Bulletin Daily Paper 9-26-13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75$

THURSDAY September26,2013

eca on imscreensin isers New statepark SPORTS• C1

LOCAL• B1

bendbulletln.com

TODAY'S READERBOARD

oicec ie on eave

rinevi e

Timder tOWerS — A major architectural firm is taking a

cue from the second little pig, proposing a high-rise made

By Scott Hammers

primarily from wood.A3

Prineville Police Chief Eric Bush has been placed on paid administrative leave while the city investigates an unspecified personnel matter. The city issued a brief, two-sen-

Being healthy —How much exercising and dieting

The Bulletin

Bush

tence news release Wednesday. R eached by p h one, City M a n ager Steve Forrester declined to elaborate on the substance of the investigation. "I cannot and will not comment on any of that," he said.

Bush is also one of the highestranking members of the Oregon Army National Guard. In 2011, he was promoted to brigadier general, one of three generals in the Oregon

Forrester's office referred followup questions to city attorney Carl Dutli, who did not return a call for comment. Hired by the Prineville Police in 1990, Bush has served as chief since 2003.

guard. See Bush /A5

are right for you?D1

Bacterial duddies —The medical world is shifting the

way it views our microbes.D3

Bend growth —Checking in on projects proposed for the south side of the city.C6

Timber payment bill clears U.S. House

FORWARD IN THE FOREST: ASERIES Editor's note: A year after the devastating Pole Creek Fire and against the backdrop of a budget showdown in Congress, The Bulletin explores some of the historical developments that produced the current state of Eastern Oregon's national forests, and how local efforts may provide a new management model.

Bayou sinkhole —After a voracious mawopened up in 2012, almost nothing in a small Louisiana town has been the

same.A6

By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives

Online shipping —The challenges faced bysmall re-

unanimously passed leg-

k;

tailers.C6

islation Wednesday that would extend county timber payments for one year, resulting in an additional $100 million for Oregon. The main thrust of the Responsible Helium Administration and Stewardship Act is to gradually move the U.S. out of the helium business and sell off its helium reserves. The sale is expected to generate around $500 million, most of which would fund another year of payments under the Secure Rural Schools program, which cost $329 million last year. The House bill now heads to the Senate, which passed similar legislation last week. The bill's proponents said the legislation needs to go to the President Barack Obama desk for his signature before Tuesday, when authorization to manage the country's helium reserves expires. Speaking on the House floor before Wednesday's vote,Rep. Greg Walden, RHood River, said he supports the extension of the Secure Rural Schools program. See Bill /A4

ilff •

ln national news — After Ted Cruz's marathon delay,the Senate begins debate on the

House-passed spendingbill.A2

And aWedexclusive-

TODAY: Periods of heavy timber harvest followed by restrictions tied to spotted owl habitat and a decline in sawmilling have led to a dense, combustible forest at risk to ever-larger wildfires.

11 counties in rural Coloradoare fed up with Denver. A secession vote is scheduled for November.

bendbulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Iran's leader condemns Holocaust, stirs dispute

an increasingly large chunk of federal money.

art: eca eso uman intervention ave res ape t etim er an scape By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — As he conducts a high-profile good-will visit to New York this week, Iran's new president, Hasan Rouhani, says

he is bringing a simple mes-

pold's death, the agency faces ongoing

sage of peace and friendship. But on Wednesday, Rouhani set off a political storm here and in Iran, with a frank acknowledgment and condemnation of the Holocaust that landed him in precisely the kind of tangled dispute he had hoped to avoid. Rouhani, in an interview on Tuesday with CNN, described the Holocaust as a "crime the Nazis committed towards the Jews" and called it "reprehensible and condemnable." It was a groundbreaking statement, given that his predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, denied the systematic extermination of Jews during World War II. Rouhani largely repeated his comments in a meeting with news media executives on Wednesday. But a semiofficial Iranian news agency accused CNN of fabricating portions of Rouhani's interview, saying he had not used the word Holocaust or characterized the Nazi mass murder as "reprehensible." Rouhani spoke in Persian; officials at CNN said they used an interpreter provided by the Iranian government for the interview, which was conducted by Christiane Amanpour. See Iran /A5

challenges to finding and maintaining the right balance for the 193 million acres of publicly owned forests and grasslands

New York Times News Service

and the cost of suppression is sapping

SATURDAY: Representatives of environmental groups, the timber industry and other stakeholders — once unlikely to even sit at the same table — work together to restore forest health.

H Follow along atbendbulletin.com/forest

WASHINGTON - "We shall never achieve harmony with the land, anymore than we shall achieve absolute justice or liberty for people," wrote Aldo Leopold, a forest supervisor with the U.S. Forest Service who became an earlyproponent of conservation and environmental ethics. "In these higher aspirations the important thing is not to achieve but to strive." More than a century after the Forest Service's creation,and 65yearsafterLeo-

By Mark Landler and Thomas Erdbrink

FRIDAY: Fires are burning bigger, more homes and property are in harm's way

it oversees, including more than 12 million acres of national forests in Oregon. Decades offire suppression and intensiveharvest of old-growth trees opened up some drier forests to thick undergrowth. Over the last 20 years, drastically reduced cuts and increased insect infestations have also contributed to huge swaths of unhealthy forests vulnerable to unnaturally big wildfires. By the Forest Service's own calculations, up to 82 million acres — more than 40 percent — of the National Forest System needs treatment to remove hazardous fuels. "After20 years under the Northwest ForestPlan and east-side screens, Ore-

gon's federally managed forests — ap-

proximately 60 percent of all forestland in the state — are at greater risk today from fire, insects and disease than in the late 1980s," the Oregon Forest Research Institute's 2012 Forest Report noted. The institute, an educational organization created bythe Oregon Legislature in 1991 and funded through taxes on forest products,promotes responsible forest management. "Designed to create older forest habitat for a variety of endangered species while maintaining abase level of economic activity, the plan has never been fully implemented, and there has been no alternative policy guidance for management of millions of federal acres." See Forests/A5

A dense and unhealthy stand of trees in Central Oregon.

