Bulletin Daily Paper 09-25-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

THURSDAY September25,2014

SPORTS • C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD BiOniC panCreaS — How insulin pumps changethe lives of young people whostruggle with Type1 Diabetes.D1

Seylent —Freedomfrom

en 00 wi wor els oa ear inna iona a

BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS

ea OI' B

shopping for and preparing food? It's about $9aday,and you have to drink this powder and oil mixture t instead.D3

new

Campfire evolutionSitting around the fire telling stories is a tradition so ancient, it may be part of what makes us human.A3

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

The switch to a new statewide standardized

h.

Plus: Garbage — Amer-

test has grabbed the at-

icans throw awaymorefood than paper, plastic, metal and glass combined.A3

tention of parents and pol-

iPhene 6 Plus —wlll It

iticians, but before those changes are felt in the spring, students in BendLa Pine Schools will have to work through a range

bend in your pocket?C6

of other exams both new

and old. High schoolers will see

And a Web exclusive-

the most changes in how they are tested. At that

Meet the Belgian Malinois: the dog the White Housedidn't use on a fence-jumping intruder. benttbulletin.cem/extras

level, the district will shift away from emphasizing end-of-year summative assessments to spreading exams across the calendar. Previously, in addition

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Solar plane pilots hope to circle the world By Diane Cardwell New York Times News Service

Last year, two Swiss pi-

lots became the first to fly across the United States in a featherweight plane using the power of the sun. Now they are back with

Photos by Joe Kiine/The Bulletin

test, known as the Oregon

and chosen to appear in the commercial.

and Skills, or OAKS, high schoolers also took the the year. The ACT was meant to offer schools

The Bulletin

When Abby Wilson was a teenager table and chairs in the room she shared with her sister (after being cut off from storing anything else in the family garage) she never realized her affinity for vintage items would benefit her years

throughout the year, giving

later as a retail store supervisor.

the fall and winter before

cross-countrypredecessor,

will not be continuous, more to meet the needs of the pilots than those of the

plane, which, with an elaborate combination of solar cells and lithium batteries,

can fly day and night. In the earlier trip, the

men flew roughly 24 hours before stopping. But this time the pilots — who will

trade off the roughly dozen legs of the trip — must fly for up to five days and nights at a time because of the ocean crossings. "We trained in the sim-

ulator for longer times, for three or four days, but, of

growth annually. Now students will be taking shorter exams in taking the ACT in the

spring. The new exams,

adults at estate auctions for information

and they were very generous," Wilson said. Today, the Bend Goodwill store where Wilson works is No. I in the re-

SeeTest/A5

Aa:

berg, one of the pilots.eYou

need an airplane which is reliable — you cannot

Makeup andwardrobe stylist Sherilyn Lawson, of Portland, left, touches upmakeup

Wilson had her larynx removed, leaving her prone to infection and sensitive to climate. She's been fighting an aggressive thyroid cancer since she was only 32, fallout from childhood radiation treatments for a facial birthmark.

they were selected to be profiled in the Her many years of treatment, surcorporation's in-house magazine and geries and recoveries left an indelible again when both Bend women were mark. "People at work made my job a mischosen for a national media campaign. ery," Wilson said, speaking in the raspy Abby Wilson voicecreated by covering up the openWilson, 54, moved with her husband, ing in her neck, which forces air from Bill, to Bend six years ago. At age 39, her lungs into her mouth and lips. "Be-

and judged.Her kids were protective and took it hard if people were insensitive to their mom. Her husband was a rock, she said, but most adults didn't seem to know how to treat her.

SeeGoodwill/A6

By Mark Mazzetti

a country torn by two years of

Related

ed the spotlight. Itput out no

death and chaos. U.S. intelligence officials be-

•Obama attheU.N.,A6 • Refugees amid airstrikes,A2

slick Internet magazines and

WASHINGTON — Some time last year, a Kuwaiti man

has drawn support from

where he met up with other members of al-Qaida who had begun putting down roots in

SeeSolar/A5

comments, the stares, being overlooked

New York Times News Service

from the U.S. government arrived in northwest Syria,

flight last year, according

out, they all knew. That was the hardest thing for me, not noticing the looks." Seemingly overnight, Wilson understood what is like for the disabled: the

In Syria, a terror cell that avoided the spotlight

flight." The men's mission

to previous reports in The Bulletin.

same person,but once the larynx came

By Michael S. Schmidt New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — A

report released by the FBI on Wednesday confirmed what many Americans had feared but that law enforcement officials en drastically in the past

do the maintenance in the

system for the cross-U.S.

fore (during the years of cancer treatment) I looked and sounded like the

FBI: Mass shootings on the rise

had never documented: Mass shootings have ris-

in his early 30s who had spent more than a decade hiding

dozens of entrepreneurs and companies, including Mountain High Equipment & Supply of Redmond, which designed an oxygen

'

on Abby Wilson before filming the commercial.

course, we never flew-

that's going to be the first time," said Andre Borsch-

teachers a glimpse at learning as it happens.

/.

t'ie

nonprofit sells its more valuable items. But the reason Goodwill Industries

for Goodwill Industries of the Columbia Willamette. She met both when

known as ACT Interim test, are intended to offer

/ r~p.~

gion's e-commerce system, where the of the Columbia Willamette, which op-

The journey, like its

teachers the ability to track

"I got really into it. I'd pump the

eratesstores in Oregon and southwest Washington, lauds Wilson as an exceptional employee goes beyond her success with the store's Web sales. She, and fellow supervisor Stacey Dodge, exemplify Goodwill's mission: changing lives through employment. "These ladies are amazing. They have transformed their lives," said Dale Emanuel, public relations manager

oil-rich Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.

another measure of how much students had learned

and forced to store an antique dining

be announcedtoday,to fl y an even more advanced solar airplane around the

Assessment of Knowledge ACT exam at the end of

By Leslie Pugmire Hole

a more ambitious plan, to

world early next year, beginning and ending in

to the state's standardized

Abby Wilson looks at her daughter, Jasmine, not pictured, as director David Poulshock motions to move an item on set during filming for a Goodwill commercial in Wilson's backyard in Bend. Wilson has been honored as an exceptional Goodwill employee

lieve that the Kuwaiti, known

sometimes as Muhsin al-Fadhli, hadbeen sent from Pakistan by Ayman al-Zawahri, al-Qaida's leader, to take over a cell that could one day use Syria as abase forattacks in Europe

and possibly the United States.

TODAY'S WEATHER Rain tapering off High 64, Low38 Page B6

Unlike other jihadist groups that have come to prominence in recent years, the cell that

al-Fadhli came to leadknown within intelligence and law enforcement agencies as the Khorasan Group — avoid-

from 2007 to 2013, com-

pared to an average of 6.4 shootings annually from 2000 to 2006. In the past 13 years, 486 people have

did not boast of its plans on Twitter.

been killed, with 366 of

The group's evolution from obscurity to infamy has been

en years. In all, the study looked at 160 shootings

sudden: The first time Presi-

since 2000. (Shootings tied

dent Barack Obama publicly mentionedthegroupwas Tuesday.

to domestic violence and

SeeCell /A6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

half-dozen years. There were, on average, 16.4 such shootings a year

C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health 01-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope 06 Sports E1-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B1-6 IV/Movies

B5 C1-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

30 pages, 5 sections

the deaths in the past sev-

gangs were not included in the report.) See Shootings /A5

Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt

0

IIIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

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rian ur ssee re u eaon or er By Anne Barnard New York Times News Service

SURUC, Turkey — Turkish

Kurds on both sides of the

itary officials again report-

border here accuse Turkey, nominally a U.S. ally against

ed attacks on Islamic State

targets, describing strikes against oil refineries coning against Islamic State mil- the extremist group to kill trolled by the group in eastern itants advancing just across Kurds and stop them from us- Syria. the Syrian border. Lines of ing the chaos in Syria to estabBut unleashing U.S. firepoliceofficers fan out across lish autonomy there. That view power against the Islamic fields, brandishing riot shields was only strengthened this State introduces new, unpreto stem the flow o f S y rian week, they said, as Turkish au- dictable dynamics that vary Kurds fleeing the militants. thorities impeded both those from place to place in the volTear gas mixes with wind- trying to flee the Islamic State atile and increasingly fragb lown d i r t a s t h e p o l i ce and those trying to fight it. mented conflict. Hitting the disperse refugees desperate The Turkish government Islamic State means different to get into Turkey and Turkish has provided safe haven for things to different players in Kurds trying to help them. The many Syrian insurgents and different places — adding to police also clash with Kurd- calledfor Assad's ouster,but the difficulties Obama faces in ish men equally desperate to denies supporting the Islamic building a coherent coalition cross in the opposite direction State. against the group. — Turkish and Syrian citizens President Barack Obama Syrian insurgents, includbound for Syria to defend the has sought to package the ing some who the Obama adKurdish enclave of K o bani U.S. airstrikes against Islam- ministration says will act as from an Islamic State assault. ic State militants in Iraq and its ground force against the IsThe chaos on this one small Syria as a single straightfor- lamic State, have criticized the stretch of the border illustrates ward battle, to "degrade and strikes, while one official in the complexity of the conflict destroy" an organization that the Syrian government, which into which the United States has accelerated the destabili- has condemned the strikes as is now inserting itself far zation of the region and poses a violation of its sovereignty, more forcibly than ever before a potential, though not immi- told Reuters they seemed to be "proceeding in the right duringthree years of Syrian nent, threat to the U.S. civil war. On Wednesday, U.S. mil- direction." tanks dot the hills here, guard-

the Islamic State, of creating

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

Qvg4Qz>Q z4Q 4>O The estimated jackpot is now $40 million.

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

g31g37g47 g3 /13 g22 The estimated jackpot is now $10.1 million.

China COnViCtiOn —Thenewsthat a Uighur academic, llham Tohti, had beensentenced in China to life in prison on charges of separatism drew atorrent of international outrage this week, but many analysts said the severesentence fit in with Beijing's increasingly heavy-handed treatment of China's ethnic minorities. Prosecutors said Tohti's public efforts to discuss mounting inequality and repression in the region werecynical ploys meant to split the nation. His lawyer on Wednesdaysaid Tohti was stunned bythe life sentence. UPS Shnnting —The fianceeof oneof two UPSsupervisors who police in Birmingham,Alabama,say were slain by afired employee said Wednesdayher boyfriend had expressed sympathy for the man over the dismissal but didn't fear him. BrianCallans, 46, wasn't pleased when he foundout theshipping company planned tofire 45-year-old Kerry JoeTesney,partly becausethe manhada family to support, said Erica Carmichael, whowas engagedto Callans. "Hetold me, 'I'm not happy about it, Erica. Theguy has beenwith the company along time. That's a hugechange in somebody's life,"' Carmichael said. Virginia abduCtiOn —A hospital worker suspected of abducting a University of Virginia student wasarrested in Texas onWednesday, law enforcement authorities said. Theauthorities have already begun the process to return the suspect, JesseLeroy Matthew Jr., 32, to Virginia, the Charlottesville police chief, Timothy Longo, said in a brief newsconferenceWe dnesday night.HedidnotsaywhyMatthew had gonetoTexasorhow hewasapprehended.PolicesayMatthew was the last person seenwith the student, Hannah Graham, 18,who has notbeenseensinceshedisappearedtwoweeksago.

NavajO lawSuit —In the largest settlement obtained by anAmerican Indian tribe with the federal government, the NavajoNation will receive $554 million to end alawsuit alleging that the government mismanaged the community's assets for more than 50years. The settlement, which the Justice Department outlined Wednesday, is the latest agreement madebetweenthe Obamaadministration and Indian tribes that say thegovernment did not act in their best interests when managing their natural resources. Thesum the Navajos will receive exceeds agreements with other tribes by more than$170 million. — From wire reports

Find It All David Vincent/The Associated Press

"Unconditional Surrender," a 25-foot cast-bronze sculpture in color of a sailor and anurse in lip-locked embrace, is displayed outside theCaenMemorial in Normandy, France, onWednesday. The sculpture, by SewardJohnson, is based ona U.S. Navy photographer's black-and-white snapshot

taken on Aug. 15,1945, according to the Sculpture Foundation, a U.S.-based nonprofit that owns the work. It also resembles afamous photograph taken by Life magazineAlfred Eisenstaedt on that day. The sculpture is to spend ayear outside theCaenMemorial, a museumfocusing on World War II.

One month: $17 <Printonly:$16)

By mail in DeschutesCounty: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeechutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Editien only:Onemonth: $13

Beheaded hOStage —Fighters aligned with the Islamic State beheaded aFrenchtourist in Algeria and released avideo Wednesday documenting the brutal killing, according to the SITEIntelligence Group. HerveGourdel,55,waskidnappedovertheweekend,soon after the Islamic State called on its supporters around theworld to harm Europeans in retaliation for the recent airstrikes in Iraq and Syria. In addition, a militant group in the Philippines also announced it was holding Europeancaptives: two Germans whom it threatened to kill unless Germanypays ransom or stops supporting the U.S.-led campaign against the Islamic State.

MarathOn hnmding —A federal judge ruled Wednesdaythat the trial of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev,who is accused of planting two bombs at the 2013 Boston Marathon, would remain in Boston but would bedelayed for two months. In making his decision, JudgeGeorgeO'Toole of U.S. District Court rejected anargument by Tsarnaev's lawyers that the trial be movedbecausetheir client could not get a fair trial in Boston. O'Toole, however, delayed thestart of the trial until Jan.5. Tsarnaev haspleadednot guilty in the bombing that killed three and injured more than 260.

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CORRECTIONS

Ebnla Outbreak —So manyEbola victims are dying at home because of the severeshortage of treatment centers in Monrovia, Liberia's capital, that they are infecting family members, neighbors and others in a ballooning circle of contagion. Only18 percent of Ebola patients in Liberia are being cared for in hospitals or other settings that reduce the risk of transmission by isolating them from the rest of the population, according to the Centers for DiseaseControl and Prevention. Unless that rate reaches 70percent, the center predicted this week, Ebolacases will keep soaring.

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FAA expecte to approveuse o rones or TV, imma ing By Joan Lowy The Associated Press

WASHINGTON The Federal Aviation Administration is expected to announce

use themto deliverpackages. Wedding videographers, real estate agents, journalists and other many others are clamoring to use them as welL

541-389-9252

•3

sylvan©bendbroadband.com

presents several drone oper-

ators and interest groups that have challenged the FAA's drone restrictions, said he is concerned tha t l i m i tations

today that it is granting per-

The seven movie and televi- attached to the drone permits sion companies are regarded may be so onerous that the by agencies as trailblazers, benefits of using the drones to fly drones, an important the first of what are likely to will be outweighed by the cost steptoward greater use ofthe be dozens of industries that and theheadache of complytechnology by commercial op- could be approved in coming ing with regulations. "I'm worried that it's too erators,said attorneys and a months for drone operations company official familiar with under limited circumstances. small a step forward and it's "The floodgates will open too narrowly limited," he said. the decision. However, the permits are and we'll see all kinds of othThe seven companies — Aeexpected to come with limita- er entities looking to use these rial MOB LLC, Astraeus Aeritions, including that the un- things," said Lisa Ellman, al, Flying-Cam Inc., HeliVideo manned aircraft be used only an attorney with M cKenna, Productions L LC , P i ctorvion closed sets and that they Long & Aldridge who for- sion Inc., Vortex Aerial and be operated by a three-per- merly headed the Justice De- SnaprollMedia LLC — have son team, including a trained partment's working group on been working with the Motion drone operator. drone policy. Picture Association of AmerUntil now, the only permit But B r endan S c hulman, ica for two years to win FAA for commercial drone oper- a New York attorney who approvaL mits to seven movie and television production companies

ations the FAA has granted has been to the Conoco Phil-

lips oil company, which has flown two kinds of unmanned

aircraft in unpopulated areas of Alaska and over the Arctic Ocean with significant limitations on their use. The FAA is under intense

Dr. Natasha Rudd, N.D., L.Ac.

Thursday, October 9th

PLEASE JOIN uS FORAN OPEN HOUSE

to monitor pipelines, inspect

Thursday . October 2nd, 2014

the undersides of oil platforms and bridges, and spray crops.

5:oopM - 7:oopM

Amazon and Google want to

Come give your input on the vision for this future park in northwest Bend at the upcoming

COM M U N ITY MEETING

ban on commercial drone use. Companies want to use drones

want to use the technology

the recent transition of ownership to...

or sell it to others to relax its

a plethora of industries that

e

RILEY RANCH NATURE RESERVE Sage Health Center is pleased to announce

Dr. Rudd is currently accepting new patients. She specializes in Family medicine, Acupuncture and Chinese medicine, personalized nutrition, botanical and homeopathic medicine, as well as being a primarycare physician. We also offer blood pressure checks, blood draws, well checks and physicals.

pressure from Congress and

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Presentation8 Q & A: 5:30 — 7:00 pm District Office • 799 SW Columbia St.

More information at: bendparksandrec.org (541) 389-7275


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, Sept. 25, the 268th day of 2014. Thereare 97 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Marine PreSerVe —President Barack Obama will sign a proclamation expanding the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument, making it the largest ocean preserve in the world.

STUDY

am ire stories U.S. throwsout morefood than

aves al' e plastic, paper,metal andglass earnin

Thirty-five million tons were thrown out in 2012. Food waste is one of the

top contributors to climate change.

HISTORY Highlight:In1789, the first

United States Congress adopted12 amendments to the Constitution and sent them to the states for ratification. (Ten oftheamendmentsbecame the Bill of Rights.) In1513, Spanish explorer Vasco Nunez deBalboa crossed the Isthmus of Panamaand sighted the Pacific Ocean. In1690,one of the earliest American newspapers, Publick Occurrences, published its first — and last — edition in Boston. In1775, American Revolutionary War hero EthanAllen was captured by the British as he led an attack on Montreal. (Allen was released bythe British in1778.) In1904, a NewYork City police officer ordered afemale automobile passenger onFifth Avenue to stop smoking acigarette. (A male companion was arrested and later fined $2 for "abusing" the officer.) In1919, President Woodrow Wilson collapsed after a speech in Pueblo, Colorado, during a national speaking tour in support of the Treaty of Versailles. In1932, the Spanish region of Catalonia received aCharter of Autonomy (however, the Charter was revoked byFrancisco Franco at the end of the Spanish Civil War). In1957, nine black students who'd been forced to withdraw from Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, because of unruly white crowds were escorted to class by members of the U.S. Army's101st Airborne Division. In1974,Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher TommyJohn underwent an experimental graft reconstruction of the ulnar collateral ligament in the elbow of his throwing arm to repair a career-ending injury;the procedure, which proved successful, is now referred to as "Tommy John surgery." In1978, 144 people were killed when a Pacific Southwest Airlines Boeing 727and a private plane collided over SanDiego. In1981, Sandra DayO'Connor was sworn in asthe first female justice on theSupreme Court. In1994, Russian President Boris Yeltsin began afive-day swing through the United States as hearrived in New York, hoping to encourage American investment in his country's struggling economy. Ten years ago:U.S.warplanes, tanks andartillery repeatedly hit at Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's terror network in the insurgent stronghold of Fallujah, Iraq. Five years ago:President Barack Obama,British Prime Minister Gordon Brownand French President Nicolas Sarkozy, in Pittsburgh for a G-20 summit, accused Iran of constructing a secret underground uranium enrichment facility and hiding its existence from international inspectors foryears. One year ago:Nearly a dozen of Syria's powerful rebel factions, including one linked to al-Qaida, formally broke with the main opposition group in exile and called for Islamic law in the country, dealing a severe blow to the Western-backed coalition.

BIRTHDAYS Broadcast journalist Barbara Walters is 85. Actor-producer Michael Douglas is 70. Model Cheryl Tiegs is 67.Actor Mark Hamill is 63. Actress Heather Locklear is 53. Basketball Hall of Famer Scottie Pippen is 49. Actor Will Smith is 46. Actress Catherine Zeta-Jones is 45. Actress CleaDuVall is 37. — From wire reports

NEED TO KNOW

By Roberto A. Ferdman The Washington Post

W ASHINGTON —

The

much-anticipated U.N. Cli-

-%i•

mate Summit, which began

Tuesdayin New York, is ostensibly a platform for world leaders to leapfrog debates over whether climate change is real, and skip straight to discussions centered on how

to overcome the challenges it poses. But it's also an impetus for those beyond the

sessions' panels to illuminate troubling patterns of behavior that are contributing to

our collective carbon footprint — and food waste is

This country is one of the The price for producing food worst offenders: A 2012 pa- that never ends up in someper by the Natural Resources one's mouth is much moreDefense Council estimated it includes both the resources that as much as 40 percent of and e n v ironmental d e c ay America's food supply ends sacrificed for its making. The up in a dumpster. livestock industry contributes The most obvious problem more than 15 percent of global with this waste is that while carbon emissions, according Americans are throwing out to the U.N., which means that their food, an estimated 1 in when Americans throw out every 9 people in the world meat, they are wasting some of still suffers from chronic the most environmentally costhunger — that is, insufficient ly food available. food — including more than A n umber o f i n i t iatives, 200 million in Sub-Saharan both domestic and internaAfrica and more than 500 m illion Asia. Even in t h e United States, where that

tional, have surfaced to curb the amount of food that nev-

duced. As the United Nations noted in its report on world

at supermarkets, restaurants,

value of sitting around a times used to regulate social campfire, listening to stories, norms. Joking made up 16 singing songs and letting percent of conversations in yourself stare mesmerized the daytime and stories made into the flickering flames. up just 6 percent.

er makes it to people's plates. number is significantly low- The FAO's Save Food program most egregious, especially in er, some 14 percent of U.S. centers around four pillars the United States. households still struggled — awareness, collaboration, In 2012, the most recent to put food on the table for a policy development and inyear for which estimates are portion of last year, accord- vestment — and focuses on available, Americans threw ing to the USDA. the need for improved food out roughly 35 million tons of The level of food waste channels; the USDA, for its food, according to the Envi- suggests that curbing hunger part, has hosted a number of ronmental Protection Agen- isn't a matter of producing talks, panels and initiatives. cy. That's almost 20 percent more food so much as better The department held a webimore food than the United preserving and distributing nar Wednesday that will speStates tossed out in 2000, 50 the food currently being pro- cifically address food waste

T hese activities may

percent more than in 1990,

Thinkstock

Our ancestors probably sat around the fire telling stories the same way we do — and it could've boosted their brainpower.

By Deborah Netbum

ty-four percent were devoted

Los Angeles Times

to criticisms, complaints and

D on't u n derestimate t h e

h a ve

played an essential role in early societies. A new study suggests socializing an d s t orytelling around a communal fire may have off ered our hunting and gathering ancestors a unique time to expand their minds and imaginations in ways that were not possible during the hard work and harsh light

conflict, which w a s

s ome-

At night, however, when

the Ju/'hoansi Bushmen gathered around a fire, 81 percent

out a now seemingly paltry 12.2 million tons.

versation was kind of nasty a lot of the time," Wiessner

In 1980, food waste accounted for less than 10 per-

apparent problem with food repurposes roughly a million

said, "but at night they would

cent of total waste; today, it

waste: the threat to the en-

mellow out and t alk about

makes up well over a fifth of vironment. Landfills full of the country's garbage. Amer- decomposing food release icans, as it is, now throw out methane, which is said to be more food than plastic, paper, at least 20 times more lethal a metal orglass — and by a greenhouse gas than carbon long shot. dioxide. And America's land"Food waste is an incred- fills are full of food — organic ible and absurd issue for the waste is the second largest world today," Jose Lopez, contributor to the country's Nestle's head of operations, landfills. Those same landsaid of the issue earlier this fills are the single largest promonth. ducer of methane emissions Roughly a third of the food in the United States — they produced worldwide nev- produce almost a quarter of

W iessner d o esn't

think

sure time may have created

1970s were the same as our

a spacefor different types of social interactions as well. In a paper published Monday in PNAS, she argues that conversations that take place

early ancestors', but she says the experiences of the Ju/'hoansi can help anthropologists form hypotheses about our hunter-gatherer a n cestors who probably lived under similar conditions hundreds of thousands of years ago.

different quality, and different content, than those that

take place during the day. Next, Wiessner would like "I think people are much to examine how the red, ormore open at night by a fire," ange and blue flames of firesaid Wiessner, who teaches at light act on us physiologically the University of Utah. "We by measuring how subjects' are always checking peo- hormone levels change when ple's facial expressions, but at

t hey relax and talk b y t h e

night people are mostly staring into the fire and expressions are concealed." In 1974, Wiessner spent

fire.

two months recording conversations be t w ee n t he Ju/'hoansi Bushmen, w h at

different cultures. Another

Americans discarded in 1960, when the countrythrew

But there's another less

er gets eaten. The problem

the country's total methane is particularly egregious in emissions, according to the developed countries, where NRDC. food is seen as being more exThe environmental cost of

pounds of recovered food each

year. Significantly curbing food waste nationally, let alone in-

ternationally, however, will likely prove a daunting task. The problem, after all, is a systemic one. "Our best estimates are that about 40-50 percent of food waste comes from con-

sumersand 50-60percent from businesses," Ashley Zanolli, who addresses food waste at the EPA, told NPR this week.

Food is wasted at virtually every stage of its production, which means that it's up to food producers,distributors, retailers and eaters to fix the

pendable than it is elsewhere. food waste goes further than problem. "Every year, consumers in just methane emissions. Prorich countries waste almost as ducing food is a costly affair much food (222 million metric for the environment — an tons) as the entire net food pro- estimated one-third of global ' NQRTHWEsT duction of sub-Sahann Africa carbon emissions come from CROSSING (230 miliion metric tons)," the agriculture — but it's one soU.N. notes on its website. cietypays to feed itself. Aauard-aeinning

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raphy of night" studies from

that we watch on television or read in books. But that seems

to be changing. "Like hunter-gatherers, we 1970s. work our imaginations, gain The conversations she col- new perspectives and expand lected were generally among our horizons from stories,"

she writes in the paper. "Even

so, artificial light and digital Of the 122 daytime convercommunication are invading sations she recorded, 31 per- the night worldwide, turning cent of them were devoted to hours of darkness into ecoeconomic discussions — talk nomically productive time about foraging or hunting and overriding social time plans or technology. Thir- and story time."

P

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to digitally record stories from people she knew in the

at least four or five adults and

en in Washington, D.C., which

She hopes other researchers will contribute "ethnog-

line of inquiry: How does the lack of firelight and stowas then a group of forag- rytelling time in our modern ers i n n o r t heast N a mibia lives affect our society and and northwest Botswana in our own individual sense of southwestern Africa. (Today, empathy? they make only a small part After all, many of us are of their living foraging.) naturally drawn to fire, espeWiessner originally made cially when we crave intimathe recordings hoping to cy — think candlelight dinlearn how this group of peo- ners, romantic rooms with ple established and main- fireplaces, or making s'mores tained social networks across during a family camping trip. a vast area of 124 miles. But Wiessner also notes that recently, she revisited the re- today, long after electricity cordings to see how interac- reduced our time with actual tions among members of the firelight, our society's nightcommunity differed during time hours ar e s t il l o f t en the day and at night. She also spent engaging with stories returned to N a mibia t hree times between 2011 and 2013

and other food establishments. There are also many localized examples of programs working to diminish food waste, including D.C. Central Kitch-

around storytelling. "During the day, the con-

of the conversation revolved

gist Polly Wiessner wondered that the lives of the Ju/'hoanwhether this newfound lei- si Bushmen foragers in the

at night around a fire have a

and nearly three times what

hunger last week, there is actually enough food to feed all seven billion people living in the world today.

the past. They would space travel and talk about group of the daytime hours. gatherings happening far When humans first learned away, they would cross time to control fire about 400,000 to their forefathers, and they years ago, the quality of their traveled, in the stories, to othlives changed dramatically. er realms." Brain size and gut size inFrom these stories, mostcreased, predators no lon- ly about the adventures of ger posed such a dire threat known people, the multiand our ancestors' circadian generational audience could rhythms shifted as firelight glean information about the extended the day by several workings of their society, the hours, according to the study. rules of marriage and kinThe light of the fire intership, and learn regional tradifered with melatonin produc- tions. Also, through hearing tion, allowing people to stay about theexperiences of othawake during a time when er people, the listeners gained productive work was difficult empathy, Wiessner said. to accomplish. Anthropolo-

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

Boko Harammilitants devastate northern Nigeria, presidentsays

p jg p jtej j'egt eg gg pn g pegtl jp By Gardiner Harris New Yorh Times News Service

NEW DELHI — An Indian

spacecraft affectionately nicknamed MOM reached Mars or-

bit Wednesday, beating India's By Eleni Giokos

Asian rivals to the Red Planet and outdoing the Americans,

the Soviet s and the Europeans indoingso on a maiden voyage and a shoestringbudget. An ebullient Prime Minister Narendra Modi was on hand at the Indian Space Research Or-

ganization's command center in Bangalore for the morning event and hailed it "as a shining symbol of what we are capable

„ iyi

IIII'

of as a nation." "The odds were stacked

I(IIIII ) lll"

against us," Modi, wearing a red Nehru vest, said in a televised news conference. "When

you are trying to do something that has not been attempted before, it is a leap into the un-

Aijaz Rahi/The Associated Press

Indian Space Research Organization scientists and officials cheer as they celebrate the success of

known. Andspace is indeedthe Mars Orbiter Mission at their Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network complex in Bangaiore, India, biggest unknown out there." on Wednesday. India triumphed in its first interplanetary mission, placing a satellite into orbit around Children across India were Mars on Wednesday morning andcatapulting the country into an elite club of deep-space explorers. asked to come to school by 6:45 a.m. Wednesday, well before the usual starting time, ison Square Garden before of its inability to make its own Mars' orbit. They used a small to watch the historic event on heading to Washington for a equipment and its refusal to let rocket, a modest 3,000-pound state television. meeting with President Barack foreign companies open plants spacecraft and a plan to slingThe Mars Orbiter Mission, Obama. owned entirely by them. shot around the Earth to gain or MOM, was intended mostly The Indian Space Research The country's most import- the speed needed to get there. A to prove that India could suc- Organization has always had ant export is the cheap brain- mission that began with a Noceed in such a highly technical a small budget, and for years it power of its engineers, based vember launch in Sriharikota endeavor — and to beat China. largely worked in international in technology centers like Ban- has been flawless ever since. "In this Asian space race, As Modi and others have noted, isolation after many countries galore and Hyderabad, who India's trip to Mars, at a price cut off technological sharing provide software and back-of- India has won the race," Pallaof $74 million, cost less than programs in the wake of Indian fice operations for corporations va Bagla, author of "Reaching the Hollywood movie "Gravi- nudear tests. It has launched around the world. for the Stars: India's Journey to ty." NASA's almost simultane- more than 50 satellites since "Our success on Mars is a Mars and Beyond," said in an ous — and far more complex 1975, including five foreign sat- crucial marketing opportuni- interview. — mission to Mars cost $671 ellites in one June launch. As ty for low-cost technological The triumph was well timed. million. other countries have rethought know-how, which is what we do Thousands of Indian and ChiSuccess was by no means theirpricey space programs, really well," said C. Uday Bhas- nese soldiers have been enassured. Of the 51 attempts India's low-budget affair has kar, an analyst with the Society gaged in a standoff for more to reach Mars, only 21 have gained increasing attention for Policy Studies, a New Delhi than a week on disputed land succeeded, and none on any and orders. Its success has research center. India's space in Ladakh, in the Indian-concountry's first try, Modi noted. long been seen as a fulfillment program "spent peanuts, and trolled portion of Kashmir, and In 2012, China tried and failed, of the kind of state-sponsored they got it done." President Xi Jinping of China self-sufficiency t ha t f o r m er and in 1999, Japan also failed. India's decision to launch recently held a three-day visit But Modi, who was elected Prime M i n ister J awaharlal Mangalyaan, the name of its to Indiathatwas overshadowed in May with a once-in-a-gen- Nehru cherished but that left spacecraft, resulted after Chi- by the border disputes. na's own mission to Mars failed eration majority in parliament, Indiaimpoverished. Mangalyaan, which is the hasbeen on somethingof aroll. More recently, India's tech- in 2012. In almost every sphere, Hindi word for "Mars craft," is And the Mars achievement, nological isolation in defense the Chinese have outpaced the slated to remain in an elliptical which he had almost nothing and other areas has been due Indians over the past three de- orbit around Mars, sending to do with, will only add to that. in large part to the country's cades, but Indian scientists saw back information about MarModi leaves Friday for New restrictions on foreign invest- an opportunity to beat them tian weather and methane levYork, where he will address

gos, generates most of the country's wealth. About 69 ABUJA, Nigeria — Nigeri- percent of Nigerians in the an Islamist group Boko Ha- northeast were living in abram's insurgency is having solute poverty in 2010, coma "devastating" impact on pared with a national averthree of the country's north- age of 61 percent, according eastern s t ates, P r esident to Nigeria's statistics agency. Goodluck Jonathan said. Nigeria is one of five counThe violence by the mili- tries in West Africa to record tants, concentrated in Borcases of Ebola this year. The no, Adamawa and Yobe outbreak is most severe in states in the majority-Mus- Guinea, Liberia and Sierlim north of Africa's biggest ra Leone, where more than oil producer, "is significant 2,800 people have died, acin terms of the killing and cording to the World Health maiming of innocent peo- Organization. Nig e ria's ple," he said in an interview H ealth Ministry s ays t h e with Bloomberg TV Africa virus killed seven people in in New York Tuesday. the country. "Overall it doesn't affect "We have been able to the economy that much in contain Ebola," Jonathan terms of the economy of Ni- said. "There is no Nigerian geria as a state, but it's dev- who is Ebola-positive." astating for the economies of Jonathan, 56, has govBorno state, Yobe state and erned Nigeria since 2010, Adamawa state," Jonathan when his predecessor, Umasaid. ru Yar'Adua, died in office, Bloomberg News

ments, its poor infrastructure

to Mars. In just a few months,

els in its atmosphere to control-

the U.N. General Assembly as and its infamous bureaucracy. they cobbled together a mis- lersin Bangalorefrom sensors well as a sold-out, largely Indi- India is now the world's larg- sion to send a 33-pound pay- powered by three large solar an-American crowd at Mad- estimporterof arms because load of fairly simple sensors to panels.

Jonathan's

a d m i nistra- and a year later he won elections. The president hasn't

tion is struggling to contain the rebellion, which killed more than 4,000 people in the past 12 months, according to Maplecroft, the

Bath, England-based risk consultancy. The attacks include three blasts in the

said whether he intends to run for re-election in a vote

scheduled for Feb. 14. Jonathan has faced criticism for failing to improve electricity supplies, one of his key campaign pledges

capital, Abuja, in April, May in the last election. Most Niand June this year, the first gerians cannot afford to use bombings in the city since diesel generators, leaving 2011.

them with only a few hours

The president, whose government had previously said it was close to crushing Boko Haram, this year began describing the group as an expanding al-Qaedabacked threat to Africa. The violence in Nigeria drew

of grid electricity per day. On Sept. 19, Nigerian Oil

i nternational attention a f -

sold to private investors last

Minister Diezani Alison-Ma-

dueke announced a $1.3-billion bailout for power companies saddled with debts inherited from the state elec-

tricity company, which was

ter Boko Haram kidnapped year. more than 200 schoolgirls in South Africa, which has April and threatened to sell a third of Nigeria's populathem into slavery. Most of tion, generates more than 10 the girls are still missing. times as much as power. "It's not going to happen The predominantly Christian south of Nigeria, which in one day," Jonathan said includes its oil- and gas-pro- of the effort to bring dependducing coastal areas and able electricity to Nigerians. "It's going to be gradual." the commercial hub of La-

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Report: ACA cuts hospital spending

The Solar Im-

pulse plane, pictured, flew

across the By Robert Pear New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON The O bama a dministration i n -

creased the p ressure on states to e xpand M edicaid

on Wednesday, citing new evidence that hospitals reap financial benefits and gain more paying customers when states broaden eligibility. In states that have expanded Medicaid, the White House

said, hospitals are seeing substantial reductions in "uncom-

pensated care" as more patients have Medicaid coverage and fewer are uninsured.

Sylvia Mathews Burwell, the secretary of health and human services, and Jason

Furman, the chairman of President Barack O b ama's Council of Economic Advis-

ers, said the data should persuade more states to expand

Medicaid. "Because of the Affordable Care Act," Burwell said, "we

project that hospitals will save $5.7 billion in uncompensated care costs this year. Hospitals

Test

Medicaid programs. Uncompensated care represents the combined total of unpaid hospital bills and charity care provided to low-inexpanded Medicaid. Many of come patients. the others, which have balked Financial reports from inuntil now, are likely to recon- vestor-owned hospitals and sider the issue when state leg- surveys by several state hosislatures convene next year. pital associations show that White House officials said Medicaid expansion has rethey wanted to work with Re- duced the number of patients publican governors on Med- who cannot pay their bills, icaid, as they did with Gov. Burwell said in issuing a reTom Corbett of Pennsylvania, port on trends in uncompena Republican. They reached sated care. agreement with Corbett last The study was part of a month on a plan to expand White House campaign to Medicaid using federal funds improve public perceptions to buy private health insurof the Affordable Care Act ance for about 500,000 low-in- before the midterm elections come people. on Nov. 4 and the start of T he a d m inistration d i d the next annual open enrollnot single out other states for ment period for people to buy special attention, but Florida, health insurance, beginning Georgia, North Carolina and Nov. 15. Texas — all with RepubliIn the first enrollment pecan governors — are obvious riod, the White House said it candidates. Health policy ex- signed up 8 million people, of perts estimate that 3.5 million whom 7.3 million have paid people could gain coverage if their premiums and still have those states expanded their coverage. in states that have expanded Medicaid are projected to save up to $4.2 billion of the total amount." Twenty-seven states have

Core State Standards. The

standards, which benchmark Continued from A1 when students should acquire "This is a change from certain skills and knowledge, doing a summative assess- were developed by the Nament to f o r m ative assess- tional Governors Association ments," said Shay Mikalson, and the Council of Chief State the Bend-La Pine district's School Officers. Oregon adassistant superintendent of opted the Common Core in secondary education. "It's 2010, but this will be the first a change from one test that year the state's standardized lasts a couple of hours to two test, which is used for federal 45-minute check-in t ests. reporting purposes, will be We'll now be getting informa- aligned with the standards. tion on students when we can Besides being more rigorous — the state has predicted do something with it." Lora Nordquist, assistant

two-thirds of s t udents will

United States

last year. Now the company plans to use a newer model to circumnavigate the world. The Assoaated Press file photo

Solar Continued from A1 It has also become an un-

likely incubator for a variety of technologies, including

about 4t/2 hours. While Smarter B alanced

cause of that change, we can now go in and help students during the school year, instead of just seeing where

exams are mandated for grades three through eight and 11th grade, the district uses about 10 other exams

how many words a student reads in a little time and how

accurate they are is a very powerful indicator of c om-

prehension," Nordquist said. "This has been shown over millions of students."

Nordquist described the test as a "temperature check."

"It's a good way to see if there's a high fever, a stu-

one that's healthy," she said. "This doesn't tell us what

pleted in as little as three min-

ed by Smarter Balanced, a

times a year in elementary

coalition of states, including

schools, tests what is termed a student's "oral reading fluency." Simply put, a student

The reportraised questions

about the impact the mass Continued from A1 shootings are having on law Many of the sprees ended enforcement officers who rebefore the police arrived at spond to the grisly scenes. the scene, the report said. In

44 of the 64 cases in which the FBI was able to determine

the length of the shooting, the gunfire lasted less than 5

It also reinforced one of the r ecommendations from t h e administration's study: th at local officers need to be better

Partners in Care

Bend Community Center Tuesday, October 7 — 10:00 am to 12:00 pm

educators can do better," Nordquist said.

La Pine Senior Center: MOnday, OCtOber 13- 9:00 am to 12:00 Pm

— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tieeds@bendbulletirt.com

Redmond Senior Center: Wednesday, October 15- 11:00 am to 3:00 pm

high-profile shootings, like the one at Columbine High School in Colorado in 1999, before going on their own killing sprees. The analysts said that the

Partners In Care Bend Office Wednesday October 8 900am to 1200pm and Tuesday, October28 — 8:00 am to 12:00 pm

gunmen were attracted to the attention that mass killers re-

Roughly 45 percent of the shootings occurred in offices

bases, government o ff ices,

federal government had de-

homes, places of worship and medical facilities. In 24 of the 160 shootings, the gunmen attacked more than one loca-

the FBI.

tion.Mass shootings occurred

Academics had previously attempted to quantify mass shootings by using media reports. In the new study, the FBI relied on court documents,

in all but 10 states.

reports from all of its 56 field

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ceive. They were often motitrained and equipped to stop vated by a sense that they had minutes. Twenty-three shoot- gunmen intent on slaughter. no other way to resolve the isings ended in less than two In 21 of 4 5 shootings in sues they faced other than viominutes. In 64 of the cases, the which officers confronted the lently lashing out, the analysts gunmen committed suicide. gunmen, nine officers were sard. The report was promptedby killed and 28 were wounded. the spate of mass shootings in Four officers were killed in recent years, like those at San- ambushes, and in three cases, dy Hook Elementary School in armed security guards who Newtown, Connecticut, and were not law enforcement offiat a movie theater in Aurora, cers were killed and two were Colorado. wounded. After the Sandy Hook masOfficers killed the gunmen sacre, in which 20 children at the scene in 21 of the cases. were killed, President Barack Nine gunmen who exchanged Obama announced that ad- gunfire with the police comministration and law enforce- m itted suicide, and t w o ment officials would study surrendered. how the country could stop the Just two of the 160 shootshootings from occurring. ings involved more t han There was widespread be- one gunman, and six of the lief that the number of shoot- killers were women. Two ings had risen significantly, of the twelve shootings that but the federal government occurred at colleges or unihad no uniform way to track versities were committed by them. As part of the administration's efforts, the FBI, which keeps track of national crime

John Day

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t a sk " de t e r mined

and math, which will still be called OAKS, will be provid-

Shootings

Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber, min-

changingSmiles

by the district. These tasks, which were previously set by individual teachers, are not a typical test, but instead consist of a prompt that may

potential for r ich conversations within schools and the district about how students performed and what we as

Oregon, that have curricula aligned with the Common

ogy, which put Borschberg in charge of studying the project.