Get Rover to roll over? Fat chance

Andy Tullis i The Bulletin

By Stacey Stowe New Yorh Times News Service

h

LJ

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 56, Low 31

Page B6

4 P We userecycled newsprint

INDEX 01-6 Obituaries Business/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope 06 Sports Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Lo c al/State B1-6 TV/Movies

L

She has been in at least three fitness programs. She runs on the treadmill. She swims in a lap pool. Her trainers shout encouragement. Although her target weight still eludes her, Lolita remains optimistic, smiling gamely during her workout and snacking on carrots. If only her legs weren't so short. Lolita is a 4-year-old dachshund, a breed that like the beagle and Labrador retriever is prone to putting on extra pounds. In her case, about 8 pounds too many. But the problem of overweight dogs cuts across breeds. More than half of U.S. dogs are overweight, according to the Association for Pet Obesity Prevention. See Dogs/A4

AnIndependent

B5 C1-4 D6

Vol. 110, No. 269,

s sections

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8 8 2 6 7 0 2 32 9

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

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OUR ADDRESS Street

Ariz., blasted the freshman senator from Texas for sugWASHINGTON — The Sen- gesting during his speech that ate moved Wednesday to take Republican lavlnnakers had not up a House-passed temporary fought hard enough to stop the spending bill t h a t d e funds health-care law before ConPresident Barack O b ama's gresspassed itin March 2010. health-care law, despite Sen. McCain said he "campaigned Ted Cruz's more than 21-hour all over America" last year to "repeal and replace Obamattempt to delay the legislation. Shortly after I p.m. EDT, the acare." But "much to my disfunding bill passed its first pro- may," he said, "the people spoke cedural hurdle in the Senate, . and they re-elected the which voted unanimously to president of the United States," start debating the House ver- who had campaigned on going sion of a goverment funding ahead with the law. measure. The Senate now has McCain also vigorously ob30 hoursof debate time sched- jected to Cruz's comparison of "pundits" who say that the uled on the House bill. The vote followed a mara- health-care law cannot be dethon attack by Cruz, R-Texas, funded to politicians who apon the Affordable Care Act, in peased Nazi Germany before which Cruz commanded the World War II. "I resoundingly reject that alSenate floor for more than 21 hours — from Tuesday after- legation," McCain said. He said noon to noon on Wednesday. Cruz had told him that he was After Cruz ended his talk- not comparing U.S. legislators athon, Sen. John McCain, R- to Nazi appeasers, but McCain .

FAX

1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

Heal'th IBW BnalySIS —Youmight be pleased with the low monthly premium for one of the newhealth insurance plans under President BarackObama'soverhaul,buttheaddedexpenseofcopay-

e naesa s e a e The Washington Post

www.bendbulletin.com

N EW S R O O M

SPENDING BILL

By Paul Kane and Ed O'Keefe

541 -382-1811

N EW S R O O M

NATION 4% ORLD

.

ments and deductibles could burn a hole in your wallet. An indepen-

dent analysis releasedWednesday, onthe heels of anadministration report emphasizing affordable premiums, is helping to fill out the bottom line for consumers. The annual deductible for a mid-range

called that "a difference without a distinction" and said he still objects to Cruz's language. Cruz took the floor at 2:41 p.m. Tuesday, promising to speak"until I am no longer able to stand." He proceeded to talk away, holding forth with occasional assistance from a handful of Republican colleagues, who gave him breaks from

speaking by asking lengthy questions, although Cruz was still required to remain on his feet on the Senate floor, with no food or bathroom breaks. The end of the speech-making, a filibuster in all but name, followed an e x change late Wednesday morning in which Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., informed Cruz that under Senate rules, he could continue speaking until 1 p.m. But Cruz opted to yield the floor at noon, when the Senate formally began a new legislative day with a prayer.

CaorSd0AVL

"silver" plan averaged$2,550 in a sample of six states studied by

Avalere Health, or more than twice the typical deductible in employer

plans. A deductible is the amount consumers must payeachyear before their plan starts picking up the bills. NSA spying dill —Spying by the National Security Agency has cost the United States economically and angeredallies, a bipartisan group of senators said Wednesday in unveiling legislation that would end the collection of millions of Americans' phone records and data

on Internet usage. ThreeDemocrats — Oregon's RonWyden, Mark Udall of Colorado and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut — and Republican Rand Paul of Kentucky outlined their legislation to end

longstanding NSAsurveillance practices and open up some of theactions of the secret federal court that reviews government surveillance

requests. Kenya mall attaCk —AI-Shabab, the armedSomali Islamic extremist group thatattacked a shopping mall in Kenya, said Wednes-

day that foreigners were a"legitimate target" and confirmed witness accounts that gunmen tried to let Muslims go free while killing or taking the others captive. In an email exchange Wednesday with The

Associated Press, al-Shababsaid, "The Mujahideen carried out a meticulous vetting process at the mall and have taken every possible precaution to separate the Muslims from the Kuffar (disbelieversj

before carrying out their attack." POStal SerViCe —Facing a "precarious financial condition" as fewer customers use its services, the United States Postal Service proposed another round of rate increasesWednesday to go into effect in January — its largest price increase since 2002. The plan

smuoo Aw.

— which would raise the cost of first-class stamps for one-ounce letDsciiurgsRe

ters to 49 cents from 46 cents, among other changes — is intended to generate an additional $2 billion in annual revenue for the Postal

DIGGING OUT IN PAKISTAN

Service. Theagency expects to lose about $6 billion in the current fiscal year.

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337

Syria conflict —After months of crippling deadlock, members of the U.N. Security Council have inched closer to the details of a binding resolution on Syria, Western diplomats said Wednesday,

although Russia, one ofSyria's strongest allies, denied that a consensus had been reached. Representatives of the permanent members of the Security Council — Britain, China, France, Russia and the United

DEPARTMENT HEADS

States — met for lunch Wednesdaywith Secretary General Ban

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Ki-moon to discuss the crisis in Syria. Two diplomats said they had

reached aconsensus on the broad elements, including "a reference" to sanctions should Syria fail to comply with its obligations. 7

Same-SeX Wedding WitneSS —Former President George H.W. Bushwas an official witness at the same-sex wedding of two

"~P I

longtime friends, his spokesman said Wednesday. Bush and his wife, Barbara Bush, attended the ceremony joining Bonnie Clement

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Facebook pageshowing Bush signing the marriage license asa witness. She captioned the photo: "Getting our marriage license

7

witnessed!" — From wire reports

Arshad Butt/The Associated Press

Pakistani villagers look for belongings amid the rubble of their destroyed homesWednesday, aday after an earthquake killed 348 people in the remote district of Awaran and pushed a new island up out of the

Arabian Sea. Survivors built makeshift shelters with sticks and bedsheets and hungry people dug through the rubble to find food.

Almost all of the 300 mud-brick homes in the village of Dalbadi were destroyed. NoorAhmad said he wa sworking when the quake struckand rushed home to find his house leveled and his wife and son dead.

"I'm broken," he said. "I have lost my family."

ur as Oun-

cy tu

At least 500 people were also injured, according to a statement from the National Disaster Management Authority, which gave the latest death toll. — The Associated Press

The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0358.

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spokesman Jim McGrath said. Thorgalsen posted a photo onher

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Navy Yardshooter driven by delusions,FBIsays Investigators are continuing to try to understand Alexis' The Washington Post "pathway to violence," Parlave WASHINGTON The told reporters. The etchings government contractor who on his gun included "Not what killed 12 people at the Navy y'all say!" and "Better off this Yard last week was driven by way!" delusions that he was being Another scratchedmessage, "My ELF weapon!" and other controlled by low frequency radio waves, and he scratched evidencegathered from Alexthe words "End the torment!" is' electronics indicate that on the barrel of the shotgun the former reservist thought used in the killings, the FBI he was being controlled by said Wednesday, offering new, extremely low frequency elecchilling details of the killings. tromagnetic waves, according Valerie Parlave, assistant to the FBI. The Navy has legitdirector in charge of the FBI's imately used such technology, Washington field office, said the FBI said, but these radio that Aaron A l exis, 34, be- waves also have been at the gan the shooting k n owing center ofconspiracies about he would be killed. A search government mind control. of Alexis' electronic devices, Alexis had been working she said, indicates that he was for Experts IT, a subcontrac"prepared to die during the tor that is updating computer attack and that he accepted systems at Navy and Marine death as the inevitable conse- C orps installations. He a r quence ofhis actions." rived in the Washington area Documents released Aug. 25 and stayed for a week Wednesday and details proin a hotel in Bethesda, Md., acvided by authorities began to cording to search warrant affill in some gaps in the time- fidavits unsealed Wednesday. line of the Sept. 16 rampage, From Aug. 31 through Sept. which ended w he n p o l ice 7, he stayed at a hotel in Arfatally shot Alexis in a thirdlington, Va., and then went to floor cubicle. a Residence Inn in WashingThe clues about A l exis' ton, where he stayed until the mental state and motivations attack. He started at his job come from inscriptions found on the fourth floor of Building on his Remington 870 shot197 at the Navy Yard Sept. 9. gun and documents found on Parlave said Alexis had a his electronic devices. performance issue at work In one document, he wrote: that was addressed the Friday "An ultra low frequency atbefore the shooting, which octack is what I've been subject curred on the next work day. to for the last three months, But she said there was no inand to be perfectly honest, dication so far that Alexis tarthat is what has driven me to geted "anyone he worked for this." or worked with."

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 3

MART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, Sept. 26, the 269th day of 2013. There are 96 days left in the year.

CUTTING EDGE HAPPENINGS Mail — Postmaster General Patrick Donahoeappears before a Senatepanel to press lawmakers for swift action

on legislation to address the agency's financial trouble.

A proposed structural system would use approximately 70 percent timber to build tall buildings as an environmentally friendlier alternative to steel and concrete.

HISTORY

Making a case for a timder tower

Highlight: In1789, Thomas Jefferson was confirmed

Engineers are developing ways to build skyscrapers largely of timber, which would reduce construction-related carbon

dioxide emissions compared with conventional structures of concrete and steel. They designed a timber tower based on an existing conventional 42-story apartment building, and compared the two.

by the Senate to be the first

United States secretary of state; John Jay, the first chief justice; Edmund Randolph, the

PROPOSED STRUCTURAL SYSTEM Timber columns

first attorney general.

In 1777, British troops occupied Philadelphia during the American Revolution. In1892, John Philip Sousa and his newly formedband

The tower would

performed publicly for the first

concrete.

time, at the Stillman Music Hall in Plainfield, N.J. In1914, the Federal Trade

be approximately 70 percent timber

Laminated or heavy timber are glued together.

Timber floors, 8 inches thick Solid timber walls for stability

COLLIMN

and 30 percent reinforced IYPIOALFLOOR I FLOOR ANDPERIMETER BEAM

Commission wasestablished.

Steel tie

In1918, the Meuse-Argonne

offensive, resulting in anAllied victory against the Germans, began during World War I. In 1937, the radio drama "The

Shadow," starring Orson Welles, premiered on the Mutual Broadcasting System. In 1955, following word that President Dwight D. Eisenhow-

er had suffered aheart attack, the New York Stock Exchange

saw its worst price decline since1929.

I

Foundation and two lower floors

are concrete.

Reinforced concrete link beams

-

COMPARING TIMBER AND CONVENTIONAL STRUCTURES A timber tower would be lighter, so

the foundation does not have to be as massive as for a conventional structure.

Proposed, timber structure " Benchmark, concrete structure "

"

"

"

"

Republican Richard M. Nixon faced off before a national TV

audience. In1962, Maury Wills of the

Los Angeles Dodgers stole his 100th base during a13-1 victory over the Houston Colt.45s.

"The Beverly Hillbillies" premiered on CBS. The cult film

"Carnival of Souls" premiered in Lawrence, Kan., where parts of it had been filmed. In1969, the family comedy

series "The Brady Bunch" premiered on ABC-TV. In1986, William H. Rehnquist

was sworn in as the16th chief justice of the United States, while Antonin Scalia joined the

Supreme Courtas its103rd member. In1990, the Motion Picture Association of America an-

nounced it had created anew rating, NC-17, to replace the X rating. In1991, four men and four

women began atwo-year stay inside a sealed-off structure in Oracle, Ariz., called Bio-

sphere 2. They emerged from the structure on this date in 1993.

Ten years ago: President George W.Bushand Russian President Vladimir Putin opened a two-day summit at Camp David. The government

issued a recall for Segway scooters, citing instances in which riders fell off when the

batteries ran low. Five yearsage: Hollywood screen legendand philanthropist Paul Newman died

in Westport, Conn. at age 83. In their first debate of the presidential campaign, held at the University of Missis-

sippi, Republican John McCain portrayed himself as a battle-

tested elder running againsta naive rookie, while Democrat Barack Obamasuggested McCain was a hothead who'd

made the wrong choices on the Iraq war, corporate taxes

and more. One year age: A judge in Pennsylvania upheld perjury charges against two Penn State administrators in the

Jerry Sandusky case. Rebels in Syria set off two car bombs in Damascus that engulfed the

army headquarters in flames.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Richard Herd is 81. Singer Olivia Newton-John is 65. Actor Jim Caviezel is 45.