Redmond

the problem is, whether the student has trouble decod-

draw on multiple subjects.

utes. The exam, given three

the Swiss Institute of Technol-

aj. B~ do

dent who is a little warm or

they end up at the end."

throughout the year, some reThe biggest change, how- quired by the state and others ever, will come in the spring, an initiative of the district. when the state's standardOne of the most essential, ized tests in language arts Nordquist said, can be com-

Piccard presented his idea to

or so times a day. The method ister of state of the United Arab allow refrigerators to have worked so well that Borschberg Emirates and the chief execumore internalspace and even tried it on vacation, he tiveofrenewable energy coma product developed with said. pany Masdar, said the collaboNASA that makes urine Still, the new model plane ration between the mission and drinkable. The pilots are has more legroom and a redin- his country was natural, given also developing a way to ing seat to make the journey its investments in renewable produce oxygen with solar more comfortable. The men energy and dean technologies. "It's a country that fits with energy, but that will not be anticipate about 25 days of flyavailable until later flights, ing over a period of four to five the message we have," Piccard Borschberg said. months, stopping in Asia, the said. "It's an oil-producing But, the men said, one of United States and Southern country that invests a lot for rethe biggest commercial ap- Europe or North Africa before newable energy knowing that plications for the plane itself returning to the United Arab oil will not be forever. We don't could be as a kind of satellite Emirates. fight against oil — we just show replacement, making it into The tour was the brainchild that we can diversify and be a sustainable high-altitude, of Piccard, a psychiatrist who more energy-efficient." unmanned platform with grew up in an exploration-oriBorschberg added that oil cameras or communica- ented family and was part of should be left to producing new tions equipment. the team that was first to cir- materials, saying, "It's a fabuDesigning the plane — a cumnavigate the globe nonstop lous molecule." carbon-fiber frame, w i t h in aballoon.Hebecame enammore than 17,000 solar cells ored of the idea of flying withand a sheer wrappingout fuel when a propane shortPure. &md.6 t"o. has been a relentless drive age nearly ended the balloon to reduce weight, Bertrand ride in 1999. He met BorschPiccard, the other pilot, said. berg, an engineer and entrepreThe cockpit fits only one, neur who had been a jet fighter Bend

reads to his or her teacher. "It's hard to believe, but

mance

than 20 minutes at a time 10

pilot in the Swiss air force, after

a thin insulation that can

superintendent for p r ima- fail — the Smarter Balanced ry education, described a tests are also l onger than ing or limited English skills, summative exam as an "au- previous exams, projected to for instance. But it does let topsy," while, she said, a for- take high school students six us know there is a problem, mative exam "is more like a to eight hours total for lan- which we can then explore." Beginning next year, elecheckup." guage arts and math. Last "With a formative, we can year's exams in t hose sub- mentary teachers will also say, here's what's healthy, jects typically took students test students on a "perforhere's what we need to look at," Nordquist said. "Be-

so both men have developed techniques using yoga, meditalion and self-hypnosis to rest or remainalertasnecessaryincluding sleeping for no more

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ple were killed and 17 were wounded. The most injuries-

offices and media reports. The 58 of them — resulted from a team of agents and analysts shooting at the Colorado movwho worked on the study said ie theater, where 12 people they would use the numbers were killed. as a baseline in studying other FBI analysts said that many shooting trends. of the gunmen had studied

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

0 ama, at U.N., vowsto counterextremistt reat

Goodwill

By Mark Landler

nonetheless stayed at her

New York Times News Service

lar new course for the United

job in retail sales, despite a promised promotion that vanished, needing the insurance coverage. After her youngest child was out

States in a turbulent world, tell-

of the nest, the couple took

ing the U.N. General Assembly in a bluntly worded speech that

what Wilson calls a"leap of

the American military would work with allies to dismantle

the Islamic State's "network of

Oregon. Hearing that Goodwill's Job Connections program

death" and warning Russia that

specialized in workers with

it would pay for its bullying of Ukraine. Two days after ordering

barriers to employment, Wilson signed on and was

Continued from A1 "People think they're in a soundproof booth and you can't hear them," Wilson said. "And I don't have a thick skin."

Demoralized, W i l son UNITED N A T I ONS President Barack Obama on Wednesday charted a muscu-

faith" and moved to Central

placed in a retaiVmedical

airstrikes on dozens of mili-

Jason Decrow/The Associated Press

tant targets in Syria, Obama

President Barack Obama addresses a meeting of the United

issued a fervent call to arms against the Islamic State — the

Nations Security Council regarding the threat of foreign terrorist

once-reluctant warrior now apparently resolved to waging a struggle against Islamic extremism for the remainder of his presidency. "Today, I ask the world to join in this effort," Obama said, seeking to buttress a global coalition that he said would train

and equip troops to fight the group, also known (as) ISIL, starve it of financial resources, and halt the flow of foreign recruits to its ranks.

"Those who have joined ISIL should leave the battlefield while they can," Obama said, foreshadowing the blows to come."For we will not succumb to threats, and we will demon-

strate that the future belongs to

fighters during the 69th session of the U.N. General Assembly.

new campaign to confront climate change. It was a starkly different president from the one who ad-

in our i nterconnected world

that cannot be met by one nation alone, it is this," he said, "terrorists crossing b orders

and threatening to unleash unspeakable violence." In addressing the Ukraine off a missile strike on Syria crisis, Obama used his stronover its use of chemical weap- gest language yet, portraying ons. In that speech, Obama Russia's incursions as an afoffered a shrunken list of U.S. front to U.N. principles and priorities in the Middle East promising to levy a cost on and showed little appetite for President Vladimir Putin. He the charged rhetoric or inter- accused Russia of conspiring ventionist policies of his prede- with Ukrainian separatists to cessor, George W. Bush. obstruct an investigation into a Obama on Wednesday spoke downed Malaysian jetliner. "This is a vision of the world more like a wartime leader, reaffirming his determination to in which might makes right," work with other countries but Obama said, "a world in which leaving little doubt that the U.S. one nation's borders can be redressed skeptical world leaders

at the General Assembly last year, two weeks after calling

job suited to her skills. But immediately it became evident, she said, that her new

employer was having trouble with her disability. "Some days I'd come home feeling beat up; it just wears you down after

awhile," she said. Wilson kept in t ouch with the staff at Job Connections and that led to a

supervisor position at the Bend Goodwill store. She's

been so successful there that the company nominated her for a national award

that honors employees who exemplify the Goodwill mission. W ilson beat out

hun-

dreds of other employees for the Edgar J. Helms Award this year. "I don't want to be the ob-

was at work. He eventually ness. Wilson has a long drivefound her and the family had way, but it couldn't contain the to move again, this time to nearly two dozen equipment Bend. trucks, a catering van and ve"Getting out in the world hicles holding makeup artists, and finding a job, it was hard," sound technicians and proDodge said. "It was like start- duction assistants. ing over, trying to find out who In her cozy backyard, crews I was. I had to build myself up, set up lights, monitors, screens because I had been cut down and boom microphones. for so many years I felt like I Emanuel was on hand, and had no potential." When she obviously thrilled that filming handed out her first few re- had finally begun. "We want to tell people who sumes around Bend, she said, she'd cry. they are serving when they "Not a good first impres- donateto our stores," she said. "People see us as the world's sion, I know," she said wryly. Her first job in the area largest yard sale, but we're turned out to be a disaster, so much more." She cites a with a boss who regularly de- statistic: 62,000 people went meaned his employees. through Goodwill's various But after her bad work sit- job programs last year in this uation started to affect her region alone. health, she started looking The commercial spot will around for opportunities. air in the Northwest and po"I was starting to feel like a tentially nationwide, accordvictim again," Dodge said. "I ing to Emanuel. In addition, was getting a paycheck, but I radio spots will be created wasn't controlling my situa- from the taping, as well as tion." She found Job Connec- a mini-documentary for the tions and signed up for the company's website. program (after crying during In her bedroom, Wilson was her first visit). She was re- nonplussed by the controlled ferred to the Bend Goodwill chaos. As crew members, store, where her job turned out all with earpieces, buzzed to be a perfect fit. Dodge was around her, she shrugged. unwilling to work when her Compared with the years she kids were out of school, and fought cancer and today, as the store built her schedule she struggles to keep healthy, around that. this is nothing. "I'm not going to let what "No company is perfect, but they are so good here," she happened to me dictate my life said. "The people I work with more than it already does. I'm are part of my family." not going to give it that power," At home,Dodge continued Wilson said. to work hard at raising her The day before Dodge was kids in a manner that would in the spotlight, with cameras give them more power and following her at work, at play independence than she expe- and near her home. "I never hesitated to agree to

rienced. Yet when her ex-hus-

stress. As if to underscore his new

ones because of the truth that

might be revealed."

ject of pity, even though I've band showed up at a perfor- the commercial," she said. "If it gone through what most m ance for her sons'metal rock helps one person, it's worth it." people will never have to," band, her first instinct was to — Reporter: 541-548-2186, Wilson said. "I don't feel run, as she had before. lpugmire@bendbulletin.com "But I went right up to him sorry for me. It's life and you deal with it the best and asked what he wanted," • g • you can." Dodge said, her pride evident.

onslaught of global challeng- role, Obama headed a rare es that have given the U.S. no leaders session of the U.N. Se-

The 39-minute speech was also notable for what he did not

Stacey Dodge

choice but to take the lead: from

say. Last year, he singled out

those who build, not those who destroy." The brutality of the

militants, he said, "forces us to would act as the ultimate guar-

drawn by another, and civilized

look into the heart of darkness."

people are not allowedto recov-

antor of an international order

Even so, Obama said, the that he said was under acute er the remains of their loved threat from the Islamic State was only the most urgent of an

curity Council, which unani-

resisting Russia's aggression mously passed a resolution reagainst Ukraine to coordinat- quiring countries to pass laws ing a response to the Ebola out- against traveling abroad to join break in West Africa; frombro- terrorist groups or financing kering a new unity government those efforts. "If there was ever a challenge in Afghanistan to organizing a

nuclear negotiations with Iran

and Syria's civil war as two of his top priorities in the Middle East. On Wednesday,he men-

tioned them in only a cursory manner.

Cell

saidSeth Jones, a terrorism ex-

li died in the strike, and U.S. pert at the RAND Corp. officials have given differing Several of Obama's aides accounts about just how dose said Tuesday that the airstrRes the group was to mounting an against the Khorasan opera-

Iran after the U.S. war in Af-

ghanistan began in 2001, and the exact circumstances of the al-Qaida group in Iran have been one of the mysteries of the

post-Sept. 11 period. Iran's government said the any plothad of success.One senior U.S. official on Wednes- possiblyusing concealed explo- militants were living under day described the Khorasan sives to blow up airplanes. But house arrest, and U.S. intelliplotting as "aspirational" and other U.S. officials said that the gence agencies do not believe said that there did not yet seem plot was far from mature, and that Iran — a Shiite-majority to be a concrete plan in the that there was no indication country — ever considered an works. that Khorasan had settled on a alliance with a Sunni terrorist But the focus on the Kho- time or location for the attack network. Starting at the end of rasan Group in recent days has, — or even on the exact method the last decade, the al-Qaida at least for the moment, divert- of carrying out theplot. operatives began leaving Iran ed attention from the Islamic Some experts said it was for Pakistan, Afghanistan and State, the militant group whose more likely that U.S. spy agen- elsewhere. One of them, bin recent battlefield successes cies had developed specific in- Laden's son Saad, was killed in were Obama's original reason telligence about the location of a CIA drone strike in Pakistan attack,and about what chance

for launching airstrikes. It has

tives were launched to thwart an "imminent" terrorist attack,

al-Fadhli and others, and that

also underscored the enduring Obama hadordered the strike relevance of al-Qaida's lead- to kill the Khorasan operatives ership apparatus in Pakistan, before they could scatter. a group that Obama told the Osama bin Laden's death in United Nations on Wednesday 2011, together with the rise of hadbeenbadlybattered. al-Qaida affiliates in Yemen, "There's a contradiction Syriaand elsewhere, led some here," said Bruce Riedel, a analysts to conclude that al-Zaformer CIA analyst now at wahri, bin Laden's successor, the Brookings Institution. "If no longer had clout in the milithey are that decimated, why

she's viewed as a "dynamo," according to Emanuel — has contributed a lot to

her sense of self-worth but it has been a long journey for the woman who was

firm condusions about its ultimate goals. Intelligence of-

'

Grap

"I'm very outspoken now.

I don't stand there and let anyone get bullied," Dodge said. "I'm always for the person who can't stand up for themselves. The

w o rld's a

scary place when you have no power."

who would turn abusive

and controlling, Dodge said. With four kids and few job skills — not to men-

tion the voice of her family telling her to remain obedient to her husband — she

stayed for more than 10 years. "He had guns and let me know he would never let me leave with the kids," she said. "But I turned a c orner eventually and i t

became aboutkeeping my kids alive." In an escape

to the war in Syria that erupted in 2011 and that has since be-

that sounds like a movie

Connect Hearing

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YOUII HKARING PflOFESSIONALS

FORNIER LV LEAQB.D HBIRINIIAIDCENTER

1-888-568-9884

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Vacuums Bend 541-330-0420

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script, Dodge sought help from friends and escaped while he r

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located next to WholeFoods

,

541382-6447~2090NEWytrC t ~ S ' t 101 Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com

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tant world.

are we so alarmed when we In an age when savvy mildetect new evidence of their itants spread their messages activities?" using social media, al-Zawahri The paucity of public infor- rarely produces audio or video mation about the K horasan recordings of his pronounceGroup makes it hard to draw

raised to be, above all, a good girl. " My g r a ndpa w a s Sharing the message preacher and I was basiWhen the commercial procally raised by my grand- duction team arrived in Bend parents," Dodge said. "I on Sept. 23, it was serious busiwas very naive and broke away." HEARING AIDS She was married by 25, DOES to a fun, charming man EVERYONE

in2009. Others went farther afieldcome the epicenter of the jihadist world.

"It was a turning point. Later,

my son said, 'You know, he's Some days, S t acey not so big anymore.' I knew if Dodge says, she feels I ran again it would teach my like she has "vulnerable" kids to always be afraid." stamped on her forehead. She describes herself as a "But I'm working to get completely different person better and I feel like I'm from young Stacey. She enmaking progress," said the courages her kids to ask ques46-year-old single mother. tions and talk to her about evDodge's job as a produc- erything, something she could tion assistant at the Bend never do as a child. Goodwill store — w here

in Syria's vicious civil war, anAl-Sharikh and al-Fadhli alysts said that the Khorasan were once part of a cadre of Group's focus is on external al-Qaida operatives living in Continued from A1 That's when he announced attacks. Iran, facilitating the flow of "What core al-Qaida wanted money, weapons and fighthe had ordered an airstrike against it to disrupt what U.S. was some forward-deployed ers that moved from Iran, officials said was a terror plot people in Syria, which is an Afghanistan and Pakistan to aimed at the West. important battlefield for them Iraq. Many senior al-Qaida The U.S. government has yet because itis so close to Europe," operatives fled Afghanistan to to confirm whether al-Fadh-

HaVe yOLI

been suffering from dry eye'?

ments. Obama administration officials for years have boast-

ed that the CIA's campaign of drone strikes in Pakistan has believe that the group, although devastated al-Qaida's apparabased in Syria, answers ul- tus there, but the emergence of timately to a l -Zawahri a n d the Khorasan Group in Syria al-Qaida's core leadership in appears to indicate that al-ZaPakistan. They said that its size wahri's authority and influseemed to fluctuate, but that ence, however symbolic, enit consisted of approximately dure in some corners ofthe unitwo dozen operatives, most of verse of militant organizations. whom came to Syria from PaBesides al-Fadhli, who was kistan and Afghanistan begin- once one of bin Laden's close ning in 2012. advisers and who according to Once they arrived in Syria, the United Nations once fought members of the group estab- against the Russian governlished contacts with fighters ment in Chechnya, another ficials and terrorism experts

from the Nusra Front, a Syr-

top member of the Khorasan

ian rebel organization that is al-Qaida's official affiliate in Syria and one of myriad groups that formed in recent years to fight the government of Syria's president, Bashar Assad. While the Nusra Front remains primarily committed to fighting government troops for territory

Group is believed to be Abdul Mohsen Abdullah Ibrahim

-

g

• •

-

• •

al-Sharikh, a Saudi who also

arrived in Syria in 2013. In August, the Treasury Depart-

ment imposed sanctions on

al-Sharikh, describing him as one of the Nusra Front's "top strategists."

r olo


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbuiietin.com/iocai

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

BRIEFING Knight donates to Kitzhader Phil Knight, co-founder and chairmanof Oregon-basedNike,hasgiven $250,000 toDemocratic Gov. JohnKitzhaber's campaignfor afourth term. The donationis a political win for Kitzhaber and a reversalfor Knight, who backedKitzhaber's Republicanchallenger, Chris Dudley, in2010 with $400,000 incash contributions. In the racefor governor, Kitzhaberfaces Republicanchallenger Dennis Richardson,a state representative,and a handful of minorparty candidates inthe Nov.4 election. Knight andother Nike executiveshavebeen active in Oregon politics foryears. In 2012,Knight doled out contributions of $2,500and $5,000to dozens oflegislators and candidates, primarily in October. InDecemberof thatyear, Kitzhabercalled the Legislature intospecial session toapprove a tax deal for Nikeaheadof a $150-million expansion to its headquarters in WashingtonCounty. Knight hasbackedboth RepublicanandDemocratic candidates inlegislative andgubernatorial races andhasdonated to initiative efforts. Mark Parker,Nike's presidentandCEO, thankedKitzhaberand state andlocal leaders for helping "expediteand support the proposeddesign, planningandbuilding of theexpansion of our headquarters," according to acompanypressrelease fromApril 2013. SeeBriefing/B5

eason'sc an e rin s on -awaite rain • After what had been a drySeptember, showers in theforecast through Saturday

r

year.

-e.<

About 5,000 Pacific Power

customers in central Bend lost power for 30 minutes

tJ 'e

doused the region, howev-

The Bulletin

er, and the rainfall total for

Monday was the start of fall, and it didn't take long for

Wednesday and today is expected to reach a half-inch by this evening, according

a Pacific Power spokesman

to the National Weather

of Transportation sent out a

Service. The average precipitation

notice to Central Oregon residents Wednesday warning of fall weather affecting road conditions.

the weather to turn gray and wet in Central Oregon. Rain showers are expected

throughout this morning with a chance of thunderstorms this afternoon and this eve-

ning, according to the weather service. Rainfall is expected in the forecast through

Saturday night. September had been com-

pletely dry in Bend until Wednesday. Rain showers

tp' ~~

to crews whether the outage was caused by the weather,

for Bend in September is 0.43

inches. The last major rain event was Aug. 12-15. About

sard. The Oregon Department ' f'e e.

V

days. The year-to-date precipitation for Bend is 5.71 inches,

based on weather conditions

A pedestrian carrying an umbrella walks along a sidewalk on a rainy Wednesday afternoon in downtown Bend. The city had a

slightly less than an average 6.9 inches by this time of

and be extra cautious.

completely dry September until Wednesday, according to the

oin i a

SeeRainfall /B5

wi

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

National Weather Service.

a sm i e

The Bulletin

The lone campaign against the marijuana legalization initiative in Oregon has reported its first

campaign donation to what has been a relatively quiet

I

effort so far.

The group against Ballot Measure 91, which would legalize possession ofupioa

,:) Is )iy

pV4 ssnabC4~« ,u

es

iffs' Association on Friday.

ss

Kim Miller, right, and her daughter Traci Doyel sort donations from members of the community at their home in Bend on Wednesday. "We have a friend that lost everything in Weed, so we decided kitchenware, bed sets and toys. No more large donations are being accepted, but the family is looking for donations of a moving truck and gas money to transport all the donations down to Weed. For more

3. Deception Complex • Acres: 7,801 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Lightning 4. 790 Fire

• Acres: 3,023 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Lightning 5. Onion Mountain • Acres: 4,123 • Containment: 80% • Cause: Unknown

Correction In a story headlined nDeBone,Barramdiscuss charter," whichappeared Wednesday,Sept. 24,on Page B1,Jodie Barram's statement aboutthecity of Bend needing toraise rates in asustainable fashion wasincorrectly presented. Barramwas referring to water rates and not tax rates.The Bulletin regrets theerror.

No on 91 also report-

ed spending more than $21,000 on what maybe the first poll since a SurveyUSA poll in June showed 51 percent of respondents favored legalization while 41 percent were opposed. Results of the latest poll were not available.

The group is made up mostly of law enforcement groups such as the sheriffs' association and all of Oregon's 36 district attorneys, and it's going against several groups that have raised millions of dollars. The opponents have also sustained

information, contact Miller at 541-480-7910.

setbacks on multiple fronts. Karen Wheeler, manager

latest information, visit

• Acres: 5,508 • Containment: 55% • Cause: Humancaused

Oregon, reported a $100,000 donation from the Oregon State Sher-

p

to help everyone," Miller said. The donations range from men's, women's and children's clothing to

2. 36 Pit

of mariadultsin

asl

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

• http://inciweb.nwcg. gev/state/38 • www.nwccweb.us/ infermatien/firemap. aspx 1. Scoggins Creek • Acres: 211 • Containment: 100% • Cause: Unknown

haif-p ound

ELECTION juanafor

• ssn

Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the

Anti-pot group gets donation By Taylor W.Anderson

~

FIRE UPDATE

ci

motorists, pedestrians and bicyclists plan for extra traveling time, adjust their speed

0.63 inches fell over three

c~<':

'ttsad

d

f

+p

The statement suggests

sa

)~jk"ef" 'll

p

e tast

Wednesday. It was unclear

By Ted Shorack

u

of the Oregon Addictions and Mental Health division,

sent an email to countydrug

JEFFERSON COUNTY

prevention departments

oin orwar wit a newcourt ouse By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

MADRAS — Jefferson County will seek more state

warning themnot touse federal money for anything that couldbe considered lob-

Ahern said the county has been working closely with its

Deputies routinely transport

provided the initial $4 million in state assistance, and even

bying or political activity. The division was also going to send two people to moderate a stop of what's called the Oregon Marijua-

inmates through the corridors

if it survives, it's unlikely the

na Tour before announc-

architect and contractor to

occupied by other visitors to the building. And, the building

county will have an answer on its request for additional funding until August. Regardless, the county plans to break ground on the courthouse in the spring and

ing in August that it was backing out because some of the speakers were notoriously opposed to marijuana legalization. "Because of the timing of the series as well as the

Commissioner Mike

or other security features.

money to help it build a new courthouse, but intends to push ahead regardless of what answer it receives from Salem. Wednesday, county com-

parethecostoftheproposed three-courtroomcourthouse to $15 million. A program providing state funds to counties undertaking courthouse

Jefferson County Courthouse

missioners and members

improvements will chip in $4 million, Ahern said, while the

structurally deficient. Commissioner John Hat-

county plans to submit new

field said the proposed court-

move into the new facility in fall 2016. Councilors and commis-

requests for an additional $2.3 million.

house should be adequate for

sioners also heard a presen-

have a reputation for taking a political stance, we decid-

the next 40 to 50 years. Ahern said it is rumored

tation from Zach Ackley and

ed not to participate our-

Tim Causey from Deer Ridge

that legislators are looking to eliminate the program that

Correctional Institution.

selves," said Rebeka Gipson-King, spokeswoman

of the Madras City Council met in a joint session to hear updates on the courthouse

and on changes made at Deer Ridge Correctional Institution in the wake of an early May escape.

The current courthouse, built in 1961, has two court-

rooms andno metal detectors

sits in an identified flood plain. In 2008, a review of state

court facilities deemed the

See Courthouse/B5

choiceofspeakers that

for the addictions division.

Four legislators, two from Portland and two from

Eugene, filed a complaint

Bend City Councicandi l datesdon't seeeyeto eye By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

Bend City Council can-

Nttt= Npv. 4 ~

ELE CTIPN

didates Barb Campbell and Scott Ramsay both tout their experience managing small businesses as proof of their ability to make good financial

Campbell, who is challenging the incumbent Ramsay,

decisions for the city.

said that Ramsay supported

But there is also plenty on which the candidates disagree.

unnecessarily expensive water and sewer projects that

bentibulletin.com/electiens

forced the city to raise utility

with the elections division over the tour. The lawmakers alleged the tour would

use public resources and that public employees were

rates. The city will raise sewer

to raise utility rates, and that

working to defeat the mea-

left the city short of the money

sure during working hours.

rates by 9 percent and water

it needed for major infrastructure upgrades.

A Beaverton woman, Jennifer Alexander, filed a

The seat for which Ramsay

similar complaint with the elections division Sept.8. asking the division to provide its take on whether the

rates by 5 percent Oct. 1 for all customers, which will increase by more than $5 the total monthly utility bill for an average residential customer,

and Campbell are running is one of three that are up for election in November.

according to the city. There are seven seats on For his part, Ramsay has the nonpartisan Bend City said previous city officials Council. failed to make tough decisions See Election/B2

tour is considered political advocacy, and therefore in

violation of election laws. SeeMeasure 91/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

NEWS OF RECORD

EVXNT

ENm a

at 3:14 a.m.Sept. 21, inthe area of Hunnell andRobal roads. Criminal mischief —Anact of The Bulletin will update items in the criminal mischief wasreported at Police Logwhensuch arequest 9:27 a.m. Sept. 21, inthe 200block of is received. Anynewinformation, NE10th Street. such asthe dismissal of charges Criminal mischief —Anact of or acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117. criminal mischief wasreported at 11:12 a.m.Sept. 21, inthe 400 block of NW Riverside Boulevard. BEND POLICE Criminal mischief —Anact of DEPARTMENT criminal mischief wasreported at 11:36a.m. Sept.21, inthe 20400 Criminal mischief — Anact of block of lllaheeDrive. criminal mischief wasreported at Theft —A theft was reported at 2:53 9:56p.m.Sept.22,inthe200 block p.m. Sept. 21, inthe 600 block of NE of NW Riverside Boulevard. Fourth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at Criminal mischief —Anact of 11:49 p.m.Sept. 22, inthe areaof criminal mischief wasreported at PowerhouseDrive. 9:09a.m. Sept. 22, in the1000 block Criminal mischief — An act of of NW CumberlandAvenue. criminal mischief wasreported at Criminal mischief —Anact of 1:53 p.m. Sept. 23, in the200block criminal mischief wasreported at of NW Riverside Boulevard. 9:43 a.m. Sept. 22, in thearea of Criminal mischief — An act of CommerceAvenueandSWColumbia criminal mischief wasreported at Street. 2:11 p.m.Sept. 21, inthe 500 block of Theft —Atheft was reported at SW Industrial Way. 10:56 a.m.Sept. 22, in the62600 Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:43 block of HawkviewRoad. p.m. Sept. 22, in the1300 blockof Criminal mischief — Anact of NW Wall Street. criminal mischief wasreported at Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was 11:54a.m. Sept. 22, in the700 block reported stolen at7:40a.m. Sept. of NW DelawareAvenue. 21, in the100 block of SW Roosevelt Criminal mischief —Anact of Avenue. criminal mischief wasreported at Unlawful entry — Avehicle was 2:47p.m.Sept.22,inthe400 block reported entered at9:32 a.m. Sept. of NW Franklin Avenue. 23, in the 63000 block of Layton Avenue. PRINEVILLE Criminal mischief — An act of POLICE criminal mischief wasreported at 2:49p.m.Sept.22,inthe300 block DEPARTMENT of SE WoodlandBoulevard. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was Theft —A theft and anact of criminal reported entered at12:54 p.m.Sept. mischief were reported at10:24 a.m. 20, in the 61100block of Geary Drive. Sept. 23, in thearea of NWVista View Road. Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:48 p.m. Sept. 20, in the1300 block of Theft —Atheft was reported at NW Federal Street. 2:42 p.m. Sept. 23, in thearea of NW Madras Highway. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:27 p.m. Sept. 20, in thearea of BroadwayandAdams roads. BEND FIRE RUNS DUII —William Henry Kite Jr., 37, was arrested onsuspicion of driving Monday under the influence ofintoxicants at 2:01 a.m. —Trashfire,19739Aspen 10:17 p.m. Sept. 20, in the2600 block Ridge Drive. of NE U.S.Highway 20. 17 —Medical aid calls. Criminal mischief — An act of Tuesday criminal mischief wasreported at 6:18p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 1:52 a.m. Sept. 21, inthe areaof 1361 NWFederal St. Century Drive andElder RidgeStreet. 7:02p.m.—Unauthorized burning, DUII —Anthony PaulAnderson, 33, 60244 WinnebagoLane. was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants 25 —Medical aid calls.

POLICE LOG

TODAY SMARTART, SHOW,SALE, SOCIAL:Featuring an art contest, raffles, live auction and music; proceeds benefit Start Making A Reader Today programs; $10 or a new hardcover children's book, reservation recommended; 5 p.m.; Aspen Hall,18920 NWShevlin Park Road, Bend; www.bendparksandrec. org, dturnbull©getsmartoregon.org or 541-355-5600. TEACHERS'NIGHTOUT:Teacher appreciation night and community resource fair for Central Oregon educators and school administration; free; 6-8 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. AUTHOR!AUTHOR!:Jess Walter, author of "Beautiful Ruins," will speak; $20; 7 p.m.; BendHigh School, 230 NESixth St.; www. dplfoundation.org or 541-312-1027. "GOD OFCARNAGE": A play by YasminReza abouta playground altercation between two boys and the tensions that emerge; $15, $12 for seniors and students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. ARMCHAIRSTORYTELLING: Featuring several storytellers sharing personal stories; $10 in advance only; 7:30p.m.,doorsopenat7 p.m .;Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Bend; www tinpantheater.com or 541-241-2271. BEND COMEDYSHOWCASE: Featuring Central Oregon female

comics; $5inadvance,$8at the door; 8 p.m.; TheSummit Saloon & Stage,125 NWOregon Ave.; www.bendcomedy.com, scotti e©cocomedyscene.com or 480-257-6515. PATCHYSANDERS:The Ashland seven-piece folk band performs, with Brothers Reed; free; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

FRIDAY MT. BACHELORKENNELCLUB ALL BREED AGILITYTRIALS: More than120 dogs of different breeds race through a timed obstacle course; free; 11a.m.-5 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www.mbkc.org or 541-388-4979. "THE BOXTROLLS": Showingof the 2014 stop-motion animation film, Morgan Hayfrom Laika will present and bring puppets from the film; $7.50, $7 for children12 and younger, $7 for seniors 65 and older; 2:30 p.m.; Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court; www.sistersmoviehouse.com/or 541-549-8833. SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade AvenueandAsh Street;

sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com.

Andy Tullie /The Bulletin filephoto

The Corn Maize and Pumpkin Patch, featuring an 8-acre Godziila corn maze, a market with pumpkin

cannons, zoo train, pony rides andmore, is coming Smith Rock Ranch this Friday in Terrebonne. VFW DINNER: Fishand chips;$6;3-7 p.m.; VFWHall, 1503 NEFourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. MISSIONCHURCH FALL FESTIVAL: Featuring hay rides, pumpkin decorating, a mechanical bull and more; free; 4-8 p.m.; Taylor Ranch, 22465 McArdle Road, Bend; www.experiencethehighlife.com, info©mymissionchurch.org or 541-306-6209. REDMOND KIWANIS OKTOBERFEST:Over 30 craft beers on tap, plus wines and ciders; live music, games andsilent auction; free admission; 4-10 p.m.; Wild Ride Brewing Co., 332 SWFifth St.; 541-980-2040. BEND ROOTS REVIVAL: A festival that celebrates and showcases the musical, artistic and cultural character of our community; free; 5:30 p.m.-1 a.m.; Deschutes Brewery's lower warehouse, 399 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive; www.bendroots. net. CITIES UNDERFIRE: TheChristian band from Canadaperforms; free; 6 p.m.; American Legion Community Park, 850SW RimrockWay, Redmond. DOUBLEFEATURE: "UNTRAMMELED"AND"THE MEANING OF WILD": Featuring a showing of two films, presented by Deschutes National Forest and Discover Your Forest; free; 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. "THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY": Alfred Hitchcock's comedic whodunit about Harry Worp, who appears dead on a hillside by asmall town, presented by BendExperimental Art Theatre; $15, $10for students; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.beattickets.org or 541-419-5558. REDWOOD SON:ThePortland

Americana band performs, with The Revelry; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond

St., Bend;www.mcmenamins.comor

541-382-5174. "GOD OFCARNAGE":A play by YasminReza abouta playground altercation between two boys and the tensions that emerge; $15, $12 for seniors and students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.

MARKET:Featuring local artists and crafters; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lotacross from Downtown Bend Public Library, 600 NW Wall St.; 541-420-9015. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN PATCH:An 8-acre Godzilla corn maze with pumpkin patch and market

featuring pumpkincannons, zootrain,

pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages 5and younger for Corn Maize; $2.50 for most other activities; 10 a.m.-7 p.m., pumpkin patch open until 6 p.m.; Smith Rock Ranch, 1250 NE Wilcox Ave., HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC SERIES: Featuring Vanchestein-Park- Terrebonne; www.smithrockranch. Vanhauwaert Trio; $35, $10 students com/or 541-504-1414. and children age18and younger; 7:30 CRAZY MAMACRAFTFAIRE: p.m., doorsopenat 6:30 p.m.; Tower Featuring 70 local craft vendors and Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; artists; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; BendFactory www.highdesertchambermusic.com, Stores, 61334 S. U.S.Highway 97; info©highdesertchambermusic.com sewsavvymp©hotmail.comor or 541-317-0700. 541-848-0334. CRUTCHES: The Seattle punk band DD RANCHFARMFESTIVAL: performs, with Frustration, E.F A. Featuring hay rides, pony rides, kids' and Hog's Breath; free; 8 p.m.; Third corral, petting zoo and live music; Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; proceeds benefit the Opportunity 541-306-3017. Foundation; $35 per vehicle; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; DDRanch, 3836 NE Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; www. ddranch.net or 541-548-2611. SATURDAY SEVENPEAKS SCHOOLGARAGE SALE:Sale to benefit the school's Sparrow, or child in need inCentral Oregon; free; 8 a.m.-2 p.m., donations will be accepted Sept. 26 from12 p.m.-3 p.m.; SevenPeaksSchool, 19660SW MountaineerW ay,Bend;

Get A Taste For Food. Home 8r Sarden Every Tuesday In AT HOME TheBulletin

i • t

I•

I

www.sevenpeaksschool.orgor 541-318-6373. MT. BACHELORKENNELCLUB ALL BREEDAGILITYTRIALS: More than120 dogs of different breeds race through a timed obstacle course; free; 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S.Main St., Prineville; www.mbkc.org or 541-388-4979. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY

The most comprehensive visitors' guide in the tri-county area, this

colorful, slick-stock-covered, information-packed magazine is distributed through Central

Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It iS alSOOffered to DeSChLIteS

NAME:Barb Campbell

NAME:Scott Ramsay

AGE:50

AGE:48

RESIDENCE: Bend EDUCATION: bachelor's degree in biology and psychology from the University of Denveranddid graduate studies in education at Eastern OregonUniversity GOV/CIVICEXPERIENCE:co-founder of the traffic advocacy group Slower Safer Bend; provides free activities and asafe meeting space for kids at her downtown store, Wabi Sabi

RESIDENCE: Bend EDUCATION: LaneCommunity College GDV/CIVICEXPERIENCE:elected to the City Council in 2010; board member at nonprofit Economic Development for Central Oregon; member of the city of BendEconomic Development Advisory Board; member of the Deschutes County Public Safety Coordinating Council; member of the City of BendAccessibility Advisory Committee; member of the Tower Theatre Advisory Committee

Election

strategy to maintain quality

Continued from B1

ple, Campbell said the City

Barb Campbell

Council could have kept water rates lower if it had select-

of life in the city. For exam-

As Campbell noted, Ramsay supported large city utility projects that city employees have described as necessary to catch up to the

Campbell owns a Japa- ed a less costly option to treat nese-themed store c alled drinking water for microorWabi S ab i i n do w n t own ganisms.Bend faces afederal Bend, and she previously requirement to begin treating r an unsuccessfully in t h e water it t akes from B ridge

needs of a growing population after years of inadequate

and 'Ittmalo creeks. The City cilor Tom Greene's seat. She Council voted 4-3 in 2013 to is a co-founder of Slower proceed with a filtration plant

take equipment west of Bend,

2012 election for then-Coun-

Safer Bend, a group formed to monitor speeding in city neighborhoods. Slower Safer Bend worked with the city to

get speed signs installed in high-traffic n eighborhoods around Bend.

"I think the biggest challenge is quality of life, which s tarts with w hether or n o t

people are able to find a good job, whether or not t hey're

able to find a good place to live," Campbell said. There is a short supply of rental housing, "and utility rates are skyrocketing," Campbell said. Campbelladvocated keeping water and sewer rates low during her 2012 campaign, and said this is still a key

Ramsay, and his parents, Ed and Cathy. He successfully ran for election in 2010, with

a campaign that highlighted his business experience.

i I INII

111 WAYS TO DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON IS ACOMPREHENSIVE GUIDE to places, events and activities taking place throughout Central Oregon during the year. Both locals as well as visitors to the area will discover the services and products your business has tooffer when you advertise in this publication.

giS

CEI~RA| .OREG0N

investment. These included the water treatment plant and

a new pipeline and water in-

which has an estimated price tag of $24 million. Existing that could cost up to $33.5 pipelines that supply city million to complete. Bend had drinking water were built in already spent at least $5 mil- the 1920s and 1950s and have lion to design the project by begun to break. fall 2013. Campbell said the Ramsay said the most imcity could have saved money portant issue for Bend offiby opting to treat drinking cials at the moment is finishwater with ultraviolet light, ing the plan to expand the which could cost an estimat- city's urban growth boundary "in the timeline we outed $12 million to $14 million. lined at (City) Council." The Scott Ramsay city's goal is t o c omplete Ramsay is president of the project by spring 2016. his family's business, Sun Ramsay said the key will Mountain Fun Center, where he works with his wife, Gitta

County Expo Center visitors all year round.

be for city officials to make

sure they stay on track and avoid "wandering or rabbit holes we can go down in this process." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin To Reserve Your Ad Space call

541-38 2-1 81 1 h

www.bendbulletin.com


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

E3

REGON

nersae cras i s us a n 0

0

AROUND THE STATE Life Sentanoa —AnOregonjudge hassentenced a31-yearold man to life in prison for fatally stabbing his wife's ex-husband. Marcos Pico has no possibility of parole for 25 years. He wassentenced Wednesday in ClackamasCounty Circuit Court in the Dec. 13, 2011, death of Jonathan Waldorf. The victim was ambushed and stabbed 16 times by anattacker dressed in black as Waldorf arrived home in an upscale Damascus subdivision late at night. Jurors were told that Pico is married to Waldorf's ex-wife, Stevanie. Waldorf and Stevanie Pico were in the middle of a child-custody dispute when Waldorf was killed.

an ci c ommissioner

By Steven Dubois The Associated Press

PORTLAND — Th e h us-

band of Portland City Com-

OSU jainS Campaign —Oregon State University has joined the national campaign to combat sexual assaults on college campuses. In a letter Tuesday to students, faculty and staff, OSUPresident Ed Ray announced the university has signed onto It's On Us, the sexual assault education and prevention campaign promoted last week by the Obamaadministration. The goal is to enlist the entire campus community to prevent sexual assaults.

missioner Amanda Fritz died

Wednesday in a multi-vehide wreck on Interstate 5 in Salem. The Oregon Department of

Transportation said the crash happened shortly before 8 a.m., a time when drivers are

commuting to state government jobs.

TeenS Charged —Corvallis police say two juveniles who had been smoking marijuana in a park have beencharged for what prosecutors say were their roles in starting a Sept. 5 fire that burned 86 acres of public and private land. The 15-year-old and 16-year-old have beencharged with misdemeanor counts in juvenile court.

Dana Haynes, the spokes-

man for Portland Mayor Charlie Hales, confirmed the death of Steven Fritz. The 54-year-

— From wire reports

old was a psychiatrist at the Oregon State Hospital. The city council meeting scheduled for Wednesday was

Visit Central Oregon's

Find It All Online

:)tsia

canceled. "My heart goes out to Comm issioner A m a n d a Fri t z

E238032

and her family, " Gov. John Kitzhaber said in a statement. "Her husband Dr. Steve Fritz dedicated himself to the ser-

vice of those in need." Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian Oregon State Police Lt. Emergency crews work at the scene of a multiple-car crash, just south of the Portland Road overpass, Gregg Hastings said it was in the southbound lanes of Interstate 5 on Wednesday in Salem. raining hard when a small pickup traveling northbound collided with a tanker trailer. Mayor Hales said Wednesday The crash stopped traffic The pickup then crossed the afternoon that Fairchild, 64, during the morning commute, Find Your Dream Home grass median into the south- is a mental health specialist at but all lanes were reopened by bound lane, where it struck

the state hospital and her hus-

a zebra-striped 1993 Nissan band works for Portland Fire Sentra driven by Fritz. and Rescue. Two other southbound veThe driver of the pickup and hicles got caught in the crash, two people in another vehicle Hastings said. were also taken to a hospital. Fritz died at the scene and Hastings said investigators his passenger, Cary Marie have yet to determine what Fairchild, was taken to Salem caused the pickup to collide Hospital with critical injuries.

with the commercial truck.

• • •

2008. She previously worked as a registered psychiatric nurse.

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"Amanda is aware of the

outpouring of condolences," the mayor said. "And she is deeply appreciative of everyone's thoughts."

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Uo Oen scasses withnu emo els The Associated Press EUGENE — The Universi-

dedined to say more about the decision.

ty of Oregon has put an end to A leader of what's known as weekly sessions where com- the SaturdayFigure Drawing munity artists can sketch nude Group describesthe sessions models.

L

as calm and quiet, so it's not

An administrator says the why there's a concern free Saturday sessions have dear about safety. The group's sesdrawn increasing attention, sions have been held since the and the school can't afford to mid-l990s. pay for more security in an The school has classes with "unstructured and u n-monitored environment."

Eugene Register-Guard reports that school officials have

'sSI isna

nude models, but those are for enrolled students and not open

A Niagazine Highlighting the Variety of Organizations That ConnectYour Community.

to the general public.

Central Oregon communities continue to grow due to a nationally-recognized appreciation for the region's quality of life. From providing the mostbasic needs offood, shelterand security, to creating and maintaining positive social, educational, recreational and professional environments, Central Oregon's nonprofit community is a foundation for our

t.

Medford City Council readies marijuanatax The Associated Press

tion if it enacts the tax before MEDFORD — I f O r egon thestatemeasure passes. voters approve recreational The state of Oregon would

marijuana, Medford will be ready to tax it. The Medford City Council

also tax marijuana, so any city tax would be on top of that. mulative tax that would have

The Mail Tribune reports the council may vote before

a potential maximum of 18

state voters decide Ballot Mea-

ed frommarijuana producers, wholesalers, processors, re-

sure 91. Deputy City Attorney Kevin McConnell said the city would be in a better legal posi-

percent that would be collecttailers and medical marijuana facilities.

us~

Through the publication of Connections, The Bulletin will both define and profile the organizations that make up this network. Connections will provide readers with a thorough look at nonprofit organizations in Deschutes, Jefferson, and Crook Counties.

SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 5th CALL 541.382.1811 TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY. I '

Homeless manstabbed in YaquinaStatePark The Associated Press

The man underwent surgery and is expected to survive. in Newport say a homeless He told police he was drinkNEWPORT — Authorities

I

I

ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS The Bulletin is in theprocess ofverifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon.Pleasefill out this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail backIo: The Bulletin, Attn: Kari Matiser, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. E-mail information to kmatiser©beiiddtilletin.com or call 541-382-1811 ext.404 Name of Nonprofit Group

man was stabbed in the back

ing with another man at Fish-

of the neck by another transient staking out a state park gazebo as "his area." The Eugene Register-Guard reports the 47-year-old victim was bleeding profusely Tuesday night when he staggered into a restaurant where off-du-

erman's Memorial Gazebo in

Contact Person

Yaquina State Park. He said the other man claimed the

Phone

gazebo and lashed out with a knife. Police arrested 29-year-old Ty Owen Brown on attempted murder and other charges. ty officers attending a confer- They said he had a 6-inch ence among the patrons and knife. Brown told police the rendered aid. stabbing was in self-defense.

of organizations and thousands of volunteers make up this nonprofit network.

yr

considered an ordinance TuesThe proposed Medford orday night that would impose a dinance would create a cucity tax of 6 to 18 percent.

area's success and sustainabiTity. Hundreds

Lti

E-mail

Nonprofit Mission Statement/Purpose


B4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

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ores ervice a ou 0 ro on Irs men men

„INIL 8'

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he U.S. Forest Service is badly going where so many have tried to go before — undermining the First Amendment. It's finalizing rules to give it more power to decide what the media can take pictures or video of in the wilderness. Permits would be required, costing up to $1,500. Fines for those not having a permit could be up to $1,000. The problem is that the rules are so overbroad and vague. The Forest Service could use this authority to shut down news photos or video of any stories that it decided were not positiveenough. We guess they read the First Amendment differently than most people where it says: "shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press." The Forest Service says the rules areproposed to preventcommercial activities in the wilderness and to keep the wilderness wild and untrammeled. There is also an exception for"breaking news." But even that breaking news exception is problematic. What is breaking news? Who is going to set

the definition'? The Forest Service? A wildfire or a rescue might be an easy decision. Of course, during fires and to a lesser extent during rescues,the Forest Service or fire and rescue officials already tell the media whereitcan and cannot go. So we are not sure that is an exception to anything. There have also been problems with the Forest Service's existing temporary rules. For instance, in 2010, the Forest Service would not let Idaho Public Television film a student conservation crew, The Oregonian reported. The agency relented after pressure from the Idaho governor.Should the media need to get a governor involved when it wants to cover a story? The Forest Service is trying to fulfill its responsibility to protect the wilderness. But this version of its rules could easily be contorted to protect the agency from unwanted media coverage and interferes with dear protections under the First Amendment.

State graduation rates to get an artificial boost regon is likely to see a 2 percent increase in its high school graduation rate next time it is calculated, even if no real change occurs in the percentage of students who earn degrees. That's the result of the state's decision to include modified diplomas, whichhavebeen omitted inthepast, in its overall graduation rates. The move follows the state's success in tightening requirements for the modified diplomas and convincing the federal education department that the result is "a recognized equivalent of a high school diploma," accordingto The Oregonian newspaper. The most immediate benefit will be access to federal financial aid for those who earn modified diplomas and seek financial help to attend community college. That's a worthy goal to help students who can make good use of post-high school training and otherwise couldn't pay for it. The result will also cause confusion in comparing graduation rates from year to year, an issue of some importanceinastatewidelycriticized for having one of the worst four-year graduation rates in the nation. The new rates will requite an asterisk everytimethey'rerefevenced, to explain

what percentage can be attributed to the additionof modified diplomas. Modified diplomas are earned by students with learning difficulties or medical conditions that prevent them from keeping up with grade-level learning. The modified diploma allows students to earn some of their credilsfmmspecialeducationdasses. The new calculations will still excludeextended diplomas, GEDs and certificates of attendance, The Oregoman reported. Graduationrates have assumed growing importance in the political arena, partly because they are used as shorthand to judge school districts' success, but alsobecause Gov. John Kitzhaberfocused on them in his school reforms. His 40-40-20 goal aims at having 100 percent of students earn a high school diploma by 2025. That's a tall order in a state where the 2013 figure was 68.7 percent, a tiny increase over the previous year's 68.4. Oregon was ranked second worst in the nation for 2012, according to one of the several ways to calculate graduation rates. Earning a high school diploma is a critical step, but educators need to focus onpreparingstudents for what happens next. That means ensuring all graduates are fully prepared for jobsorforadvanced education.

u to si By Courtland MIlloy

In a society wherepeople are reading less and watching more videos, the

The Washington Post

A

t , o ut o m i n

cellphone video captures the image of a man as he illegally entered the White House

front door last week. As a result, the public is now engaged in a spirited debate about how best to improve

influence of the visual over

our behavior will only grow.

security at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Too bad there was no video of the White House shooting in 2011. A

missing in that college town. In gunman out to kill President Barack those cases, there were only photoObama strafed the second and third graphs of the victims. Media coverfloors of the White House, on the age quickly waned, as did public insouth side where the president and terest in making the streets of Charhis family live. There were news lottesville safer. accounts, but not as many as you Maybe interest will be rekindled might expect, and pitifully few fol- now that one of the missing women low-ups on the arrest of the shooter. has been "humanized" by video. And there was virtually no pubIn Ferguson, Missouri, where

what gets our attention and moves us to act is the graphic and grotesque. Just look at what has happened since fanatics in the Middle East began posting beheadings on YouTube. Suddenly a war-weary nation ramps up for the "war on terror" anew.

The ugliness of domestic violence is only recognized after an elevator camera catches a football player punching his fiancee. And what about all of those fa-

thers and mothers going on rampages in recent months and killing everyone in their families? There

was another Friday: A 51-year-old Florida man killed his daughter and six grandchildren before killing himself. Where is the outcry over these atrocities?

lic discussion about preventing that

an unarmed 18-year-old, Michael

kind of security breach. Such is the power of the video. In a society where people are reading less and watching more videos, the influence of the visual over our behavior will only grow. The search for 18-year-old Hannah Graham, a University of Virginia student who disappeared Sept. 13,

Brown, was fatally shot by police

At least 450 children a year are

last month, black youths have be-

murderedby their parents,according to a recent USA Today analysis

gun wearing body cameras to record their encounters with police.

of FBI statistics, with three out of

If they are mistreated, the camer-

fourofthem under 5yearsold. as would help them prove their case. But there is no video of those David Whitt, a spokesman for the mostly normal-looking dads as they California-based company that dis- go around the house blowing the tributed the cameras, told the Asso- kids' brains out. So we dismiss their intensified as media continued to ciated Press that the devices would actions as "unfathomable," while show three surveillance videos that give black residents the ability to accepting easier-to-grasp images were released by police in Charlot- "challenge the police narrative." from an elevator camera or a video tesville. Hopefully the attention will

Never mind that statistics com-

lead to her whereabouts and a safe piled by the Missouri attorney general's office show a decadelong return to her family. You'd like to think that anyone pattern of police misconduct in who went missing would warrant Ferguson. Blacks have been beaten, the same dedication and concern. racially profiled while driving and We shouldn't have to see Hannah's pulled over at rates much higher face on a security video to feel the than white drivers. And yet, whites nightmare that her parents were go- are caught with far more contraing through. Just knowing that she band than blacks. is missing should be enough. But the numbers and testimony of However, during the past five residents have not been enough. It years, four other women have gone has to be on video to be real. Sadly,

of a man running across the White

House lawn. The security video made the NFL the face of domestic violence and

Ray Rice the focal point of debate among fans and foes over whether his behavior was to be condemned

orexcused. Seeing is believing. Out of sight means out of mind. Surely there are better ways to comprehend reality. Blind people don't need sight to do right. Why do we?

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: leiters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

I srae's New Year starts wit more o o s e By Daniel GordIs Bloomberg News

srael has moved on from this sum-

mer's war. The press has been ocused on budget battles, illegal immigrants and other matters. As is

always the case before the beginning of the Jewish New Year, Israelis are interested in how far Israel has come,

and what still needs tobe done. In a country that began 66 years ago with just 806,000 citizens (approximately the size of Indianapolis, Indiana, today), population statistics are still a source of ongoing interest. This year'snumber is8,904,373 — Israel just barelymissed hittingthe nine-million mark. Still, it's a 10-fold increase

in six and a half decades, an astonishing accomplishment. To the extent that the Gaza War had lately been in

the news, ironically, it had to do with poverty. Asbeforeeveryma jorJewish holiday, newspapers focused on the number of poor Israelis for whom holiday food would be scarce;thisyear,

though, slow distribution of funds and tion — just a sense of dosure. I heard food was blamed in part on the war. more than one person say, "It's good Tuesday morning, however, all of for those boys' parents — they get to that changed, when we woke up to a enter Rosh Hashanah at least know-

compared to his successor Hassan

Nasrallah, he now seems like an amateur. Thus, this morning's news was no cause for high-fives or flag waving. reminder of how the Gaza War actu- ing that their kids' killers are dead." We saw the domino syndrome even ally started. The alleged murderers But it was a muted relief, not the sort today. Whatever momentary satisof the three Israeli boys kidnapped of public displays of joy that erupt- faction there might have been knowin June were dead, killed by securi- ed in the U.S. following the killing of ing the manhunt was over and that ty forces in their hideout in Hebron. Osama bin Laden. Israelis didn't even cold-blooded killers would never kill It was cut and dried; even Hamas celebrate when Sheikh Ahmed Yas- again, it all quiddy turned into woracknowledged that they were dead, sin, the founder of Hamas, was finally ry when the"moderate" Mahmoud and made no effort to protest their killed in 2004 after several attempts. Abbas-led P a lestinian A u t h ority innocence. Thousands of Palestinians took to the announced that because of the IDF Unspoken, but clear to all, was the streets of Gaza City after that killing, operation, it would boycott the upfact that no one here wanted the ter- but Israelis went about their business. coming Cairo talks mandated by the rorists arrested. The boys' parents In large measure, that is because Is- terms of the cease-fire with Hamas. acknowledged openly that they were raelis have no illusions. There will be Was the quiet going to end? Thankrelieved that the killers had not been other murderers; life in this region is a fully not. Even Abbas had previouscaught alive. When the terrorists were dangerous and depressing form of the ly condemned the kidnappings. So surrounded, the Israeli Defense Forc- children's Whac-a-Mole game. the threat to boycott the talks was a es opened with heavy fire, and then, The stakes of not getting the "mole" lame bluff ,andthe PA quickly backed when the two refused to surrender are deadly. But so, too, ironically, down. and shot back, the IDF fired a rocket at are the stakes of succeeding. AbFor now, then, all quiet on the souththe house. That was that. bas al-Musawi, the Hezbollah leader ern front. But not so in the north. Just At the cafes and in the small neigh- whom Israel assassinated in 1992, hours after news of the shootout in borhood markets, there was no exulta- was considered a fearsome threat; but Hebron, we learned that for the first

time since 1982, Israel had shot down a Syrian fighter jet that crossed into Israeli airspace. There's nothing amusing about what is unfolding in Syria, but the Syrian leadership came closer to providing just a bit of levity today when it insisted that the downing of

the plane was consistent with Israel's ongoing support for Islamic State. That levity was a rarity, however. After a very bloody and depressing summer, the last thing Israelis want

is another conflagration on another front. But in this tinderbox region, we know, dear red lines make a differ-

ence. Draw one but then ignore it, and your deterrent edge is gone. Unlike Jan. 1 in the West, Rosh Ha-

shanah is not a holiday of revelry. It's a quiet day of reflection, of looking back, of gazing forward. — Daniel Gordisis seniorvice president and Koret distinguished fellow at Shalem Collegein Jerusalem. He is the author of "Menachem Begin: The Battle for IsraeI's Soul" and "The Promise of Israel."



B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

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

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HIGH 64'

ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 71 37'

63' 39'

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Oct 1

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THE PLANETS T he Planets R i se Mercury 9:20 a.m. Venus 6:15 a.m. Mars 12:45 p.m. Jupiter 2:46 a.m. Saturn Uranus

Set 7: 3 6 p.m. 6: 4 7 p.m. 9 : 3 9 p.m. 5 : 0 9 p.m. 8: 5 9 p.m. 8: 0 9 a.m.

11:00 a.m. 7:21 p.m.

UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon

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POLLEN COUNT G rasses Absent ~

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WATER REPORT As of 7 n.m.yesterday

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Yesterday Today Fridny

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Yesterday Today Friday Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W

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Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 60/42/0.00 57/45/sh 58/49/r 70/58/0.04 80/61/s 80/58/pc 74/46/0.00 74/49/s

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78/57/s 86/55/s

80/60/pc 75/52/s 73/56/s 82/62/I 53/29/s

82/62/pc 74/50/I 76/51/pc

74/50/pc 75/59/pc 77/53/s 77/52/pc

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78/68/0.75 48/41/0.04 Ottawa 72/46/0.00 Paris 64/45/0.02 Riu de Janeiro 90/66/0.00 Rome 75/63/0.02 Santiago 57/45/0.00 Snu Paulo 88/63/0.00 Snppnro 67/54/0.06 Seoul 75/66/0.06 Shanghai 77/70/0.02 Singapore 86/81/0.79 Stockholm 46/28/0.22 Sydney 74/50/0.02 Taipei 84mlo'.54 Tei Aviv 88/71/0.00 Tokyo 73/68/1.04 Toronto 72/52/0.00 Vancouver 68/59/0.41 Vienna 64/39/0.00 Warsaw 55/37/0.00

85/65/pc 55/44/c 73/48/pc 67/47/pc 84/70/pc

80/62/pc 62/46/sh 74/50/s 70/51/s 88/73/c 75/58/I 78/57/s 61/41/sh 63/46/pc 74/67/r 79/66/I 72/54/pc 69/49/s 81/62/s 78/62/pc 81/69/pc 81/71/s 85/77/I 87/78/sh 53/40/c 60/45/sh 75/53/r 67/52/pc sgnsn 89/78/pc 88/74/s 85/74/pc 81/69/r 77/64/s 73/51/s 75/52/s 65/53/r 64/50/c 61/51/sh 62/53/pc 62/46/sh 60/49/sh

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What the great Cascadia earthquake could mean to Central Oregon.

Ll I,PV

Eric Morfenson / Capital Press

gtyn'9 Yamhill County on Monday. Growers say grape quality this year is outstanding.

Capital Press

NEWBERG — Sam Tannahill doesn't want to jinx the

2014 Oregon wine grape harvest, but here goes: It's shaping up tobe"epic." "An amazing year," said Tannahill, v i ticulture d i rec-

tor and a co-founder of A to Z Wineworks in Yamhill County. Perfectly warm summer

temperatures, no bad weather "curveballs" like last year's monsoon and very little disease PreSSure, he Said.

As a result, the state's growing regions, from Mosier in the Columbia River Gorge to Medford in Southern Oregon, are producing big yields of "beautiful, beautiful grapes," Tannahill said. "The quality is off the charts."

Knock on wood — such as those French oak fermentation barrels at A to Z that cost

$1,000 each — but the pinot noir, chardonnay, pinot gris, riesling, rose and other varieties produced this year by the state's 905 vineyards and

601 wineries may be equally notable. Tannahill

d i d n' t e x p e ct

problems from rain that swept into the Willamette Valley this

week. The vineyards could use

a drink, he said, and the grapes pelling wines early on in their are well-developed, with thick life," he said. The heavy yield — he's picking2.75 to 3 tons per skins that will protect them. Greg Jones, a Southern acre compared to the typical Oregon University professor 2.25 tons — caused the vines to who specializes in viticulture spread the sugar around."It's climatology, said 2014 was the much more balancedthan you warmest growing season on w ouldhave expected,given the recordformost ofthestate,and heat," Sweat said. largely without extreme temOregOn Wine hasbeen on a perature spikes that damage "pretty gOOd run,u With pOSitiVe crops. ratings from professional wine The consistently warm tem- reviewers in all recent years peraturesallowed growers to except for 2007, Sweat said. But harvest grapes at peak condi- with the passage of time, the tion rather than rush to beat 2007 vintage has greatly imCOld Weather or dovvnPourS, proved. "Those wines are gorJones said. Wine produced geous right now," he said. should be of very good quality, The heavier yield this year he said. has caused some logistical "We're seeing really beau- problems, however, as growers tiful fruit this year," agreed hustle to provide fermentation Bill Sweat, chair of the Ore- space. "You expect to pull 5 tons gon Wine Board and owner of Winderlea Vineyard and Win- from a vineyard and 7.5 show ery in Dundee. "The biggest up," Sweat said. "I've been jokthing we're fighting on the sort- ing that we're putting grapes in ing line this year is boredom." pots and pans and crockery." Wine quality is less predictWine grapes are Oregon's able, Sweat said, but sugar, 13th most valuable crop, with acidity and alcohol levels are a 2012 farmgate value of about trending in the right direction. $94 million. Industry leaders "Every indication is it's going estimate the total economic to be a very beautiful vintage," impact at $2.7 billion annually, he said. COunting SuCh thingS aS direCt Vintages from warm years employment, spinoff jobs, toursuch as this tend to be more ist trade and tasting room and fruitful, lush and "very com- restaurant activity.

Dr. Scott Ashford, Dean of the College of Engineering, Oregon State Univeristy

Lisa Stroup, Executive Director, Oregon Mountain River Chapter of the American Red Cross

Good year for grapeharvest By Eric Moftenson

Join expertsforapanel diSCuSSiOn on CasCadia and an in-depth look at how the major earthquake predicted to hit the Oregon coast sometime in the next 50 years could impact Central Oregon.The panel includes:

Sgt. Nathan Garibay, Emergency Service Manager, Deschutes County Sheriffs Office

Roberto Garcia snips clusters of pinot noir grapes as harvest continues at A to Z Wineworks in Ore-

Four key organizations are partnering to bring this important preparedness event to you. Don't miss this free event for a first-hand look at the predicted Cascadia quake and for important tips on how to prepare yourself, your family and your business to survive the immediate aftermath.

t The Bulletin servingcentraloregon since mus

Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2014 7 p.m. at the Tower Theatre A panel presentation with time for audience questions. Free and open to the public. Tickets and information: Afww.towertheatre.org 5C-746-4S66

Amerlcan Red Cross Oregon Mountain River Chapter

OrogonStntnCascades

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62/43/sh 59/48/sh Geneva 64/45/0.25 67/48/s Houotoh • .c Hsrnre 82/48/0.00 85/55/s «o o o 83@~ Hong Kong 89/78/0.00 9Ong/s 90/80/pc d,o Chihunhun >%>v' ' 'e'e < of W~L < < + ~ Istanbul 68/55/0.00 72/62/s 73/61/c 79/54 x ePrmxxwwwv.. Jerusalem 86/64/0.00 82/62/s 76/61/s Monte W W' eX esnnuv.XIW W$ WV.n sf/dn 'e PYik x x'v w Johannesburg 76/53/0.00 81/56/s 83/57/s wv.v.~ v '+ ~ v v '+ '+ '+ v '0 '+ uQw Limn 66/58/0.00 68/58/pc 67/58/pc Lisbon 77/64/0.00 81/64/s 81/64/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 64/54/0.06 66/57/pc 69/54/pc Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 70/57/0.00 75/50/s 77/52/s Manila 90/78/0.20 88/76/I 87nsn

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Precipitation: 6.41" at Daytona Beach,FL

FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver ~ ~ xtrem~e Redmond/Madras ~x tre ~me Sisters ~E xt re~me Prinevige ~~ xt rem~e La Pine/Gilchrist ~x tre ~ me

74/50

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Abilene Akron Albany Albuquerque Anchorage Agsnfs Atlantic City 72/58/0.01 Austin 84/55/0.00 Baltimore 71/47/0.01 Billings 89/57/0.00 Birmingham 81/59/0.00 Bismarck 89/58/0.00 Boise 95/62/0.00 Boston 66/54/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 70/54/0.00 Buffalo 77/50/0.00 Burlington, VT 74/47/0.00 Caribou, ME 63/32/0.00 Charleston, SC 69/60/0.12 Charlotte 64/53/0.18 Chattanooga 81/55/0.00 Cheyenne 81/50/0.00 Chicago 80/54/0.00 Cincinnati 78/52/0.00 Cleveland 75/48/0.00 ColoradoSprings 83/52/0.00 Columbia, Mo 77/52/0.00 Columbia, SC 65/57/0.04 Columbus,GA 79/58/0.00 Columbus,OH 77/51/0.00 Concord, NH 68/39/0.00 Corpus Christi 86n1/0.00 Dallas 88/60/0.00 Dayton 79/49/0.00 Denver 84/56/0.00 Des Moines 66/58/0.42 Detroit 74/50/0.00 Duluth 68/57/Tr El Paso 87/65/Tr Fairbanks 43/27/0.01 Fargo 68/59/0.06 Flagstaff 80/41/0.00 Grand Rapids 74/48/0.00

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Yesterday Today Friday

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lington 7'I/45 Meac am Losti ne 70/4 • W co7 /51 73/46 Enterprlse dl te 63/ PRECIPITATION he Oaa 7 • 73/46 Tigamo • 66/ 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.13" CENTRAL: Cloudy andy • 65/55 Mc innviH • 72lso 0.16"in 1992 and cool along with Joseph Record /53 Gove • He ppner Grande • nt • upi o o Condon 46 71 44 Cam u es Month to date (normal) 0.1 4 (0.33 ) periods of rain today Lincoln Union o o 60/ Year to date (normal ) 5.65 (7.09 ) Mostly cloudy with a 64/55 Sale pray Granite Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 7" shower tonight. 70/5 • 0/60 a 'Baker C Newpo 67/41 SUN ANDMOON 1/50 63/53 • Mitch 6 72/42 Camp Sh man Red n WEST:Mostly cloudy 65/44 Today Fri. g uu Yach 65/40 • John Sunrise 6:56 a.m. 6: 5 7 a.m. with a couple of 71/48 62/55 • Prineville Day 2/43 tario Sunset 6:57 p.m. 6: 5 6 p.m. showers today.Mostly 67/44 • Pa lina 68 / 4 6 8 52 Moonrise 8 :22 a.m. 9:23 a.m. cloudy with a shower Floren e • EUgene n Se d Brothers 65 42 Valen 64/55 Tt/47 Moonset 7:3 9 p.m. 8:1 2 p.m. in spots tonight. Su iVern 64/38 80/51 Nyssa u 63/ 9 • l.a pine Ham on MOONPHASES e J untura 82/6 0 Grove Oakridge First Fu l l Last New • Burns 77/46 OREGON EXTREMES Co 71/49 /46 66 2 • Fort Rock Riley 66/36 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 64/37 67/38 62/37

High: 92' at Ontario Low: 35' at Burns

SUNDAY

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows.

ria

EAST:Sunshine giving way to clouds with a Seasid shower or thunder64/57 storm around in the Cannon afternoon. 63/56

TEMPERATURE 66 55'

Mostly cloudy with a shower

SATURDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday High Low

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LOW 38'

Mostly cloudy with rain tapering off

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FRIDAY

StfCharles HEALTH SYSTEM


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 C o l lege football, C2 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

PREP FOOTBALLTHIS WEEK

GOLF

BOWLING

Kelso pro claims Fall Tour round

Ol'

BLACK BUTTE

RANCH —Lance Satcher, a professional from Kelso, Washington, edged BlackButte Ranch's Jeff Fought Wednesday to win the soggy third round of the Fall Tour Invitational. Kelso shot a 5-under-par 67 at Black Butte Ranch's Glaze Meadow. Fought, Black Butte Ranch's director of golf, narrowly missed his second win in three days after shooting a 4-under68. Ryan Fery, of Beaverton, was low amateur with a 2-under 70. The Fall Tour is hosted by four different Central Oregon golf courses. The tournament is split into four one-round events and includes club professionals and amateurs. The tournament continues with today's final round at Black Butte Ranch's Big Meadow course.

owin

e es I'3 ICcl

can es • International events considered too boring and in

need of anupgrade

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Summit High statisticians patrol the sidelines during football games while using the Digital Scout app, one of a num-

ber of technological advancements used byCentral Oregon coaches and players.

By Eric Talmadge The Associated Press

INCHEON, South Korea

— About a month and a half ago, Kevin Dornberger and his Swedish friend Christer Jonsson were watching a tournament in Hong Kong. They made it through most of the afternoon before Jonsson, the secretary general of the World Tenpin Bowling Association, looked at Dornberger, the president of World Bowling. "This is boring," he said. Dornberger — who has

— Bulletin staff report

MOTOR SPORTS Stewart will not

• Central Oregon teamsmove past the daysof VHSand advance to digital

face charges

CANANDAIGUA, N.Y.— Prosecutors

announced Wednesday that a grand jury had decided against bringing criminal charges against

Inside

LUCAS

three-time NASCAR

champion Tony Stewart in ste„srt the August death of

a driver at a sprint car race in upstate New York. Ontario County District Attorney Michael Tantillo said the victim,

Kevin WardJr., was under the influenceof marijuana thenight of the accident"enough to impair judgment." And he said two videosexamined by investigators showed "no aberrational driving by TonyStewart." The decision came nearly sevenweeks after Stewart's car struck and killed Ward during a dirt track race onAug. 9. Stewart, the brash and popular NASCARdriver known as "Smoke," spent three weeksin seclusion following what he called atragic accident before quietly returning to the Sprint Cup circuit. One of the biggest stars in the garage, Stewart has 48 career Cupwins in 542 starts but is winless this year and did not make thechampionshipChase field.

• A roundup of previews for Friday Central Oregon football games,C4

GRANT

as his chuckles return. But, he

idway through his own

recalls, back when he played football at Bend High, "our phone still

MTherebegins laughing. were no smartphones

hooked into the wall. We didn't

or touch-screen tablets when he

That technology he refers to includes PlayMaker Pro, a playbook application used by Bend High (and surely many more). It includes Digital Scout, a stat-keeping app utilized by Summit. But perhaps most notable, that technology includes Hudl, an app

thought, Matt Craven just

played football at Bend High in the early 1990s. There were VHS tapes that produced fuzzy video,

which Craven and his teammates and coaches studied to scout opponents. Before that, Craven remem-

bers seeing his father, longtime Lava Bears assistant Mick Craven,

watching 16-millimeter film. Matt Craven is really not as old as this flashback might suggest, the now-Bend coach emphasizes

even dream of technology like this."

that, according to the company's website, is "revolutionizing the

way coaches and athletes prepare for and stay ahead of the

With Hudl, the long sessions of

studying film projected on a wall in a stale football team room are a thing of the past. Because through Hudl, video now is accessible at any time, at any place, via cell-

bowled since he was 8, had

a 40-plus-year competitive career, has rolled 16perfect 300 games and who now heads the sport's international governing body — nodded his head emphatically. "I've watched more world championships competitions

phone or tablet. And that technol-

ogy is now being used by most if not all Class 5A football teams in Oregon. "It's a huge, HUGE tool for us and our kids," says Mountain View

than anyone in the world,"

Dornberger told The Asso-

coach Brian Crum. eYou walk

ciated Press on Wednesday on the sidelines of the Asian

down the hallway at 7:15 in the morning, they (Cougar players) will be sitting against the wall with their phone out. They're not texting. They're watching Hudl. They're watching their opponent. They're watching practice. It really has changed the game of football, for both coaches and players."

competition."

Games bowling competition in Incheon, South Korea. "And it has occurred to me that the

people who say we are boring have a point."

Dornberger's solution is a radical overhaul of the very heart of the sport — its com-

plicated, but to bowlers beloved, scoring system. SeeBowhng/C4

See Digital /C4

GOLF

Watson at U.S.Ryder Cup helm again, 21years later By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

GLENEAGLES, Scotland — Phil

Mickelson has played in the Ryder Cup more times than any other American. His experience is such that recent captains have leaned on

— The Associated Press

him for observations on everything from pairings to picks. That was not the case with Tom Watson at the

COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL

Ducks coachgets historic victory EUGENE — The Uni-

versity of Oregon volleyball team won its Pac-12 Conference opener on Wednesday, defeating Oregon State in straight sets at Matthew Knight Arena. The Ducks' 25-22, 27-25, 25-19 victory improves their record to11-0.

Oregon State falls to 10-2, 0-1.

This was the 197th victory for Jim Moore as the headcoach at Oregon, making him the winningest coach in the program's history. Karla Rice had196wins inher tenure. — The Albany Oemocrat-Herald

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

helm. In the week leading up to Watson making his three wild-card picks, Mickelson was asked if the 65-year-ol d captain had reached out

Randy Ando holds an umbrella while Lanfranco Vaccari putts at the ninth hole during the Pacific Amateur at Lost Tracks Golf Course in Bend on Wednesday.

to him. The answer was no, without

Raindoesn'tdampen PacAm

phone, glanced at it and replied, "Still

elaboration. Then, as if to make a point, Mickelson reached into his pocket for his no." Watson might not need any help to

PeterMorrison/ rhe AssociatedPress

U. S. team captain Tom Watson holds the Ryder Cup trophy at Gleneagles, Sc o tland,uesday. T

find a winning formula for the Ryder By Zack Hall The Bulletin

SISTERS — Tom Bryan was loading up his car nearly an hour before the rest of the golfers playing at Aspen Lakes Golf Course. Rain was pouring, as it did for much of Wednesday around Central Oregon. But the 81-year-old from the Seattle area was cer-

tainly not going to be chased off by a little precipitation. Instead, his reason for packing up early was more typical for a golfer: he was fed up with his golf game. "It's not going to do me any good to finish," said Bryan, one of more than 400players in this year's Pacific Amateur Golf Classic. SeePac Am/C4

Pac Amschedule The Lithia Pacific Amateur Golf Classic is a four-day net amateur tournament played around Central Oregon TODAY 10 a.m.:Tournament of Champions, Crosswater Club at Sunriver Resort For mere informationand full results:www.pacamgolf.com

Cup. One reason the PGA of America

took a chance on the oldest captain ever in the Ryder Cup was his history in the matches. The Americans have not won on European soil since 1993, the last time Watson

was the captain. He is adored in Scotland as much as any

NSX't N P 40th

es these matches with a sin-

gular focus. "The European team is loaded," Watson said. "But when the matches start at

Channel

American golfer, having won the British Open four times on Scottish links. His three Senior British

Open titles all were in Scotland. In the four Ryder Cups that Watson played, only one was held in the United States.

One thing has not changed: Watson approach-

7:35 on Friday morning, there's going to be quality of play going on. We'll just see who wins. I know our team is totally

committed to bringing the cup back. I know that. And I'm going to do everything in my power to help them do that and set the stage for them." SeeWatson /C4


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY BASEBALL

MLB, Seattle at Toronto MLB, Baltimore at NewYork Yankees OR Minnesota at Detroit SOCCER Women's college, Washington at Oregon

ON DECK 4 p.m. 4 p. m .

MLB Pac -12

FOOTBALL

College, TexasTechat Oklahoma State College, Appalachian State atGeorgia Southern NFL, NewYork Giants at Washington High School, Washington, Sumner at Auburn-Mountajnvjew 7 p.m. Men's College, UCLAat Arizona State 7 p.m.

Roo t FS1

GOLF

Ryder Cup

11:30 p.m., 3 a.m. Golf

FRIDAY AUTO RACIBG

NASCAR,NationwideSeries,Dover,practice 7 a .m . FS1 NASCAR,SprintCup,AAA400,practice Ba.m. FS1 NASCAR,Nationwide Series, Dover, practice 11 a.m. E SPN2 NASCAR,Sprint Cup,AAA400, qualifying 12: 30 p.m. ESPN2 BASEBALL

MLB, Los AngelesAngels at Seattle

7 p.m.

Roo t

FOOTBALL

College, FresnoState at NewMexico 5 p.m. E SPN2 College, Middle TennesseeState at OldDominion 5 p.m. FS1 High School, St. John Bosco (Caljf.) at Bishop Gorman (Nev.) 6 p.m. E SPNU GOLF Champions Tour, NatureValley First TeeOpen 1 p.m. Ryder Cup 1:30 a.m., 3 a.m., 4:30 a.m. SOCCER Women's college, Stanford at Utah 2 p.m. P a c-12 Women's college, Washington St. at Oregon St. 4 p.m. P a c-12 MLS, New England at Sporting KansasCity 5 p .m . NB CSN England, Liverpool vs Everton 4:45 a.m. NBCSN Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechanges madebyTVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL SunS, BledSOO agree to 5-yr, $70m deal — ThePhoenix Suns and point guard Eric Bledsoehavereachedagreement on a five-year, $70 million contract, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press. Thedeal is considerably more than the four-year, $48 million the Suns initially offered but well below the five-year, $80 million-plus maximum contract Bledsoe sought as a restricted free agent. Bledsoefaced an Oct. 1 deadline to sign a $3.7 million qualifying offer to play for the Sunsthis season, then become an unrestricted free agent.

FOOTBALL VikingS' CRSSOIOut fOr SeaSOR —Minnesota Vikings quarterback Matt Cassel will miss the seasonwith broken bones in his left foot, and right guard BrandonFuscowill also beout for the rest of the year due to apectoral muscle injury. TheVikings placed Cassel and Fusco on injured reserveWednesday. Both players were hurt Sunday at NewOrleans. Teamshavethe option of placing one player on injured reserve with the intent to bring him back to theactive roster after six weeks, but they savedthat designation for now.

CYCLING WiggiRSWinSWOrld rOad time trial — BradleyWiggins of Britain powered across the finish line 26.23 seconds ahead ofhis nearest rival to claim his first road cycling world title on Wednesday with a convincing victory in the time-trial event. Wiggins, who won silver in 2011and2013, clocked 56 minutes, 25 seconds to takethe title from second-placeTony Martin of Germany,who was bidding for a fourth straight championship. TomDumoulin of the Netherlands finished third, 40.64 seconds behind. — From wire reports

Today Boyssoccer:RedmondatSummit,3p.m.;Ridgeview at Bend,3p.m.;Junction CityatSisters,4:30 p.m.; Madrasat Molala, 6p,mcCrookCountyat Gladstone,4:15p.m.; Glideat LaPine,4:30 p.m4Central Christianat LifeChristian, 4:15p.m. Girl ssoccer:RidgeviewatBend,4:30p.m.;Redmond at Summit,4:30p.m.;Sisters atJunctionCiiy, 4:30 p.m.;MolalaatMadras,4p.m.; GladstoneatCrook County,4p.mcPleasant Hil at LaPine,3 p.m. Volleyball:Summitat Bend,6:30 p.mcRidgeview at MountainView,6:30 p,mcSisters at Cottage Grove, 6:45p.mcEstacadaatMadras,6p.m.;La Pine atCoquile, 5 p.m. Cross-country: LaPineatHarrier's ChalengeinCottageGrove,4:15p.m. Friday FoolbalkBendat Pendleton, 7p.m.; MountainViewat Springfield, 7p.muSummit at TheDalles, 7 p.m.; Ridge view atAshland,7p.m.;RedmondatHood RiverValley,7 p.m.; Gladstoneat CrookCounty, 7 p.m.;SutherlinatSisters, 7p,mcMadrasat Estacada, 7 p.mcBurnsat LaPine, 7 p.m.; Vernoniaat Culver, 7p.m.;ProspectatGilchrist, 4 p.m. Volleyball: CrookCountyat Corbett, 4:30p.m.; Pilot Rock atCulver,5 p.m.; Gilchrist at CentralChristian, 6p.m.;Paisleyat Trinity Lutheran,4:30p.m.

FOOTBALL

SOCCER

DEALS

NFL

MLS

Transactions

NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All TimesPDT

MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT

BASEBAL L AmeucanLeague DETROITIGERS— Reinstated RH PAnibal Sanchezfromthe15-day DL. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Extended their player development contract withBeloit (MWL)throughthe 2016season. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association LOSANGELESLAKERS— SignedGRonniePrice. MIAMIHEA T— NamedPhilWeber coachof Sioux Falls (NBAD L). Reassigned Octavio DeLaGranato playerdevelopment coachfor Sioux Falls anddirector of minorleagueoperations. PHOENIX SUNS—Agreed to termswith GEric Bledsoe onafive-year contract. SACRAMENTOKINGS— ReleasedGScottyHopson.

Today'sGame

EasternConference

N.Y.GiantsatWashington, 5:25p.m.

W L T P l sGF GA D.C. 1 4 9 6 4 6 45 34 Sporting KansasCity 13 10 6 45 43 34 N ew England 1 3 1 3 3 4 2 41 40 NewYork 10 8 11 41 48 42 Columbus 10 9 10 40 41 36 Philadelphia 9 9 11 38 45 43 T orontoFC 10 11 7 3 7 39 43 Houston 9 13 6 3 3 33 50 Chicago 5 7 1 6 31 37 43 Montreal 6 17 6 2 4 34 52

BundayrsGames GreenBayat Chicago,10a.m. BuffaloatHouston, 10a.m. Tennessee at Indianapolis,10a.m. CarolinaatBaltimore,10 a.m. Detroit atN.Y.Jets,10 a.m. Tampa Bayat Pittsburgh,10a.m. Miamivs.Oaklandat London,10a.m. Jacksonvilleat SanDiego,1:05 p.m. PhiladelphiaatSanFrancisco,1:25 p.m. AtlantaatMinnesota,1:25 p.m. NewOrleansat Dallas, 5:30p.m. Monday'sGame NewEnglandat KansasCity, 5:30p.m.

WesternConference

W L T P lsGF GA x-Seattle 1 7 9 3 5 4 53 44 x-LosAngele s 1 5 5 9 54 59 31 R eal SaltLake 1 3 6 1 0 4 9 49 36 FC Daga s 1 4 10 6 4 6 52 40 Portland 9 8 1 2 39 52 48 Vancouver 8 8 1 3 37 36 39 Colorado 8 14 7 3 1 40 53 SanJose 6 12 10 28 33 41 ChivasUSA 6 17 6 24 23 54 NOTE: Threepointsfor victory, onepointfor tie. x- clinched playoffberth

Injury Report NEW YORK—TheNational Football Leagueinjury report, as providedbytheleague(OUT- Definitely wil not play;DNP- Did notpractice; LIMITED- Limited participation inpractice; FULL—Full participation in practice): NEW YORK GIANTS at WASHINGTON Saturday REDBKINB —GIANTB: OUT:WROdell BeckhamJr. Boyssoccer:Culveratlrrigon,1 p.m. (hamstring), LB DevonKennard (hamstring). DOUBTGirls soccer.MountainViewat Hermiston,1 p.m. F UL: L B J o n Beason(foot,toe).QUESTIONABLE:CB Volleyball: Summit,CrookCountyat StatePreview ZackBow m an (q uadriceps), TJamesBrewer (back), Tournamentin Albany,8 a.m.; Ridgeviewat Park- T CharlesBrown (shoulder). PRO BABLE: P Steve rose Tournae mnt, TBD;Culver, Trinity Lutheranat Weatherford(left ankl e). REDBKINB: OUT: QBRobert McKenzie RPITournament, TBD;Central Christian Griffin III (ankle),LBA k ee m Jor dan (kne e), TEJordan at Paisley,2:30p.m.; Gilchrist vs.Arlingtonand Reed(hamstring). QUE STIONABLE: NTChris Baker Mitchell/Spray at Mitchell, noon hip), DE Kedric Golston(groin), DEJason Crosscountry:Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, (ankle, (hamstring), WRDeSeanJackson (shoulder), SummitSi , stersatNikePreNationals in Portland, Hatcher DT Frank Ke arse nkle)r GShawnLauvao (knee), G Ba.m.;Redmond,Ridgeview,CrookCounty, Sisters Kory Lichtensteig(aer (groin, rib, hip), CBTracy Porter at OutlawClassic in Sisters,TBD;Bend, Summit, (hamstring), STrenton Robinson (abdomen). PROBMadras,CulveratMadrasInvite, 10a.m. ABLE: K KaiForbath(right groin), RBAlfred Morris (knee), LBBrianOrakpo(finger), T TylerPolumbus (knee),LBKeenan Robinson(shoulder). GOLF

Local 2014 Lithia Pacific AmateurGolf Classic Wednesday At CoursesThroughout Central Oregon Final Round(Fourin each flight advanceto championshipround) Net StrokePlay Flight 1 — 1,WiliamMcKiegan, 213.2, David Burkart,219.3, PaulGoff, 223.4,TroyMcMaster,225. Flight2 — 1,VernonCarlson,212.2, GregCheever,215. 3, JohnHaake, 217. 4,Michael Scorcio, 223. Flight 3 — 1,BlakeBarnes,205.2(tie), ScottJolley, 208;DonSherman,208. 4,Robert Cardinal, 210. Flight 4 — 1,TabFrench, 206.2(tie), RickLukas, 213; KeithDemelo, 213. 4,RonColarchik, 216. Flight 6 — 1, Mitch Bowman,202. 2, Clint Walker, 203.3, RussDodge,210. 4,Rick Underman, 211. Flight 6 —1 (tie), BartJohnson,208; David Swanson,208;Robert LaPlante, 206.4, Jerry Splonski, 210. Flight 7 — 1,JerryMalmevik, 209. 2, Bil Ligeness,211.3,TimothyBorba,212.4, RandyCamp,213. Flight 8 — 1,ToddMcKinnon,207. 2, BruceOlson, 208.3, MikeMulan,213. 4, ScottBrown,214r Flight 9 —1, RolandRhue, 207. 2, JayMerril, 213. 3,JohnNorgaard, 215.4, Ronald Sztuczko,217. Flight 10 — 1, MarvMoneymaker, 212. 2, Al Stautz,214.3(tie), Robert Dake, 220;JackWaibel, 220. FligM11 —1,JoeLindgren,211.2, MichaelCram, 216. 3(tie),GilbertGonzalez,220;Ted Kitchens, 220. Flight12 — 1,MarkAhern, 211.2, Robert Long, 213. 3,LewisRogers, 215.4,BobVidourek, 216. Flight13 —1, KenForster,212. 2, Roger Pitkin, 214. 3,DavidMcAlees,218. 4, Allen Stewart,219. Flight 14 —1, Wiliam Jackson,211.2, Don Cavarra,214.3(tie), RonGoodrich,215; DevonBratsman,215. Flight 16 — 1, GeneWhisnant, 217. 2,JimCox, 219. 3,JamesMadonna,223.4,Jim Handa,224. FligM 16 — 1,Suza nne Conner, 214. 2, Kathy Kaldal,217.3,Judith Sanders,224. 4,NancyWhite,225. Flight17 — 1, MichegeMarquardt,209. 2, Kathy McDonald,213.3,JulieSpilker,219.4,CogeenMoulton,220. Flight 18 —1 (tie), Jerry Close,238; Ryan Schaefer,238. 3 (tie), BradyKendall, 239; Danny Carroll, 239. FALLTOUR INVITATIONAL

Sept. 22-26 RoundThree, Sept. 24 at BlackButteRanchGlaze Meadow StrokePlay Moneywinners Professionals —Gross: 1, LanceSatcher, 67. 2, Jeff Fought,68.3 (tie), SeanArey,69; TylerAustin, 69. 5(tie), CaseyKing, 70;TimHval, 70.7, Fred Haney,71.6 (tie), BobGarza, 73;TimFraley,63; Tom Carey,63. Amateurs — Gross: 1,RyanFery, 70.2, Bil Tomlinson,Zt. 3, CharlieRice,72. 4 (tie), BradMcFadden,73;Daniel Cheremnov, 73. 6 (tie), JeffWilson, 74;MikeRogers, 74.8 (tie), CoreyBeil, 75;Ivan Kutsev, 75;RickSittanen, 75.Net: 1.AndyWest,62.2 (tie), CraigJohannesen, 66; Gary Johanns,66; Steve Waite,66.5, BrianBlack,66.6(tie), DarinHarbick, 69; HerbParker,69; JohnHowey, 69.9 (tie), CarlLarsen, 70; KellyPaxton,70;Scott Petersen, TO. Team (Net Rotation) — 1,JeffFought/David Zrosinki/Bill Tomlinson/Gary Johanns, 112. 2 (tie), Craig Melott/CarlLarsen/RichardRudd/Bob O'Neil, 124; Erik Nielsen/JeffWard/AndyWest/Harry Paik, 124. 4, Brian Nosler/Brian Black/BrianTrumble/ ChuckEverett,125. 5 (tie), SeanArey/Steve Petersen/ Craig Mahnke /Scott Petersen,128; Matt Reams/Kevin Croucher/Andy Baida/Aaron Eastman, 128; Lance Satcher/JeffBailey/SteveWaite/YangLee, 126.

Wednesday'sGame

FC Dalla3, s Seatle FC1

Friday's Game

NewEnglandatSporting Kansas City, 5p.m.

HOCKEY NHL Preseason NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT

Wednesday'sGames Ottawa (ss)4, Toronto(ss) 3, SO Dallas 4, Florida3, SO Boston 2, Washington0 Carolina 4, NrY.Islanders 2 Calgary4,Arizona3, OT Ottawa (ss)3, Toronto(ss) 2 Edmonto n3,Winnipeg2 Today'sGames NewJerseyatPhiladelphia, 4 p.m. Minnesotaat Pittsburgh,4p.m. Colorado at Montreal, 4:30p.m. Chicago at Detroit, 4:30p.m. ColumbusatSt. Lours,5 p.m. Tampa Bayat Nashvile, 5 p.m. Vancouver atCalgary,6 p.m. Anahei matLosAngeles7:30p.m.