Actor Ben Shenkman is45. Singer ShawnStockman (Boyz II Men) is 41. Singer-actress Christina Milian is 32. Tennis player Serena Williams is 32. — From wire reports

BUILDING WEIGHT

VOLUME OFMATERIALS ~

~

ESTIMATEDCO2 EMISSIONS

16,100

488,000 482,000

"

WOOD

• STEEL

2,100

g

35,900 Tons

Cubic feet

In1960, the first debate between presidential nominees

took place in Chicagoas Democrat John F.Kennedyand

I

Timber floor and perimeter concrete Anchor I'od beam are joined with steel anchor rods and ties.

9,500

Tolls, Coze

CONCRETE New York Times News Service

Source: Skidmore Owings & Merrill LLP

By Henry Fountain

British Columbia, will make it the tallest wooden building in The movement to construct North America when it is comt all b u ildings l argely w i t h pleted next year. wood as an environmentally Constructing more and tallfriendlier alternative to steel er towers will require changes and concrete has received a in building codes — most of boost from an unusual source which limit wood structures to — a leading architectural firm fourstories orfewer — and conknown for its towers of steel struction methods. Architects, and concrete. engineers, contractors and, Skidmore, Owings 8c Mer- crucially, developers will have rill, the Chicago-based firm to be convinced that wooden that has designed a long list of buildings can be safe, attracskyscrapers,including the new tive and profitable. (They are One World Trade Center in low- generally more expensive than er Manhattan, has developed a conventional towers, although structural system that uses so- in some areas ofconstruction called mass timber — columns there can be savings because and thick slabs that are lami- the slabs can be erected fairly nated from smaller pieces of quickly) Fire protection is a wood. In a report this year, the particularconcern, but advofirm showed how the system cates for wooden buildings say could be used to build a 42-sto- mass timber does not ignite ry residential tower that would easily and forms a layer of char have a lower carbon footprint that slows burning. They say than a conventional structure. wooden towers can meet fire "We're tall building engisafety standards for steel or neers," said William F. Baker, concrete buildings. a partner in th e f i r m. "We P roduction o f s t eel a n d wanted to see what we can do concrete produces significant to help on the sustainability amounts of the greenhouse gas side." With their system, about carbon dioxide, while wood 70 percent of the structural holds the carbon from carbon material is wood; most of the dioxide removed from the atrest, including the foundation, mosphere through photosynis concrete. thesis. So using wood in the Benton Johnson, anengineer structural elements can help who worked on the report, said offset the carbon emissions that wooden high-rises could from the other parts of the conhelp solve the growing world- struction process and from the wide problem of providing ad- operation of the finished buildequate housing to the billions ing. A timber tower uses a lot of of people who are, or will be, wood. This is not conventional living in cities — while also ad- frame construction, in which 2dressing climate change. by-4s and other thin elements "We know that we need to are nailed together, but more build a lot m ore buildings," akin to building with concrete Johnson said. "And we know slabs. The tower in the Skidthat we need to lower CO2." more, Owings & Merrill study, Until now, tall wooden build- for example, would contain ings had been championed about 3.9 million board-feet of by a handful of architects and wood; a typical single-family engineers, mostly from smaller home contains less than 20,000 firms overseas and in Canada. board-feet of framing lumber. They welcomed the Skidmore, The use of so much wood Owings 8r Merrill report. raises the issue of the potential "I'm r eally t h r illed t h at impact on forests if wooden they're involved with it," said buildings were t o b e come Michael Green, an architect in prevalent. Baker noted that in Vancouver, British Columbia, the United States and Canada, who has designed many wood- about 60 billion board feet of en buildings and, with partlumber was harvested each ners, came up with a different year, and as long as forests structural system for wooden were managed, sustainable towers that was detailed in a wooden buildings should not report last year. "This is the have much ofan impact. There first new way to build in a hun- are also millions of fir trees in dred years. It's going to take a North American forests killed little time to work through the by a widespread beetle infestabest way of doing it." tion that could be used to proFew modern tall w ooden duce the timber panels. b uildings have b een b u i lt The Skidmore, Owings gc around the world, and only Merrill system uses a type of one, an apartment building engineered wood calledglued that was completed this year laminated timber, or glulam, in Melbourne, Australia, has for the building columns, and reached 10 stories. Green's de- cross-laminated timber slabs sign of a 90-foot-high mixed- for the central core, floors and use building in Prince George, shear walls, whichprovide stiffNew York Times News Service

ness against wind loads. But the concept calls for concrete beams along the perimeter of each floorand elsewhere to allow for longer spans and thus more flexibility in floor layouts. The case study 4 2-story

building in the report is based on an actual Skidmore Owings 8c Merrill tower, the DewittChestnut apartments ( now called the Plaza on Dewitt) in Chicago, that was built in 1966. That building, made of steel

and concrete, had an innovative structural design — it is basically a tube that acts like a vertical cantilever to resist wind loads — that was used in later buildings, including the Sears Tower.

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

Dogs

BIII II 1

Continued from A1 And in dogs, as in people, extra weight is linked to diabetes, arthritis and high blood pressure as well as kidney and respiratory diseases. Reducing calorie intake is part of the solution, veterinarians and pet behaviorists say. But diet without exercise isn't

Continued from A1 But he would prefer the Senate take up the forestry bill passed by the House last week, which would increase harvests on public forests to helpgenerate revenue for heavily forested counties. "This measure provides short-term relief to rural communities teetering on the edge of bankruptcy. But, let's be clear: This help is a lifeline, not a life boat," Walden said. "The status quo of asking Uncle Sam for a check year after year is not sustainable." Congress first enacted the SecureRuralSchoolsprogram in 2000 to compensate heavily forested counties whose local economies were devastated by federal limitations placed

II

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enough. So dogs have been hitting the gym for fitness programs at kennels and pet spas around the country. At the Morris Animal Inn in Morristown, N.J., where Lolita works out, the pools and treadmills are part of a 25,000square-foot building surrounded by nature trails. Staff members in khakis and polo shirts lead dogs through exercises and reward them with yogurt vegetable parfaits. Some of the f i tness programs are tied to events like the Kentucky Derby (in the canine version, dogs jump over

hay bales) and holidays (New

i...

•I

Tony Cenicola / New York Times News Service

Lolita, an overweight dachshund, works out on a treadmill as part of her "canine cardio session," a health and fitness package offered at the Morris Animal Inn in New Jersey. More than half of American dogs are overweight, according to the Association for Pet Obesity Prevention, causing health probIems just like in people.