A merica's Line Favorite

Open Current 0/U Underdog (Hometeamin caps)

REDSKIN S

4

NFL Today

3 'I~ 4 6

Sunday

4 4 40' / z Dolphins 1~/r 50~/r Packers 3 '/r 3 41 TEXANS Bills 7 7 451 / 2 COLTS Titans 3 3 40' / z Panthers RAVEN S 1~/z 1~/z Lions JETS STEELE RS 7'/r 7 '/ r 4 4 '/r Buccaneers CHARG ERS t 3'A 13 4 4ra Jaguars 4 r/z 5 50 r a 49ERS Eagles Falcons 3 3 47 VIKINGS Saints 3 3 53 COWBO YS Monday 4 3 r a 4 5'/~ CH IEFS Patriots

TENNIS ATP BhenzhenOpen Wednesday AtLonggang Sports Center Bhenzhen,China Purse: $666,000(WT260) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound Andreas Seppi (8), Italy, def.SimoneBoleli, Italy, 6-4,6-3. RichardGasquet (3), France,def.Giles Muller, Luxembourg, 6-3, 6-2. Juan Monaco, Argentina,def. VasekPospisil (7), Canada, 7-5,2-6, 6-3. TommyRobredo (4), Spain, def.SamGroth, Australia, 1-6,7-5,6-3.

College Today

GA SOU THERN15'A I9'/z 60 App'chianSt OKLAHOMAST14' /r 14 71~/z TexasTech Ucla 3Vz 4'/z 60 A rizona St

OLDDOM 3ra Fresno St 5r/z

Friday 31/2

5'/z

73 NEW MEXI CO

Saturday 46~/z Wyoming

MICHIGANST32 31 MICHIGAN 8 12 INDIANA 3 4 Baylor 2 2 r/r 21 WISCON SIN 33'/r 33 VIRGINIA 21 2IPA VA TECH 26 21 T emple 3 r/z 6 PITTSB URGH tra 19'/z lowa 13 ~/r 9 RUTGERS 11 1t'/r PENN ST tg'A t 0'/z TOLEDO 14 16 KENTUCKY 14'4 17 LOUISVILLE 21 21 BOSTON COL 4ra Bra BUFFALO 7 6 T ULSA 5 ' / z 3 KANSAS ST 30 2IPA AUBURN 33'/z 33'/z BowlGreen 10 5 CALIFOR NIA tg'A I3'/~ Tcu 30 31'Iz Rice 10 9'4 S. CAROLINA 6 6 NAVY 7 7 Notre Dame 13~/ 11 Texas ABM 10'4 9 USC 11 91/2 CLEMSON 13 14 Stanford 6 8 Texas 1 4 ' /z13'/z GEORGIA 18 17 MIAMI-FLA 4 7 Florida St 24 19 S. Alabama 6r/z 5 16'/z OHIO ST 14 U AB 12' A IIPA MISSISSIPPI 21 19 UT-S.Antonio 3r/z 5 UL-MONROE 9 12'/z UTAH 10 13 B oise St 1 4 13 LSU 45 43 19'/z NEBRA SKA 18 SANDIEG OST 17 16'/z

Nevada 2

67ra Mid TennSt

41/2

43~/r Minnesota

69ra Maryland 68'/z IOWA ST 50~/z S. Florida 44~/r K ent St 56ra W. Michigan 44'/z

U CONN

WTA

46~/z A k ron WuhanOpen 46'/r PURDUE Wednesday 54~/r T u lane 45 N 'western At Optics Valley InternationalTennis Center Wuhan, China 57~/z C. Michigan Purse: $2.44million (Premier) 50~/z Vanderbilt Burlace: Hard-Outdoor 43~/r WakeForest 56ra ColoradoSt Singles 57Vz Miami-Ohio Third Round 65~/z Texas St Elina Svitolina,Ukraine,def. GarbineMuguruza, 5 6~/r Ute p Spain,walkover. 61~/z La Tech Alize Cornet,France,def. KirstenFlipkens, Bel66'/r U MASSgium,7-6(4), 1-6,6-3. 67ra Colorado CarolineGarcia,France,def. CocoVandeweghe, 4ZA SMU United States,6-3, 6-2. 5yr/2 S . Miss TimeaBacsinszky,Switzerland, def. MariaShara62~/~ Missouri pova(4),Russia,7-6(3), 7-5. 68'/2 W. Kentucky Petra Kvitova (3), CzechRepublic, def. Karolina 48~/ Syracuse Plis kova,CzechRepublic,6-3,2-6,6-4. 70~/z Arkansas A ngel i q ue Ke r ber(7), Germany,def. BarboraZahla55~/r Oregon St vovaStrycova,CzechRepublic,6-1, 6-1. 67ra N. Carolina CarolineWozniacki (6), Denmark, def. Casey Del47'/~ WASHINGTON 41'/z KANSAS lacqua,Australia, 6-0,6-3. EugenieBouchard(6), Canada, def. AlisonRiske, 55~/z Tennessee United States,6-2, 6-3. 6 0~/r Duk e 57'/~ NC STATE 58'/z ID AHO

Malaysi anOpen Wednesday At Putra Stadium Kuala Lumpur,Malaysia Purse: $1.02million (WT260) 48'/z FLAATLANTIC Burlace: Hard-Indoor 5 2~/z Tro y 67~/zWashingtonSt Singles 57'/r AIR FORCE First Round 55ra New Mexico St MichalPrzysiezny,Poland,def. MalekJaziri, Tuni66~/z l l l inois sia, 4-6,6-4, 6-2. 5 6~/z Unl v BenjaminBecker, Germany, def. JoaoSousa(6), 54 SAN JOSE ST Portugal7-6 , (1), 6-2. 64 Cincinnati 52~/r Florida Int'I 57ra Memphis

FOOTBALL

National Football League ARIZONACARDINALS— ReleasedRBJalenParmele.SignedDTBruceGastonfrom Miami's practice squad.Re-signedPDrewButler tothe practicesquad. ReleasedDTChristian Tupoufromthe practice squad. DETROILI TONS— SignedLBJosh Byrnesfrom Baltimore'spracticesquadandDBJosh Victorian to the practice squad. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed TE Chase Ford and OL Austin Wentworth fromthepracticesquad and QB McLeo dBethel-ThompsonandTERyanOttento the practicsqu e ad.PlacedQBMatt Cassel andGBrandon Fusco oninjuredreserve. NEW YORKJETS— SignedCB LeQuanLewis from thepracticesquad. SignedCBMarcusWiliams to thepracticesquad. OAKLANDRAIDERS—PlacedSTyvonBranchon injuredreserve.ClaimedSBrandianRossoffwaivers from Miami. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS—SignedDETJ.Fatini kun,LBShayneSkovandFBlanThompsontothe practicesquad. CanadianFootball League HAMILTONTIGER-CATS — Traded DE Brandon Boudreauxand2015and2016 fourth-round draft picks toSaskatchewanfor 2015and 2016third-round draft picksandanegotiation-list player HOCKEY National HockeyLeague DETROIRE T DWINGS—Agreed to termswith D Joe Hickettsonathree-year,entry-level contract. LOSANGELES KINGS — Reassigned D Jacob MiddletonandRolandMcKeown, CsMichael Amadio andJakeMarchment, LWMatthew Mistele and RW Spen cer Watsonto their junior teams.Released GBrandonMaxwel, DStephenHarper and CsTaylor BurkeandConor McGlynn. NEWJERSEY DEVILS — AssignedGAnthonyBrodeur toGa tineau(QMJHL), DRyanRehil to Kamloops (WHL)andFsBrandon Baddockto Edmonton (WHL), ConnorChathamto Plymouth (OHL), RyanKujawinski to Kingston (OHL) and John Quennevile toBrandon (WHL). NEW YORKRANGERS — Reassigned Cs Nick Latta, LoganNelson, MichaelSt. CroixandAndrew Yogan;RW sMichael Kantor, RichardNejezchleb and JoshNichoff s;DTroyDonnayandSam Noreau;Fs PaxtonLerouxandChris McCarthy; andMackenzie Skapski toHartford(AHL)andDRyanGraves, Ryan ManthaandDaniel Walcott; Cs Keegan Iverson and AdamTambeffini; andGBrandonHalversonto their junior teams. ReleasedLWNathanBurnsandDDallas Valentinefromtryout agreements. WINNIPE G JETS— Re-assignedDJanKostalek to Rimouski(QMJHL), DNelsonNogier to Saskatoon (WHL), C ChaseDe Leoto Portland(WHL), 0 Jimmy Lodgeto Saginaw(OHL), RWAxelBlomqvist toVictoria (WHL) andGEricComrieto Tri-City (WHL). COLLEGE COLLEGEOFCHARLESTON— NamedJ.D.Poweff directorof men's basketball operations. FELICIAN —Announcedthe resignation of men's socce rcoachRogerStephens.Promotedmen' sassistant soccer coachErik Kotynski men's interimsoccer coach. HOLYCROSS— Agreed to termswith women's basketbalcoach l Bil Gibbonsona four-yearcontract extension. LIMEST ONE— Named Karl Reedassistant wrestling coach. NJIT —Named Dino Presley men'sassistant basketball coachandJaredCzechdirector of basketball operations. NEWMEXICO—NamedCodyHopkins director of basketbaloperati l ons. NYU—NamedAlicia Aemiseggermen'sandwomen'sassistantswimming coach. STANFORD— Signed men' s basketballcoach JohnnyDawkinsto acontractextension. TEXAS-PANAMERICAN— NamedJaiSteadman men'sassistantbasketball coach. WINTHRO P— Named J.D. Angel director of video servicesforathletics, CariMooreassistant softball coachandKendall Fullerassociate headbasebal coach.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedonWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Btlhd Wsllhd B onneville 12,486 2,772 2,444 6 9 7 T he Daffes 8,542 3,135 3,049 9 0 2 John Day 10,153 2,117 3,649 1,146 McNary 8,587 1,661 4,987 1,481 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Btlhd Wsllhd Bonneville1,051,601155,369 300,667 122,753 The Daffes675,879 105,887 208,062 84,194 John Day 551,985 86,294 148,367 57,114 McNary 495,219 75,561 140,269 52,259

Pac-12Conference isgetting to be a tougher neighborhood By Chris Dufresne Los Angeles Times

the South Division last year, is playing hurt while it awaits

COLLEGEFOOTBALLCOMMENTARY

e talk this past summer the return of star quarterback Saturday before blowing a 31was that P ac-12 Con- Taylor Kelly. 13 fourth-quarter lead. ferencefootballwas as The Pac-12 bottom, overall, The Pac-12's edges have costrong as anyone with a mem- is stronger. alesced into a meaty, mighty ory could remember it. Washington State, the only middle section. "Those are statements usu- Pac-12 team with a losing reThe league has gone 29-4 in ally made prior to the season, cord, gave Oregon its toughest nonconference play and boasts where everyone kind of has game, and only a fumbled punt seven of the 25 remaining unthat overall, positive look," Or- cost the Cougars a win against defeated schools. egon State coach Mike Riley Rutgers. The SEC West is the best said this week, meaning words With Connor Halliday at division in college football, but do not mean much. quarterback, W a s hingtonthe Pac-12 is a better league After one month, here is S tate will continue to be a from bottom to top. where the statements stand: pain. Last week, Halliday The SEC East has struggled. The Pac-12 top is not as needle-threaded two scoring Kentucky has not won a league strong asadvertised. Oregon throws behind the helmet hole game since 2011, Vanderbilt and UCLA, picked to win the of Oregon's Ifo Ekpre-olomu, has already lost to Temple, and "much improved" TennesNorth and South divisions, the Pac-12's best cornerback. have not lived up to preseason Utah, 9-18 in its first three see got exposed at Oklahoma. top-10billing. Oregon has been years of Pac-12play, appears to Florida allowed a school-redecimated by offensive line have overcome its brutal entry cord 645 yards to Alabama last injuries and is subsisting off fee. The Utes are 3-0 and com- week. Missouri, the defending quarterback Marcus Mariota, ing off a big win at Michigan. East champions, lost at home America's best player. Colorado and California, to Indiana, and South CaroliUCLA un d erperformedmaybe the worst teams in ma- na last week barely escaped at in victories against Virginia, jor-college play last year, are Vanderbilt. "We've all seen good footMemphis and Texas but enters significantly improved. the Pac-12 fray still playing for Last year, Colondo's home ball teams," South Carolina

that great, yet Chris Petersen is Do they get bumped for a onethe first Washington coach to

loss orundefeated teamthat did

hearts in their throats. "I would rather everyone

shafted he will lead a march

week with c o nfidence and we play not be good," Arizona momentum. coach Rich Rodriguez joked Six quarterbacks rank this week "Let's be honest. I

downtown San Francisco. "I can guarantee you there

week's Associated Press polL begin his Huskies career 4-0 notplaythe same type of schedThe 14-team SEC has seven since 1908. ule? That to me is going to deterPac-12 coaches have gone mine wherethis playoff goes." teams ranked in the top 14, but from pride in their hearts to five are from the West. Shaw said if the Pac-12 gets The Pac-12 moves to the

heart of league play this

among the top 14 in NCAA passing efficiency. Oregon State leads the nation in pass effic iency defense and Oregon leads in pass efficiency offense. Stanford is tops in total defense, scoring defense and pass defense, while Washington leads the nation in sacks. September, though, was the

don't like these toughgames. I'd ratherbe really good in a crappy league, but it's not going to happen. That ship has sailed." Coaches are worried that parity comes with a price. Stanford coach David Shaw was more discomfited than

on conference headquarters in will be 12 coaches going to the commissioner and saying, 'Hey, we need to change our schedule. If we're going to beat each other up and get left out, we need to do what everybody

else is doing, schedulewise, or at least what some other people are doing schedulewise."

That last comment seemed entertained a f ter w a t ching Arizona's wild, Hail Mary win a veiled shot at the SEC, which over CaL opted to stay with an eight-

easy part. The same Pac-12 "Every game is scary," he coaches who spent the summer peddling their league now said. "No one had a lot of exfacetheconsequences. pectations for Cal, and there The bloodletting begins were moderate expectations with UCLA at Arizona State, for Arizona. And then you Stanford a t Wa s hington, turn their game on and you Washington State at Utah, Or- say, 'Wow.' " egon State at USC and ColoraWhat toll will the league everything on its wish list. win over Cal was its only win coach SteveSpurrier said after do at CaL race have on Pac-12 playoff Stanford, the two-time de- in Pac-12 play. Cal finished 0-9 his team's 48-34 win. "We ain't Oregon and Arizona have chances? one." "That's what we don't know," fendingleague champion, is for- and l-ll overall. the weekend off as they premidably flawed. The Cardinal This weekend, Cal hosts Yet South Carolina did man- pare for their Oct. 2 game in Shaw said. "To me, that's the have pitched shutouts against Colorado in a "See How Far age to defeat Georgia, maybe Eugene. biggest unknown. It all hingUC Davis and Army but lost at We've Come" rematch in the best team the East has to Welcome to the Packed-12. es, as we all know, on the (sehome to USC, which lost at km- Berkeley. Cal has already won offer. Oregon State is 3-0 and may lection) committee. Imagine a ranked Boston College. at Northwestern and thought it The Pac-12 has nine schools have its best defense in years. two-loss Pac-12 champion that Arizona State, which won had defeated Arizona this past ranked in the top 40 of this Washington has not looked all played a hellacious schedule.

game league format in a 14team conference (the 12-team Pac plays nine league games). Shaw is willing to see how it all plays out. He says if the committee rewards the Pac-12,

"that justifies what we do."

From now until December,

though, the league becomes a gnashing of tectonic plates. "The realization is sobering, I think," Oregon State's Riley said. "At the same time the competition is exciting ... but the reality of what we talked

about is coming true right in frontofour faces."


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L 95 63 81 77 81 77 76 82 69 89

x-Baltimore NewYork Toronto Tampa Bay Boston z-Detroit

Kansas City Cleveland Chicago Minnesota

Pct GB

West Division W L 98 61 86 72

Pct GB 616

x-LosAngeles Oakland Seattle Houston Texas z-clinched playoffberth x-clinched division

83 75 69 90 65 93

4 ~Wil g sxt

Pct GB 601 513 14 513 14 481 19 437 26

CentralDivision W L

88 70 86 72 83 76 72 86 68 90

19 games.

DODGERS TAKE THECROWN

All TimesPDT

F y'.trrr!/gx

557 544 2 522 5'/r 456 16 430 20

544 11'/r 525 14'/r 434 29 411 32'/r

)L

Wednesday'sGames

Baltimore 9, N.Y.Yankees5 Detroit6, Chicago White Sox1 Minnesota 2, Arizona1 L.A. Angel5, s Oakland4 Toronto1,Seattle0 Cleveland 6, KansasCity 4 Boston11,TampaBay3 Texas 5, Houston1

Today'sGam es Seattle(Wilhelmsen3-2) at Toronto(Da.Norris 0-0), 1:07 p.m. Baltimore(Gausman7-7)atN.Y.Yankees(Kuroda119), 4:05p.m. Minnesota(May3-5) atDetroit (Scherzer17-5), 4:08 p.m. Tampa Bay(Helickson1-4) at Boston(Webster 4-3), 4;10 p.m. Oakland(Hammel 2-6) at Texas(Lewis 10-14), 5:05 p.m. KansasCity (Shields14-8) at ChicagoWhite Sox (Quintana 9-10), 5:10p.m. Friday'sGames TampaBayatClevel and,4:05p.m. Baltimore atToronto,4:07 p.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 4:08p.m. Houstonat N.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat Boston,4;10 p.m. Oaklan datTexas,5;05p.m. Kansas CityatChicagoWhite Sox,5:10 p.m. L.A. Angelat s Seatle, 7:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L x-Washington 92 64 Atlanta 77 81 NewYork 76 81 Miami 75 82 Philadelphia 72 86 CentralDivision W L 88 71 86 72 81 77 73 85 71 88

Pct GB 590 487 16 484 IBr/t 478 17r/t

456 21

Pct GB 553

Mark J. Terrill/The Associated Press

Los Angeles Dodgers' Hanley Ramirez, right, celebrates after scoring on asingle by Juan Uribe as San Francisco relief pitcher Javier Lopez looks onduring the sixth inning of Wednesday night's game in Los Angeles. The Dodgers won the NL West with a 9-1 win over the Giants.

Angels 5, Athletics4 OAKLAND, Calif.— Howie Ken-

drick doubled anddrove in three runs,andtheALWestchampion Los Angeles Angels held off playoff-hopeful Oakland. TheAngels beat their Northern California rival for the seventh time in thepast eight meetings to capture the season series10-9 for the first time in four years. TheAngels won at the Coliseum for just the third time in nine games.Angels star Mike Trout left the gamebefore the top

Carterdh 4 0 0 0 ABeltre3b 2 1 0 0 Krauss1b 2 0 0 0 Smlnsklf 3 1 0 0 G uzmnph-1b1 0 0 0 Telisc 4000 J castroc 3 0 0 0 Rua1b 3 1 1 3 Presleyrf 3 0 1 0 Sardinsdh 3 0 1 0 G !Petit3b 2 0 0 0 DnRrtsrf 2 0 0 0 Villarss 3 1 1 1 Totals 2 7 1 5 1 Totals 3 05 6 5 Houston 0 00 000 010 — 1 Texas 000 010 40x — 6 E—Vilar (18). DP—Texas 3. LOB—Houston 4,

Red Sox11, Rays3

BOSTON — Anthony Ranaudo pitched sevenstrong innings, and Garin Cecchini hit his first major league homerun to help fifthplace Boston beat fourth-place Tampa Bay.TheRedSoxtwice Texas 9. 2B—Andrus(35), Odor(13). HR —Villar (7), batted around, scoring five runs Odor(9), Rua(2). SB—Grossman(9), Altuve2 (56), Odor(4),Sardinas2(5), Dan.Robertson(6). S—Dan. in the fourth inning and four more Robertson. in the sixth, when they drew five IP H R E R BBSO walks — three with the bases Houston FeldmanL,8-12 6 4 1 1 4 6 loaded. 2-3 2 4 4 2 1 Veras DeLeon 11-3 0 0 0 0 2 Texas BonillaW,3-0 6 4 0 0 2 7 RossJr. H,2 1 0 0 0 1 0 Klein 2 1 1 1 1 3 HBP—by Feldman (Rua), byBonila (G.Petit). WPFeldman,Bonila. T—3:06.A—28,003 (48,114).

BBarnsph 1 0 0 0 RAlvrzp 0 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 4 0 0 0 Riveraph 0 0 0 0 Flandep 1 0 0 0 Vincentp 0 0 0 0 Pitlsburgh Atlanta KParkrph 1 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Massetp 0 0 0 0 Venalelf 0 0 0 0 JHrrsn 3b 5 0 1 0 Bonifac 2b 4 0 1 2 Scahillp 0 0 0 0 SMartelf 4 1 2 0 ASmnsss 5 0 2 0 Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 AMcctcf 5 1 2 2 FFrmn1b 3 1 0 0 Culersnss 1 0 0 0 Sniderrf 4 0 1 0 J.uptonlf 4 1 2 2 Stubbsph 1 0 0 0 RMartnc 2 0 1 0 Heywrdrf 5 0 0 0 Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 3 0 4 6 4 CStwrtc 2 0 1 0 CJhnsn3b 3 2 2 0 C olorado 100 0 0 2 000 — 3 I.Davis1b 3 0 1 0 Gosseln3b 1 0 0 0 San Diego 3 0 0 1 0 0 ggx— 4 GSnchzph-1b1 0 0 0 Bthncrtc 4 1 2 0 E—R.Liriano (3). DP—San Diego1. LOB —ColMercerss 3 0 0 0 BUptoncf 2 1 0 0 orado 6,SanDiego7. 28—Solarte (5), Medica(11). Barmes2b 3 0 0 0 Tehernp 2 0 2 2 HR — B la ck m on (19), Medi c a (9). SB — M aybi n (4), Lockep 2 0 0 0 LaSteffph 1 0 0 0 Medica(6). JGomzp 0 0 0 0 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO L Frmsp 0 0 0 0 Jaimep 0 0 0 0 Colorado Tabataph 1 0 0 0 Shrevep 0 0 0 0 FlandeL,0-6 4 4 4 4 1 4 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Doumitph 1 0 0 0 Masset 1 1 0 0 0 2 Axfordp 0 0 0 0 Russellp 0 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 2 1 Scahill Pimntlp 0 0 0 0 JWaldnp 0 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Brothers GPolncph 1 0 0 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 3 6 2 9 2 Totals 3 56 116 Belisle 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Nicasi o P iNsburgh 0 0 0 0 2 0 000 — 2 Friedrich 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Atlanta 022 200 Ogx — 6 Diego E—Gosselin (3). DP—Atlanta1. LOB—Pittsburgh San ielandW,1-0 5 1 -3 3 3 3 3 5 11, Atlanta11.28—I.Davis (17), C.Johnson2 (27), W .AlvarezH,1 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 Bethancourt2 (3). HR—A.Mccutchen(25), J.Upton R VincentH,20 1 0 0 0 0 1 (28). SB —S.Marte (28), J.Upton(8), B.Upton (20). 2 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO QuackenbushH,9 1 BenoitS,10-11 1 0 0 0 0 1 Pittsburgh HBP—by Fl a nde (Gr an dal ) . Bal k—Wieland. LockeL,7-6 4 8 6 6 5 3 T — 3: 1 0. A — 38,589 (42 , 3 02). JGomez 23 1 0 0 1 1 LaFrombois e 1-30 0 0 0 0 Ju.Wilson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Phillies 2, Marliits1 Axford 1 1 0 0 0 0 Pimentel 1 1 0 0 0 1 MIAMI — Kyle Kendrick pitched Atlanta TeheranW,14-13 5 6 2 2 3 6 seven innings, had three hits and Varvaro 1 0 0 0 1 0 drove in a run, Jonathan Papelbon 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Jaime 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 closed in his first appearance Shreve Russell 1 1 0 0 0 1 since beingsuspendedand Phila1-3 1 0 0 0 1 J.Walden KimbrelS,45-49 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 delphia beat Miami. WP — Jaime. Philadelphia Miami T—3:17.A—25,457 (49,586). ab r hbi ab r hbi R everecf 3 0 0 0 Yelichlf 4 0 1 0 Brewers 5, Reds0 Franco 3b 5 1 2 0 Solano 2b 4 0 1 0 Utle y2b 4 0 0 0 McGeh3b 4 0 1 0 H oward1b 3 0 0 0 Bour1b 4 0 0 0 CINCINNATI —Kyle Lohsemade pr 0 0 0 0 GJones rf 4 1 2 0 the most of another wasteful day GwynJ Giles p 0 0 0 0 Vldspn pr 0 0 0 0 for Milwaukee's offense, throwing Papeln p 0 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 0 0 rf 4 0 2 1 KHrndz cf 4 0 2 1 a two-hitter and driving in a run for Byrd uflf-1b 3 1 1 0 Mathisc 2 0 0 0 a victory that forestalled elimina- R N ievesc 2 0 0 0 Handp 2 0 0 0 tion from the playoffs a bit longer. DBrwnph-If 0 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee will be eliminated from Galvisss Kndrckp 3 0 3 1 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 the wild card race with a loss or a R uizc 1 0 1 0 Cappsp 0 0 0 0 T otals 32 2 9 2 Totals 3 31 7 1 win by SanFrancisco, which lost P hiladelphia 00 0 0 0 0 110 — 2 to LosAngelesWednesdaynight Miami 0 00 000 100 — 1 DP — Philadelphia1, Miami3. LOB—Philadelphia 9-1. Pittsburgh clinched at least 10, Miami6.28—Ruf (8), K.Kendrick (1),Yelich (30), the other wild card spot onTuesSolano(11), G.Jones2(31), K.Hernandez(2). 3B—K. Hernandez (1). day night. IP H

R E R BBSO

Philadelphia Milwaukee Cincinnati K.KendrickW,10-13 7 6 1 1 1 2 544 tr/t ab r hbi ab r hbi GilesH,12 1 0 0 0 0 0 513 6r/r of the fifth with a stomach illness. CGomzcf 4 0 1 1 BHmltncf 2 0 0 0 PapelbonS,38-42 1 1 0 0 0 1 462 14r/t Braunrf 4 0 0 0 Heiseycf 2 0 0 0 Miami 447 17 LosAngeles Oakland Lucroyc 2 0 0 0 Bourgslf 4 0 0 0 Hand 7 6 1 1 3 2 West Division ab r hbi ab r hbi ArRmr3b 5 1 1 0 Frazier3b 3 0 0 0 HatcherL,0-3 1-32 1 1 1 0 W L Pct GB C alhonrf 4 1 1 0 Crispcf 4 0 1 1 Frnkln2b 3 0 1 1 Cespdsdh 5 1 2 0 GParralf 3 1 0 0 Mesorcc 3 0 0 0 A.Ramos 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 x-LosAngeles 91 68 572 Forsythss 4 0 0 0 Craig1b 3 1 0 0 T routcf 2 1 1 0 Fuldlf 5 0 1 0 RWeks2b 3 1 2 1 Lecurep 0 0 0 0 Capps 1 1 0 0 0 0 SanFrancisco 85 73 538 5r/t Guyerlf 3 1 1 0 Lvrnwy1b 1 0 0 0 Greenph 1 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 3 0 0 0 Overay1b 3 0 0 0 Phillips2b 3 0 0 0 HBP—by H and(Ni e ve s),by Ca p ps(Re ve re). SanDiego 76 82 481 14r/r Campncf 1 0 1 0 JGomsdh 2 0 1 0 SRdrgz1b 4 0 1 0 Cecchin3b 3 2 1 1 Tigers 6, WhiteSox1 K Davisph 1 0 0 0 Brucerf 3 0 0 0 T—2:54. A—22,491(37,442). Colorado 66 93 415 25 Casalic 1 0 0 0 Rcastllcf 3 1 0 1 Pujols dh 3 1 1 1 Callaspph-dh 1 0 0 0 MrRynl1b 0 0 0 0 Hannhn1b 3 0 2 0 Arizona 63 96 396 28 J Molinc 3 0 0 0 Brentzlf 5 2 2 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 2 3 A.Dunnph-dh1 0 0 0 Segurass 3 2 2 2 Cozartss 3 0 0 0 DETROIT —Justin Verlander z-clinched playoff berth Vazquzc 2 1 1 1 Cron1b 3 0 0 0 DeNrrsc 3 1 1 0 Lohsep 2 0 0 1 Corcinop 0 0 0 0 Interleague x-clinched division D Butlrc 0 0 0 0 ENavrr1b 1 0 0 0 Freimn1b 2 0 0 0 pitched eight impressive innings, Totals 3 5 3 9 3 Totals Hooverp 0 0 0 0 3 311109 lannettc 3 0 0 0 Vogtph-1b 2 0 0 0 L utzph 1 0 0 0 and Detroit inched closer to a Twins 2, Diamoitdbacks1 Wednesday'sGames T ampa Bay 2 0 0 0 0 0 001 — 3 GBckhss 4 1 1 0 Lowriess 4 1 2 0 Viffarrlp 0 0 0 0 Minnesota 2, Arizona1 Boston 020 504 Ogx — 11 postseason spot, rallying after Cowgilllf 4 0 1 0 BBurnspr 0 0 0 0 Dennck p 0 0 0 0 N.Y.MetsatWashington, ppd., rain E—Geltz (1), Cecchini (1). DP—Boston1. LOBMINNEAPOLIS — Phil Hughes LJimnz3b 4 1 1 0 Sogard2b 0 0 0 0 B rnhrtc 1 0 0 0 benches cleared in the sixth inning Tampa Milwaukee 5,Cincinnati 0 Bay 8, Boston 9. 28—Zobrist (34),Longoria Totals 30 5 6 5 Totals 2 8 0 2 0 Reddckrf 4 1 2 2 set a single-season major league Philadelphi2, a Miami1 to beat the Chi c ago White Sox. (26), Myers (14), S.Ro dri g uez (13), Nava (21), Ce sPunto2b-ss 4 1 1 1 M ilwaukee 0 0 0 1 1 0 030 — 6 record for strikeout-to-walk ratio, Atlanta 6,Pittsburgh2 pedes (36), Brentz (2). 38 — K ie rm ai e r (7). HR — C eTotals 3 4 5 9 4 Totals 3 54 9 4 White Sox ace Chris Sale was C incinnati 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 Chicago Cubs3, St.Louis1 cchini(1).SF—Franklin, Bogaerts. LosAngeles 102 010 100 — 5 breezing along with a shutout E—Bourgeois (1). DP—Cincinnati 1. LOBpitching eight strong innings for SanDiego4, Colorado3 IP H R E R BBSO Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati 2. 28 — Oakland 000 000 400 — 4 C.Gomez (33), Minnesota in a 2-1victory over L.A. Dodgers 9,SanFrancisco1 Tampa Bay E—Trout (3), Reddick (5), Donaldson(23), when he hit Victor Martinez with ArRamirez(23), Segura(13). S—Corcino. SFToday'sGam es OdorizziL,11-13 3 7 5 5 3 3 Lohse. Arizona. D e.Norri s (6). DP — Los A ng el e s 2. LO B — Lo s An gea pitch in the sixth. The two exMilwaukee(Gallardo 8-10)at Cincinnati (Holmberg les 4,Oakland7.28—Pujols (37), H.Kendrick (32), L B.Gome s 1 2 2 2 2 0 IP H R E R BBSO 1-2), 9:35a.m. the benches Yates 1 1-3 1 4 3 2 2 Milwaukee (2), Reddick(16). 38—Punto(2). SB—Trout changed words and Arizona Minnesota N.Y. Mets(Gee7-8) at Washington(Treinen2-3), Jimenez Geltz 2-3 0 0 0 2 2 (16), B.Burns (3). CS—Green(4). SF—Pujols. LohseW,13-9 9 2 0 0 0 6 and bullpens emptied. Thesituaab r hbi ab r hbi 10:05arm.,1stgame C.Ramo s 1 0 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO tion didn't escalate andMartinez Cincinnati Inciartlf 4 0 1 0 DaSntncf 4 1 3 0 Philadelphia(D.Buch anan 6-8) at Miami (Koehler LosAngeles Beliveau 1 0 0 0 0 3 CorcinoL,0-2 4 1 - 3 4 2 2 4 2 Pollockcf 4 1 1 0 Dozier2b 3 0 1 0 9-10),1:10p.m. Boston .SantiagoW6-9 51-3 3 0 0 2 3 eventually scored to tie the game Hoover 12-3 0 0 0 1 1 Lamb3b 4 0 1 0 Plouffe3b 0 0 0 1 N.Y.Mets(ZaWheeler11-10) at Washington(G.Gon- H RanaudoW,4-3 7 6 2 2 1 2 Viffarreal 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 PestanoH,1 1 1 0 0 2 1 Trumodh 4 0 0 0 Nunez3b 1 0 0 0 ati. zalez9-10),4:05p.m.,2ndgame D.Britton 1 2 0 0 0 0 13 4 4 4 0 0 Dennick 1 1 3 2 2 0 DPerltrf 3 0 0 1 KVargs1b 3 0 0 0 Pittsburgh(Volquez12-7) at Atlanta(Hale 4-4), 4:10 Morin Edw.Escobar 1 1 1 1 0 2 Lecure ThatcherH,2 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 Pachec1b 4 0 1 0 Parmel1b 0 0 0 0 p.m. Detroit Odorizzipitchedto3 batters inthe4th. Grilli H,11 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Chicago WP — C orc i n o 2, Vi l a rreal . Ahmedpr 0 0 0 0 KSuzukc 3 0 0 1 San Diego (Cashner 5-7) at SanFrancisco (YPetit SalasH,B ab r hbi ab r hbi HBP —by Yates(Cecchini), by Edw.Escobar (Guyer). 1 1 0 0 0 1 T—2:54.A—27,033 (42,319). G regrsss 4 0 1 0 Arciarf 3 0 0 0 5-5), 7:15 p.m. Eatoncf 4 0 0 0 Kinsler2b 3 1 2 2 WP — B. G o mes 2 . P B — J . Mo l i n a . StreetS,17-19 1 0 0 0 0 1 B oWlsnc 3 0 1 0 Pintodh 3 0 0 0 Friday'sGames A IRmrzss 4 0 1 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 2 0 T—3:40. A—35,741(37,499). Oakland Pnngtn2b 3 0 00 A.Hi ckslf 3 0 0 0 Miami atWashington,10:05a.m.,1st game JAreu1b 4 1 1 0 Micarr1b 4 0 0 1 Cubs 3,Cardinals1 Lester L,16-11 7 8 5 3 0 7 EdEscrss 2 1 0 0 Atlantaat Philadelphia,4:05p.m. Gregerson 1 1 0 0 0 1 Giffaspi3b 4 0 2 0 VMrtnzdh 2 1 0 0 Totals 3 3 1 6 1 Totals 2 52 4 2 Miami atWashington, 4:05p.m.,2ndgame National League Doolittle 1 0 0 0 1 1 A Garcirf 4 0 0 0 JMrtnzlf 4 1 3 0 CHICAGO — Jake Arrieta pitched Arizona 000 001 000 — 1 Houstonat N.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m. Viciedodh 4 0 1 1 Cstllns3b 2 0 0 1 T — 3: 2 7. A — 27,989 (35, 0 67). 1 1 0 0 0 0 ggx— 2 PittsburghatCincinnati,4:10 p.m. seven strong innings to outduel St. Minnesota JrDnkslf 4 0 1 0 D.Kellypr-3b 0 1 0 0 Dodgers 9,Giants1 E—Plouffe(14). LOB—Arizona 6, Minnesota6. ChicagoCubsat Milwaukee,5:10p.m. Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 Holadyc 3 0 0 0 Louis'John Lackeyand leadthe 2B — Pacheco (10), Da.Santana2 (26). SB—Inciarte Orioles 9, Yankees 5 St. LouisatArizona,6;40p.m. Semien2b 3 0 1 0 AnRmnss 3 0 0 1 LOS ANGELES— ClaytonKer(19), Pollock(14), Lamb(1). S—Dozier. SF—D. Chicago Cubs to avictory over the 2Peral Coloradoat L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m. RDaviscf 4 2 3 1 ta,Plouffe. SanDiegoatSanFrancisco, 7:15p.m. Cardinals. Arrieta (10-5), coming NEW YORK — Derek Jeter and the Totals 3 4 1 7 1 Totals 2 96 106 shaw tied a career high with his IP H R E R BBSO Chicago 000 001 000 — 1 21st victory, Yasiel Puig homered Arizona off a one-hit shutout against CinNew York Yankeeswereeliminated Detroit Wild Card 000 001 23x — 6 L,0-7 5 3 2 2 4 6 AMERICANLEAGUE E—Holaday(7). DP—Chicago1. LOB—Chicago to highlight a four-run sixth inning cinnati last week, limited St. Louis Nuno from postseason contention, Delgado 2 1 0 0 0 3 W L PctGB and the Los Angeles Dodgers won 6, Detroit 9. 2B — K in sl e r (40), J.Marti n ez (30). 38to two hits and an unearned run E.Marshal l 1 0 0 0 0 1 wasting a three-run lead in a Kansas City 86 72 .544 Viciedo(3). SB—J.Abreu (3), R.Davis (35).S—Hola- the NL West title with a victory Minnesota while striking out10. Healso had a P.HughesW,16-10 8 Oakland 86 72 .544 loss to Nelson CruzandAL East day, An.Romine.SF— Mi.cabrera,Casteff anos. 5 1 1 0 5 Seattle 8 3 75 .525 3 IP H R E R BBSO over second-place SanFrancisco. two-run triple in the fourth inning. BurtonS,3-4 champion Baltimore. Jeter went 1 1 0 0 0 1 Cleveland 82 77 .522 3'/r Chicago Fittingly, the Dodgers claimed HBP — by N u no (E du.E s co bar ). 0 for 4 as thedesignated hitter in Sale 6 4 1 1 3 10 T—2:31 (Delay:1:06). A—29,445(39,021). St. Louis Chicago NATIONALLEAGUE GuerraL,2-4 1 3 2 2 0 0 their second straight division title ab r hbi ab r hbi W L P c t G B his next-to-last game in pinstripes, Lindstrom 23 3 3 3 1 0 behind Kershaw (21-3j, the probMcrpnt3b 3 0 1 0 Coghlnlf 4 0 2 0 z-Pittsburgh ending a seven-gamehitting 86 72 .544 D.Webb 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 able NL Cy Leaders Young Award winner Wong2b 4 0 0 0 J.Baezss 4 0 0 0 SanFrancisco 85 73 .538 Detroit streak and dropping his average Hollidylf 4 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 2 0 0 0 Through Wednesday's Games Milwaukee 8 1 77 .513 4 VerlanderW,15-12 8 7 1 1 0 6 and MVP candidate whohas been M Adms1b 4 0 0 0 Solerrf 3 0 1 0 to.253. AMERICAN LEAGUE z-clinched playoff berth Soria 1 0 0 0 0 1 the catalyst behind their success JhPerl t ss 4 0 1 0 Valuen3b 3 1 1 0 BATTING — Al t uv e, Houston, .343; VMartinez, HBP—bySale(V.Martinez). PB—Flowers. YMolinc 4 1 2 0 Wcastllc 4 0 0 0 Detroit, .334;Brantley,Cleveland,.329;Beltre, Texas, this season. Baltimore NewYork T—3:04.A—36,810 (41,681). P hampr 0 0 0 0 Lakecf 3 0 0 0 .325; Cano, American Lea Lge Seatle,.318; JAbreu,Chicago,.316; Miab r hbi ab r hbi Taversrf 3 0 1 0 Kalishph-cf 1 1 1 0 Cabrera,Detroit,.312. Markksrf 3 2 1 2 Gardnrcf 5 0 0 0 San Francisco L os Angeles Bourjoscf 2 0 0 0 Watkns2b 2 1 0 0 Blue Jays1, Mariners0 RBI — Trou t, LosAngeles,110; Ncruz,Baltimore, Indians 6, Royals 4 L oughlf 3 1 1 2 Jeterdh 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi D escalsph 1 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 108; Micabrera,Detroit, 106;JAbreu,Chicago, 105; A.Jonescf 5 0 2 2 Headly3b 4 3 3 1 Pencerf 4 0 0 1 DGordn2b 4 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Valaikaph 1 0 1 1 Pujols,LosAngeles,105; Ortiz, Boston,104; Bautista, TORONTO — Mark Buehrle pitched N.cruzdh 5 1 4 1 Teixeir1b 4 1 2 3 CLEVELAND Panik2b 4 0 1 0 Barney2b 0 0 0 0 — YanGomes hit a CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 Toronto,103. Clevngr1b 4 1 1 0 Cervellic 3 0 1 0 P osey1b 4 0 0 0 Puigcf 4112 eight shutout innings to reach200 Lackeyp 2 0 0 0 Arrietap 2 0 1 2 three-run homer, Michael Brantley HITS—Altuve, Houston, 222;Brantley, Cleveland, Pearce1b 1 0 0 0 Drew2b 2 1 1 1 Duva01b 0 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 4 1 0 0 SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 Alcantrph-2b 2 0 0 0 199; Micabrera,Detroit, 186; Cano, Seattle, 185; innings for the14th consecutive Pareds3b 4 0 1 0 Pirelaph-2b 1 0 1 0 got three more hits andCleveland S andovl3b 4 0 2 0 Kemprf 4 1 1 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Kinsler,Detroit, 184;VMartinez, Detroit, 183;AJones, Schoop2b 1 0 0 0 CYounglf 4 0 1 0 Susacc 4 0 2 0 HRmrzss 2 1 1 0 season, RyanGoinsdroveinthe stayed in the ALwild-card chase Grichkph-cf 1 0 0 0 Baltimore,178. KJhnsn2b-3b4 2 2 0 Rchrdsrf 2 0 0 0 CDmnglf 4 0 0 0 Rojasss 1 1 0 0 Totals 32 1 5 0 Totals 3 1 3 7 3 HOME RUNS —Ncruz, Baltimore,40; Carter, only run of thegameandToronto Flahrtyss 5 2 3 2 BMccnph 1 0 0 0 for at least one moredaywith a A riasss 4 1 1 0 Crwfrdlf 2 3 2 2 S t. Louis 000 0 1 0 000 — 1 Houston,37;JAbreu,Chicago,35; Bautista, Toronto, C Josphc 4 0 0 0 EPerezrf 0 0 0 0 pushed Seattle closer to playoff GBlanccf 4 0 2 0 Uribe3b 4 0 2 3 win over Kansas Ci t y. A loss would — 3 Chicago 000 200 01x 35; Ortiz,Boston,35;Trout, LosAngeles, 35; EncarISuzukiph 1 0 0 0 T Hudsnp 2 0 0 0 A.Effisc 3 1 0 1 E—W.castillo (6). LOB —St. Louis 6, Chicago9. nacion,Toronto,34. elimination, beating the slumping have eliminated the Indians, but B.Ryan ss 4 0 0 0 J.Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Kershwp 2 0 1 1 28 — S ol e r (8), Va l b uena (33), Ka l i s h (4). 38 — A rri e t a STOLEN BASES—Altuve, Houston,56; Ellsbury, Totals 39 9 15 9 Totals 3 5 5 9 5 Mariners. Buehrle (13-10)allowed after blowing a 3-0 lead, they ral- Machip 0 0 0 0 Ethierph 0 0 0 0 (1). SB —Bourjos (9). NewYork, 39;JDyson, KansasCity, 36;RDavis, DeB altimore 000 6 0 0 030 — 9 MDuffyph 1 0 1 0 BrWlsnp 0 0 0 0 three hits, walkedoneandstruck within 3t/a games IP H R E R BBSO troit, 35;AEscobar, Kansas City, 31;Reyes,Toronto, N ew York 111 0 0 0 020 — 5 lied and moved Affe ldtp 0 0 0 0 St. Louis 30; LMartin,Texas,29. out10, one shy ofhis seasonhigh. DP — Baltimore1, NewYork1. LOB—Baltimore9, of Kansas City andOakland in Cordier p 0 0 0 0 L ackey L,3-3 62 - 3 5 2 2 4 8 PITCHING —We aver, LosAngeles, 18-8; ScherNewYork5.28—Flaherty(14), Teixeira (13), C.Young the wild-card standings. There JGutrrzp 0 0 0 0 He left to his secondstanding ovaS .Freema n 0 0 0 0 1 0 zer, Detroit, 17-5; Kluber,Cleveland,17-9; Shoe(7). 38 —Lough (3). HR —Headley (6), Teixeira (22), Hestonp 0 0 0 0 Maness 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 maker,LosAngeles, 16-4; Wchen,Baltimore, 16-5; tion of the night after ChrisTaylor's are four days left in the regular Drew(7). S—C.Joseph. SF—Lough. Totals 35 1 9 1 Totals 3 0 9 8 9 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 PHughes, Choate Minnesota,16-10; Lester,Oakland,16-11. IP H R E R BBSO season. leadoff single in theninth. Aaron San Francisco 001 000 000 — 1 C.Marti n ez 2 -3 2 1 1 0 1 ERA —Sale, Chicago, 2.17; FHernandez, Seattle, Baltimore — 9 Los Angeles 00 0 0 1 4 04x Sanchez came onandpickedoff Chicago 2.34; Lester, Oakland,2.46; Lester,Oakland,2.46; B.NorrisW,15-8 6 5 3 3 1 9 KansasCity E—Arias(3), Kershaw(2). DP—SanFrancisco2, Cleveland rrietaW,10-5 7 2 1 0 1 10 Kluber,Cleveland,2.53; Richards,LosAngeles, 2.61; pinch runner JamesJones, then Tom.HunterH,11 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 LosAngeles1.LOB— SanFrancisco7,LosAngeles A ab r hbi ab r hbi Strop H,19 1 1 0 0 0 2 Cobb,TampaBay,2.75. MatuszH,14 1 0 0 0 0 0 6. 28—Susac(7), Kemp(37), C.crawford (14).38got the final two outs for his third .RondonS,27-31 1 2 0 0 0 0 1-3 2 2 2 1 0 AEscorss 5 1 3 0 Bourncf 4 1 0 0 Brach Kershaw (1). HR —Puig (16). SB—C.crawford(23). H Aokirf 5 1 1 0 JRmrzss 4 1 1 1 S.Freeman pi t ched to1 bat t er i n the 7t h . NATIONAL LEAGUE saveinasmanychances.Seattle McFarland 0 1 0 0 0 0 S—Kershaw. HBP —byArrieta(Taveras). BATTING —Morneau, Colorado, .317;JHarrison, O'DayS,4-8 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 L .caincf 5 1 1 0 Brantlylf 4 1 3 0 had inched closer in thewild card IP H R E R BBSO T — 2: 4 1. A — 33,29 2 (41, 0 72). Hosmer1b 5 1 2 1 CSantn1b 1 1 0 1 Pittsburgh, .316; AMccutchen, Pittsburgh, .313; New York San Francisco race whenOaklandlost to the AnPosey, SanFrancisco,.308; Revere,Philadelphia,.307; GreeneL,5-4 32 - 3 7 6 6 3 5 BButlerdh 4 0 2 3 YGomsdh 3 1 1 3 THudsonL,9-13 51-3 5 3 3 1 4 AGordnlf 1 0 0 0 Chsnhll3b 4 0 0 0 Lucroy,Milwaukee,.301; Span,Washington,.300. Huff 2 2 0 0 0 1 gels, but the defeat droppedthem Padres 4, Rockies 3 J.Lopez 0 1 2 2 1 0 S.Perezc 4 0 0 0 Aviles2b 3 1 1 0 RBI — AdGonzalez,LosAngeles,112;Stanton, Mi11-3 3 2 2 0 0 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Machi three gamesbackwith four to play. Whitley ami, 105;JUpton,Atlanta, 99;Howard, Philadelphia, D.Phelps 1 2 1 1 1 0 Infante2b 3 0 1 0 RPerezc 3 0 1 0 Affeldt 1 0 0 0 0 1 SAN DIEGO — Joe Wiel and M ostks3b 4 0 0 0 T.Holtrf 2 0 0 0 93; LaRoche, Washington, 91;Holliday, St. Louis, 90; Claiborne 1 1 0 0 0 1 1-3 1 4 1 1 1 DvMrpph-rf 1 0 0 1 Cordier Desmond, Washington,89. Seattle Toronto Whitleypitchedto 2baters inthe8th. earned his first big league win, JGutierrez 13 0 0 0 3 0 Totals 3 6 4 104 Totals 2 9 6 7 6 HITS — Span,Washington,180;Pence,SanFranab r hbi ab r hbi McFarlandpitchedto1batter inthe8th. 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 and TommyMedica hit a three-run K ansas City 0 0 0 1 3 0 000 — 4 Heston cisco,179;Revere,Philadelphia,179; DGordon, Los AJcksn cf 4 0 0 0 Reyes ss 4 0 0 0 T—3:32. A—46,056(49,642). Los Angeles — 6 Cleveland 3 0 0 0 2 1 ggx A ngel e s , 173;Rendon,Washington,172;FFreeman, Ackleylf 4 0 1 0 Bautistrf 3 0 1 0 replay-aided douershawW,21-3 8 8 1 1 0 11 home run and a DP — Cleveland1. LOB —Kansas City10, Cleve- K Atlanta,171;Lucroy,Milwaukee,171; McGehee, MiCano2b 3 0 0 0 Encrncdh 3 0 0 0 BrWilson 1 1 0 0 0 0 ble to lead San Di e go to a vi c tory Rangers 5,Astros1 land 7. 28 —Hosmer (35), B.Butler (31), J.Ramirez J.Lopez ami,171. K Morls1b 3 0 0 0 Lind1b 3 0 0 0 pitchedto2 batters inthe6th. HOMERUNS —Stanton, Miami, 37;Rizzo,ChiS eager3b 3 0 0 0 DNavrrc 3 0 1 0 (9), Brantley(45), Aviles(16). HR —YGomes (21). HBP over Colorado in their home finale. — by THud s on (C.crawford), by Cordi e r S B — A vil e s (14). SF — D av .M urp hy . Morrsnrl 3 0 0 0 Pompylf 3 0 0 0 31;Duda,NewYork, 28; Frazier, Cincinnati,28; ARLINGTON,Texas— Lisalverto The Padres notched their 76th win cago, WP—Kershaw.Balk—Kershaw. IP H R E R BBSO (C.crawford). JUpton, Atl a nta, 28; LaRoche, Washington, 26;Byrd, Hartdh 3 0 1 0 Kawsk3b 2 1 0 0 T—3:07. A—53,387(56,000). Bonilla becamethefirst pitcher KansasCity with four games to go, matching Phil adelphia,25;AdGonzalez,LosAngeles,25;AMcZ uninoc 2 0 0 0 Gosecf 3 0 0 0 J.Vargas 4 4 4 4 3 1 CTaylrss 2 0 1 0 Goins2b 3 0 2 1 Pittsburgh, 25;Mesoraco, Cincinnati, 25. in Texas Rangers history to win their victory total from each of the Cutchen, FinneganL,0-1 1 2 1 1 0 J.Jonespr 0 0 0 0 Braves 6, Pirates2 STOLEN BASES—DGordon, Los Angeles, 64; past two seasons. Crow 1-3 0 1 1 1 0 BHamilton, Cincinnati, 56; Revere, Philadelphia, Totals 2 7 0 3 0 Totals 2 71 4 1 his first three career starts with a Bueno 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Seattle 0 00 000 000 — 0 victory over Houston. Bonilla (34 7; CGomez , Milwaukee,34; Span,Washington, Andrew MCCutchen K.Herrera 1 1 0 0 1 0 ATLANTA — Toronto 000 000 01x — 1 Colorado San Diego 31; EYoung,NewYork, 29; Blackmon, Colorado, 28; DP — Seattle1, Toronto1. LOB —Seattle 2,Toronto 0), promoted Sept. 2 from Triple-A Lcoleman 13 0 0 0 1 0 homered for Pittsburgh's only ab r hbi ab r hbi SMarte,Pittsburgh,28; Rollins, Philadelphia,28. 3. 28—Hart(9).S—C.Taylor. Round Rock, allowed four hits and TiCollins 23 0 0 0 0 1 runs, and the Pirates stumbled in Blckmncf 4 1 1 1 Solarte 3b 4 1 1 0 PITCHING —Kershaw, Los Angeles, 21-3; IP H R E R BBSO struck out seven in six scoreless Cleveland Ynoa3b 2 1 0 0 Maybincf 4 0 1 0 Wainwright,St. Louis,20-9; Cueto,Cincinnati, 19Central title, Seattle Bauer 4 13 8 4 4 3 2 their chase for the NL Mornea1b 3 1 0 0 Gyorko2b 4 0 0 0 9; Bumgarner,SanFrancisco, 18-10; Greinke,Los TWalkerL,2-3 8 4 1 1 1 6 innings. McAllisterW,4-7 21-3 1 0 0 0 4 0 3 1 Grandl1b 3 2 1 0 Angeles,16-8;WPeralta, Milwaukee,16-11; Fister, falling to Atlanta. ThePirates, who Cuddyrrf Toronto RzepczynskiH,13 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 CDckrs If 4 0 3 1 Medica If 3123 Washington,15-6; Simon,Cincinnati, 15-10;Roark, BuehrleW,13-10 8 3 0 0 1 10 Heuslon Texas ShawH,24 1 0 0 0 1 1 clinched a playoff spot on Tuesday Rosarioc 4 0 0 0 Benoitp 0 0 0 0 Washington,15-10;Lynn,St. Louis,15-10. ERA —Kershaw, Los Angeles, 1.77; Cueto,CinAa.Sanchez S,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Allen S,23-27 1 1 0 0 0 1 night, began the night1t/a games Rutledgss 3 0 0 0 RLirianrf 4010 Buehrlepitchedto1batter in the9th. Grssmnlf 2 0 1 0 LMartncf 5 1 1 0 J.Vargaspitchedto1batter inthe5th. Belisle p 0 0 0 0 AMoorec 2 0 0 0 cinnati, 2.29;Wainwright, St. Louis, 2.38;Ham els, behind St. Louis. Pittsburgh lost T—1:59.A—16,836 (49,282). Altuve 2b 3 0 1 0 Andrus ss 5 0 1 1 HBP —byJ.vargas(Bourn),byBauer(A.Gordon). Nicasiop 0 0 0 0 Amarstss 4 0 0 1 Philadelphia2.47; , HAlvarez,Miami,2.70; Lynn,St. M rsnckcf 4 0 1 0 Odor2b 3 1 2 1 T—3:29.A—13,796(42,487). for only the fourth time in its past Fridrchp 0 0 0 0 Wielndp 2 0 0 0 Louis ,2.73;Greinke,LosAngeles,2.74. z-St. Louis z-Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati Chicago