Year's Resolution Camp is pop-

ular). Programs range from the Olympian, at a daily rate of about $100, to the Athlete, at about $40 a day. But even a luxury spa environment can't mask the hard work. For Abbe, a 6-year-old yellow Labrador retriever who is about 20 pounds overweight, a short tussle with a toy leaves her panting. She does betterretrieving a ball from an indoor pool, a task that continues to engage her after three dozen tosses. "The will is so there," said Lisa Tims, her t rainer at the Morris Animal Inn, as Abbe swam to get the ball b efore lumbering out of t h e water. Cesar Millan, the popular dog trainer whose books and television shows promote a philosophy of "exercise, discipline, affection," said most dogs were overweight because of l azy owners who confuse food with affection and attention. Letting the dogs out in the backyard is no substitute for a walk, he added. And giving the dog a cookie doesn't make up for not playing with him. "Dogs today have butlers and maids," Millan said. "They don't hunt for their food anymore, but they should work for food." And that work needs to include walks during which the dog is focused on obeying commands to b e p hysically and mentallyengaged. For the last seven years, the College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville has offered a fat camp for dogs, inpatient and outpatient. But the dogs who live at the clinic tend to be more successful, said Dr . A n gela Witzel, a veterinarian at the university who specializes in animal nutrition. "A dog can

If your pooch ispudgy

Local event

Put down the bag of treats andget off the sofa: The sameadvice that is good for you is good for your dog, say thosewho treat obesity in pets. Besides common-sensewisdom about eating less and moving more, there are anumber of strategies and practices

• The Mt. Bachelor Kennel Club Fall Agility Trials take place Saturday at the Crook County

Fairgrounds,see calendar for details, Page B2

to slim down dogs or keep them from gaining weight. But before

starting a newdiet and fitness program, a checkup is important, said Deborah Linder, a research assistant professor at theTufts

he was considered unadoptable and was about to be euthanized, said Heather Hines, the director of Indigo Ranch. "He was a friendly, wonderful dog, but he was huge, his coat was greasy, and he had to lie down to eat his food," Hines said. She focused on his diet first because, as she explained, "he couldn't stand up for long." Once Butters started losing weight, Hines began increasing his activity. About five months after he arrived, he had slimmed to 84 pounds. The newly trim Butters discovered he had a knack for catching a ball in midair, said Paige Reed, whose family adopted him in 2011. "He didn't know he could run or jump until he lost the weight," Reed said. "Now he's athletic, loves playing with us and with other

Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine and head of its Obesity

Clinic for Animals. Weight gain in adog may beasymptom of a disease or anunderlying problem like alow thyroid level. Once you have the go-ahead, begin with what experts call a touch test: Run your hand over your dog's ribs; the area should

feel no more paddedthanthe back of your hand, Linder said. Then weigh your pet. If your dog is small, Use ababy scale or weigh yourself and your dog together, and dosomesubtraction. For larger breeds, ask toUseyour veterinarian's scale. Exercise is vital to a pet and to any weight-loss program, said Cesar Miiian, the dog trainer. Basically, anything "that makes a

dog a dog is goodexercise," Millan said. That meanswalking, running, swimming, herding, jumping in agility training, search-

and-rescue work. Theoptimal amount and intensity of exercise dependsontheage,breedand healthofthedog;someareso overweight that short walks are the only option. And shorten exer-

cise and increaseaccess to water in hot weather. Find out from your veterinarian how manycalories your dog should consume every day and then contact the manufacturer of your dog food to determine its calorie content. An active adult

Lab, for example, mayconsume1,000 calories a day, Linder said, but no more than10 percent of itshould be treats. And some chew treats, she added, are1,000 calories. Aim for a safe rate of

weight loss, generally1 to 2 percent of a dog's body weight per

dogs.

week. (The American College of Veterinary Nutrition has more advice and a list of certified nutritionists at acvn.org.)

And don't let pets appeal to your guilt to get you into overfeeding them. Linder suggested hiding some of your dog's daily food

in toys, so nosing, poking or prodding is required to obtain it. She added, "Making them find some of their food exercises their mind and body." — Stacey Stowe, NewYork 11mesNewsService

endorsement of the Association of American Feed Control Officials, an organization that helps develops nutritional standards for animal food. And "if you are going to use a homemade dog food, consult a veterinarian," Witzel said, because different dogs have difgive me big puppy-dog eyes, ferent nutritional needs. "For and I'm still not going to give instance, a dog doesn't need him a piece of chicken," Witzel carbohydrates unless she is said, whereas an owner may pregnant or lactating." not be able to resist the appeal. Lisa Walsh, the owner of In choosing dog food, she Loyalville, a kennel and trainrecommended checkingthe la- ing center in Hatchbend, Fla., bel on store-bought food for the estimated that two-thirds of

her canineclients were overweight when they arrived. She cited inactivity and foods high in carbohydrates as causes. To solve the problem, Walsh offers one-on-one, 24-hour care and training at $1,250 a month. Indigo Ranch in Vernonia, Ore., is a kennel that offers what it calls a "doggy fat camp." The camp began about two years ago, shortly after a county shelter contacted Indigo Rescue, the nonprofit rescue organization financed by Indigo Ranch, about a 3-year-old Lab aptly named Butters. At 142 pounds,

Hines, who has seen all m anner of excesses in her line of work, said: "People think it's funny or cute when their dog is fat. One woman told me she saw her husband feeding Haagen-Dazsleftovers to herdog." Bad diets like that are responsible for 60 to 70 percent of weight gain in dogs, said Dr. Ernie Ward, a veterinarian in Calabash, N.C., who founded the Association for Pet Obesity Prevention and is the author of the 2010 book "Chow Hounds: Why Are Dogs Getting Fatter?" Instead ofice cream, Ward recommended feeding your dog more of what you might eat if you were on a diet: vegetables like carrots, broccoli, asparagus and green peas. "This is a human problem," he said. "No pet is making a sandwich and eating a bowl of ice cream at midnight."

as the 08 C lands. Last year, Deschutes County received $1.8 million, Crook County $1.7 million and Jefferson County $570,000 intimber

payments.

Rep. Peter DeFazio, DSpringfield, praised the bill's passage and called on the Senate to produce its own forestry bill so that any disagreements can be worked out by members ofboth chambers. "Ultimately, O& C c o unties need a long-term solution that breaks us out of the decades-long logjam on federal forest policy, puts thousands of Oregonians back to work, improves forest health and protects our environment, and disentangles the health of rural county budgets from these u npredictable an d d i m i n ishing federal support payon logging on public land. The ments," he said in a prepared payments, designed to grow statement. "The House passed smaller over time, were meant a bipartisan, balanced, longto help portions of local bud- term solution last week, and gets, including spending on today we passed these critical schools and roads, normally transition payments. I hope supported by the tax base un- the Senate will act quickly to til the region could develop a make any necessary changes non-timber-based economy. so the bill can be passed out The program has been ex- of that chamber and signed by tended several times. Since the president." its inception, Oregon has reAlthough most often associceived more than $2.8 billion ated with balloons, helium is in total payments. used in numerous technologiIn 2012, Oregon collected cal settings, including MRIs about $100 million in pay- and cleaning silicon chips. ments, $63 million through The U.S. reserves account for the U.S. Forest Service, and an the lion's share of the domesadditional $36 million for the tic helium market, and would 18 Western Oregon counties struggle to find another source that contain Oregon 8r Califor- if it lost access to the governnia Railroad Grant lands. The ment's helium holdings. Bureau ofLand Management — Reporter: 202-662-7456, oversees those forests, known aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Forests Continued from A1 In 2000, Congress enacted the Secure R ural S c hools program, which a uthorized annual payments to counties containing federal forests to help local budgets decimated by the loss of taxes from timber revenuesfrom federalland that can't be developed. The payments were designed to grow smaller over time as rural communities shifted away from timber economies, and have been extended several times. Plans to renew them for 2014 are pending in Congress. Under the program, Oregon has received in excess of $1 billion total, including more than $40 million for Deschutes County, more than $30 million for Crook County and more than $8 million for Jefferson County.

Industry decline The payments helped supplement l o ca l g o v ernment budgets, but they didn't increasethe volume of work for local sawmills and wood processing facilities. Much of the manufacturing and f orestry infrastructure in Eastern and Southern Oregon — the mills, skills and people — have been lost as a result of the decline in harvests over the past two decades, according to the Forestry Institute report. Paul Ehinger, a timber industry consultant who worked for the Edward Hines Lumber Co. for more than three decades, has been monitoring the decline of th e i n dustry for years. By his calculations, Eastern Oregon had 27 sawmills operating in 1993. Twenty years later, that number had dropped to eight. Over the same period,the total number of sawmills, plywood plants, veneer plants, board plants and pulp mills in Eastern Oregon has dropped from 35 to 14. "We a re growing m o r e timber by far than is being harvested on Forest Service lands," Ehinger said during a recent phone conversation. "There's plenty of timber out there, another billion board feet they could harvest without straining anything." The mills in Eastern Oregon need a combined volume of

Bush Continued from A1 He served 14 months in Iraq in 2009 and 2010, earning the Bronze Star and the combat infantry badge. In late July, Bush was given a new assignment with the

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NUMBER OFPLANTS INOPERATION: 1993,2003, 2012 Western• Oregon •

"The mills depend on the timber supply, but the forest health really depends on the mills," he said.

Lumber companies forced to adapt

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produced," he said. Because it can take decades to grow viable sawlogs, "in Eastern Oregon, there's not that much merchantable timber left." In order to survive, lumber companies have been forced to adapt their business models to accommodate different qualities and sizes of wood. In May, the Collins Pine Co. finished a $2 million renovation to its small log mill at its Lakeview facility, said Paul M. Harlan, the firm's vice president of resources. "Doing this gives us more flexibility to run different dia meter mixes t h rough t h e plant," he said. Being less dependent on one particular size of log boosts the mill's opportunities to stay busy and keep i ts employees working, h e said. But even with the renovation, the mill's future is far from certain. "It's not a silver bullet," he said. "It is anticipating the c hanges that we k now a r e coming." Similarly, t h e M al h e ur Lumber Co. has spent millions building a pellet mill in John Day. The facility, built in 2010 in part with $5 million of stimulus funds made available by Congress during the Great Recession to help boost economic recovery efforts, turns chips and fiber into wood bricks and

ship developing.

,s--—--——-

OESCHUTES

COOS,' •OUGLAS

"As t he l a ndscape h a s changed ecologically, many of us have come to realize if you want the flammable stuff out of the woods so that wildfire can act like it should ... you're going to need someplace to take that material." T he Oregon F orest R e source Institute's Cloughesy also sees a symbiotic relation-

Eastern • Western • Eastern I California Oregon '% Washington I Washington gitotal

200 150

The Forest Service is doing the best it can with the money allotted to it by the U.S. Congress, said Brandon Kaetzel, the Oregon Department of Forestry's pr incipal e conomist. Between 2005 and 2010, the agency's d i scretionary budget rose from $4.21 billion to $532 billion. Since then, it has declined to $4.86 billion for fiscal year 2014. Federal forest management

in Oregon grew much more

100 50 0

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Source: Paul Ehinger 8 Associates Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

about 400 million board feet a year to stay economically viable, said Mike Cloughesy, Oregon Forest Resource Institute director of forestry. The six national forests in Eastern Oregon typically harvest around 200 million board feet

per year. T he timber i ndustry h as been caught in a downward spiral, with reduced harvests, particularly of larger sawlogs, resulting in mill closures. But fewer mills can make it harder for projects to "pencil out," or be viable economically. The farther companies have to haul logs or biomass to an appropriate processing facility, the narrower the margins become. F inding the right way t o restore a forest to an ecologically sound, fire-resistant state often hinges on pairing it with local infrastructure capable of handling the logs and fiber that need removal, said Pete

guard to serve as deputy assistant chief of staff in South K orea, training South K o rean and A merican forces, o verseeing operations a n d performing a d m i n istrative duties. At the time, Bush said he intended to split his time between Prineville and South

Caligiuri, a Bend-based forest ecologist for the Nature Conservancy. "The only way to do that reallyistomake surewehavethe local infrastructure to get that done," he said. "Otherwise, it becomes a losing proposition from the get-go, at least from an economicperspective." In some cases in Eastern Oregon, this has helped turned environmentalists and the remaining timber industry into unlikely allies, with each camp realizing it needs the other to achieve more sustainable forests, or in the industry's case, survive. "A lot (of sawmills) are shuttered for good reason. A lot of them are large log mills that were built to process oldgrowth t r ees," said S usan Jane Brown, an attorney with the Western Environmental Law Center. But appropriately scaled infrastructure is critical to restoration efforts, she said.

complicated in 1990, when the spotted owl was first listed under the Endangered Species Act. Environmental regulations severely curtailed timbering on federal land in order to preserve the bird's favored habitat, turning the spotted owl into a symbol of the clash between the timber industry and conservationists. Despite the restrictions, the number of spotted owls in the Pacific Northwest continued to shrink to an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 total, a 40 percent decrease from 1985. Last year, President Barack Obama's administration announced it w a s a p proving

limited logging in areas designated as critical habitat, acknowledging that active management produces healthier habitats. But the listing has already had an impact on east side forests, said Kaetzel. "Thetruth is the east side has been hurting since the 1990s," he said. Timber companies began speculative buying on the eastside,where there weren't as many spotted owl habitats to worry about, he said.