TampaBay Boston ab r hbi ab r hbi Z obristdh 5 1 2 1 Betts2b 3 1 1 1 Kiermrcf 5 0 2 0 Bogartsss 4 1 2 3 L ongori3b 3 1 1 0 Navarf 4 1 1 2 Myersrf 4 0 1 1 BrdlyJrrf 0 0 0 0


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

Digital

Prep footdallthisweekend

Continued from C1 Craven remembers a simi-

lar form of technology not that long ago called Digital Sports Video. He recalls DSV having nearly all the perks of Hudl — except, with DSV, Craven

says, "you had to be a computer programmer to work it, and you couldn't exchange film via Internet." With Hudl, that travel

has been eliminated. "It makes it so much easier to trade films with teams instead

of meeting at the top of Santiam Pass on Saturday afternoon," Crum says, "then trying to break stuff down back in the old days of VHS or 16-millimeter film."

While Craven prefers to watch an opponent's game film in its entirety to understand the

"feel of the game," with Hudl, coaches and players have the ability to categorize plays — by down and distance, by field positioning, by run or pass, by just about anything. "It's pretty amazing how far they've come in the last five

years with it," observes Craven, whose program is in its fourth season of using Hudl. "In terms of scouting and what you can do, it just blows you away," Crum says. "The level of reports that you can get ... you can really get to the minute level. In the old days,

you had to use intuitive ability or you were marking with pen and pencil. But now, those

reports come out, and you can start to see some real trends and start to game-plan around

those and let your kids know what to look for." A nother feature o f

Hudl

might appeal to players the most. Not long ago, building a highlight reel for college recruiters involved players and coaches holing up for hours, scouring through game tape and splicing plays together. Now, players can collect plays — dips, really — on Hudl and insert graphics to their liking before sending highlight video packages off to college coaches. Becauseof all of these features provided by Hudl, players want to watch video. That

includes senior Bend running back Hunter McDonald, who

says that he watches game tapes "pretty much all the time, every day." It also includes the

Lava Bears' starting quarterback, Creighton Simmonds, a senior who watches video

during his open periods or while athome or "anywhere, really," he says. "It just boosts confidence," says Simmonds, whose team has won its past two games.

"Everyone knows what they're doing because they can see themselves physically doing it. ... I think last year we had 15 minutes of watching it all together, like every player. And this year, we have hours and hours and hours of everyone

watching it because (the app) adds up the times you watch. The hours and hours compared to 15 minutes last year is a big difference." Hudl is

r e volutionary, as

shown by Playbook Scripts, an animated playbook feature used by Mountain View that

allows Cougars coaches to attach clips of the team executing each playcorrectl y or incorrectly. The app is a timesaver of sorts, allowing players to watch video whenever they want and

giving coaches more scheduling flexibility as they do not have to physically be present to break down footage. But, Craven points out, this technological innovation in instruction

will never usurp the realthing. "It will never replace direct instruction and having a physical teacher there to guide it," Craven says."It's a great tool. But it's not the teacher. High

school kids have to be taught HOW to watch film. A lot of them come in as freshmen and

just watch themselves.... They need instruction on how to be

effective in watching film." The Cougars are in their fifth season using Hudl and their third of "heavily being into it," according to the thirdyear coach Crum. Over the past

four years, Mountain View has compiled a 38-10 overall record with three Intermountain Conference titles, three trips to at

least the state quarterfinals and a Class 5A championship. And Hudl, Crum says, gets "a ton of credit." "It's only going to create a better group of football players, not just around here but around the country," Crum

says. "Kids have so much more access to watch themselves and get better at what they do.

It's really changed football."

— Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucasibendbulletin.com.

FRIDAY Bend (2-1) at Pendleton(2-1), 7 p.m.: In racking up 422 yards of total offense and limiting Eagle Point to just 41 yards rushing, the LavaBears posted their second straight shutout in a 49-0 home win last Friday. Hunter McDonald, who ran for131 yards and two scores last weekand is averaging neariy145 rushing yards per game,leads Bend into battle against a former Intermountain Conference foe. Aweek after posting 143 total yards and two touchdowns, LavaBearquarterback Creighton Simmonds looks to help theBears spoil Pendieton'shomeopener.TheBuckaroos are coming off two straight wins, including a 2814 victory at Ontario. Mountain View(3-0) at Springfield (2-1), 7 p.m.: The Cougars wereoutscored 14-0 in the fourth quarter but halted Crater's final drive to hold on for a 40-34 road win last Friday. Mountain View, No. 1 in the OSAAClass 5Arankings, seeks its first 4-0 start since 2010when it travels to Springfield. Mike Irwin (three touchdowns and146 rushing yards last week) andCodyAnthony (two rushing TDs) lead theCougars into the nonieagueshowdown.TheMillers,who haveadvancedtothe5A semifinals each of the past two years, comeoff a 28-21 loss at Hermiston. Summit (2-1) at TheDalles (0-3), 7 p.m.: Forcing turnovers has beenone of the Storm's keys to success this season. Despite giving the ball away five times in a35-14 homeloss to Ashland last Friday, Summit logged three take-aways to bring its season total to 11 through three games. Jason Garcia, who ran for 109yards last week, and SeanKent, who added103 yards rushing and two touchdowns, guide theNo. 10Storm to The Daiies. Thenewlyrenamed Riverhawks havebeen outscored 162-28 so far this season, including 61-0 last Friday at RedmondHigh. Ridgeview(2-1) at Ashland (3-0), 7 p.m.: Jacob Johnson comesoff a gamefor the ages. In a 6151 comeback victory over visiting Hood RiverValley last Friday, the Ridgeview quarterback passed for 364 yards andbecamejust the fourth player in Oregon 11-manfootball history to pass for eight touchdowns.Now,Johnsonand histoptargets Tanner O'Neal (202 yards, four TDslast week) and Coiton Joiiey (111yards, two scores) take the Ravens toAshland,whichranksNo.5 inClass5A. The Grizzlies, state semifinaiists a yearago, won 35-14 at Summit last Friday behind 195passing yards and three touchdowns byKyleWeinberg along with108 rushing yards andtwo scores by Ryne Robitz. Redmond(3-0) at Hood River Valley(1-2), 7 p.m.: ThePanthershaveshown tobeoneof5A'sbest on both sides of the ball, as shown bytheir 61-0 home win against TheDaiies last Friday. Derek Brown rushed for four touchdowns and, for the third straight game, ran for more than140 yards. Brown leads the highest-scoring team in 5A(nearly 60 points per game) to HoodRiver to face the Eagles, who comeoff a 61-51 loss at Ridgeview last week. Riley VanHoose (six touchdowns last Friday) and Patrick Crompton (three TDs)highlight the Eagles. Gladstone t3-0) at CrookCounty t2-1), 7 p.m.: Blake Bartels passed for a season-high143 yards in Crook County's 39-14 win at Sisters last Friday, rushing for another 86 yards and finishing with a total of two touchdowns. Barteis and theCowboys, who as a team ranfor 367 yards last week and are No. 8 inthe OSAAClass 4A rankings, begin Tri-Valley Conference playagainst Gladstone. The top-ranked Gladiators defeated visiting Scappoose 35-21 last Friday, their narrowest margin of victory this season. Gladstone allowed 422yards of total offense to Scappoosebut boasts three Smith running backs (Zach, Sir'Ray andHandsome)who eachscoredatleastonetouchdown last week. Sutherlin (1-2) at Sisters (1-2), 7 p.m.:After a 39-14 home loss to Crook County last Friday, Sisters looks to get back on track in their SkyEm League opener against Sutherlin. Running back Logan Schutte, who rushed for a score against Crook County, and the Outlaws host the Bulidogs, who fell 43-20 at Harrisburg last week. Wryland McKnight was on the receiving end of two scoring passes byTaelor Carson against Harrisburg. Madras (1-2) at Estacada (0-3), 7 p.m.:With Gustavo Pacheco booting a pair of field goals and a point-after-touchdown last Friday, the White Buffaloes picked up their first win of the season in a13-12 victory against visiting Stayton. Now, running back Jered Pichette, who rushed for Madras' lone touchdown last week, and the Buffs travel to Estacada for the Tri-Valley Conference opener for both teams. TheRangers come off a 24-7 loss to Stevenson (Wash.) and have been battling the effects of the nearby 36 Pit fire, including poor air quality that forced a late change to play their "home" game last week at Barlow High.

Burns(3-0) ati.a Pine(1-2), 7 p.m.:La Pine built an 18-0 halftime lead only to watch it turn into a 33-24 loss at Lakeview last Friday. In their final nonconference matchup of the season, quarterback BradWard, who hadtwo touchdown passes lastweek,andtheClass3A Hawkshosttheundefeated 2A Hiianders, who comeoff a 49-19 rout against CascadeChristian. Vernenia (1-2) at Culver (3-0), 7 p.m.:For the first time since 2008, the Buiidogs are off to a 3-0 start after dismantling Santiam 54-26 on the road last Friday. Cuiver, which is No. 2 in the OSAA

Class 2A rankings and is the highest-scoring team in the classification, is outscoring opponents147-46. Clay McCiure, fresh off a 6-of-6 passing performance for137 yards and two touchdowns, leads the Buiidogs against Vernonia, which defeated Chemawa40-16 at home last week after being shut out in each of its first two games. Prospect (2-1) at Gilchrist (2-0), 4 p.m.:The Heitzman brothers highlight Giichrist's attack in

this Ciass1A Special District 2 matchup. Senior JonnyHeitzman has rushedfor290yardsand two touchdowns while racking up 108 receiving yards in the Grizzlies' first two games. Meanwhile, freshman quarterback NathanHeitzman was 6-for-10 passing for173 yards and two scores in Gilchrist's 46-13 win at McKenzie on Sept. 12. Gilchrist, which comes off a byeweek, hosts Prospect, which won 56-6 at Glendale last Friday. — Bulletin staff report

Pac Am Continued from C1 As for the rain, the 12-year veter-

an of the Pac Am said he has come to expect the occasional wet and wild day. "We haven't had many of these days, but I'll tell you, we had one (a few years ago) with sleet and rain and everything else," Bryan said. "We used to play in October, so we

f

/

were expecting some real different

temperatures." It seems like it is an unwritten rule that at least one of the first

three rounds of the Pac Am, which is in its 18th year, must be played in some version of less-than-ideal

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Central Oregon weather. Rick Lukas, of St. George, Utah, tees off at the ninth hole during the Pacific This year it came on Wednes- Amateur Golf Classic at Lost Tracks Golf course in Bend on Wednesday. day's third round, the final round

for all but the top four players in each flight. Rain had Pac Am golfersreaching for an umbrella and head-to-toe waterproof clothing. ButforJerryClose,a53-year-old from Moses Lake, Washington, a little rain was no bother. "Wonderful, actually," Close replied when asked how his day went. "The forecast was for heavy

of a combination of rain and poor

play. Not him. He finished his round with a 77-over 149 and still walked

off the course in a mood that would suggest a score much lower. "I had more fun than anybody on this golf course today," he said while pointing to his scorecard. rains, and it reallywasn't thatbad, I "But I did have apar. didn't think." "I came prepared (for the rain). Then Close — who had just shot It's golf."

to get the ball into the hole." Close is in his fifth year playing in the Pac Am, so he knows well

"the hard part" of playing in the Pac Am can be packing for every conceivableweather occasion, he SRld.

Considering the potential weath-

er variations, why keep coming back with an entry fee of more than $500 per year'? Close says that the appeal of the a 5-over-par 77 from the 7,300-yard Tanner Bown, a 3 0 -year-old Pac Am goes far beyond the day's tips at Aspen Lakes to qualify for from Las Vegas, agreed that play- weather. "Weatherwise, you have to acthe championship round today in ing in the rain was part of the Sunriver — sat back and laughed. game. cept that," Close said. "As far as the "But I played well, too," he addBown works for the Southern cost goes, you get a lot of return for ed. "That probably makes a big Nevada Golf Association and is your money." difference." playing in the Pac Am to scout out That includes generous gift It most certainly can. the tournament for ideas for his packages and dinners, he said, and M ike Quartero, a 70-year-old association's Las Vegas World Am- one more distinctive perk: a chance from A ntioch, California, said ateur, a handicapped golf tourna- to shoot 77 at Aspen Lakes to qualtwo of his playing partners quit ment not unlike the Pac Am. ify for the championship round their rounds before finishing. And He said the weather would be at Crosswater Club, one of the nahe joined up with another player a silly reason to give up in the Pac tion's most heralded golf courses. whose partners had stopped short Am. Conduded Close with a smile: "The first two days were fantas- "So really, the return on the entry of 18 holes. Quartero, who is playing in his tic up here," Bown said. "People fee is not bad." second Pac Am, could only assume should realize that (it could rain), — Reporter: 541-617-7868, players were pulling out because and no matter what, you still have zhaII@bendbulletin.com.

Watson Continued from C1 Even so, the generation gap creates a dynamic that brings an element of curiosity to this Ryder Cup. Only two players on his teamMickelson and Jim Furyk — were playing on the PGA Tour when Watson won the last of his 39 titles in 1998.

Watson has not been at a Ryder Cup since he was captain, and he

was slightly defensive Wednesday when asked a series of questions about whether that might hurt him.

"No," he said flatly."Because I've played in the Ryder Cup four times, and I've been a captain once. That's

experience." He also does not buy into the notion that he cannot relate to a

new generation of players, nine of whom were not even born when he

won the first of his eight majors. "I've answered that question before," Watson said. "They know

I've played in the Ryder Cup. They understand I've been a captain.

RyderCuprosters

Cup only twice since Watson last

was captain — at Brookline in 1999

UNITED STATES Captain:TomWatson Players:c-Keegan Bradley, Rickie Fowler, Jim Furyk, Zach Johnson, Matt Kuchar, c-Hunter Mahan, Phil Mickeison, Patrick Reed, c-WebbSimpson, Jordan Spieth, JimmyWalker, Bubba Watson.

when Justin Leonard made the "putt heard 'round the world," and in 2008 with Paul Azinger at the helm at Valhalla. Watson already raised questions with his picks, stating that he want-

EUROPE Captain:Paul McGiniey Players:Thomas Biorn, Denmark; Jamie Donaldson, Wales; Victor Dubuisson, France; c-Stephen Gallacher, Scotland; Sergio Garcia, Spain; Martin Kaymer, Germany;Graeme McDowell, Northern Ireland; Rory Mcliroy, Northern Ireland; c-lan Pouiter, England; Justin Rose, England; Henrik Stenson, Sweden; c-LeeWestwood, England.

chosen. Will it matter who plays? Does it

c-Denotes captain's pick

And they know that I know what

they're doing. They have respect round so he could watch. for me and I have the ultimate reAs a captain? "I haven't really been paying spect for them. We're on the same page. We'reprofessional golfers. attention," McGinley said. "In reDoesn't matter how old you are or gards to what Tom is doing with howyoung you are." the team, I don't even know what He certainly has the respect of groups he's going out with. I just European captain Paul McGin- know he's going to make some ley, who referred to Watson as his good decisions and he's going to "boyhood hero." McGinley went to have a strong American team out college in San Diego and worked there and we are going to be preon a practice range when the PGA

thing. They have won the Ryder

pared for that."

ed the hot hands and then passing over Chris Kirk, who had won the

Deutsche Bank Championship the day before the captain's picks were matter who is the captain? "Bottom line is he's a profes-

sional golfer with a resume that is awfully deep," Zach Johnson said. "He's got a lot of sage advice and wisdom that I think we can cer-

tainly dig into and maybe learn from. Andthenyou compound that

with the fact that we're playing a country that he's had some success in — to put it mildly — I think it's terrific." Mickelson was asked how his

own experience could help the Ryder Cup rookies, and he quickly deferred. "I'll try to do or say whatever I

can," Mickelson said. "But it's captain Watson's team. He's the leader. It's been21 years since the last time

we won on foreign soil and the last time it happened, he was the lead-

er. It was also the last year before I started making the teams. So I'm very honored that I have the op-

portunity to play with him, play for him, and learn from him."

Tour came to town. McGinley used McGinleytalks of atemplate that And now, the Americans will to ask his friends to cover for him Europe has had for years. find out if they can win under him when Watson played a practice The Americans have no such again.

Bowling

rolls. If the bowler fails to knock

ings, since the system is working

down all the pins on the first roll,

for them the way it is. But he added

Continued from C1

he or she gets chance. If the bowl- that he thinks significant changes er knocks over the remaining pins are required to attract spectators on the second roll, that is called a and sponsors and win the backspare, and it counts for the 10, plus ing of the International Olympic however many pins that bowler Committee. "I think we will see change," he knocks down in the next roll. If the bowler fails to get a strike or said. "I think the industry in gena spare,the score forthe frame is eral knows the need for change so registe red as however many pins that we are more relevant on popuare knocked down in the first two lar culture again."

What he would like to see is an

arrangement similar to the soccer World Cup that would pit players against each other in a group format culminating in finals. Scoring, possibly only in the finals, could be simplified into a frame-by-frame showdown. The player winning the frame would get one point. Any player getting to six points would attempts. automatically be the winner, and Simple enough, right? that would be the end of it. Dornberger and a lot of people Another radical suggestion be- trying to figure out how to keep ing considered is to make every sport bowling out of the gutter do strike count for 30points, no matter

Mike Seymour, an Australian

who is the World Tenpin Bowling Association's vice president, said

a working group is scheduled to make four or five proposals at an

not think so. At big i nternational competitions, where dozens of bowlers are

executive board meeting in December in Abu Dhabi.

winners are determined by cumulative scores, not finals, it is hard

tennis. With each game shorter,

quite unhappy to see vanish. for spectators to get emotionally "I'm open to anything because involved because no one knows the I love our sport," Dornberger said. winners until the entire day's com"I love tradition, but it's vital that petition is over. "It took 11 I/2 hours to complete we become an Olympic sport. If we have to be dragged into the 21st the two rounds of play today," said

three format. But he acknowledged

century to do that, I'm OK with that."

the track if the 30-point strike sys-

what the next ball is. Spares would count for 20. That would make the math a lot easier yet retain the 300

as the perfectscoreforagam e— a tradition many bowlers would be

Seymour said top-level bowling playing at the same time and the could soon start to look more like

Bill Hoffman, a five-time world champion and Hall of Fame bowler

finals could be played in a best-ofthat, even for supporters of the overhaul, letting go of the magical 300 is hard to imagine. "Maybeforthe average leaguetype player a few more years down

tem has been established and provwho is coaching Hong Kong's team en that might take over," he said. works: at the Asian Games. "That is way "I don't like banishing the old 300. I'm a traditionalist and I've been Each game is broken down too long for climaxes." into 10 frames. If a bowler rolls a Hoffman said the changes around for a long time in this sport. strike, that counts for the 10 pins would likely face the most opposi- I can't see it being banished forevknocked down in that roll, plus the tion from the 10 or 15 players who er, maybe just a change at the top pins knocked down in the next two are at the top of the world stand- end." Here is how bowling currently


C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

+

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S&PBOO

N ASDAQ ~ 4 6 53

17,210.06

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

4,555.22

Todap Thursday, September 25, 2014

Just a blip? Business orders for durable goods 1,960 '" " " ' 10 DAYS shot up by the largest amount on 2,050 ": record in July. Most of the strength contributing to the sharp gain in the orders for 2,000 "; long-lasting manufactured goods 1,950 stemmed from demand for commercial aircraft, which tends 1,900 to fluctuate sharply from month to 1,850 month. That's one reason economists anticipate that the ' M M A Commerce Department will report M today that durable goods orders plunged in August. StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,308 1,711 Pvs. Volume 3,204 1,778 Advanced 1843 1796 Declined 1 246 8 8 4 New Highs 24 29 New Lows 1 35 1 3 6

GOLD ~ $121860 ~

10-YR T-NOTE 257%

1,998.30

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DOW

Close:$4.96 V-2.32 or -31.9% The graphite and carbon materials company reduced its 2014 financial outlook, and it announced several management changes. $15

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Wall Street expects Nike's earnings and revenue improved in the June-August quarter. The athletic apparel and footwear maker, which is due to report its fiscal first-quarter financial results today, has benefited this year from strong sales growth. Those gains have helped offset a pickup in marketing costs. Investors will be listening for an update on Nike's marketing expenses, which surged 10 percent in the previous quarter. $80.84

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CHG +2.01 +8.27 +1.01 +4.59 +.54 +2.16 +1.29 +2.73

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CATEGORY Foreign Large Growth MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * N N N ASSETS $3,369 million EXP RATIO 1.25%

$ 26.87

Vol.:3.7m (11.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$939.19 m

PE: 27.2 Yield : ...

*

3-yr 21. 5 %

KBH Close: $16.07 V-0.90 or -5.3% The homebuilder reported worse-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue results, along with a downturn in home deliveries. $19

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J A 52-week range

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$102.30~

$153.10

Vol.:7.0m(2.8x a vg.) P Mkt. Cap:$41.36 b

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B B B Y Acorda Therapeutics

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Close:$67.33L4.64 or 7.4% The home goods retailer reported earnings and revenue results for its latest quarter that beat Wall Street expectations. $70 65

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Close:$37.62 L8.27 or 28.2% The biotechnology company said it will buy Civitas Therapeutics for $525 million, gaining a potential Parkinson's disease drug. $40 35

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Merrimack Pharma.

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52-week range $80.62

Vol.:11.7m (3.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$13.6b

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52-week range $27.51 ~

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M AC K SolarCity

Close:$7.33L0.14 or 1.9% The biotechnologycompany signed a licensing deal with Baxter International for its potential pancreatic cancer treatment.

$8 7

SCTY Close:$63.04L2.64 or 4.4% The solar energy systems company hopes to raise up to $500 million in a debt offering involving convertible senior notes. $80 70

J A 52-week range $2.05~ Mkt. Cap: $766.63 m

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$32.10~

$ 66.35

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The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.57 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on consumer and business loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3-month T-bill . 0 1 ... +0 .0 1 6-month T-bill . 0 3 .03 ... W 52-wk T-bill .09 .09 v 2-year T-note . 5 9 .54 + 0 .05 L 5-year T-note 1.80 1.76 +0.04 w 10-year T-note 2.57 2.53 +0.04 V 30-year T-bond 3.28 3.25 +0.03 V

BONDS

V V

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L L L L

L .33 L 1.43 L 2.66 W 3.67

Bond BuyerMuni Idx 4.43 4.44 -0.01 w w 5-yr * Barclays USAggregate 2.35 2.36 -0.01 W L 18.9 % PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.79 5.70 +0.09 L L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.10 4.15 -0.05 W L AP YEST3.25 .13 BarclaysCompT-Bdldx 2.07 2.05+0.02 L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.06 3.07 -0.01 W L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities AmBalA m 25 . 67 +.12+6.4 +13.7 +16.8+12.8 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.23 +.28 +6.2 +10.9 +13.5 +9.8 A 8 A The price of oil CpWldGrlA m 47.11 +.33 +5.6 +12.9 +19.2+10.5 8 8 D increased EurPacGrA m 49.48 +.23 +0.8 +7.9 +15.1 +7.4 A 8 8 Wednesday afFnlnvA m 54. 7 7 +.40+7.2 +17.6 +22.3+14.6 C C C ter the governGrthAmA m 46.39 +.48 +7.9 +17.9 +22.9+14.7 C 8 D ment reported a IncAmerA m 21.67 +.69 +7.4 +13.2 +15.7+12.3 A A A larger-than-exInvCoAmA m 40.16 +.33 +10.6 +21.2 +23.2+14.6 A 8 C pected decline NewPerspA m38.74 +.28 +3.1 +11.2 +18.7+11.9 C 8 8 in oil stocks. In WAMutlnvA m42.37 +.25 +8.9 +18.5 +21.9+16.2 8 C A metals trading, Dodge &Cox Income 13.89 -.61 +4.6 + 5.7 +4.7 +5.4 A A B gold, silver and IntlStk 46.20 +.21 +7.3 +14.5 +20.5+10.2 A A A Stock 182.94+1.11 +9.5 +22.3 +27.7+16.5 A A A platinum fell. Fidelity Contra 102. 3 7+1.61+7.6 +18.6 +21.1+16.2 B C B Wheat rose. ContraK 102 . 37+1.60+7.7 +18.8 +21.3+16.4 B C B LowPriStk d 49.56 +.33 +5.0 +13.4 +22.2+16.4 D D B Fideli S artan 500l d xAdvtg 71.19 +.56 +9.7 +20.1 +23.3+16.1 B 8 A FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 54 +.61 +7.1 +12.0 +13.8+11.0 A A A IncomeA m 2. 5 1 ... +7 . 6 + 12.2 +14.3+11.4 A A A Oakmarb Intl I 25.42 +.63 -3.4 -0.3 +20.4+11.1 E A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 87 +.17+6.4 +15.9 +19.2+13.5 D E D RisDivB m 18 . 66 +.16+5.8 +14.9 +18.2+12.5 D E E RisDivC m 18 . 54 +.16+5.9 +15.1 +18.3+12.6 D E E SmMidValA m46.13 +.19 +4.5 +13.2 +19.6+13.0 D E E SmMidValB m38.83 +.16 +4.0 +12.4 +18.6+12.0 E E E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 34.37 + .11 +5.8 +13.9 +21.7+14.2 E D C Exchange GrowStk 55.5 6 + .77 +5.7 +18.5 +23.0+17.3 B A A The dollar HealthSci 70.6 6+1.67+21.2 +33.3 +37.7+27.3 B A A advanced versus Newlncome 9. 5 2 - .61+4.4 + 4 .6 + 3.0 +4.5 B C D the euro, British Vanguard 500Adml 184.33+1.44 +9.7 +20.1 +23.3+16.1 8 8 A pound and 500lnv 184.33+1.43 +9.6 +20.0 +23.2+16.0 8 8 8 Japanese yen. CapOp 52.30 +.55 +13.3 +21.3 +27.9+16.8 A A A The ICE U.S. Eqlnc 31.63 +.18 +8.4 +16.9 +22.4+16.7 C C A Dollar index, IntlStkldxAdm 27.99 +.15 +2.3 +6.6 +13.7 NA 8 D which compares StratgcEq 32.52 +.24 +8.4 +20.5 +26.7+19.3 A A A the dollar's value TgtRe2020 28.67 +.12 +5.8 +10.8 +13.6+10.3 A A A to a basket of Tgtet2025 16.68 +.68 +5.9 +11.5 +15.0+11.0 A 8 8 key currencies, TotBdAdml 10.77 -.62 +4.0 +3.9 +2.2 +4.1 D D D rose. Totlntl 16.74 +.69 +2.3 +6.5 +13.6 +6.5 B D C TotStlAdm 49.98 +.38 +8.5 +18.6 +23.3+16.3 C 8 A TotStldx 49.96 +.38 +8.4 +18.4 +23.2+16.2 C 8 A USGro 30.91 +.37 +7.7 +19.3 +22.4+15.4 8 8 C Welltn 40.61 +.13 +7.4 +13.6 +16.3+11.8 A A A

MANAGER Lei Wang SINCE 2006-02-01 RETURNS3-MO -0.1 Foreign Markets YTD -3.0 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +0.4 Paris 4,41 3.72 +54.37 +1.25 3-YR ANNL +10.8 London 6,706.27 +30.19 + . 45 5-YR-ANNL +5.8 Frankfurt 9,661.97 +66.94 + . 70 Hong Kong23,921.61 + 84.54 + . 35 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 45,116.94 +1 01.77 +.23 Roche Holding AG 3.02 Milan 20,691.04 +340.01 +1.67 2.75 -38.45 -.24 Total SA Tokyo 16,167.45 2.69 Stockholm 1,411.23 + 5.91 + . 42 Novartis AG Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -40.00 -.74 Mitsubishi UFJFinancial Group Inc 2.46 Sydney 5,375.90 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Zurich 8,797.17 +33.37 + . 38 Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Holdings Inc 2.44 redemption fee.Source: Morninestar.

h5Q HS

FUELS

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS

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

.01 .05

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.11 3.09+0.02 W L

Thornburg International Value has FAMILY trailed most of its peers in recent Marhetsummary AmericanFunds years, but Morningstar says it Most Active still has strong managers and a NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG distinctive strategy. S&P500ETF 960941 BkofAm 841256 CitizFin n 603436 Apple Inc s 559944 iShEMkts 527436 Yahoo 481462 SiriusXM 452182 Vale SA 383165 iShJapan 348602 SPDR Fncl 330096

$16.53~

8

18 17

110

Wednesday's close:$54.95

52-WEEK RANGE

Ye i ld : .

120

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:::"'""Princess power

Hasbro (HAS)

PE: .

Close:$1 24.00 L6.05 or 6.9% The drug and medical device maker notified its takeover target Allergan that it expects its financial results to top forecasts. $130

+22. 2 +4 2 .4 8 1 6 1 0 0. 5 0

The Labor Department reports today its latest weekly figures on unemployment benefits applications. Applications dropped two weeks DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate pius stock. 5 -Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current ago to a seasonally adjusted annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, rs regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent 280,000, a sign that the job dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months pius stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash market is strengthening. The value ss ex-distrittution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. four-week average of applications, a less volatile measure, fell to 299,500. Applications are a proxy for layoffs. When fewer people seek benefits, it suggests that Hasbro's stock had its second best unit already includes My Little Pony and Nerf employers are keeping their Rebelle. day of the year Wednesday after it workers. announced adeal to make dolls based Even withWednesday's big gain, on Disney princesses and Frozen though, Hasbro stock remains on track to Unemployment benefit claims characters beginning in 2016. fall short of the Standard 8 Poor's 500 seasonally adjusted The move both weakens a rival — Mattel index this year. If the trend holds, it 320 thousand 316 currently makes "Frozen" dolls — and it would be the third time in the last four adds to Hasbro's girls' toys division, years that the stock did so. Across the 304 est. which delivered the company's industry, toy companies are compet300 strongest revenue growth last year. 299 298 ing more with electronic gadgets for Hasbro's stable of brands in its girls kids' attention. 295 280

J A 52-week range

Valeant Pharmaceuticals VRX KB Home

52-WK RANGE e CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV

NAME

-.0076

GDOT Close:$23.41 L4.59 or 24.4% Wal-Mart Stores is offering mobile checking accounts for its customers through the banking and financial products company. $25

8

Vol.:16.5m (13.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $675444 m

Alaska Air Group ALK 30.13 ~ Avista Corp A VA 25.88 ~ Bank of America BAC 13 . 60 r-r Barrett Business BBSI 40.03 e — Boeing Co BA 113.34 ~ Cascade Bancorp CA C B 4 . 11~ ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.53 ~ 3 Columbia Sportswear COLM 57.88 ty CostcoWholesale COST 109.50— e Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ty FLIR Systems F LIR 27.91 ~ Hewlett PacKard HPQ 2 0 .25 ~ 3 Intel Corp I NTC 22.48 ~ Keycorp K EY 11.05 ~ Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ LA Pacific L PX 12.71 ~ MDU Resources MDU 27 . 35 e — Mentor Graphics MEN T 19.14 ~ MicrosoftCorp MSFT 3 2 .15 — e Nike Inc B N KE 68.04 ~ Nordstrom Inc J WN 54.90 ~ Nwst Nat Gas NWN 40.05 ~ PaccarInc P CAR 53.59 ~ Planar Systms PLNR 1.81 ~ Plum Creek PCL 39.19 o — Prec Castparts PCP 225.00 ~ Safeway Inc S WY 26.69 ~ Schnitzer Steel SCHN 2 4.13 o — Sherwin Wms SHW 170.63 — 0 StancorpFncl SFG 53.87 ~ StarbacbsCp S BUX 67.93 ~ Triqoint Semi TQNT 6.80 — o umppaaHoldings UM PQ 15.56 ~ 1 US Bancorp U SB 35.69 ~ WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.53 ~ 2 Wells Fargo & Co W F C 4 0 .07 ~ Weyerhaeaser W Y 2 7 .48 ~

1.2781+

20

J A 52-week range

NorthwestStocks Eye on Nike

+1.24 '

G TI Green Dot

GrafTech International A

+

Stocks rose the most in a month in a broad rally across most industries. The gains broke three days of losses. Investors shrugged off more signs of deepening economic malaise in Europe and focused on goodnews in the U.S. A business confidence index in G ermany, Europe's largest economy, dropped for a fifth month. But a U.S. government report showed new home sales jumped 18 percent in August, exceeding expectations. Investors bought stocks they had sold at the start of the week on news the U.S. was tightening rules on a tax-saving move called an "inversion." Nine of ten industries in the S8 P 500 index rose, led by a 1.7 percent gain in health care.