it to historians to judge the "dimensions of the Holocaust." Continued from A1 But he added, "In general, The dispute over his com- I can tell you that any crime ments reflects the extreme deli- or — that happens in history cacy of the Holocaust as an issue against humanity, including in Iranian-American relations. the crime that the Nazis comMore broadly, it speaks to the po- mitted toward the Jews, as well litical tightrope Rouhani is walk- as non-Jewish people — is reping, trying to negotiate a nuclear rehensible and condemnable, deal with the United States that as far as we are concerned." will ease sanctions to please evThe Iranian news agency, eryday Iranians, withoutprovok- Fars, which has ties to the Ising abacklash by hard-liners. lamic Revolutionary Guards Such careful c alculations Corps, posted its own translaprompted Rouhani to eschew tion of Rouhani's answer, and a handshake with President claimed that he did not use the Barack Obama at the United word "reprehensible" and that Nations General A ssembly. he said historians should be left After weeks of c onciliatory to judge "historical events," not moves, including Iran's freeing "the Holocaust." of political prisoners, Iranian That translation resembles and American officials said more closely the way Ahmathey believedRouhani needed dinejad once discussed the isto placate hard-liners in Tehran, sue. In an interview with CNN who would have bridled at im- in 2012, he said: "Whatever ages of an Iranian leader greet- event has taken place throughing an American president. out history, or hasn't taken "Shaking hands with Obama place, I cannot judge that. Why would have won Rouhani huge should I judge that?" points with the Iranian public, In what appeared to be an but it would have caused Iran's effort to head off criticism of hard-liners a conniption," said Rouhani, Iran's official Islamic Karim Sadjadpour, an expert Republic News Agency reporton Iran at the Carnegie Endow- ed Wednesday that the chief ment for International Peace in of staff of Iran's armed forces, Washington. Maj. Gen. Hassan Firouzabadi, Rouhani avoided other land said the new president had mines at the United Nations. presented Iran's clear and revoHis comments to the General lutionary stands in his United Assembly, though less inflam- Nations speech. matory than those of AhmaAhmadinejad's refusal to recdinejad, touched on s imilar ognizethe Holocaust became a themes and grievances: the symbol of Tehran's implacable lack of international respect for hostility. For Israel, it is evidence Iran, the West's refusal to rec- that Iran is bent on its eliminaognize its right to enrich urani- tion, and this is why Israel is so um, and the Israeli occupation determinedtoprevent Iranfrom of Palestinian territory. acquiring a nuclear weapon. B ut w he n R o uhani s a t WhileAmerican Jewishleaddown later with Amanpour, he ers characterized Rouhani's removed into fraught territory. marks as a step forward, they Asked whether he shared his remained deeply skeptical of predecessor's belief that the Ho- Iran's intentions and its readilocaust was a myth, Rouhani ness to abandon its nuclear replied, according to CNN's ambitions. "Assuming the accuracy of translation, that he would leave

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the translation, for me his comments are duly noted," said David Harris, the executive directorof the American Jewish Committee. "But he's only acknowledging, an d r a t her belatedly, the universally acknowledged truth of the last 70 years. That does not warrant a standing ovation." Israeli officials reject Rouhani's claim that the factual details of the Holocaust are a matter best left to historians. A statement issued by the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week declared, "It does not take a historian to recognize the existence of the Holocaust — it just requires being a human being." The complex political crosscurrents were on display in the Iranian news media's coverage of Rouhani's day at the United Nations. A reformist newspaper, Shargh, published pictures of Rouhani and Obama during their speeches, with the headline "Perhaps Another Time" — a reflection of the letdown among averageIranians about the missed opportunity for a handshake. But another paper, Kayhan, which is close to the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, expressed horror over the possibilitythat "the clean hand of our president would for moments be in the bloody clench" of Obama. Advisersand analysts close to the government in Tehran said that after weeks of conciliatory statements and gestures by Rouhani, the excitement had gotten out of hand. "We need to gain something from the Americans, before we pose and smile with them," said Hamid-Reza Taraghi, an official who is one of the few trusted to interpret the speeches of Khamenei. "Of course, Mr. Rouhani also needed to convince some at home that he is not making any wild moves."

inch-long pellets that can be burned as fuel. The pellets can also be used as cat litter. Bruce Daucsavage,president of Ochoco Lumber,Malheur's parent company, said building the plant was partly a strategic business move. But it was also a recognition of what kind of wood was going to be coming out of federal forests in the future and being a responsible member of th e c ommunity. Having a plant that can handle fiber,as opposed to sawlogs, is an essential part to restoring healthy forests, he said. "You're looking at a large, large landscape that needs to have a number of things done on that landscape to bring it to a healthy level," he said. "You have to get a revenue source to pay for part of it."

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

TODAY'S READ:SINKHOLE ON THE BAYOU

UPDATE:SCHOOL SHOOTING

panel roun iveswa, an a own Connecticut orders release of Newtown 911 tapes s ru es o in i s oo in By Michael Melia New Yorh Times News Service

BAYOU CORNE, La. — It was nearly 16 months ago that Dennis Landry and his wife, Pat, on a leisurely cruise in their Starcraft pontoon boat, first noticed a froth of bubbles issuing from the depths of Bayou Corne, an idyllic, cypressdraped stream that meanders through s w ampy s o uthern Louisiana. They figured it was