'

16,800" '.

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Dow Jones lndustnals Close: 17,210.06 Change: 154.19 (0.9%)

16,920" "' 10 DAYS "

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CLOSE PVS. 92.80 91.56 1.61 1.63 2.69 2.68 3.91 3.82 2.66 2.63

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PVS.

1.55 1.55 Coffee (Ib) 1.85 1.85 Corn (hu) 3.30 3.26 Cotton (Ih) 0.62 0.63 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 330.20 332.00 Orange Juice (Ih) 1.42 1.42 Soybeans (hu) 9.37 9.36 Wheat(hu) 4.80 4.76

W 3 .47

w 5. 1 0 L 2.40 L 6.07 W 4. 6 0 L 1.60 L 3.34

%CH. %YTD +1.35 -5.7 -0.12 -15.9 +0.21 -1 2.6 -7.5 +2.49 +1.34 -4.4 %CH. %YTD - 0.20 + 1 . 4 -0.40 -8.8 -1.00 -3.8 +0.82 -11.1 +0.52 +1 4.2

%CH. %YTD -0.08 +1 5.5 +66.7 +1.23 -21.9 -2.02 -27.2 -0.54 -8.3 - 0.07 + 4.1 +0.05 -28.6 +0.89 -20.7 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6341 -.0063 -.39% 1.6006 Canadian Dollar 1.1 0 68 -.0006 -.05% 1.0299 USD per Euro 1.2781 -.0076 -.59% 1.3477 JapaneseYen 108.99 + . 0 6 + .06% 9 8 . 83 Mexican Peso 13. 2894 -.0254 -.19% 12.8864 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6689 +.0061 +.17% 3.5372 Norwegian Krone 6 . 3890 +.0359 +.56% 5.9711 South African Rand 11.1393 -.0295 -.26% 9.8430 Swedish Krona 7.1 8 25 + .0366 +.51% 6.3965 Swiss Franc .9452 +.0060 +.63% . 9 124 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1268 -.0040 -.35% 1.0646 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1350 .0023 -.04% 6.1211 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7520 +.0005 +.01% 7.7537 Indian Rupee 6 0.890 . 1 2 1 -.20% 62.775 Singapore Dollar 1.2673 -.0014 -.11% 1.2533 -.28 -.03% 1074.40 South KoreanWon 1040.12 Taiwan Dollar 30.22 .05 -.17% 2 9.62


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

BRIEFING

averic s a unriver in orec osure

Starducks duying out partner Starbucks said Tuesday it will buy out its partner in Japanfor $913 million, taking over complete control of operations inits second-largest market by store sales. The movecomesas the Seattle coffee giant increasingly bankson international growth. Starbucks said thepurchase will help it grow in Japan andintroduce new products throughvarious channels, such asits tea brand,Teavana. Starbucks willacquire the 60.5percent it doesn't own in its Japanese joint venture from Sazaby League, aretail company based inTokyo, in a two-part process. Starbucks will first buya 39.5 percentstake for $505 million, gaining control of thejoint venture before theendof the year. Theremaining21.5 percent will changehands nextyear for $408.5million. Thedealtook place after Sazabytold Starbucks it wanted tocash out of the business. The transaction won't change Starbucks' financial targets for 2014,the company said.

By Joseph Ditzler SUNRIVER — Bank of the

Cascades seeks to foreclose

the association its member firms and their principals: Larry Browning of Resort Realty Inc.; Hadley of Mountain

In June, the bank demand-

on Mavericks at Sunriver, the

fitness and aquatic facility, and recover $5.6 million it

ed payment after the association defaulted on the loan

Resort Properties Inc.; Mark

payments and taxes due on

ties LLC and Edward Willard of Sunray Vacation Rentals

Halvorsen of Village Proper-

the property, according to the lawsuit. The association

loaned its owners to build

and operate the facility since 2003. The bank filed a lawsuit

Inc., also known as Cascara

owes $44,433 in real estate

taxes from 2013, according to the Deschutes County Clerk's Office. Mavericks, a32,000-squarefoot facility, features an indoor rock-climbing wall, a basketball halfcourt, meeting rooms, weight room and

Aug. 1 against the Sunriver Vacations Recreation As-

sociation LLC, the group of resort property companies that guaranteed the loans that built Mavericks, at 18135

Cottonwood Road, according to the complaint in Deschutes

other amenities, including an

bank asked the court to ap-

indoor pool. It also features a FlowRider 1800, a surfing

point an independent receiver

wave machine, installed in

to manage the property and protect the bank's interests while the suit is pending. The bank ultimately seeks to have the property sold in order to

2007, according to online countypropertyrecords.

recoup its loans.

year that draw professional bodyboarders and flowriders

County Circuit Court. The

Vacation Rentals. A front-desk manager at

p

Mavericks referred questions to another manager, Jami Cunningham, who was out of the office. Halvorsen, Brown-

f, :. Andy Tullis/The Bulletin file photo

Mavericks at Sunriver — which houses Oregon's only listed FlowRider wave machine, seen here in 2013 — is the subject of a foreclosure lawsuit filed by Bank of the Cascades.

to operate, is the venue for FlowRider competitions each

clined comment.

The bank moved to sever Willard from its original com-

operate the facility and pay its employees and its payroll

Wednesday in circuit court in Bend. The bank states that it

compete for cash awards, according to The Bulletin

restructured three outstand-

archives.

payments would be used to

from around the country who

wife, Sandra Willard, on Aug. 29 filed in U.S. Bankruptcy

taxes. "The appointment of a

who lease vacation property at Sunriver resort to use Mav-

ericks, according to a Sept. 5 affidavit by Richard Hadley, an association member. Hadley stated the September

Court to discharge some of

their debts under Chapter 7. The bank's motion to sever

receiver during the month of September would be extreme- Willard from the suit and proly disruptive, not only for ceed against the others also the facility, but also (for) the may be heard Wednesday. guests ...," he stated. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, The bank complaint names

ur rise i o n e

jditzler@bendbulletin.com

Pimco 'bond king' fund investigated

us

e aure: e n s

PERMITS

ing and Hadley did not return messages left Wednesday seeking comment. Willard, through an intermediary, de-

plaint after Willard and his

The four resort property companies pay the association monthly fees for guests

Mavericks, which continues

A hearing on the request forareceiverisscheduled

— From wire reports

• S8 H Associates LLC, 62965 BoydAcres Road, $1,500,000 • Frederick J. Gientke,1876 NW Remarkable Drive, $359,508 • Bend Research Inc., 20503 Builders St., $2,348,800 • Century Park LLC, 340 SW Century Drive, $225,000 •RPBLand Investments LLC, 620 NE Vail Lane, $185,252 •RPBLand Investments LLC, 612 NE Vail Lane, $ I85,738 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20694 NE CometCourt, $302,323 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20690 NE CometCourt, $263,657 • Greg Welch Construction Inc., 19169 NWChiloquin Drive, $325,436 • James D. Hogue,20545 Murray Road, $230,000 • Greg Welch Construction Inc., 2218 NWLolo Drive, $351,192 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20681 NE CometCourt, $276,159 • Keith D. Scott, 20067 Birchwood Court, $433,245 • Leerae Ventures LLC, 20242 NWBronze St., $236,623 • River's Edge Property Development, 3032 NW River Trail Place, $265,762 • FC Fund LLC,621 SE Glengarry Place, $213,215 • 2001 Stephen B. Dandurand Revocable Trust, 61249 SEBrock Lane, $214,558 • Costco Wholesale Corporation, 2500 NE U.S. Highway 20, $1,300,000 • Enduring Log Finishes LTD, 1626 NE Fresno Ave., Lot not listed, $204,690 • Charonne Sutherland, 314 NWGeorgia Ave., Unit not listed, $323,377 • Bend Research Inc., 20503 Builders St., $191,000 • Richard H. andCarol M. Gatley Charitable Remainder Unitrust, 106 NW Skyliner Summit Loop, $495,891 • PacificHomeBuilders LLC, 20474 SE Del Coco Court, $222,941

ing loans in March 2013 and discussed a possible sale with the association in May.

The Bulletin

By E. Scott Reckard Los Angeles Times

A federal investigation of Pacific Investment Management Co. is the latest

crack in the armor of the $2 trillion fund giant, where a trustee recently questioned the $200-million salary, "bullying" behavior and "mediocre"recentperformance of co-founder Bill

Gross.

Word of the investigation followsaseriesofsetbacks for Pimco, including the abrupt departure of Gross' heir apparent, Mohamed El-Erian, reports of clashes

between the two, and an outflow of more than $65 billion in funds from Gross' signature Total Return Fund as disappointed in-

%5

vestors cashed out.

Pimco said it is cooper-

Q

ating with an examination

into whether improper accounting for bondprices contributed to the early

reportedsuccessofaretail exchange-traded fund set up to mirror the investment style of the Total Return

Fund, whose clients were giant institutional investors. The Total Return Fund

is the world's largest bond mutual fund, a staple of The' N. Pham /The Virginian-Pilot file photo

John Mihalkovic, of Virginia Beach, Virgina, shows off his newly purchased iphone 6 Plus outside the Apple Store in Virginia Beach. Apple's biggest new iPhone, with a screen eight-tenths of an inch larger than the iPhone 6, is made with an aluminum shell that has been found to bend while in pent pockets.

By Julia Love San Jose Mercury News

was documented largely

After two weeks ofbreathless coverage, we thought we'd

through Tttvitter posts topped off with the hashtag "¹bend-

scrutinized the iPhone 6 Plus

gate." Butyesterday, Lewis Hilsenteger of Unbox Therapy, an online technology show,

from every angle. But we didn't think to ask whether it would

be compatible with skinny jeans.

put the rumors to the test. In the video, Hilsenteger demonstrates how his new 6 Plus

Over thepast few days,some

users have come forward on social media daiming that their coveted 6 Plus has started to bend. Most of the incidents

warps under pressure from his fingers. "This was painful to do," he said. "Maybe this is enough

aroseafteruserssatforan ex-

information to push you in the

tended period of time with the

direction ofbuying the (iPhone 6) over the 6Plus." The iPhone 6 Plus, Apple's first"phablet," vanished almost

phones in their pockets. People who wear tightpants appear to be most at risk.

didn't showup at Applebefore when they did testing," said Eric who had spent hours in line Virey of Yole Developpement, a waitingto leave empty-handed. French research firm. Thephone, which measures But as Tech Crunch pointed 5.5 inches diagonally, has been out, finding flawin Apple's hailed for its light and thin feel, latest gadget has become a fadue inpart to its aluminum vorite fall pastime in the valley. immediately after it debuted in stores on Friday, forcing some

At first, the phenomenon

shell. The material is also fa-

The tech news site addedthat

mous for its malleability — we wrap leftovers in aluminum foil, after all — so perhaps Apple should havebraced itself for amore fl exiblephone.

reportsofbending surfaced with the iPhone 5s and 5c. (For

Still, some were puzzled

that such a defect could slip past the valley's consummate perfectionist.

"I'm really surprised that this

401(k) and other retirement plans across the nation with $221.6 billion in assets

at the end of August. The $3.6-billion Total Return Fund ETF reported

investment gains of 8.7 percent from March through August 2012, its first six months of existence. That

compared with a gain of 5.2 percent for the Total Return

Fund it emulated, which at the time was growing rapidly and exceeded $270 billion in assets. The Newport Beach,

our part, we're abitbewildered

that consumers in a yoga hot spot like the Bay would be so off endedby aphone that bends.) A spokeswoman for Apple did not immediatelyrespondto arequestforcomment.

California, company denied it had done anything wrong. A spokesman said theybelieve their "pricing procedures are entirely appropriate and in keeping with industry best practices."

Correction In the Best of the Biz Calendar, which publishedWednesday, Sept. 24, on PageC6,the day listed for the QuickBooks seminar andthe nonprofit workshop was incorrect. The correct information appears in today's calendar. The Bulletin regrets the error.

BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TODAY

• QuickBooks Seminar:Four-hour training onthebasicfunctions needed to developaccurateaccounting records; registration required;$97;9a.m.-1 p.m.; AccurateAccountingandConsulting, 61383S.U.S.Highway97,Suite A,Bend. • Nonprofit Workshop:Opento JeffersonCountynonprofits, grant writers andfundraisers; lunch provided; free;11:30a.m.-2p.m.; CentralOregon

CommunityCollege,MadrasCampus, 1170 E. Ashwood Road,Madras;541-3821170or cpuddy©oregoncf.org. FRIDAY • Build Your Business Website with WordPress:Registration required;FridaysthroughOct.10; $149; 9a.m.-4p.m.;COCC Chandler Building,1027NWTrentonAve., Bend; 541-383-7270. SATURDAY

• Beginners QuickBooks Pro2014: Learn todoyourownbookkeeping; registration required;$85;9a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeWay,Bend;541-383-7270. MONDAY • Cisco CCNA Security:Introduction to security relatedissuesandskils networkadministrators need to provide securityforacomputernetwork;CCNA certIcation or instructor permission

prerequisite; registration required; MondaysandWednesdaysthrough Dec. 5;$360;12:45-3:05 p.m.;Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. • Pintefest for Business:Learn to use thisaffordabletool topromoteyour business; registration required;Mondays through Oct.6; $65;6-9p.m.; Central OregonCommunityCollege,2600 NW CollegeWay,Bend;541-383-7270.

•Business Fundamentals Bootcamp, Entrepreneurship: First in aseries ofworkshopsfor anyone interested intuning upor starting up an organization;call to register; $10per course; 6:30-8:30p.m.;COCC-Crook County OpenCampus,510SELynnBlvd., Prineville; 541-447-6228. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visitbenddulletin. com/bizcal


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Fitness, D2 Nutrition, D3 Medicine, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

Decodingfood abes and the tricky fine print By Gabriella Boston Special to The Washington Post

If it says it's organic, gluten-free, vegan, kale-in-

These buzzwords line grocery store shelves these days,

NUTRITION and, yes,

were to eat 138 grams worth

some of these products are good for you. But some are less so, says Cheryl Harris, an Alexandria, Virginia-based

of gummies — six bagsthat would mean 420 calories and 60 grams of sugar.)

goji-laced, it's got to be good for you, right? Not so fast.

dietitian.

Photos by Lloyd Fox/Tribune News Service

tain 100 percent of the daily That's a lot of good stuff

right there, no? Except when you look at the list of ingredients, there

are three types of sugars listed first — and no berries. Let's compare them with

realberries:A serving of strawberries (147 grams) also maxes out your daily vitamin C, but it has a bit of

fiber (about 3 grams) and

By Michelle Andrews Special to The Washington Post

Infertility treatment is

a numbers game in some respects: How many treat-

Even as insurance plans

are modestly improving their infertility coverage, clinics and oth-

s 7-year-old Zara Cheek packed her

MONEY ers are coming up with cre-

bags for her first sleep-away camp this

ative ways to help would-be

summer, she found herself looking

parents reduce their financial risk for procedures that

I

can cost tens of thousands

forward to more than just swimming, going on hikes and eating s'mores for two glorious weeks.

Zara looks at her insulin pump, held in a belt her mother made

for her.

To her, the experience meant a chance to live like a normal kid for a while — and even, quite possibly, to help thousands of others afflicted with the illness that has shaped her life. Zara, who lives in Baltimore and started third grade

needs. Thou g h its causes are un-

urinate frequently. Suffer-

ers must be given artificial insulin. If left insufficiently treat-

ed, Type 1 diabetes can spark dangerous spikes or drops in blood-sugar level and, in the long term, complications as dire as heart failure and stroke.

this fall, is one of about 2 know n , the implications of million Americans who have T y pe 1 diabetes are well es-

Unlike Type 2 diabetes, which affects about 27 mil-

Type 1 diabetes, a

lion Americans and can of-

tablished. Most who

chronic and potentially MED I C I NE ha ve it experience ten be treated purelyby diet lethal disorder of the an acute onset, usu- and exercise, Type I diabepancreasthatleavesthebody ally beforeage30.Symptoms tes is one of the world's most unable to make insulin or turn generally include weight loss, taxing chronic illnesses to blood sugar into the energy it i n c reased thirst and a need to manage.

Diagnosed at age 2, in 2008, Zara — an avid readerwith a shock of sun-kindled blond hair — has rarelybeen separated fromthe glucose sensor, digital monitor and electronic

insulinpump she wears on herbelt. Nor have herparents, Daniel Cheek and Suzanne

Razaq, been free of the responsibility of monitoring that equipment 24 hours a

day and adjustingit as ablizzard of factors evolve, from the amount of exercise Zara plans to taketo the amount of

stress she's feeling. See Diabetes/D4

are eating gummies or kale chips — needs to be, what are you replacing?" Harris says. In other words, if you are replacing a candy bar with gummies, then you are moving in the right direction. But if you are replacing an apple with gummies, "that's not as good a bet," Harris says. SeeLabels/D3

for inferti ity treatment? a child'? And how much can you afford?

BALTIMORE-

to overeat. "This is why I think the question — whether you

Money-backguarantees

ments will it take to conceive

By Jonathan Pitts eThe Baltimore Sun

And this is true for a lot of

processedfoods:Even ifthey areorganic,allergy-freeand

Take Annie's Homegrown all the other good stuff, they Berry Patch Organic Bunny often lack fiber and water, Fruit Snacks, which are pop- which means there is less ular among the toddler set. bulk and volume to fill us up, They are vegan, gluten-free Harris says. and fat-free, and they conConsequently, it's easier recommended amountof vitamin C per serving.

Iantsatasteo norma ie to i Hwi t e ia etes

too, at 47, compared with 70

for the gummies. But, then again, the strawberries are also much larger than gummies, which come in a 23-gram bag. The 147grams ofstrawberries (about a cup) are going to be much more filling. (If you

fused, protein-rich and

Zara Cheek, a preteen with Type1 diabetes, was entered in a "bionic pancreas" study in Boston this summer.

less sugar (7 grams vs. 10). The calorie count is lower,

up paying more than if they had opted for a single cycle, but if they don't have a baby, they get the full amount back; couples can also stop

at any point in the process and get a full refund. The program coststwice as

m uch as asingle cycle: $20,000 for shared-risk IVF and $30,000 for shared-risk egg donor. "In reality, patients who

get a baby on the first cycle are subsidizing those who don't get a baby," says Michael Levy, president and IVF director at Shady Grove.

of dollars. Some even offer a "We see this as an opportumoney-back guarantee ifa nity to give patients security patient doesn't conceive. regarding the financial risk Shady Grove Fertility, a that they face." large center with sites in Tina and Jimmy Stone Maryland, Pennsylvania opted for the $30,000 plan. Tina's uterus was healthy, and Washington, has a number of programs to help but her ovaries weren't its patients financially. The producing viable eggs. The center pioneered a "shared- Hollywood, Maryland, courisk" approach to in vitro ple became pregnant with fertilization years ago that twins on the third try. The offereda 100 percentrefund twin boys are now 2, and if a couple didn't have a their daughter, who is adoptbaby. Now the center offers ed, is 8. "For us, it was worth it," a similar program for couples who use donor eggs to says Tina Stone, 35, who conceive. Other fertility cen- says the couple financed ters do likewise. the treatment through a priBoth of Shady Grove's vate personal loan. "It kept shared-risk programs allow our options open if it didn't couples to try up to six cywork, whereas if you pay cles of IVF or donor eggs for per cycle, you've paid for a flat fee. If couples conceive nothing if it doesn't work." rightaway, they may end See Infertility/D5

T e en in o Piates,car ioan stren trainin By Sheila Marikar

diesel and electricity. Think

machine challenges those

New York Times News Service

about another way of powering a car that's clean energy,

Sebastien Lagree knelt

that's abundant, it's the per-

atop it in ways that traditional Pilates may not. "It brings to Pilates what

down and plucked a spring rigged up to an elliptical

fect kind of energy you want.

Pilates was lacking," said

On a recent afternoon,

machine. He

That's what I'm working on." This is how

Amanda Freeman,

founder of

FITNESS climbed aboard Lagree spends the Frankenstein-ian creation, one of

many scattered about the Burbank, California, headquarters of his company, Lagree Fitness, which occupies a warehouse that brings to mind a mad scientist's lab.

"On thesemachines here, I'm experimenting having a mix of static and variable

tension," he said, pedaling slowly. "It's like, out there,

to drive cars, you have gas,

the New York-based

many of his days: toying with tension and figuring out how to better use

eccentric owner of Lagree

fitness studios that license his method. With the prom-

ise of sculpturing lean, long muscles, his workout has

the Megafor-

Kim Kardashian. Even Mi-

equipment,

mer studio SLT, which

which blends Pilates, cardio

stands for

chelle Obama is a fan. "This workout is really intense and works so many

Strengthen

different muscles at the same

training, to more than 250 studios that license his method.

Lengthen Tone. "I always wanted to do Pilates, but I felt like I needed to do another workout after. I didn't sweat." Over the last 13 years,

Lagree has built something of an empire. He has sold

attracted celebrity devotees,

Fitness and inventor of

Megafor-

of exercise equipment he

cardio and strength training. A wobbly carriage that can be pushed and pulled, lunged on and squatted down to, the

each, to the more than 250

mer, has sold the exercise

New York Times

workout that blends Pilates,

Sebastien Lagree, the

including Sofia Vergara and

it in a piece invented, the Megaformer, the basis of a core-burning

thousands of machines, which cost upward of $7,000

time," Vergara wrote in an email. She bought her own Megaformer last year and uses it four to five times a week, she wrote. "I love it because it works out muscles I

didn't even know I had." SeeExercise/D2

and strength

Emily Berl New York Times News Service


D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

FmVESS

Getting a proper workout

without leavingyourhome By Julie Deardorff

there's no one to correct bad

Chicago Tribune

form or screen for risk factors

JessicaSmith often exercis- or injuries. Home workouts es at her Miami home because often lack the palpable eneri t's m or e c o nvenient a n d gy of a live class. Moreover, affordable than hitting the Smith and other fitness exgym. Several times a week, perts say it's difficult to give she also records her workout away content and still pay the sessions and uploads them bills, yet free programming is to YouTube, so thousands of something consumers expect. "The Internet has provided her closest friends can sweat right along with her. an opportunity for anyone Smith's effort to spread fit- with a good body to post a selness to the masses is gaining fie, and consumers are buymomentum. Her free exercise ing into the hype," said master videos and programs have fitness trainer and educator a ttracted more than 8 m i l - Amy Dixon, who has had lion views. More than 90,000 several workouts stolen and people, meanwhile, have sub- posted on YouTube. "It feels scribed to Jessicasmithtv.com like the social media world is and the rate is steadily in- getting run over with 'posers,' creasing each month, accord- especially for those of us who ing to YouTube. Her mostly can communicate how to do female fans say they love an exercise properly and deher energy, enthusiasm and sign programs that are safe down-to-earth persona. and effective." "It has brought my career Some experts say online to a whole different level be- workouts can be appropriate cause I'm able to connect with tools, especially if they help the audience in a p e rsonal people get started. But they way," said Smith, a certified often aren't tailored toward wellness coach and fitness in- an individual's specific needs. structor. "I train millions more "It's good to have a little more people than I did when I was oversight and use them as a personal trainer, yet I only part of a larger package with do one workout so I'm not ex- overall health s creening," hausted, and able to give more s aid Brent A l var, a b o a rd of myself to the audience." member o f the Na t i o nal As sales of exercise DVDs Strength and Conditioning continue to decline, fitness Association, which certifies professionals are increas- personal trainers. "You have ingly putting their workouts to be cautious. You often don't online, either establishing know the credentials of the YouTube channels and post- individuals on the videos." ing free videos or charging Still, with a little trial and erminimal fees for downloads ror, consumers can find qualior monthly subscriptions. On- ty content, especially if they line workouts can help over- are willing to pay. Strength come one of the biggest ob- and conditioning specialist stacles to exercise: getting to Leah Sarago, creator of the — or being inside — the gym. Ballet Body Signature SeWith a variety of choices and ries, has produced more than programs, the workouts can 130 downloads in addition to be accessed on demand in the

DVDs. The workouts can be

form, she may ask them to send her a video of themselves performing the exercise. "I didn't just want to throw

out a bunch of workouts. I wanted to give people some structure," s ai d S a r ago, whose method is centered

Continued from 01

prove on the traditional Pilates reformer from the start — "It's like, a wooden wheel: how do

Bend; info©REPoregon.comor

SATURDAY

"resistive e l ongation

techniques." "It is like being a trainer from afar, but more

accessible for an entire group of people," she said. Most of her downloads cost $3.99, and she has no plans to give them away. "I value my product," she said. Dixon straddles the line.

She chargesfor most of her content but will also offer free single exercises, tips or programs, in part to help market her other work. "If you truly put together a full production

for a complete program, it should be worth something," she said. "However, if I do a quick guerrilla workout shot on my iPhone, I'm fine with

posting it for free." On YouTube, fitness-related videos are among the

fastest-growing areas within sports,according to a company spokesman. Smith first posted short clips on YouTube in 2009 but hopes to one day reach a million subscribers,

especially now that she is collaborating with YouTube to build her brand. Like Sarago, Smith connects with viewers by using minimally edited videos and bringing them into her home. During some episodes, Smith carefully steps around her French bulldog puppy, Peanut, when he naps on her yoga mat. Women report that Peanut distracts their chil-

the way people work out'? "We're interviewing everyone. We have Microsoft. We

you make that into something have NASA. We have a whole more interesting?" he said, his bunch of scientists, people in a typical fitness guru. He is a booming baritone dripping nanotechnology, biotechnolformer aspiring actor who took with sarcasm — the idea for ogy, people into robots, all of up personal training to pay the manufacturing his own equip- that stuff," he said. Behind bills ("I thought being a person- ment came in 2003. He maxed him was a white board with al trainer was worse than being out 15 credit cards to pay lots of arrows and the phrase a car salesman") and calls his $150,000 for a prototype of the "synthetic bodies'?" scrawled success something of a fluke. Proformer, the Megaformer's in large letters. He also hasn't worked out in a predecessor. Two years later, He and his wife, Danielle year. "You have to understand he had enough new machines Lagree (they married last that I'm a lazy guy," he said. to replace the old ones. His cli- year, 34 days after meeting at "Nothing here happened be- ents balked at the design, but a Studio City bar), also have cause I masterminded it." a glowing write-up from the plans to get into the supplewebsite Daily Candy brought ment market. Danielle Lagree, A weird journey from in a trove of new business, and a former Penthouse pet, wants mOdeling tOthe MegafOImer the Lagree method started its to open a marijuana dispenLagree studiedbusiness and march from Los Angeles to sary, and Sebastien Lagree marketing at Portland State the rest of the world. thinks "there's some herbal University and received a masHis rise hasn't been withqualities of pot that can go ter's in business administra- out obstacles. He ended up into an energizing drink." He's tion from Seattle University. marrying, and divorcing, the curious about other unconvenHe also modeled on the side. client from the gym for whom tional energy sources as well. "Maybe it'scrazy, but coWhile he got plenty of at- he made that one-time exceptention from paparazzi who tion; they have two children caine actually has a lot of thought he was the Italian together. He lost his sprawl- health benefits," he said. "The model Fabio Lanzoni ("I cut ing Melrose Avenue studio to way they synthesize it is not my hair because of it," Lagree his second wife, Carrie Mint- good, but the coca leaves, peosaid), acting gigs didn't ma- er, in their divorce last year. ple chew on it in Peru and they terialize. At the suggestion (She now runs it under the don't go crazy." of a friend, he applied to be a name Carrie's Pilates Plus.) The idea, eventually, is for personal trainer at Angel City He claims some licensees and the Lagree method to extend Gym in West Hollywood, Cal- others are "blatantly copying" well beyond a workout. Laifornia, and was thrust into the design of his machines, gree would also like to build teaching Pilates, a form of ex- which carry two patents, and a car-racing team, get top-tier ercise he had never heard of. plans to sue them once his deejays to spin for Megafor"I thought this was the big- pending patents are approved. mer classesbroadcast worldgest scam ever," he said. "I But Lagree swats off these wide and maybe even produce come from a background that situations like gnats as he forg- a horror film. ("I like zombie physical fitness needs to be ex- es ahead. Showing off the latest flicks," he said.) Nothing irks ertive, you need to sweat, you versions of his Megaformers him more than th e n otion — each model has a dinical that he should stick to fitness, need to be sore." So Lagree riffed on tradi- name, the M2, the M3, the If- though he plans to resume tional Pilates moves and de- ormer — he spoke about robotic his own Megaformer regimen veloped a workout that made arms and handles that move soon. "I'm getting so fat," he him, in his words, "a sensation electronically. He's developing lamented, throwing in an exovernight." a suit with sensors that light up pletive and a sidelong glance He lost his job at the gym af- andbuzz whenthewearer flubs at his adulterated ellipticals. "Our licensees are always ter the owner accused him of up his form during a workout. sleeping with clients (Lagree He's working on a book about suggesting, 'Hey, there's this said that happened "once; it his experience with exercise fitness expo or this health was not a rule") and branched and funding a documentary expo, you should do that,' and off on his own, opening a stu- about the future of fitness that I'm like, 'No,' because I don't dio in the living room of his he wants to present at the Sun- consider myself a fitness comWest Hollywood apartment in dance Film Festival in 2016. The pany," he said. "I'm a lifestyle company," he 2001. question he hopes to answer: While Lagree wanted to im- How will technology optimize added. But Lagree exhibits none of the rah-rah enthusiasm of

PERFORMANCE AND BIOMECHANICSCLASS: For intermediate and advanced runners; $96 per eight-week session; 5:30 and 6:30 p.m.; Rebound Physical Therapy and Biomechanics Lab,1160 SW SimpsonAve.,Suite200, 541-419-8208.

or 541-693-5712. CHILDBIRTHPREPARATION CLASS:Learn about the FREE MASSAGE: Free; 9 a.m.-4 physiological and emotional p.m.; Redmond Senior Center, aspects of labor and delivery, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.; www. massagere newal.massagetherapy. for first-time and experienced expectant parents; $89, com or 541-548-6325. registration required; 9 a.m.-3 TRANSITIONINGBACK TO p.m.; Central Oregon Community HEALTH:Eight-week program College, 2600 NW College for male and female cancer Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu or survivors and caregivers, twice541-383-7700. weekly exercise in rehab gym with specialist; free, registration MOMDAY requested; 4-5 p.m.; St. Charles Cancer Center, 2100 NEWyatt Court, Bend; www.stcharlescancer BETTERBONESANDBALANCE: Learn exercises to slow bone loss .org or 541-706-3754. and improve strength and balance; AHEAD OFTHE GAME: WHAT $79, registration required; 10 a.m.YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT 11 p.m.; Sabai Wellness Center, YOUTH CONCUSSIONS: 51366 U.S. Highway 97, La Pine; Parents and athletes share 541-536-3300. personal recovery stories; Dr. LIVING WELLWITH DIABETES: Viviane Ugalde and Dr. Sondra Participants will learn techniques Marsall; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; to help them deal with diabetes Bend Park & Recreation District symptoms,through Nov.3; Office, Community Room, $10; 1:30-4 p.m.; Heart 'n Home 799 SW Columbia St.; www. Hospice & Palliative Care, 51681 centerfoundation.org, cstiles© Huntington Road, La Pine; www. centerfoundation.org or livingwellco.org or 541-322-7446. 541-322-2399.

TODAY

TODAY

yoga and uses body weight, i sometrics and w hat s h e calls

HEALTH EVENTS

EVENTS

in dance, ballet, Pilates and

comfort and privacy of home, used individually or as part of dren, allowing them to get a with minimal equipment and a systematic training program workout in. "When you watch DVDs, cost. called periodization, which But since anyone with an was devised by Sarago and you see polished, amazing Internet connection can uprequires a three- or six-month bodies," said Smith. "Real life isn't like that. I'm at home just load a video or create a web- commitment. site, the market is also flooded Sarago interacts directly like they are. My dog is in the with amateur or unqualified with the clients who have in- way, I'm sweating and they trainers, posing as credible vested in th e p eriodization can hear me breathing heaviprofessionals, industry ex- program as much as she can; ly. I think people like the realperts say. With online fitness, if they have questions about ity aspect."

Exercise

FiTNESS

PILOT BUTTECHALLENGE: Trail race up the butte with prizes and more; $10, registration required; 9-11 a.m.; Pilot Butte State Park, Bend; www.pilotbuttebend.com, buttechallenge©gmail.com or 541-248-4635. WALKING FORWELLNESS: Cancer survivors and caregivers will learn walking and stretching techniques; free, registration requested; 11 a.m.; St. Charles Cancer Center, 2100 NE Wyatt Court, Bend; www.stcharlescancer.org or 541-706-3754.

FRIDAY

TUESDAY

AHEAD OFTHEGAME: CONCUSSION MANAGEMENT IN A SCHOOLSETTING: Discuss

RED CROSSBLOOD DRIVE:9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Redmond Proficiency Academy, 2105 W. Antler Ave.;

www.redcrossblood.org or

Oregon concussion lawsand

How to submit

541-526-0882. TRANSITIONINGBACKTO HEALTH:Eight-week program formaleandfemalecancer

school responsibility; free, registration required; 9 a.m.3:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; www.centerfoundation.org or 541-693-5712.

Events:Email event information to healthevents©bendbulletin. com or click on "Submit an Event" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must beupdated monthly and will appear at bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact:

survivors and caregivers, twice-

SATURDAY AHEAD OFTHEGAME: BEST PRACTICES INYOUTH CONCUSSION MANAGEMENT: Learn about new research done on youth sport concussion diagnosis, neurological testing and treatment; free, registration required; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; www.centerfoundation.org

541-383-0358.

Announcements: Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com. Con-

weekly exercise in rehab gym with specialist; free, registration requested; 4-5 p.m.; St. Charles Cancer Center, 2100 NE Wyatt Court, Bend; www.stcharlescancer .org or 541-706-3754.

WEDNESDAY COFFEE &CONNECTION: Meet other people whose lives have been affected by cancer; free; 12:30 p.m.; St. Charles Cancer Center, 2100 NE Wyatt Court, Bend; www.stcharlescancer.org or 541-706-3754.

tact: 541-383-0358.

OSPICE

PEOPLE

of Redmond 5 4 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3

• Dr. Laurel Hartwellhas joined the gastroenterology department at Bend Memorial Clinic. Hartwell is board certified in internal medicine and is a member of the American Gastrointestinal Association, American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy and the American College of Physicians. • Chrlsty McLeod has been promoted to chief operating officer for Bend Memorial Clinic. McLeod was previously the chief marketing officer. • Dr. Steven Gordon has joined the St. Charles Health System board of directors. Gordon is the system vice president of care transformation for PeaceHealth in Vancouver, Washington. • Dr. Hartwell Llnhas joined the St. Charles Health System board of directors. Lin is the medical director of the emergency department at John Muir Medical Center in Concord, California.

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g(l y k~> » ~c i M '$~~4 2rtank you lfo4 you S musice! Dr. Miller is back home and seeing patients at Bend Family Dentistry. Thank you Central Oregon for all of your donations —from Central Oregon donations alone, they had enough supplies to place over 400 sealants as well as supply children with oral hygiene instruction, tooth brushes, tooth paste and dental floss.

Dr. Tran Miller

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

TION

s o en,a oo su s iu e,avia eo ion. By Hope Warshaw

adds, "It's helping me live better, and it has potential to feed

Special to The Washington Post

been hearing about Q •• I've Soylent, a complete nu-

the world."

Soylent is two products: a package of powder and an oil

trition product that promises to

take all the bother out of food preparation. It's strangely appealing. I like the idea of food effic iency and having an easyto-carry food for traveling. Do you recommendit? • Soylent had not been on • my radar screen until you

blend made with canola and

fish oil. The customer purchases both products and blends them in a particular ratio. The cost? Rhinehart estimates it at

soyl.ent

$9aday. No planning, shopping, chopping, cooking or cleanup. "Strangely appealing," as you

A

asked. Here's the lowdown on

NutritionFscts

Nutrition profile

Originsandpremise

N\

calories,50 percent from car-

bohydrates,20 percent from protein and 30 from fat, which is in sync with federal Dietary Guidelines for the average

traditions, celebrations and

half their food dollars on food

science fiction movie, based There are hardly any added loosely on the book, inserted sugars, saturated fatorcholesthe use of human remains as

terol, three of today's nutrition

1,000 calories.

Thepros

meals. He's at 80 to 90 percent. • Nutrient breadth: Foods

meal or part of a structured

vitamins and minerals, induding some not yet identified but

to sip Soylent on occasion than

Courtesy Soylent 1 The WashingtonPost

Q•

A

A

source of nutrition should ide-

purchased away from home. ally contain prebiotic flbers due "Soylent is missing a critical to their positive influence on gut feature of the food experi- flora," Saddler says. ence: pleasure! Drinking the As the saying goes to each same shake meal after meal his own. If t h e p remise of is unlikely to be sustainable Soylent appeals to you and or enjoyable for most people," works with your lifestyle and Mauney says. Rhinehart says nutrition goals, then blend it regularSoylent customers use up and give it a whirl. Perhaps it for 60 to 80 percent of their consider it for a lickety-split

Soylent comes in a package with a bottle of oil, which the customer m ixesand drinks.Th e company's CEO says itcosts about $9 a day.

an ingredient in its version of nemeses. Soylent. But adults come in all sizes, The Soylent of today, avail- so this maybe insufficient caloable since May, contain no soy, ries and nutrients for physically professorof medicine at George lentils or human remains. It's activemen or women and inex- Washington University. "These individuals can get classified as a food product by cess for people who are sedenthe Food and Drug Administra- tary or want to lose weight. the nutrition they need with tion, not a dietary or nutritional relatively few adverse effects as Drinking vs.chewing supplement. long as the formula is nutritionSoylent's website (www. • Normally, we chew to ally complete," she says. soylent.me) opens with this • consume foods. So does question: "What if you nev- drinking your calories for exWhat a b out c h anges er had to worry about food tended periods raise physiolog• in bowel function and again?" In 2012, Rhinehart was ic concerns? movements? "We don't have vast expe"Healthy people who exa stretched-thin 20-something working as a San Francisco • rience in healthy people, • ist solely on liquid nutrisoftware engineer. He found but we can apply lessons from tionmay experience changesin himself not eating well and in- people who require a liquid the frequency and consistency censed by the repeated drudg- tube-feeding long term, deliv- of their bowel movements, but ery of preparing meals, from ered either by mouth or right that depends greatly on their sourcing foods to scouring into the stomach or intestine fiber intake," Saddler says. dishes. Soylent is designed for due to serious gastrointestinal Soylent contains 27 grams healthy adults as a sole source disorders," says Antoinette per 2,000 calories, well over of nutrition. "It breaks food Saddler, a doctor specializing the puny fiber intake of most and nutrition down to bare es- in gastroenterology and nutri- Americans and much doser to sentials," says Rhinehart, who tion support and an assistant the recommended 14 grams per

Q

ety of dietary fibers can aid this

self-expression. Socializing of- balance. "It may be challenging ten involves food. And, for bet- to achieve the right balance of ter orworse, according to the fibers with an exdusively liquid National Restaurant Associa- diet. For example, any product tion,Americans spend nearly consumed as a person's sole

American adult. A nu t r i tion ad v a ntage:

lentils. "Soylent Green," a 1973

interest in the role of gut health

• Food isn't solely fuel:Food

The name, says Rob Rhine- gredients are: maltodextrin, rice protein and oat flour along with keyvitamins and minerals. After sipping a whole pack"Make Room! Make Room!" age of powder and containerof Set in 1999 and a favorite of oil blend, you'll consume 2,000 Rhinehart's, the book ponders

ness. Take that as you will.

consuming liquids versus solids may offer less satiety and prompt higher calorie intakes. As for taste, Soylent has been described on company messageboards as bland, breadlike or yeastlike, with a bit of sweet-

in weight control and disease prevention. Maintaining a selection and preparation and healthy gut requires a balance the act of eating are woven ofvastnumbers ofm icroorganinto the fabric of our culture, isms. Consuming a wide vari-

I\4 I

hart, Soylent's chief executive, is derived from Harry Harrison's 1966 science fiction novel

the impact of excessive population growth on food availability. To feed this burgeoning populati on, people consumed Soylent, made from soy and

hook when it comes to food

This notion has led some nutrition experts to theorize that

Thecons

8 ll

The powder's first or main in-

adds, "Liquids are generally emptied from the stomach more rapidly than solids."

• Gut-health questions: preparation. Plus, they're easy to tote and quick to fix. There's a dramatic increase of

0A

the product with its upsides and put it inyour question. downsides.

• Structure for weight control: Although Soylent's target market is not those wanting to lose weight, use of liquid meal replacements for this purpose has been researched and proved beneficial for some. W hy? Structure. Meal replacements, as they're called, take the guesswork out of planning meals and counting calories. As with Soylent, you're off the

• Convenience: Soylent is a no-muss, no-fuss approach to feeding oneself. "For someone who can't or chooses not to make the time to prepare foods, convenience is the only

eating plan, or pack it whenyou contain a wide variety of fibers, travel just in case. It's healthier to skip a meal or down an unhealthful one.

thought to be important to our health. 'Viiith Soylent, nutrient variety won't be the spice of

plus I can list for Soylent," says your lifebecauseyournutrients Anne Mauney, a registered di- will come from the same food etitian and owner of a private sources day after day," Mauney nutrition counseling practice in says. Washington. • Variety and satiety: Aben• Less environmental waste: efit of chewing and swallowing Depending on how much food food is satiety, influenced by packaging you trash, consum- food's aesthetic appeal, aroma, ing Soylent could decrease taste and texture. "Satiety, the your environmental burden. sensation of being full, is influBut Soylent stillrequires manu- enced by the speed of stomach facturing, packaging, shipping emptying," says Saddler, who and electricity to ready it for slppmg.

Struggling to hear? Call for your HEARINGTEST.

ESCHUTES

~eses f (l,

E UMATOLO G Y

Labels

like it or not. She just hopes that whether we're eating kale chips or fruit gummies, Ebeth Johnson, a plant-based packaged food, to read in- the processed foods will help nutritionist, natural foods chef gredients carefully. Look for us develop a taste for the real and owner of Breastfeeding whole-food ingredients that thing. "If you get a taste for Chef, a business that counsels are not puffed, isolated, con- kale chips, maybe eventually pregnant and nursing women centrated, hydrolyzed, crys- you might segue into eating on nutrition. talized," Johnson says. "Make kale salad?" Harris says. "Whether we're t alking sure added sugars are not about superfoods or regular within the first two or three foods, they are all their most ingredients." super when consumed in the Except, says Harris, decodform as close to nature as ing a nutrition label can be possible without added sug- tricky. ars and refined fats," Johnson Take Cascadian Farm Orsays. ganic Peanut Butter Chocolate But if we do go for the pack- Chip Granola Bars. There are I aged foods, we need to look at least seven different sugars carefully at labels, because all included, and yet sugar is not healthful-sounding products listed as a top ingredient. "But are not created equal. if you combined all the sugar, For example, Brad's Raw it might be the first ingrediCrunchy Kale Chips are only ent," Harris says. lightly processed and loaded So, even when we are lookwith vitamins (122 percent of ing at the list of ingredients, your daily vitamin C) while we have to read between the nutritional value in terms of vitamins. "It is important, as with any are whole is the way to go, says

thenmaybe notso much.

Rheumatology Consults

In the end, eating foods that

Continued from 01 Natosha Prolago, a client of Harris' who has a 3-year-old son, says she thinks of gummies as candy or treats. "Gummies and fruit juice are in the same category. There is little or no nutrition-

al value. They are just treats," Prolago says. Kale juice, though packed with vitamins, can have as many calories as a soft drink.

Take Bolthouse Farms Daily Greens, for example, which contains, among other things, kale, spinach and cucumbers. It has 90 calories for 8 ounces (one serving) and about 19 grams of sugar, a bunch of vitamins and potassium. Pretty

good. But again, what are you replacing? If you are replacing a soda, then you are lightyears ahead (though a Coke is roughly the same on calories), but if you are replacing water and a serving of kale salad,

Sensible P o rtions

G a r den lines.

Veggie Straws have about the Harris concedes, though, same amount of calories (130 thatprepared foods area part per serving) but no significant of modern life, whether we

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D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014

MEDICINE

W encancer isa ears,cou it ea e t oacure? By Julie Deardorff

methods that could prolong or

Chicago Tribune

savelives.

The public hunger for new ways to fight cancer — along physician, says she's had just with the enormous gap in scione patient whose advanced entific evidence — is reflected breast cancer inexplicably in the recent best-selling book "Radical Remission" by Kelly vanished. The patient, Ann Fonfa, en- Tbrner, a psychotherapist and dured multiple surgeries to re- independent researcher who move canceroustumors that wrote about nine factors she kept growing back All the believes could play a role in while, Fonfa refused the recom- spontaneous remission. mended treatments of chemoThe best way to win the war therapy and radiation, instead on cancer, according to 1brnexperimenting with unproven er, is to talk to those who have alternative therapies, induding already won. "It's only false changing her diet, taking herbs hope if the stories are false," and reducing stress. she said. "But these people Seven years after her origi- truly had cancer. And they are nal diagnosis, Fonfa received well now." good news: The cancer was Medical experts say such undetectable. Fonfa, 66, has o bservations a r e n' t ver y been cancer-free forthe last 14 meaningful given the lack of a years. comparison group. "For every person we hear In a few rare cases, people defy cancer without medical about who refuses cancer treatment or by using thera- therapy and lives, there are pies that are considered inad- additional people who refuse equate, a phenomenon known standard medical therapy and as spontaneous remission. die," said Dr. Rebecca JohnScientists have been fascinat- son, a cancer specialist in the ed andbaffled by these devel- Seattle area who has also batopments for as long as cancer tled breast cancer. has been recognized as a disTurner stresses that she is ease. Was it luck? Or did the not suggesting that patients patients do something special abandon standard medical into harness the awesome power terventions. Instead, she hopes of the immune system? to encourage further study Studying these exception- and share the stories of peoal people, however, is fraught ple diagnosed with advanced with di ff iculty, controversy cancer who experienced unand the dangers of promot- expected recoveries. ing bad science. The potential To date, the medical literabenefits of highlighting the ture consists only of individual unusual recoveries should be case studies and overviews. balanced against the risks, ex- Some incidents, when more perts warn, including offering closely scrutinized, prove not patients false hope, blaming to have been remissions at all. those who succumb and enStill, the phenomenon has couraging alternative treat- been reported with virtually ments in place of conventional all kinds of cancer, more fre-

fessor of general oncology vegan diet, exercised more and director of the Integrative and took enzymes. "I concenMedicine Program at the Uni- trated on the joy of life," said

In her 28-year career, Dr.

Deborah Axelrod, a New York

Diabetes

abasketball. The device does nothing to

versity of Texas MD Anderson

Fonfa, who lives in

D elray

CancerCenter,has found that Beach, Florida. "Serving in the exceptional patients — those advocacy world has been very who had advanced, incurable valuable." cancer and who subsequently Surgery temporarily elimbecame diseasefree or lived inated the tumors, but each longer than expected — had ad- time they grew back. In 1997, opted an attitude of "activism" afterthree lumpectomies and that indudes taking responsi- a mastectomy, she was diagbility for their health and ac- nosed with stage 4 cancer. tively coping withtheir disease. Finally, Fonfa tried Chinese Fonfa, president and founder herbs. After the first dose, she Jim Rassol/Tribune News Service of the Annie Appleseed Proj- said, she broke out in hives. Ann Fonfa' sbreastcancerspontaneouslydisappeared.Shenow ect,a cancer-patientadvocacy But within 10 months, the reworks to raise awarenessabout complementary cancertreatments. group, was diagnosed with a maining tumors had vanished, slow-growing breast cancer in something Fonfa attributes to 1993. Though she underwent a change in her immune sysquently in some types than breast, according to the study. surgery, she declined chemo- tem. "I have friends who have others. Kidney, brain, uterine In th e l at e 1 800s, New therapy and radiation because done everything mainstream and skin cancer (melanoma) York surgeon William Co- she said her body overreacts to and conventional, and they were the four most common ley noticed that contracting a chemical exposures. die. No one really knows the types, according to a review of post-surgical infection seemed Instead, Fonfa adopted a luck of the draw," she said. 176 published cases from 1900 to help some cancer patients. to 1960by University of Illinois He began treating people College of Medicine surgeons with cancer by infecting them Tilden Everson and Warren with certain kinds of bacteCole. In cases of infant neu- ria, which came to be known roblastoma, regression isso as Coley toxins. Coley had common that screening isn't some success, but researchers recommended, according to weren't able to replicate his the National Cancer Institute. work, and other forms of treatEverson and Cole didn't ment overshadowed his ideas, specify that the remission had according to t h e A m erican to be permanent. They also Cancer Society. excludedcases of lymphoma Turner and other research-

Ilo ur Hands Hurt'V

or leukemia because of the natural fluctuations in growth

rates of these cancers. In a follow-up study looking at incidence rates from 1900

to 1987, University of Calgary researchers found lymphoma and leukemiaranked among the most common remissions, along with melanoma and cancers of the brain and the

ers suspect some combination

Do your hands turn white, blue, purple or transparent when cold? Are the back of your hands shiny with no lines on your knuckles? Do you have unexplained weight loss? Do you experience shortness of breath? Do you have swallowing difficulties or heartburn?

of psychological or spiritual factors could also be at play in casesof regression. Some research suggests that major mental or emotional chang-

es can significantly affect the body's chemistry, especially the hormones released by the

pituitary and pineal glands. That can lead to changes in retina. By contrast, the most the physiological system, incommon cancers overall were cluding the immune system. lung, colon and rectum, and Dr. Lorenzo Cohen, a pro-

and were willing to be away

If you areexperiencing any one ormoreof thesesymptoms, it may be anautoimmune diseasecalled Scleroderma.Call your doctor for an appointmentwith documentedsymptoms as soon aspossible to either rule out or confirm Sclerodermadiagnosis.

standard of care, she will have

from home for tw o

w eeks. helped make history. But even Within days, she was packing. if it doesn't make it to market,

Continued from 01 advance a cure — researchRaising Awarenesswith Strength R Courage "It's an incredibly intense ers say that outcome could be For 14 days in August, she Zara (has) experienced what disease to handle, and unfor- decades away — but it has the lived like any other kid at camp it feels like to be a kid without tunately, it's one that never lets potential, Razaq said, to free — sleeping in tents, downing diabetes." up," said Dr. Robert Ratner, patients and caregivers alike hot dogs, playing soccer — as chief scientific and medical of- from having to think about the device did its work. ficer of the American Diabetes 7ype 1 diabetes care every It was a time, she said, when Association. waking moment. she and the 11 other girls in 't This summer, Zara and her The previous summer, she the study didn't have to count t family finally got a chance to learned, Damiano and fellow carbs, adjust dosing or make take a break. researchers, including a med- any p r eparations b efore Lyndsey Carter Razaq, a real estate agent, ical team from Massachusetts exercise. was surfing the Internet late General Hospital, had run a No matter the stress she one night in July when she two-week camp for adolescent put on it, she said, the bionic happened on a website that Type I d i abetes patients at pancreas made the necessary caught her eye. A Boston Uni- Camp Clara Barton, a retreat adjustments. "I had an excellent time, versity biomedical engineer and diabetes research center had spent years developing in Oxford, Massachusetts. At- and I never got homesick," she a system with all of the func- tendeeswore thedeviceduring recalled in her living room, tions of Zara's equipment that, normal camp activities. flashing a multicolored headin effect, ran itself. The trial data suggested that band and bracelets she made It had performed well in the bionicpancreas keeps glu- at camp. "I can't wait to go next real-world settings, she read, cose levels significantly more year." and the engineer, Ed Damiano, stable than o ther available Damiano, whose son, Dawas looking for child volun- methods. vid, has Type 1 diabetes, has "The results were goodteers to test it in clinical trials vowed to get the device to at a summer camp in August. much, much better than even market by the time the young Called a "bionic pancreas," we anticipated — and the kids man goes off to college in 2017. it included a glucose sensor, a seemed to have a great time," He believes they'll make the Remove those sun spots! display monitor and a pump said Damiano, whose paper deadline. (Their next chalthat delivered insulin. What on the project was published lenge: to meld the parts into a $ 1 4 0 (Re r ail Ifr60) (Retail $250) made it different was that Da- in the New England Journal of single unit a little bigger than a miano had added a "brain" to Medicine in June. smartphone.) the system. Razaq fired Damiano an Razaq is certainly hopeful. Coupon required.Expires 11/30/14. Cannot be combined with other offers. W here c a regivers m u s t email to see if Zara could at- It wasn't easy to let her daughwatch a patient's levels, as- tend thenext camp. She knew ter, now 8, go for two weeks, sess the changing conditions it was a long shot, as there was she said, but it was worth it. "If (the bionic pancreas) of a given day, estimate each a sizable waiting list, but Zara Visit thermaleffects.fullslate.com dosage size and program the happened to be one of the few comes to market, Zara may pump to deliver it, Damiano 7-year-old applicants who fit be one of the early recipients," for service information and to schedule. and his team had developed the necessary medical profile she said. "If it becomes the a mathematical algorithm by which a s m artphone-sized

for moreinfovisit www.lclerodermalnlel.orl

THERMAL EFFEGTs M AssAGE 8 S K I N C A R E 2lfassage Facial Combo

End of Summer IPL Photo Facial

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computer could assessthose

changingfactors,make every calculation on its own, then dispense the appropriate dose, all without the conscious intervention of the patient or caregiver. Various researchers have been working on developing an a r tificial pancreas for years, Ratner said. Such a device, he added, ideally will function like "the pan-

creas Mother Nature made," measuring the body's needs, "squirting" insulin in just the right amount, then shutting off to prevent overdose. While Damiano is still in the

process of seeking FDA approval, Razaq said she learned his device is approaching that ideal. It still consists of three separate units, not one, but

they're about the size of the ones Zara already wears. It also takesglucose readings 288times a day, tailors the dosage size each time and delivers it, whether the patient is sleep-

ing, going to dass or dribbling

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D5

MoNEY Infertility Continued from D1 A report by the ethics committee of the American Society for Reproductive Med-

icine found that shared-risk programs can be acceptable if patients are fully informed about the criteria for success and about program costs, among other things. Shared-risk and other programs are popular in part because health

i n s u rance

coverage for infertility treatment, while slowly improving, is still sparse. Fifteen states require insurers to cover infertility treatment to

varying degrees, according to Resolve, an infertility advocacy group. Among employers with more than 500 workers, 65 percent cover a

s p e cialist

evaluation, 41 percent cover drug therapy and 27 percent cover IVF, according to human r e sources c onsultant

Mercer's 2013 employer benefits survey. Thirty-two percent of large companies don't cover infertility services at all. Glow, a c ompany best known for an app that helps women track ovulation and

other pre g nancy-related health data, recently began offering Glow First, a program to help address the financial uncertainties posed

When health care prices are a guessing game By Daniel Chang The Miami Herald

"If you're an employer, and you don't have access to your underlying claims data, even though you're selfinsured, there's absolutely no way for you to make decisions on benefit design — other than using the brute force of across-the-board premium increases."

Health care providers and insurance companies do not have to reveal their

negotiatedprices, frustrating everyone trying to control medical costs.

union consultant raised his Could t h e

c o m m ittee

Fitch and others who asked

charged with reducing Miami-Dade labor's health

for the information never got to see predsely how Miami-Dade spends more than $400 million ayeartopayhealth caredaims for nearly 60,000 employees,

competitors. A hospital chief executive,

choice for managing their benefits costs as they go up. Most

Steve Sonenreich of M o unt Sinai Medical Center in Mi-

choose to shift more financial

ami Beach, even made a pubcare expenses look at the lic pledge on local radio last spreadsheet showing the year that he would reveal the rates that the county pays contractual rates the hospital local hospitals and d o c- retirees and dependents in the charges private insurerstorsfor medicalservices to healthplan. only to learn that he was barred That's because Miami-Dade, under the nondisdosure agreeemployees? "We reall yneed tounder- and many employers across the ment in the contract. stand where the money is country, aren't allowed to know Sonenreich said in a writbeing spent in order to be in- the prices their own insurance ten statement this week he besightful aboutbenefit design plan administrators negotiate lieves one of the problems with changes," said Duane Fitch, with health care providers, pricing secrecy is that it allows a health care consultant for even when they're self-insured, large hospital systems to leverService Employees Inter- like Miami-Dade County, and age their "geographic dominational Union Local 1991, the daims are paid with gov- nance" to runup rates on insurwhich represents physicians ernment money. ers, who pass on the increases and nurses at the counAnd that means the mayor's to employersand consumers ty-owned Jackson Health health care committee has no through higher premiums, deSystem. more insight than the average ductibles and other costs. But the answer to Fitch's

Florida consumer on how to

"If we m ake health care

by infertility and treatment.

meeting of the Miami-Dade

or themselves.

Participants p a y $50 monthly for up to 10 months. E ach person's money i s pooled with payments from people who started the same

"You need the data in order Labor Healthcare Committee last March was the same to do the proper plan design

th e end o f 1 0

an accredited infertility clinic they visit for fertility testing

or other services. The program isn't open to people who have already r eceived t r e atment fo r infertility.

The first group, which began making payments in October, has just ended. Roughly 50 people participated, according to the company. The average age was 34, and the typical participant had been trying to get pregnant for a

response he would receive

to consumers, particularly em-

ployers," he said, "they will be able to make better decisions."

that drives your outcomes,"

said Miami-Dade Commission- Divided pressure er Juan Zapata, whose requests But the push for price transfor AvMed's contractedrates parency has had an uneven imalso have been rejected. "With- pact across the country. out that, you're just shooting in Some states, such as Col"Contracts ar e p r opri- the dark, basically." orado, New Hampshire and etary," said Patricia Nelson, Massachusetts, have adopted regional head of strategic National cono.rn legislation that requires insuraccounts for AvMed Health The lackof disclosure of a ance companies and health Plans, the county's health most basic fact — how much care providers to report reimbenefits administrator that does it cost? — has prompted a bursementratesand payments negotiated th e p a y ment movement around the country for use in what they call an ratesfor medical services for greater price transparency, "all-payer claims database"for county employees. She even as insurance companies a repository of comprehensive noted that both the insur- and hospitals say revealing information on health care use ance company and the those rates will put them at a and payments for all medical health care providers agree financial disadvantage with services by Medicaid, Medievery time he repeated the question during the panel's next six meetings through July. Essentially, no.

placement may require that an

since 1985 requiring some level insurer pay a number of differoftransparency and disclosure ent providers. "So if the hospital told you from hospitals and physicians, but not insurers. that their cost is $27000" Quick

ers leave employers with little

hand to ask what seemed to keep such payment rates like a basic question. confidential.

lower costs for their employees pricing information available

months, those who haven't become pregnant split the money; more exactly, Glow agrees to pay their share to

tions more than a dozen times

At a hearing to discuss the rising costs of health — Francois de Brantes, executive director of Health Care Left in the dark carebenefitsforem ployees Incentives, a Connecticut nonprofit that advocates payment reform of Miami-Dade County in By keeping prices secret, Florida this year, a labor health careprovidersandinsur-

question at that inaugural

m onth. A t

careand commercialinsurers, cial insurers — all paying difamong others. ferent rates. Florida has enacted or Adding to the complexity: A amended statutes and regula- procedure such as a knee re-

burden onto employees, said Francois de Brantes, executive director of Health Care Incentives Improvement Institute, a

Connecticut nonprofit that advocates for payment reform.

"If you're an employer," de Brantes said, "and you don't have access to your underlying daims data, eventhoughyou're self-insured, there's absolutely no way for you to make decisions on benefit design — other than using the brute force of across-the-board premium

increases." For most people with em-

said, "it's still not a true representation of the cost of knee

surgery, because the surgeon's bill is going to be separate, and the anesthesiologist is going to bill separately." For employers, having access to dataon actualpayments would be much more useful than knowing the average discount negotiated by a plan administrator, de Brantes said. When he worked as a pro-

gram leader for General Electric Corporate Health Care Programs in the mid-1990s, de

Brantes said, GE required its health plan administrator to deliver the data — or lose the

company's business. "We would use that data constantly to figure out: What do

we need to do as an employer to improve cost and quality? Where are there problems?

ployer-provided health insur- And even to do accurate modance, rising premiums are not eling of what would be the unusual. Insured consumers impact of, say, increasing our across the country are shoul- copay on ER visits," de Brantes dering more financial respon- said. "How many people would sibility for their medical care that impact? And who's going through high d e ductibles, there more often? Is it people co-insurance rates and health who have chronic illness, or savings accounts — fuelingmo- those seeking routine service'? mentum forpricetransparency. Other large private employers, such as aerospace giant Notsosimple Boeing, negotiate contracts diBut translating health care rectly with hospitals and other pricing to into useful informa- healthcare providers, said Joe tion for consumers is compli- Smith, a physician and engicated because every patient's neer who chairs the board of experience can be different, West Health Policy Center, a even forsimilar procedures, Washington-based nonprofit said Linda Quick, president of that studies health care reform. "Health care has enough the South F1orida Hospital and Healthcare Association, a trade middlemen," Smith said of plan group for providers. administrators. "The employers Then there's the variety of are not ignorant of this. They're payers, from government pro- good at negotiating contracts grams such as Medicaid and and can also use market power Medicare, to private commer- to gain information."

year. The payout to those who

didn't become pregnant was $1,800. "This relatively minimal contribution will help to off-

0

0

set those downstream and

very high costs" of fertility testing and treatment, says Jennifer Tye, Glow's head of marketing and partnerships. There are other ways to manage the cost of infer-

I I

tility treatment. In addition

to shared-risk p rograms, many fertility clinics offer discounts and financing options. Other companies also offer financing and/or infer-

I

I

I

I .

tility insurance to help cover

.

"

the costsforcouples who are working with a surrogate to have a baby, for example, or for IVF treatments. "I think it can be confus-

+.:*~, 1

ing for people," says Barbara Collura, president and chief

I

executive of Resolve. "There's

I

'•

I

I

I I

no one place to go to learn all the different financing

I

I

I

I '

I

I

I I

I

options." Most fertility clinics have

someone on staff who will talk with prospective patients

about the costs they'll be responsible for and financing options that ar e

a v ailable,

Collura says. "Exhaust all the obvious choices with your insurance

and whatever financing programs the clinic might par-

j

I

$

I

I

S

I I

e

'

r

r

'I

I

I

ticipate with," Collura says.

"Then do research to fill in the gap if there still is one."

Among employers with more than 500

workers, 65 percent cover a specialist evaluation, 41 percent

cover drug therapy and 27 percent

St. MEDICAL Charles GROUP

COVer I'I/'F, aCCOrding

to human resources consultant Mercer's 2013 employer benefits survey. Thirty-two percent

of large companies don't cover infertility

services at all.

180 PROVIDERS AND 19 SPECIALTIES

SCharheHIIIhCan.orIISCMG $0

FANILY CARE IMMEDIATECARE PREOPERATIVECARE PEDIATRICS EMERGEIIICVMEDICIIIIE CARDIOLOGY GENERALSURGERY SLEEP MEDIOIIE BEHAVIORALHEALTH OBIGYN ANESTHESIOLOGVNEONATOLOGY PALUATIVECARE PijLMONOLOGY ONCOLOGY INFECTIOUSDISEASE HOSPITAL NEDICIIIE HOSPICE CARDIOVASCUIAR SURGERY



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

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 •

• i

•l•

s

s'

e,'g;

Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl

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Furniture 8 Appliances

280

Estate Sales

EstateSale, household, kitchen, toys, books, yard, garage, Christmas items; 56180 Solar Drive 541-598-8588,

Sat/Sun 9-3

286

286

Sales Northeast Bend Sales Northeast Bend

3-Family sale Fri./Sat. Yard Sale 45 years 8-3 rain o r s h i ne! worth! Sept. 26, 27, Quality womens shoes, 28, 9-5. 2200 NE Hwy clothing, boots; baby 20 ¹46 behind Jake's items, household & Diner, turn left small furniture. 1665 288 NE Shepard Road Sales Southeast Bend ESTATE OUT

r

A v e .

«

g < ~

9 7a •

246

246

255

Antiques & Collectibles

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Computers

1100 rds of 22LR factory ammo, $ 1 10. 541-647-7950 260 rds of 22-250 ammo, $200.

Kodak Instamatic 20 vintage '70sorig box, storage, top folds manual, flash cubes & out for serving, $250; extender.$25. Heavy metal queen 541-419-6408 bed frame, $30; Pair 38 ex84e beige The Bulletin reserves black-out d r apes, the right to publish all $15; Folding table ads from The Bulletin and 4 folding chairs, newspaper onto The in the box, $40. SE Bulletin Internet webBend. 541-508-8784 site.

Pets & Supplies

• B e gd ~ o

212

42" TV cabinet with s late t r i m $ 2 5 0; Ethan Allen buffet,

208

,

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h asing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit inf ormation may be subjected to fraud. For more informaA1 Washers&oryers tion about an adver$150 ea. Full wartiser, you may call ranty. Free Del. Also the O r egon State wanted, used W/D's Attorney General's 541-280-7355 Office C o n sumer Protection hotline at Couch, black leather w/ 1-877-877-9392. 2 recliners, like new. $475. 541-408-0846 The Bulletin Serving Central Oregee sincesgrg Fridge, Whirlpool, top freezer, white, clean, Adorable AKC $75. 541-390-4478 Registered Lab Puppies. Chocolate ($750), Silver and Charcoal ($1000.). All Furniture for Sale pups have dew claws from Log Home: removed, first shots Oak roll-top desk. and wormed. Contact Coffee table,end 541-462-3946 if intertables, 2 lamps. ested. Allbeautiful and reasonably priced.

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• New, never fired Weatherby VanguardS2, synthetic stock, cal 30-06.$550. • New, never fired Howa,wood stock, cal .300 Win Mag.$725 Must pass background check. Please call 541.389.3694, leave message.

T HE B U LLETIN

requires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer. 257

Musical Instruments

OF STORAGE Bring Crazy Back Antiques including early For a Fall Festiyal .338 Belguim Browninq 1900's walnut poster The "CRAZY MAMA BAR, 4 x L e u pold, byFarmhouse b edroom set , oak The Bulletin CRAFT FAIRE" Serving Ceerrel Oregonsince lg«g magna-ported, extra Estate Sales dresser & phone, rock- Sat. Sept. 27th 10-5 Get your c lips, L i k e new . 62738 Montara Dr. ers, Heywood Wake- Bend Factory 4tores business $'I 200. 615-448-8585 215 field dining set & end in Bend Over 60 Local Craft 2009 Beautiful table, Mid-Century tile Coins & Stamps Fri.-Sat., 10-5 5500 rounds of 22LR Vendors! Live Music Lowrey hiqh-grade ammo, $500. e ROW I N G Fully restored 1916 Ford top table, nice glass- Food! Bouncy House! Adventurer u Organ Private collector buying 541 -647-7950 Model T! Tons of large ware, china, small colCall 541-848-0334 Absolutely perfect lectibles, silver. 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TURN THE PAGE theology books free! Reloading Supplies. w/scope & case, $550. fairing, kick stand gun, dozer blade for $500. 541-728-1004 Mossberg 300A 12Ga Buying Diamonds 541-408-6900. For More Ads Bege Elrod and more. riding mower, ladders, with 2 barrels: one 22" /Gofd for Cash Healer pups with tails, The Bulletin $1400 compressor, 30 fishmodified; 8 one 181/2", Saxon's Fine Jewelers MOVING SALE 8 weeks, 2 m ales, 541-504-5224 IOI'T IIIS RI ing poles, generator, $250. 541-389-6655 60861 WILLOW CREEK LOOP choc. 8 blue $225/ea. Background check The Bulletin Mountain High Subdivision off Knott Rd. 541-390-8875 292 required. Please call BUYING recommends extra Friday Sept. 26 • Saturday Sept. 27 DO YOU HAVE 245 541.389.3694, leave msg. Lionel/American Flyer • Sales Other Areas Jack Russell puppies, I cesen v e e p r SOMETHING TO 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. trains, accessories. purebred tails docked chasing products or • Golf Equipment Wanted: Collector seeks SELL Crowd control admittance numbers 541-408-2191. 9/26-27 8-4. A n tique 2 fem, 1 male, ready services from out of I high quality fishing items FOR $500 OR will be issued at 8:00 a.m. Friday /27/14 $ 30 0 ea . the area. Sending ~ desk, 20-gal air compres- 9 & upscale bamboo fly LESS? BUYING &i S ELLING (Take 27th Street south and follow around the 541-279-9935 sor, snowblower, power cash, checks, or rods. Call 541-678-5753, All gold jewelry, silver Non-commercial big turn to Knoft Rd. Go about3miles to sa/e washer, Weider 3750 Pom-mix puppies, white l credit i n f ormation or 503-351-2746 Callawav X-12 advertisers may and gold coins, bars, site area. Gates will be open drive slowly!!!!) weight machine, bikes, w/ brown patches, so may be subjected to graphite, 3-lob, $100. rounds, wedding sets, place an ad Weatherby Mark V Ac- class Rocgj o Nell plates, milk This Sale has lots and lots of oil Paintings and cute & fluffy! 1 girl, 1 l FRAUD. For more Big Berthagraphite rings, sterling silwith our cumark, customized watercolors by Bege Elrod - can't describe them glass, LP records, cloth- boy, born 7/17, $175 information about an g fairway metals, 3-13, "QUICK CASH ver, coin collect, vin30-378, plus custom all!!! Also lots of very nice furniture and misc. ing & much more! 15349 Call 541-280-8307 e $40 each. advertiser, you mayl watches, dental SPECIAL ammo and Talley tage items; Large dark wood china cabinet; Stereo/ Ponderosa Loop, La Pine. gold. Bill Fl e ming, O r egon $ Lady Cauaway 1 week3lines 12 POODLE puppies,toy, $ call th e s cope base. W I N TV cabinet; Large round Marble top Eastlake graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 541-382-9419. Atto r ney ' OI' loving companions. ' State Model 70-300, WIN style Table, and two Victorian chairs. Coffee and Big Yellow Sign Yard metals, $100. l General's O f f i ce 541 -475-3889 ~ee eks se! Sale! Rain (covered) magnum and ammo. end tables all in cherry wood; Floral sofa; Two Lady TaylorMade Consumer Protec- • Ad must or shine, Fri. 9/26, Queensland Heelers WIN Model 100-284, Call a Pro velvet blue chairs; Nice Pecan dining table and Miscelas graphite tion h o t line at I include price of Sat. 9/27, 8-5. Fol- Standard & Mini, $150 W IN a n d Am m o. Whether you need a 7-SW, driver-7 wood, six chairs and two leaves; Oak dining table with i 1-877-877-9392. e s ie tem oi geoe ~ 541-420-8689, leave l ow s i gn s fr o m 8 up. 541-280-1537 $100. 6 chairs and one leaf; Super four poster King or less, or multiple fence fixed, hedges Wickiup J unction, www.rightwayranch.wor > TheBulletin > msg will call back. (2) Sun Mountain Size bed; Armoire style dresser; Chest of drawitems whose total trimmed or a house 16060 Right A v e., Serving Cersrret Oregonsrnre «903 Speed Carts, ers; TV/ Stereo cabinet again; two sets of nightdpress.com does not exceed 247 La Pine. F urniture, $75 ea. stands; "Cedar-style" chest; Cheval mirror; Roll built, you'll find $500. Rottweiler pups, par541-382-6664 Sporting Goods household, cr a fts, top desk; Older computer; Leather office chair; 212 professional help in ents on site. Call for Bege's hat collection; silk scarves, clothing, books,music,movies, - Misc. Call Classifieds at Antiques & The Bulletin's "Call a tools, locks and cabi- details. 541-923-2437. belts, and shoes. Wrought Iron Patio set and 541-385-5809 CHECK YOUR AD net hardware, boats, Scottish Terrier, AKC, Collectibles other wrought iron pieces; At least ten copper Service Professional" www.bendbulleiin.com camper, fish i ng,black female, shots, dewteapots and lots more copper items; Books and Directory camping & more. Well claws, dewormed, $450. cookbooks; Linens; Double wedding ring quilt; 541 -385-5809 worth the trip! Will deliver. 541-325-9615 Great Gun Deals! Glasses and several dish sets - fine china; Lots New Ruqer SP101 .357, of silverplate items- Punch Bowl; coffee and tea Scotty puppies, reserve 3" bbl, Bianchi holster, set; serving dishes; and more; Cigarette lighters; CRYPT at Deschutes NOTICE now! Mom & dad on site, $535. MKA 1919 12 ga Like new Necky Essome jewelry; Pots and pans; food products; Remember to remove 1st shots. 541-771-0717 on the first day it runs Memorial G a rden semi-auto, M16 style, 3 Kitchen tools; lots of glasses and stemware; your Garage Sale signs to make sure it is corMeadow Pond space kia 16' kayak with chokes 2 mags $625. Silky Terrier female born eSpellcheck e and 4D4 - dbl depth lawn Corning and Pyrex ware; Art Supplies and picrect. (nails, staples, etc.) Argus 300 slide rudder. Bulkheads New Pap M92 semi-auto 7/27, parents on site in ture frames and more pictures and more pichuman errors do occrypt, full grave for 2. after your Sale event water tight. Seat like projector Model pistol w /stabilizer tures; Misc. tools and shop items; Garden items is over! THANKS! Christmas Valley. 1st cur. If this happens to AK B uyer w il l ne e d 111 Series. also new. Hatches, deck s hort rifle, 20 0 r d s shots; can deliver to slides of Drake Park, - Silk flowers and Halloween items; Christmas your ad, please con- 7.62x39 ammo, 3 mags, lines and grab loops granite 8 bronze dbl From The Bulletin Bend. Can text pics. decor; Nutcrackers; Two chandeliers out of the and your local utility tact us ASAP so that $750. 541-306-0166 interment m a r k er local camping/huntall in perfect condi$400. Jeff, 707-350-1981 home; Garden tools. Hundreds of other small corrections and any companies. ing/fishing trips and tion. Orig i nally plus interment costs. items!!! Handled by ... adjustments can be Marlin lever-action 32 $1450, asking $700 $1500. For more info pups AKC, 2 girls, Alaska - in Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC The Bulletin Yorkie made to your ad. c all K e llie A l l e n 2 boys, beautiful! Shots, special rifle, Model 336 obo. P lease c a l l 1950's-1960s. $75 Servieg Central Oregon sleseSggi 541-385-5809 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves 'til 9 p.m. potty training, health quar. obo. 541-419-6408 ADL. Established 1870. 541-312-2435. 541-382-5592 or www.deeedysestatesales. com www.bendbulletin.com $1100. 541-777-77430 The Bulletin Classified $725. 541-420-4183 seller, 207-582-0732

Moving/ Estate Sale

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E2 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

325

476

Hay, Grain & Feed

Employment Opportunities

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Claesifieds Get Results!

Administrative Assistant

Employment Opportunities

Fuel Transport Driver Eds Trucking is looking for a regional TRANSPORT TRUCK AND TRAILER DRIVER for

pickup and safe delivery of propane gas, fuel

CAREGIVER needed and/or other products as directed. Follow DOT

to live on beautiful ranch and company safe driver guidelines while in rural Central Oregon performing duties. Performs daily inspections with elderly grandpar- as required by DOT to ensure that assigned ents. We are looking for equipment is in safe and compliant operating a single person or couple condition. Ensure all required paperwork Redmond Fire & Rescue to live on our working including certifications, logs, etc is completed is seeking an Administra- cattle ranch with our 88 & and is i n c ompliance with company and tive Assistant to perform 89 year old grandpar- g overnment regulations. Adheres t o a l l adyanced level secre- ents for 3 or 5 days/ company safety policies and procedures. tarial, clerical, and recep- nights per week. Duties tionist duties. required are daily perCandidate must be avail- sonal care for an 89 year The ideal candidate must meet DOT requireable to work Monday-Fri- old sweetheart of a man ments, possess a valid Class 'A' CDL with day, 8am to 5pm. Com- who has Parkinson's, as- Hazmat and Tankerendorsement and have pensation for this position sistance with medica- tractor/trailer experience. is a yearly salary range of tions and medical paperWe offer competitive pay, new equipment, $31,201 to $37,441 plus work, transportation to benefits. and from appts, cooking ability to be home most nights, medical and Please visit our website: 1-2 meals per day, light dental plan, 401(K), Profit Sharing, paid www.redmondfireand cleaning and house work, holidays and vacation, and Safety Bonus. and minimal yard work. A ~rescue.or review the job descrip- priyate bedroom and Email employment@edstaub.com Call 541-385-5809 to and for application bathroom in the home to get an application or you can fax resume to or place your ad tion requirements. are provided as well as 877-846-2516 on-line at meals and other basic Place a photo inyourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES bendbulletin.com amenities. For more info, for only$15.00par week. ~ S U B A R U . call S a rah T e skey, Starting at 3 lines Auto - Sales 541-477-3848 or *UNDER '500in total merchandise 341 Home Delivery Advisor OVER '500 in total merchandise Sales professional to steske ~ The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking Horses & Equipment 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 Join Central @bluemtnranch. com a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 Oregon's l a r gest position and consists of managing an adult new ca r d e a ler *illlust state prices in ad carrier force to ensure our customers receive 14 days .................................................$33.50 Subaru of B e n d. Need to get an ad superior service. Must be able to create and 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special Offering 401k, profit perform strategic plans to meet department 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 icall for commercial line ad rates) in ASAP? sharing, m e d ical objectives such as increasing market share plan, split shifts and and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a paid vacation. Expeself-starter who can work both in the office 2001 Silverado Fax it te 541-322-7253 rience or will train. and in their assigned territory with minimal A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: 3-horse trailer5th 90 day $1500 guarwheel, 29'x8', deluxe The Bulletin Classifieds supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. a ntee. Dress f o r with company vehicle provided. Strong showman/semi living BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) success to work in customer service skills and management skills quarters, lots of exour drug free work are necessary. Computer experience is tras. Beautiful condiREQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well place. Please apply required. You must pass a drug screening tion. $21,900. OBO Civil Unit as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin at 2060 NE Hwy 20, and be able to be insured by company to drive 541-420-3277 Supervisor Bend. See Bob or vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at The Jackson County Devon. b elieve in p r omoting from w i thin, s o Circuit C o ur t in Horseshoeing any time. is located at: Medford, O r e gon advancement within company is available to Tools the right person. If you enjoy dealing with 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. seeks a Civil Unit JHM 110-Ib certifier Want to impress the people from diverse backgrounds and you are Supervisor. Salary Bend, Oregon 97702 anvil, anvil stand relatives? Remodel energetic, have great organizational skills and $4554 to $7417 per w/vise, all GE hand interpersonal communication skills, please your home with the month. For further tools, hoof stand & send your resume to: help of a professional info and to apply go PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction forge tools, all in to h t t p://courts.orThe Bulletin is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right from The Bulletin's new condition, egon.gov/OJD/jobs c/o Kurt Muller to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these "Call A Service $1600 and click on "paid PO Box 6020 newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party or part trade for Professional" Directory positions" by OctoBend, OR 97708-6020 Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. generator. or e-mail resume to: ber 5, 2014. Equal 541-430-4449 BANKING/FINANCIAL opportunity emkmullerObendbulletin.com 260 260 263 267 ployer. No phone calls, please. Misc. Items Misc. Items Tools Fuel & Wood The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE • Pre-employment drug screen required. Horse stalls, pasture & How fo avoidscam Wanted- paying cash C ommercial Delt a All year Dependable arena. Owner care. C OMMUNITY CREDIT VN I O N DELIVERY - Make exUnifence table saw, Firewood: Seasoned; F amily ranch S W tra money!! Deliver and fraud attempts for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. Mclntosh, e xtended ben c h , Lodgepole, split, del, Redmond. $150/mo. Financial Advisor the phone book. For VBe aware of internaJoin a winning team! router, new lift, com- B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 54'I -207-2693. more info, c o ntact JBL, Marantz, Dytional fraud. Deal loOnPoint recent1y joined plete g ri p m a ster. or 2 for $365. Call for Just bought a new boat? forces with Raymond Nancy 253-720-1638 naco, Heathkit, Sancally whenever posMany extras. $1500. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. multi-cord discounts! Sell your old one in the James Financial Sersible. 541-923-6427 Call 541-261-1808 541-420-3484. Y Watch for buyers classifieds! Ask about our vices, one of the leading Hotel/ Front desk Super Seller rates! who offer more than WHEN YOU SEE THIS Generator B roker/Dealers in t h e Basic secretarial skills EPIC AIRCRAFT CAREER NIGHT G e n erAC 541-385-5809 country. Together our needed. Apply in peryour asking price and 5000w, runs g reat Pine & Juniper Split Thursday, September 25th Sug a rloaf firms have a commit- son a t who ask to have $375. 541-22'I -8226 383 5:00 PM — 7:00 PNf ment to provide an ex- Mountain Motel 62980 money wired or PROMPT DELIVERY 22550 Nelson Road by the Bend Airport Produce & Food ceptional client experi- N. Hwy 97, Bend. handed back to them. 541-389-9663 On a classified ad ence to support and build Fake cashier checks go to THOMAS a successful investment Housekeeping staff Seeking highly motivated professionals who and money orders are quality-focused, team-oriented, and www.bendbulletin.com Seasoned, split & delivORCHARDS program by a ssisting needed full-time. Expeare common. mechanically proficient. Prior experience members tomake sound rience helpful but not to view additional ered pine, $160/cord in Kimberly, Oregon PNever give out perinvestment and financial necessary. Apply in is highly desirable but not required for LaPine, or small deliv- Open 7 days week, photos of the item. sonal financial inforall positions. For moreinformation, visit ery charge to outlying 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! planning choices. To person at S u garloaf mation. 261 Shopsmith areas. 541-876-7426 www.epicaircraft.comor email U-PICK/ READY- PICK view the full job descrip- Mountain Motel, 62980 PTrust your instincts with bandsaw, kellys©epicaircraft.com. Medical Equipment BRING CONTAINERS tion and apply, visit: N. Hwy 97, Bend. and be wary of 269 www.on ointcareers.com excellent condition. for U-PICK!!! someone using an Customized extras. COMPOSITE TECHNICIANS: Titan 3-wheeled electric Gardening Supplies Freestonecanning escrow service or Prep molds and forms, cut materials using Retired shop scooter, $200. peaches: O'Henry & Equipment agent to pick up your teacher; templates or g u ides, l ay-up c omposite 541-548-4170 Pears: Bartlett, Asian merchandise. don't need anymore! material, vacuum bag parts for oven cure, Apples: Gala and 263 Pictures available. maintain records, conform to standard operatBarkTurfSoil.com The Bulletin Jonagold serving centrar oresonsincers03 ing procedures. $475. Tools • Plums • Prunes Sales Associate — PartTime — Bend, OR • Experience in composite fabrication pre-preg, Call 541-598-6486 New Fall Hours starting At Hancock Fabrics our mission is to be the PROMPT DELIVERY wet lay-up and tooling highly desirable. Tues. Sept. 30... closed authority in all things sewing. We entrust our Infrared Sauna, 220 V Cabover ladder rack, 542D89-9663 • Competent working to blueprints, templates, hook-up, no building, heavy duty with 6' tool brand to those who share our passion for Tues. & Wed., open sample parts, process sheets and other $100p 541 53677g0' box each side, $295. Thur. thru Mon., 10-4 sewing, decorating and crafts. We are fast 541-416-9686 authorized information. • Building Materials only! Visit us on Facepaced and we work hard! Our store and field For newspaper • Must be quality-focused, team-oriented, book for updates and associates are the heart of our business and delivery, call the computer competent, and highly professional. look for for us on Wed. are the key to reflecting our culture and brand. Circulation Dept. at Natural gas Ruud at Bend Farmers MarIf this sounds like the culture you crave, we 541-385-5800 tankless water TRIM & DRILL TECHNICIANS: want to hear from you. ket and Sat. at NW To place an ad, call Trim and drill aircraft parts per approved heater, brand new! Crossing. Sales Associate- Part-time 541-385-5809 199 BTU, $1600. specs. Coordinate with Quality Control for 541-934-2870 Requirements: or email parts inspection. Provide Engineering Change classifiedstbendbulletin.com • Must be available to work evenings, weekIn Sunriver area. Requests (ECR's), redlines, and comments for Call 54 I -385-5809 ends and holidays as needed. Garage Sales process improvement and development. 530-938-3003 The Bulle6n to ro m o te ou r s ervice servlnyceneal oregon slncessr School Diploma • Must be able to read and understand aircraft Garage Sales •• High parts drawings. Excellent customer service skills required REDMOND Habitat • Must be able to cut, trim and sand to a scribe Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care 270 Garage Sales • Passion for creativity, a plus RESTORE line using power and hand tools and have Building Supply Resale Lost & Found experience with trim shop equipment, includNOTICE: Oregon state Find them Please send resumes to Quality at ing drill press, grinders, hand drills, sanders, law requires anyone rmoon©hancockfabrics.com LOW PRICES Found; Sports equipin who con t racts for and routers. Hancock Fabricsis an 1242 S. Hwy 97 ment on Hwy 26, be• Must be quality-focused, team-oriented, with construction work to The Bulletin Equal Opportunity Employer 541-548-1406 Serving Central t ween M adras & be licensed with the basic computer skills to support paperless job Oregon Since 2003 Open to the public. Warm Springs, 1/2 Classifieds Construction Contractracking system. mile before Pelton tors Board (CCB). An Residental/Commercial Banking- Accounting 266 Dam exit. Call to de541-385-5809 active license SprinklerBlow-out QUALITY ENGINEER: scribe and i d entify means the contractor • Heating & Stoves Primary r esponsibilities f ocused t o ward Sprinkler Repair 541-475-4887. is bonded & insured. nondestructive t e sting of com p osite Back Flow Testing Verify the contractor's NOTICE TO components. Other areas of s upport to s s CCB l i c ense at ADVERTISER include training, mentoring and assisting with What are you Maintenance CreditUnion www.hirealicensedSince September 29, the Material Test Lab, Material Review, • Fall Clean up contractor.com looking for? 1991, advertising for Composite Fabrication, Drawing Interpretation Mowing Accounting/Operations Coordinator or call 503-378-4621. ~Weekly used woodstoves has as needed. Qualifications: You'll find it in & Edging The Bulletin recom- •Bi-Monthly been limited to mod• 5 years of Quality experience with at least 3 & Monthly Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for a mends checking with els which have been The Bulletin Classifieds years as a Quality Engineer. Maintenance detail-oriented team player with a positive the CCB prior to con- •Bark, Rock, Etc. certified by the Or• Bachelor Degree in Aerospace, Quality or attitude to assist with general accounting tracting with anyone. egon Department of related field; Quality Engineering Certificate duties and back office operational activities, Some other t rades Environmental Qual541-385-5809 421 (QEC) desirable. ~Landsca in including data entry. Maintains accuracy of also req u ire addi-•Landscape ity (DEQ) and the fed• Composite fabrication/process experience, Credit Union accounting systems though tional licenses and Construction eral E n v ironmentalFound youngfemale cat Schools & Training with nondestructive inspection using verification of entries, posting, adjustments certifications. Protection A g e ncy in NE Bend. Call to Water Feature ultrasonic techniques. HTR Truck School and reconciliations. Balances assigned GL identify. (EPA) as having met • Familiar with ISO 9001 and FAA manufacInstallation/Maint. REDMOND CAMPUS accounts, performs necessary entries and 541-330-7369. smoke emission stan• Pavers turing and inspection requirements. Debris Removal Our Grads Get Jobs! assists wit h m o nth-end G L ac c ruals. dards. A cer t ified •Renovations • Highly motivated, adaptable, self-sufficient, 1-888%38-2235 Processes drafts, ACHs, and wires. Provides w oodstove may b e Lost German Wirehaired •Irrigations Installation and able to work effectively under pressure. JUNK BE GONE WifWW.DTR.EDU excellent member service to internal business ointer, small female, identified by its certifi• Strong knowledge of engineering principles, partners and members. Processes and/or I Haul Away FREE rown & gray, light tipped , g Senior Discounts cation label, which is tail, Tumalo Reservoir 476 practices, manufacturing, and design. For Salvage. Also disburses accounts payable checks and Bonded & Insured permanently attached area evening of 9/19. Call • Strong teamwork, leadership and oral/written Employment provides administrative services on debit and Cleanups & Cleanouts 541-815-4458 to the stove. The Bul- Jackie, 541-480-6887 communication skills; able to work effectively credit cards. Successful candidate must be Mel, 541-389-8107 LCB¹8759 Opportunities letin will not knowFAA. PC-proficient in a W i ndows environment, • with ingly accept advertis- Lost Sat. 9/20 on PettiStrong background in dimensional and including Word and Excel. Previous credit Aeration/Dethatching ing for the sale of rew or Bear Creek Rd., process inspection of composite components Handyman 1-time or Weekly Services CAUTION: union or operations experience preferred. uncertified akita 10" portable table and assemblies. Ask about FREEadded Ads published in saw. 541-420-3062 I DO THAT! "Employment Opsvcs w/seasonal contract! woodstoves. DIMENSIONAL INSPECTOR: Home/Rental repairs Bonded & Insured. portunities" include Excellent benefits package and competitive Check out the Must have prior experience as q uality Small jobs to remodels COLLINS Lawn Maint. employee and indesalary. Vi s i t our web site at classifieds online i nspector working w it h m a c hined a n d Honest, guaranteed Ca/i 541 -480-9714 pendent positions. www.midoregon.com for more details. wwvv.ftendbuffefin.com composite parts; prefer prior experience using work. CCB¹151573 REMEMBER:If you Ads fo r p o sitions a Faro Arm or CMM and GD&T. Dennis 541-317-9768 Painting/Wall Covering Updated daily have lost an animal, that require a fee or Please send resume, don't forget to check upfront investment cover letter and application to: 267 MATERIALS TESTING LAB TECHNICIANS: The Humane Society must be stated. With F. Weedon Const. & Mid Oregon FCU ALL AMERICAN Seeking qualified technicians experienced in Bend Home Services. Fuel & Wood any independentjob Attn: HumanResources PAINTING • composite materials testing p rocedures, 541-382-3537 opportunity, please Handyman & light const. P.O. Box 6749, Interior and Exterior including DMA, DSC, Short Beam Shear, Redmond 541-598-6150 i nvestigate tho r Bend, OR 97708 Family-owned Tensile and Compression. Experience with 541-923-0882 WHEN BUYING oughly. Use extra CCB¹186744 Residential & Commercial flow and gel measurements and equipment, Madras Mid Oregon Credit union is adrug-free workplace c aution when a p 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts FIREWOOD... load frame operation for mechanical materials 541-475-6889 5-year warranties plying for jobs onTo avoid fraud, testing, and specimen preparation highly Landscaping/Yard Care Prineville Summer Special! line and never proThe Bulletin General desirable. 541-447-7178 Call 541-337-6149 vide personal inforrecommends payThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturNOTICE: Oregon LandCCB ¹193960 or Craft Cats mation to any source ment for Firewood scape Contractors Law day night shift and other shifts as needed. We 541-389-8420. you may not have currently have openings all nights of the week. (ORS 671) requires all Parking Lot Maintenance only upon delivery researched and CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE and inspection. businesses that adEveryone must work Saturday night. Shifts deemed to be repu"Approx. 3-month assignment* • A cord is 128 cu. ft. vertise t o pe r form AB Parking Lot start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and table. Use extreme Immediate opening in the Circulation depart4' x 4' x 8' Landscape Construcend between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. All poc aution when r e Maintenance ment for an entry level Customer Service Rep• Receipts should tion which includes: For all sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. s ponding to A N Y your parking lot / r esentative. Additional projects ma y b e l anting, deck s , include name, Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a online employment dnveway needs. asigned asneeded. Looking for someone to ences, arbors, • Commercial phone, price and minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts sweeper ad from out-of-state. assist our subscribers and delivery carriers water-features, and in- • Crack fill kind of wood are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of We suggest you call with subscription transactions, account quesstallation, repair of ir- • Seal coat purchased. loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackthe State of Oregon tions and delivery concerns. Essential: Posirigation systems to be • Striping • Firewood ads ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup Consumer Hotline tive attitude, strong service/team orientation, l icensed w it h th e • Dust control MUST include and other tasks. For qualifying employees we at 1-503-378-4320 problem solving skills. Must be able to Landscape Contrac- • Snow Removal species & cost per offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, and For Equal Opportu325 function comfortably in a fast-paced, perfortors Board. This 4-digit • De-icing cord to better serve short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid nity Laws contact mance-based customer call center environnumber is to be inour customers. Hay, Grain & Feed vacation and sick time. Drug test is required CCB ¹203383 Oregon Bureau of ment and have accurate typing, phone skills cluded in all adver- Call Scott prior to employment. 541-815-2332 & I n dustry, and computer entry experience. Most work is tisements which indi1st & 2nd cutting or- Labor The Bulletin Civil Rights Division, cate the business has Good classified adstell sevinycentral chegonsincesla done via telephone, so strong communication chard grass mix, small 97'I -673- 0764. Please submit a completed application attenskills and the ability to multi task is a must. a bond,insurance and the essential facts in an bales $235/ton. Madras, tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available workers compensaWork shift hours are Friday through Tuesday. OR. 541-420-9736 at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanThe Bulletin tion for their employ- interesting Manner.Write Must be flexible on hours, as some Holidays, • • l I dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be ees. For your protec- from the readers view -not and early morning hours are required. 1st Quality mixed grass 541-385-5809 obtained upon request by contacting Kevin tion call 503-378-5909 the seller's. Convert the Accepting resumes through October 5, 2014. hay, no rain, barn stored, Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). or use our website: facts into benefits. Show Grandma Lorraine Ed$250/ton. No phone calls please. Only completed appliAdd your web address www.lcb.state.or.us to the reader howthe item will wards of Livingston, TX, Call 541-549-3831 The Bulletin cations will be considered for this position. No to your ad and readsewing central oregon since 19ta check license status help them in someway. is hoping to reach Justin, Patterson Ranch, Sisters resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reers on The Bulletin's before contracting with Jaxon, Pearl or Shawn. c/o Kurt Muller, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR This quired prior to employment. EOE. web site, www.bendthe business. Persons Grandma's very con- Quality Orchard/Mixed 97708 or e-mail resume to: advertising tip bulletin.com, will be doing lan d scape brought toycuby cerned about T hom. Grass hay, between kmuller@bendbulletin.com able to click through maintenance do not Bend & Redmond. The Bulletin Please call 936-252-2168 No phone calls, please. The Bulletin is a serving cenrrar oregons/nce rsw r equire an LC B l i $230/ton, small bales. automatically to your The Bulletin orO email LorraineEEdwards Deliv. drug-free workplace/EOE sen 'ng cenl aloregonsince e8 cense. avail.541-280-7781 website. ~

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEP 25, 2014

DAILY B R I D G E

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sbortz

C L U B T hursday,septem ber 25,2014

Wooden you knOW it?

ACROSS 1 Pace 5 Serfs, e.g. 10Absorbed 14 I s u nt o oneself 15American 1626-Across of a North Carolina "-ville" 17Clump up 18First place 20 Roman road 21 Besmirched 22 Carrier to Tokyo 23 Cozy thing? 25Onethat's Hl-strung? 26 See 16-Across 28 Biota part 30 To-do 32Ayatollah Khomeini, e.g. 34 Super Mario Galaxy plafform 35 Mickey Mouse pics, e.g.

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

I sat down t o k i bitz the club's Chicago game and found Cy the Cynic sitting opposite his adversary Wendy, our feminist. "How's it going?" I asked Cy. "I'm keeping my head above water," he shrugged. "That's because wood fl o ats," Wendy snorted. A pparently, Cy h ad done something that didn't meet with his partner's approval. I got the details later. Cy had declared at today's four spades, and since he had bid clubs, West led the queen of hearts instead of his singleton.

one heart, you bid one spade and he rebids two hearts. What do you say? ANSWER: Slam is p o ssible if partner has the right cards: strong hearts, the ace of diamonds (but not the K-Q) and the king of clubs. Bid three clubs. If he goes to 3NT next, bid four hearts to suggest a hand with shortness in d i amonds and slam interest. If partner has 8 7, A K 9 6 5 2, A76, K7, he will bid slam. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 41 Q54

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The Cynic took d u mmy's ace; drew trumps with the ace, king and queen; and let the ten of clubs ride. The finesse won, but when he led to his jack next, West discarded, and Cy lost a club to East's king, two hearts and a diamond. "The man couldn't find his way through a laboratory maze if the rats helped him," Wendy growled. Cy should lead a club to his jack at Trick Two. He draws trumps ending in dummy and leads the ten of clubs. Then he can pick up East's king and make the game.

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

conveniences ... or a hint to eight squares in this puzzle 42 Cryptozoological beast 43 Many, many moons 44 Hose attachment 45 Friend of Homer on "The Simpsons" 47 Intermediate, in law 48 Mark Twain's belief 51 John of Liverpool 53 Freeloader 56 Legal borders? 57Wagnerian heroine 60 H.S. exam 61 Means of murder in some Agatha Chnstie novels 63Core 64 Cocktail order

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

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THAT SCRAMBLEO WORD GAME 55

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:

S E D U O N A R L T I C K marked the end O C H E of the Space D E A L Shuttle program P I D 13 Pined 18 "Because we're L S U N worth it" O T O F A sloganeer R H O N 22 Relaxed remarks B OS U N 25 "Anything ?" F OO T S 0 L D 29 Fla. University E N D A T E R named for a T I L T F O U pope AT E E I N G 31 Actress Shire 33 Vikings seek L O S S N A S them, briefly xwordeditor@aol.com 1

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09/25/14


TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

Employment Opportunities

THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 2014 E5

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Pest control TERMINIX, a growing pest control comchasing products or ~ pany is seeking a SERVICE TECHNIservices from out of • CIAN - Competitive f the area. Sending 528 c ash, checks, o r pay, medical & reLoans & Mortgages tirement p r ogram. f credit i n f ormation Must have: c lean • may be subjected to WARNING driving record; abil- I FRAUD. The Bulletin recomity to pass drug test; For more informamends you use caution about an adver- ~ background check tion when you proand state licensing / tiser, you may call vide personal the Oregon State exams. Will t r a in information to comparight can d idate. I Attorney General's nies offering loans or I Complete an appli- I Office C on s umer credit, especially cation at 4 0 SE I Protection hotline atI those asking for adB ridgeford Bl v d . , I 1-877-877-9392. vance loan fees or Bend. 541-382-8252. companies from out of state. If you have concerns or quesRoofers Wanted tions, we suggest you Advertise your car! Call River Roofing, Add A Picture! consult your attorney 541-383-3569 Reach thousands of readers! or call CONSUMER or applyin person at CQII 541-385-5809 HOTLINE, 697 SE Glenwood The Bulletin Classiaeds 1-877-877-9392. Drive, in Bend. TURNED YOU Looking for your next BANK DOWN? Private party employee? S UBA R U . will loan on real esPlace a Bulletin help tate equity. Credit, no wanted ad today and Sales problem, good equity reach over 60,000 Sales professional to is all you need. Call readers each week. Join Central Oregon Land MortYour classified ad Oregon's l a r gest gage 541-388-4200. new ca r d e a ler will also appear on bendbulletin.com Subaru of B e n d. LOCAL MONEyrWebuy which currently Offering 401k, profit secured trust deeds & receives over 1.5 note,some hard money sharing, m e d ical million page views loans. Call Pat Kelley plan, split shifts and 541-382-3099 ext.13. every month at paid vacation. Expeno extra cost. rience or will train. Bulletin Classifieds 90 day $1500 guarGet Results! a ntee. Dress f o r Call 385-5609 success. P l e ase or place apply at 2060 NE your ad on-line at Hwy 20, Bend. See bendbulletin.com Bob or Devon.

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FSBO - 16178 Hawks NOTICE All real estate adver- Lair Rd., La Pine, OR. tised here in is sub- 1 acre lot w/ grandfaject to the Federal t hered septic a p F air Housing A c t , proval. Close to Bend, which makes it illegal Sunriver Resort, Mt. skiing. to advertise any pref- Bachelor Call Sandra erence, limitation or $35,000. 541-895-3515. discrimination based on race, color, reli- One acre w/large pole ion, sex, handicap, barn, well, p ower, amilial status or na- $85,000. 52740 Day tional origin, or inten- Road, La Pine. High tion to make any such Lakes Realty & Proppreferences, l i mita- erty Man agement tions or discrimination. 541-536-0117 We will not knowingly 773 accept any advertising for real estate Acreages which is in violation of this law. All persons 16160 SW Dove Rd. are hereby informed 6.1 acre corner lot that all dwellings ad- with power, t errific vertised are available mtn. & green valley on an equal opportu- views. $79,900 MLS nity basis. The Bulle- 201205646 tin Classified Juniper Realty

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $18,000or best offer. 541-318-6049

17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $1 2,500 541-815-2523

otor h omes

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $22,995.

541-383-3503

Harley Davidson 883 Sportster

1998 Viking Tent Trailer shower with cassette, furnace, 3-way refrig, 12' travel length; extended length approx 24'. Needs some repair, but usable as is. $1500 obo. 541-312-5159 or see at 1001 SE 15th, Unit ¹173 2003 Like New "Rare" 17' Trail-Lite. Pull with 6-cyl! Good tires, awning, spare, AC/heater + central ducts, flatscreen TV/ CD, surround AM/FM/ CD band radio, sleeps 4, electric brakes, EAZ- Lift hitch, battery, large frig, microwave, stove/hood, super hot water heater, smoke detector, 2

propane tanks, tub/shower, garaged, custom cover, tags good, owner's manual. Retails $12,890; sacrifice $6850. 541-593-1221

1998, 20,200 miles,

exc. cond.,

$3,800.

881

Travel Trailers

Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, 748 H ARD TO F I N D 5 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Northeast Bend Homes ACRE, flat buildable HDFaf Bo 1996 etc., 32,000 m i les. corner lot located in Wintered in h eated BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS FSBO: Remodeled 4 Lake Park E states shop. $82,000 O.B.O. Search the area's most bdrm 2 bath, fireplace, with m ature l a nd541-447-6664 comprehensive listing of 1834 sf home on large lot. scape. MLS¹ 707-484-3518 classified advertising... 2822 NE Shepard Rd. 201406959 $135,500 (Bend) real estate to automotive, $299,000. 503-780-1861 Pam Lester, Principal merchandise to sporting Broker, Century 21 C Completely goods. Bulletin Classifieds 750 Gold Country Realty, Rebuilt/Customized appear every day in the Inc. 541-504-1336 Redmond Homes 2012/2013 Award print or on line. 775 Winner HOLIDAY RAMBLER Call 541-385-5809 Custom Home, Barn, Showroom Condition VACATIONER 2003 Manufactured/ www.bendbulletin.com Arena an d Gr e at Many Extras 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, Shop, + M o u ntain Mobile Homes 19' Pioneer ski boat, workhorse, Allison 1000 Low Miles. The Bulletin Views! This is a great 1983, vm tandem 5 speed trans., 39K, $15,000 p roperty w it h se - New Dream Special trailer, Vs. Fun8 NEW TIRES, 2 slides, 541-548-4807 3 bdrm, 2 bath cluded but central lofast! $5800 obo. Onan 5.5w gen., ABS $50,900 finished c ation. Custo m 541-815-0936. brakes, steel cage cockon your site. kitchen with nice appit, washer/dryer, fireJ and M Homes lace, mw/conv. oven, pliances and island, 541-548-5511 ree standing dinette, 2007 Jayco Jay Flight pantry and more. Tile flooring, custom railwas $121,060 new; now, 29 FBS with slide out & Registered Nurses $35,900. 541-536-1008 awning - Turn-key ready ings, huge master suite with large tiled : s. HD FXSBI 2006 new ITASCA 1989 34', 91 k to use, less than 50 toLive and work i n t h e b e autiful outdoor shower, large walk-in days used by current cond., low miles, miles. Asking $9,900 tal closet, custom vanity recreation area of John Day, Oregon, home of owner. Never smoked in, Stage I download, ex- 2007 Bennington 541-6'I 0-7259 the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, Large NE room, private and more. Well landno indoor pets, excellent Pontoon Boat tras, bags. $7900 obo. hiking, biking, hunting, fishing, camping, and cond., very clean. Lots of bath, slash entrance/ scaped with a water 541-447-0887 2275 GL, 150hp feature, iron custom bonus items; many have boating - something for everyone year round. patio, m i cro-fridge, fencing, fruit trees and Honda VTEC, less never been used. Price Community Counseling Solutions is a 501(c)3 $550 includes utilities, than 110 hours, serving Gillam, Harney, Wheeler and Grant a great patio for ennow reduced to $17,200 541-317-1879 original owner, lots tertaining. 36' x 4 0' which is below Kelly Blue Counties by providing dynamic, progressive 860 HD Softtail Deuce 2002, of extras; TennesB ook. Call Lis a , and diverse supports to improve the well 632 barn has nice sliding broken back forces see tandem axle INotorcycles & Accessories doors for horse runs 541%20-0794 for more being of our communities. Providence 2005 Apt JMultiplex General trailer. Excellent sale, only 200 mi. on and it is wood that Fully loaded, 35,000 info / more photos. motor from Harcondition, $23,500 matches the house, in 1985 Harley Davidson new We are recruiting for Registered Nurses to miles, 350 Cat, Very CHECKYOUR AD ley, new trans case 503-646-1804 close proximity to the 1200C with S portster and p arts, s p o ke Dutchman Denali work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center, a clean non-smoker frame and '05 Harley 1 20'x200' cus t o m 32' 2011 travel 3 slides, side-by-side Secure Residential Treatment Facility wheels, new brakes, crate motor. Rat Rod fenced area. 40'x60' 2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like trailer. 2 slides Evrefrigerator with ice providing services to individuals with a n early all o f bi k e look, Screaming Eagle shop has RV friendly new, Activ hull, safe erything goes, all severe mental illness. T hese positions leather saddlebags, brand new. Has proof lock canister, 15HP maker, Washer/Dryer, kitchen doors and concrete tips, ware, linens Flat screen TV's, In provide mental h ealth n ursing c are xtras. Sacrifice a t of all work done. Re- Yamaha floor along with lots of e w/ t r olling etc. Hitch, sway motion satellite. including medication oversight, medication on the first day it runs area to park and turn $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, movable windshield, plate, 6 gal Transom bars, water & sewer $95,000 related t reatment, f o llow p h ysician's to make sure it is cor- v ehicles around i n 458-206-8446 (in Bend). T-bags, black and all tank, less 30 hrs, 2 hoses. List price 541-480-2019 chromed out with a prescriptions and procedures, measure and rect. "Spellcheck" and front of t h e s h op. seats, full Bimini $34,500 - asking willy skeleton theme chest record patient's general physical condition human errors do ocProperty adjoins pubtop, Transom wheels, $26,800 Loaded. on all caps and covcur. If this happens to RV such as pulse, temperature and respiration lic lands so horses cover RV's special. Must see to appreciers. Lots o f w o rk, CONSIGNMENTS your ad, please conto provide daily information, educate and don't have t o be ate. Redmond, OR. heart and love went $5500. 541-923-6427 tact us ASAP so that WANTED train staff on medication administration, and trailered. Asking only 541-604-5993 into all aspects. All ds published in the We Do The Work ... corrections and any ensure documentation is kept according to $ 619,900 fo r th i s "Boats" classification You Keep The Cash! done at professional adjustments can be 2001 Honda Goldwing move-in ready proppolicies. Th i s p o s ition w orks w i th shops, call for info. include: Speed, fish1800cc w/2005 CaliOn-site credit made to your ad. erty that reflects pride the treatment team to promote recovery Must sell quickly due ing, drift, canoe, 541-385-5809 fornia side car trike approval team, of ownership. 4709 from mental illness. This position includes The Bulletin Classified t o m e d ical bi l l s, house and sail boats. conversion, 40K acweb site presence. Sunny Sage Way, t elephone c o nsultation a n d cri s i s $8250. Call Jack at For all other types of tual miles, every opWe Take Trade-Ins! Redmond. intervention in the facility. Senior Apartment541-279-9538. watercraft, please go tion imaginable! CD, Call Heather Hockett, Independent Living to Class 875. AM/FM, cruise, has 5' BIG COUNTRY RV PC, Broker, Century Heartland P rowler ALL-INCLUSIVE Qualified applicants must have a v alid 541-385-5809 Bend: 541-330-2495 21 Gold Country Re- Hrake, side rails, some 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', with 3 meals daily Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's Redmond: riding gear. Well seralty, 541-420-9151 like new, 2 slides-livMonth-to-month lease, 541-548-5254 license at the time of hire, hold a valid viced. Iocated in Mt. itThe Bulletin i ng area & l a r ge ervin central ore on since 1903 check it out! Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal Vernon, OR. Trailer closet, 15' power awCall 541-460-5323 Looking for your next optional. $22,500. history background check. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! ning, power hitch & emp/oyee'? 541-350-5050 Tioga 24' ClassC HONDA SCOOTER s tabilizers, 18 g a l . Place a Bulletin help Motorhome 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. Wages dependent upon education and Door-to-door selling with water heater, full size wanted ad today and Bought new in 2000, cond., $975 obo. (541) experience, but will be between $23.06 to queen bed, l a rge fast results! It's the easiest currently under 20K reach over 60,000 593-9710 or 350-8711 shower, porcelain sink $34.62/hr. E x c ellent benefit package, way in the world to sell. miles, excellent readers each week. & toilet. including signing bonus. shape, new tires, PUBLISHER'S Your classified ad $25 000or make offer. KAWASAKI The Bulletin Classified professionally winterwill also appear on NOTICE 541-999-2571 Do you havestudent loans? Make a 2-year KLX125, 2003, ized every year, cut2005 HD Heritage Soft541-385-5809 All real estate adverbendbulletin.com good condition commitment and you w ill r eceive an off switch to battery, Tail, Big Bore kit, lots of which currently reJayco 1999 10'tent tising in this newspa$1100. additional $10,000 that you can use to pay extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt plus new RV battercamper, surge brakes, ceives over 875 per is subject to the 541-593-8748 cond., $9750 firm ies. Oven, hot water down your loans. Do you need to relocate 1.5 million page bearing buddies, gd F air H ousing A c t Watercraft 541-318-8668 heater & air condiand find housing? We can help with that, condition, $2500 obo. which makes it illegal views every month tioning seldom used; 541-280-0570 too! at no extra cost. to a d vertise "any Look at: ds published in "Wa just add water and it's Have an item to Bulletin Classifieds preference, limitation tercraft" include: Kay Bendhomes.com ready to go! Get Results! Please visit th e O regon Employment or disc r imination RV sell quick? aks, rafts and motor $22,000 obo. Serious for Complete Listings of based on race, color, Call 385-5809 or Department or the Community Counseling CONSIGNMENTS Ized personal inquiries, please. If it's under Area Real Estate for Sale religion, sex, handiplace your ad on-line WANTED Solutions website for an application or watercrafts. Fo Stored in Terrebonne. at We Do The Work ... '500 you can place it in 'boats" please se contact Nina Bisson at 5 4 1-676-9161, cap, familial status, 541-548-5174 marital status or nabendbulletin.com You Keep The Cash! nina.bisson©gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, lass 670. The Bulletin tional origin, or an inOn-site credit Heppner, OR 97836. 41-385-5809 tention to make any approval team, Classifieds for: 763 such pre f erence, web site presence. limitation or discrimi- Recreational Homes We Take Trade-Ins! '1 0 - 3 lines, 7 days nation." Familial sta& Property '16 - 3 lines, 14 days 880 Harley Davidson tus includes children BIG COUNTRY RV Serving Centra> Oregon since 1903 under the age of 18 Cabin adj. to F.S. Iand 2001 FXSTD, twin Motorhomes Bend: 541-330-2495 (Private Party ads only) Ready to make memories! cam 88, fuel injected, Redmond: living with parents or 8 mi. from Sisters, mtn Top-selling Winnebago Vance & Hines short 541-548-5254 legal cus t odians, view. 1/7th share 1997 Bounder 34' 865 31 J, origina! owners, nonshot exhaust, Stage I w/slide. $17,900. pregnant women, and $49,500. 541-928-6549 smokers, garaged, only ATVs with Vance & Hines Excellent condition, people securing cusor 503-260-9166 miles, auto-level- Travel trailer cover, defuel management must see! Ford 460 18,800 The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful, self-motitody of children under ing jacks, (2) slides, up- luxe Tyvek, fits 24'-26', vated person to work in the newsroom, assist18. This newspaper Meadow Brook Estates, system, custom parts, w/Banks, new tires, graded queen bed, bunk $175 541-598-0061 extra seat. dual A/C, rear caming the features staff in a variety of duties, inwill not knowingly ac- Camp Sherman beds, micro, (3) Tvs, $1 0,500OBO. cluding with the production of a weekly arts cept any advertising Spectacular private or era, triple axle, Onan sleeps 10! Lots of storLooking for your Call Today and entertainment section. The right candifor real estate which is corporate retreat on gen, 63k miles. age, maintained, very next employee? 541-516-8684 date will enjoy a fast-paced work environment, in violation of the law. the North Fork of Lake 541-306-9897 clean!Only $67,995! Ex- Place a Bu! Ietin help be very detail-oriented, understand the imporO ur r e aders a r e Creek. Zoned for adtended warranty and/or fiwanted ad today and H onda Big R e d tance of accuracy, meet tight deadlines and hereby informed that ditional homes to be REDUCED! nancing avail to qualified reach over 60,000 UTV. Like new with exercise excellent grammar, spelling and orall dwellings adver- built. Just wander and buyers!541488-7179 readers each week. just over 40 hours ganization skills. The position is largely cleritised in this newspa- enjoy the idyllic tranYour classified ad use. Includes winch, cal in nature with some opportunities for writper are available on quility of this 45 acre will also appear on 5-foot snow blade, ing, so solid writing skills are a must. College an equal opportunity private estate nestled bendbulletin.com hard roof, half winddegree and/or previous related experience is basis. To complain of in the pine forest at , • esa = which currently repreferred for this 30-hour-per-week position. d iscrimination cal l Camp Sherman in the Harley D a v idson shield. L ists over rW~ 2007 Winnebago ceives over 1.5 mil$14,000; will sell for The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an HUD t o l l-free a t heart o f Outlook Class"C" lion page views evCen t r al 2006, FXDLI Dyna b est o ffe r ov e r equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment 1-800-877-0246. The 31', solar panel, Cat. ery month at no Oregon's dynamic lif- Low Rider, Mustang $11,000. Call drug screening is required prior to hiring. toll free t e lephone estyle. Property has 5 seat with backrest, WinnebagoC 22' heater, excellent extra cost. Bulletin 541-575-4267 number for the hear- wonderfully different new battery, wind2002 - $30,500 condition, more exClassifieds Get ReTo apply,please emailresume and any ing i m paired is homes, a bunkhouse, shield, forward contras. Asking $58K. Big engine, heavy sults! Call 385-5809 relevant writing samples to: 1-800-927-9275. trols, lots of chrome, 870 Ph. 541-447-9268 duty, many extras, or place your ad shop; and the equesfeaturesassistant@bendbulletin.com on-line at trian facilities include Screamin' Eagle ex- Boats & Accessories Can be viewed at 21,000 miles, like No phone inquiries, please. haust, 11K mi. SeWestern Recreation bendbulletin.com spacious 6-stall barn, nior owned, w e ll new. Please call for Bsnjj corrals, and fencing. (fop of hill) details 16' Drjftboat in Prineville. Entire property con- maind! $7950 L a 541-260-3251 882 Delivery IRa ©alh sists of 8 tax lots, is Pine (928)581-9190 Alumaweld Fifth Wheels Oars, anchor, zoned CSRR-3 for Winnebago Sightseer engine mount, potential r e sidential 27' 2002. workhorse and trailer.$2950. development, in$upplement Your Income •I gas motor, Class A, Bi':st W • • & N. cludes 1688 irrigation 541-546-7144 8' slide living rm/dirights and b o rders nette, new tires. spare extensive US Forest Now taking bids for an Independent Contract carrier, HD trailer 713 Allegro 32' 2007, like tire Service lands to the Hauler to deliver bundles of newspapers from hitch, water heater, Real Estate Wantedi west. This is the first new, only 12,600 miles. Harley Davidson Bend toLaGrande, Oregon on a weekly bagenera5th Wheel TransChev 8.1L with Allison 60 micro/oven, t hat M e adow 2008 FXDL Dyna Low sis. This will also include a monthly delivery Seeking small piece of time tor, furn/AC, outside port, 1990 transmission, dual exBrook Estates h as Rider Only 3200 mi. than is made en route to LaGrande. Must haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- shower, carbon diox- Low miles, EFI 460, land with hookups for been offered for sale! Stage 1 & 2 Vance & have own vehicle with license and insurance 4-spd auto, 10-ply eling system, 5kw gen, ide & smoke detector, my new mfd 1 200 MLS¹201405527. Hines pipes, detachand the capability to haul up to 6000 lbs. tires, low miles, al16' West Coast power mirrors w/defrost, fiberglas ext., elect. s q.ft. h o me . C a l l $4,250,000 able windshield, new Candidates must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. step, cruise control, most new condition, Aluminum, $3950, 2 slide-outs with aw831-640-0301 (Bend) Brian Meece, battery. Includes asSelected candidate will be independently 65 hp Mercury, nings, rear c a mera, CB radio, 60k miles, Reduced to $2500 Principal Broker sorted Harley gear/ contracted. • WE BUY HOMES• trailer hitch, driyer door awning, TV antenna w OR For Hire Shoreline Trailer, ReMax Key clothes. Clear title. flat screen To apply or for more info contact Any condition2014 Stickers, Fish w/power window, cruise, booster, Call for quote $20,000 investedProperties. 23" TV. A M/FM/CD James Baisinger at Close in 7 days. exhaust brake, central Finder. Ask for Theo, 541-480-1630 Cell Reduced fo $10,500. 'baisin er@bendbulletin.com Scott L. Williams Real vac, satellite sys. Asking stereo. $2 3 ,995. 541-598-5111 541-260-4293 541-306-0166 541-639-3423 Direct 541-548-2554 Estate - 800-545-6431 $67,500. 503-781-8812 541-548-2872.

541-504-5393

®

18.5' Sea Ray 2000 4.3L Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/ CD player, rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond $9500.

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• Health Datebook keeps you informed on all local health happenings & classes Nutrition, Fitness, Money & Medicine ' •

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E6 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

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975

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Vans

Automobiles

CHECKYOUR AD

JEEP WRANGLER 'C D

U

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. USpellcheckR and human errors do occur. If this happens to

your ad, please con-

tact us ASAP so that

corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $19,995

1974 Bellanca 1730A

King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27' TV /stereo system, front front power leveling jacks and scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566

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

32' - 2001

2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

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bi-fold door. Upgrades include, T-6 lighting, skylights, windows, 14' side RV door, infra-red heating, and bathroom,

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

$11,500. 541-549-6407

Mercedes 450SL, 1975

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T

885

Canopies & Campers

97K Miles $8999. 541-504-8399

hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, Lance Ma x Se r i es and painted. $23,500. 2005, 11'x6' camper, Tom, 541.788.5546 VW Baja, 1965 $4000. slide out, loaded. Well 1990 Dodge 4x2 pickup, cared for. $18,500. $2500/ofr. 541-536-1141 Ready for h unting. 541-923-6427

Holiday Rambler Alumascape 28' 2003, 1-owner. Self-contained, 13' slide, 80W solar panel, walkaround queen+ sofa/bed, loads of storage throughout. Excellent cond., brand new tires licensed 2015. Must see!$13,700. 541-389-9214

SNUGTOP pickup canopy for Ford F250 short bed, white, like new, Save money. Learn $400. 541-416-9686 to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e ro R Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.

Qoo

,•a 908

Keystone Raptor, 2007 37 toy hauler,2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system,sleeps 6,many extras.$29,999. In Madras, call 541-771-9607 or 541-475-6265

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles

w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - coid weather pkg, premium pkg 8 technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-91 5-9170 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

$150,000

(located @ Bend) 541-288-3333

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp p ump, 4 - 3 R hoses, camlocks, $ 25,000. 541-820-3724

$25,500

People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The ffttlletitt ClassfTfeffs

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing good thru 9/30/1 4

'65-'66 Mustang original bucket seats, completely Chevrolet Trailblazer rebuilt, better than new. 2008 4x4 1957 DeSoto 341 cu. in. dis. headers, unused. Automatic, 6-cylinder, 390 Ford cu. in. dis. tilt wheel, power winheaders, just like new. dows, power brakes, 1/3 interest in wellair conditioning, keyequipped IFR Beech Bo- Plus other older Ford & Chevy parts. less entry, 69K miles. nanza A36, new 10-550/ 541-447-7272 Excellent condition; &oM4er/ prop, located KBDN. tires have 90% tread. $65,000. 541-419-9510 932 www. N4972M.com $11,995. Chevy Silverado 2004 Call 541-598-5111 Antique & LS, 2WD, V8, 57k miles, Classic Autos includes bedliner, hard TiCk, TOCk tonneau cover. Asking $10,750. 541-588-0131 Tick, Tock... P'Itr I' jljPIII I' I I' ...don't let time get away. Hire a Chev Trailblazer LS professional out 2004,AWD, 6 cyl, remote Buick Skylark 1972 entry, clean title, of The Bulletin's Dreams do come true! 12/15 tags,$5995. "Call A Service Pampered from day one! Dodge Dakota 2003 541-61 0-6150 Quadcab Sport grey, 17K original miles. Professional" Photos at hemmings.com 115,000 miles, $6995. Len, 541-593-3149 Chev E uinox Directory today! $18,000. 541-323-1898 Ford F250 1984 4x4 King Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift kit, 90% tires, good wood truck! $2000 or best offer. 541-279-8023 1/5th interest in 1973

MONTANA 3585 2008,

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options - reduced by $3500 to $31,500. 541<20-3250

Cessna 150 LLC

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

2011 Loaded and Super Clean 4x4. $23,977 Vin¹463850 ROBBERSON

Chevelle Malibu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.

(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)

Dod e Nitro 2011

Ford F250 4x4 1996, x-cab, long wheel base, brush guard, tool box, $3000. 541-771-1667 or 541-633-3607

Dlr¹0354

975

Automobiles (photo for illustration only)

4x4 Looks as good as Its name! Vin ¹ 520014 7.977 ROBBERSON 4 ~

maaa a

541-312-3986

Ford Focus2010

Nissan Murano 2012, AWD, auto, cloth, CD, pw, pdl. (exp. 9/28/14) Vin ¹229346 Stock ¹83013

$15,979 S UBA R U

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NIRRRUORRmD.COII

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 T oyota RAV4 2 0 0 1 4WD, 1 owner - auto, no accidents, 82,000 miles, 4 cyl, 4 door,

silver/gray. $3,900. for inquiries call or text

Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/14

240-397-6808

HyundaiAccent GL 1999, auto, CD. (exp. 9/21/1 4) VIN ¹584982 Stock ¹44383B

$3,979 S USA R U .

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

Great MPGs make this a great commuter. Vin¹154827 $11,977 ROBBERSON N

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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205. pricing good thru 09/30/14 Camaro 2011

Infiniti I30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900 obo. 541-420-3277

Mini

I'2 1 1

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting

your needs. Call on one of the professionals today!

GMC Suburban 1997, fully loaded, daily driver, extra clean, $2650. 1997 Chevy Astro, runs good, $1300. 541-410-4596

Volvo XC60 2010

Convertible. End of Season Special! vin ¹213931 $23,977 ROBBERSON N

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Countryman AWD Loaded - Get there in style! ¹H99552 $24,977 ROBBERSON i N

Honda CRV EX 2007, AWD, 4x4, l eather,

moonroof. (exp. 9/28/1 4)

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PQI

541-419-3301

obo. 541-519-1627

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Vin ¹097452 Stock ¹44639A

Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

®

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

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541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014

(photo for illustration only)

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2005 Diesel 4x4

541-419-5980

Lockers, new soft top, power steering, oversized h e ater, many extras. $6,000

ROBBERSON

931

$22,500.

Honda Accord SE 2006, 4-cyl, great mpg, nonsmoker, well maint'd, 95K miles, very clean. 1 owner $9200 obo. 480-266-7395 (Bend)

$23,979 S UBA R U

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014

$18,998

L 'CR

1978

2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt 8 cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.

Toyota Sienna 201 1, LE model, 7 passenger, stow-n-go seating, alloy wheels. (exp. 9/28/1 4) Vin ¹019106. Stock ¹43981A

4&~

2005. All the goodies. Must see only

933

C J5

(photo for illustration only)

Cadillac Escalade

Vin ¹192111

Columbia 400,

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

916

Pickups

Financing available.

Laredo 30'2009

Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399

Aircraft, Parts & Service

1/3interestin

Kit Companion '94 26', 1 slide, new stove/fridge, comes with gen. Reduced to $4000. 541-389-5788

V W CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978

Chevy Tracker 1998 New tires, stereo & speakers, Warn hubs, battery. Seats in great shape, hard top and soft top, interior floors have been line x'ed for easy cleaning. 5 spd manual trans no a/c, runs great! 30+ mpg, 100k mi., has been tow vehicle. $4800. OBO 541-389-1135, Gene

544 -385-5809 935 Sport Utility Vehicles

$155,000, Call Bill 541-480-7930

541-548-5254

SuaARu

Hwy 20, Bend. Jeepster Commando 1968 2060 NE 877-266-3821 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, comDlr ¹0354 pletely restored. $12,000 obo. 808-430-5133 or Need to get an 541-382-6300 ad in ASAP? Mercedes 380SL 1982 You can place it Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent online at: condition, always ga- www.bendbulletin.com raged. 1 55 K m i l es,

3300 sq.ft. Hangar Prineville Airport 60'wide by 55' deep with 16'

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

$22,979

In Madras, call 541-475-6302

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

Fleetwood Prowler

CHEVELLE MALIBU Toyota Tacoma 2012, 1969 350-4spd, 3" 5 spd, xcab, pw, pd, exhaust. $15,000. bed liner. 541-788-0427 (exp. 9/28/14) Vin ¹014333 Stock ¹83077

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$23,999 S US A R u

RURRRUOURRRD.OON

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

ALL THE FUN STUFF! - 4X4 Vin¹019617

$28,977 ROBBERSON N UODIr~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 09/30/14 940

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

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Chevy Malibu 2012, (photo for illustration only) Lots of options; sun- Subaru impreza 2010, roof, 6 speed trans Auto, pw, pdl, tilt. with manual option, (exp. 9/28/1 4) bluetooth, o n Star, Vin ¹506348 Sirius satelite, Stock ¹82961 heated seats, pw, $13,979 pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech engine, 20 MPG city, S US A R U . 35 MPG hwy, USB port, Ipod r eady, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 $14,900 OBO. Dlr ¹0354 541-504-6974

©

Vans

Chevy Express Cargo Van 2011, 2500. CD, A/C, ps, with ladder rack.

Hyundai T ucson, Subaru Outback 2010, (exp. 9/28/1 4) 2011 l oaded, i m limited, pw, pdl, Vin ¹126159 Chrysler 200 LX 2012, 3.6L, maculate, 39k mi., leather, moonroof. Stock ¹44535A pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. prem. pkg, bronze, (exp. 9/28/14) (exp. 9/28/14) panoramic sunroof, $22,979 Vin ¹374555 VIN ¹292213 heated seats, NaviStock ¹43003A S US A R u Stock ¹83014 gation, B l uetooth, RURRRUOURRIRI.IRRI $24.979 AWD. great mileage, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $13,979 h andles great i n S US A R u 877-266-3821 S UBA RU snow. Wa r ranty, NIRRRUORRRRD.CDN Dlr¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. One owner, non2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 smokers, clear title. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 $19,500 Dlr ¹0354 (under Blue Book) FIND IT! Call (805)610-6415 SUY IT! in Terrebonne SELL IT! Chrysler Town 8 The Bulletin Classifieds Jee Libe 2 01 2 Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & out, one owner, nonAvenger 2013, smoker,. loaded with Dodge pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. options! 197,892 mi. (exp. 9/28/1 4) Service rec o rds Toyota Corolla 1994 Vin ¹535474 available. $4 , 9 50. 6-cyl, 4-dr, nice paint Stock ¹83015 Limited Edition. Call Mike, (541) 815(light blue), PRAYING FOR $13,979 8176 after 3:30 p.m. 160K miles, $1500. SNOW! Vin¹149708 541-312-2721 S USA R u 21,977 Find exactly what 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Toyota Solara 2008 silROBBERSON 4 ver convertible, 70,400 you are looking for in the 877-266-3821 ~ mama miles, A-1 shape, leather Dlr ¹0354 CLASSIFIEDS interior. 541-548-2849 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205.Price good Ford Fusion SE thru 9/30/14 Toyota Sienna 2005

®

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541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/2014

Leather, Loaded and AWD. 76k miles ¹044698$18 R977 ROBBERSON y LIROCOR ~

your web source for STATEWIDE classifieds

ROBBERSON DIIICcoll ~

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541.312.3986 DLR¹0205 pricing good thru 09/30/14

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30BSI REAL ESTAT E I CLASSIFIEDS

2012. Low mileshigh miles per gallon $15,977 Vin¹302474

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 9/30/1 4

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,

power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

rouR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSETo 2,000,000 EXPOSURESFOR ONLY$250! OR C I a N R d I

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Weekof September 22, 2014

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

541-385-5809

SuppOrtedby OregOn neWSpaperS,"ClaSSifiedS.oregOn.Comn iS a neW WebSite dediCated to bringing ClaSSified LiStingS frOm arOund the StateOf OregOn tOgether on One eaSy-tO-uSe WebSite.

DIVORCEDin 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. WWW.ParalegalalternatiVeS.Comlegalalt@mSn.Com

From jobsto homes and investment properties,you'llfind the fastest u

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Garage sale Saturday! Sales throughout

Brookings area, October 4. Buy a Curry Coastal Pilot newspaper for special map, information 8 advertising specials. See www.curryPilot.com for details.


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