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a leaky gas pipeline. So did everyone else. Just over two months later, in the predawn blackness of Aug. 3, 2012, the earth opened up — a voracious maw 325 feet across and hundreds of feet deep, swallowing 100-foot trees, guzzling water from adjacent swamps and belching methane from a thousand feet or more beneath the surface. "I think I caught a glimpse of hell in it," Landry said. Since then, almost nothing here has been the same. More than a year after it appeared, the Bayou Corne sinkhole is about 25 acres and still growing, almost as big as 20 football fields, lazily biting off chunks offorest and creeping hungrily toward an earthen berm built to contain its oily waters. It has its own Facebook page and its own groupies, conspiracy theorists who insist the pit is somehow linked to the Gulf of Mexico 50 miles south and the earthquake-prone New Madrid fault 450 miles north. It has confounded geologists who have struggled to explain this scar in the earth. And it has split this unincorporated hamlet of a bout 300 people into two camps: the hopeful, like Landry, who believe that things will eventually settle down, and the despairing, who have mostly fled or plan to, and blame their misery on state and corporate officials. "Everything they're doing, they were forced to do," Mike Schaff, one of those who is leaving, said of the officials. "They've taken no initiative. I wanted to stay here. But the community i s b a sically destroyed." Drawls Landry, who is staying: "I used to have a sign in my yard: 'This too shall pass.' This, too, shall pass. We're not there yet. But I'm a very patient man." The sinkhole is worrisome

minding Sedensky of his testimony from June. H ARTFORD, Conn . After hearing from lawyers — The state'sFreedom of from both sides at the hourInformation C o m mission long hearing, the commissionon Wednesday ordered the ers unanimously agreed to release of the 911 tapes from accept an earlier recommenlast year's shooting at Sandy dation from a hearing officer, Hook Elementary School, Kathleen Ross, who dismissed ruling in favor of an appeal each of Sedensky's arguments by The Associated Press for for withholding the tapes. In access to records withheld addition to arguing that releasby investigators. ing the tapes could hurt the inThe recordings will not vestigation, Sedensky claimed be made available immedi- they could subject witnesses to ately. The prosecutor lead- harassment from conspiracy ing the investigation of the theorists and violate survivors massacre, Danbury State's from the schoolwho deserve Attorney Stephen Sedensky special protection as victims of III, said the commission's child abuse. "This is a case about crime decision will be appealed in Connecticut's courts. victims and w i tnesses who Therecordings couldshed shouldn't have to worry that light on the law enforcement their calls for help in their most response to one of the worst vulnerable moments will beschool shootings in U . S. come fodder forthe evening history. Twenty-six people, news," he said at the start of including 20 first-graders, Wednesday's hearing. were killed inside the school On the day of the shooting, on Dec. 14 by the gunman, the AP requesteddocuments, Adam Lanza, who commit- including copies of 911 calls, ted suicide as police arrived. as it does routinely in news Sedensky argued t h at gathering, in part to examine the calls should be exempt the police response to the masfrom p ublic i n f ormation sacre thatsent officers from laws because they contain multiple agencies racing to the information that could be school.If the recordings are used in a law enforcement released, the AP would review action. But the chairman of the content and d etermine the commission, Owen Ea- what, if any, of it would meet gan, said Sedensky did not the news cooperative's stanmake clear in his previous dards for publication. testimony how the information might be used or how its release could damage an investigation in which no lES SCNNAN arrests are anticipated. "You never even reviewed the tapes," Eagan said, reThe Associated Press

By Michael Wines

*

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,

Louisiana Environmental Action Network via New York Times News Service

The Bayou Corne sinkhole, pictured here in June, has spawned conspiracy theories, confounded geologists and split locals into two camps. The mud and rock above it dropped into the vacated space, freeing trapped natural gas. The gas floated up; the rock slowly slipped down. The result was a yawning, bubbling sinkhole. Geologists say the sinkhole will eventually stop growing, perhaps at 50 acres, but how long it will take to reach that size is unclear. Under state order, Texas Brine has mounted a broad, although some say belated, effort to pump gas out of sandy underground layers where it has spread. Bayou Corne is pocked with freshly dug wells, with more to come, their pipes leading to flares that slowly burn off the methane. That, everyone concedes, could take years. The two sides greet that news in starkly different ways. State surveys show that one of the largest concentrations of methane lies directly under Landry's neighborhood, a manicured subdivision of substantial brick homes, many with decks overlooking the bayou and its cypresses. Yet only two families have chosen to leave, and while the Landrys keep suitcases packed just in case, the gas detector in their home offers enough reassurance to remain. "Do you smell anything?" he asked. "Nope. Do we have gas bubbling up in the bayou? Yes. Where does it go? Straight up. Have they closed the bayou? No."

Sinkho/e Ars 3, 2012 Evacuated

~3'6 5 DaYs ,.y! q,

And counttyg„„,r

William Widmer/ New York Times News Service

A sign pictured last week counts the days since an evacuation orderwas issued when a sinkhole appeared in Bayou Corne, La. enough. But for now, the principal villains are the bubbles: flammable methane gas, surfacing not just in the bayou, but in the swamp and in front and backyards across the area. A few words of fantastical explanation: Much of Louisiana sits atop an ancient ocean whose saltyremains, extruded upward by the merciless pressure of countless tons of rock, have formed at least 127 colossal underground pillars. Seven hundred feet beneath Bayou Corne, the Napoleonville salt dome stretches 3 miles long and I mile wide — and plunges at least 30,000 feet to the old ocean floor. A bevy of companies has long regarded the dome as more or less a gigantic piece of Tupperware, a handy place to store propane, butane and nat-

ural gas, and to make salt water for the area's many chemical factories. Over the years, they have repeatedlypunched into the dome, hollowing out 53 enormous caverns. In 1982, on the dome's western edge, Texas Brine Co. sank a well to begin work on a big cavern:150 to 300 feetw ide and four-tenths of a mile deep, it bottomed out more than a mile underground. Until it capped the well to the cavern in 2011, the company pumped in fresh water, sucked out salt water and shipped it to the cavern's owner, the Occidental Chemical Corp. Who is to blame for what happened next is at issue in a barrage of lawsuits. But at some point, the well's western wall collapsed, and the cavern began filling with mud and rock.

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

BRIEFING

Man arrested in animal neglect ATerrebonneman was arrested earlier this weekon more than

100 counts of animal neglect, according to the Deschutes County

Sheriff's Office. Tim Williams, 60,

faces 17 counts of first-degree animal neglect and 92 counts of

second-degreeanimal neglect.

www.bendbulletin.com/local

i ean SnameAFL-Clo

irror on a By Hillary Borrud

privately with Pacific Power, the utility company which owns the dam that created Mirror Pond. The Bend City Council and park district board created the ad hoc committee to gather information such as Pacific Power's plans for the dam. The committee is supposed to report back to the City Council and park

The Bulletin

The Mirror Pond ad hoc committee will wait until at least mid-October to select a couple of citizen members from among 11 applicants for the openings. In the meantime, two members of the committee and an attorney for the Bend Park & Recreation District will meet

district board with a recommendation for the future of Mirror Pond. The Deschutes River is depositing silt that will eventually build into wetlands in the pond. The ad hoc committee includes two Bend city councilors, two park board members, park district Executive Director Don Horton and Bend Community Develop-

ment Director Mel Oberst. City councilors and park board members also said earlier this year that up to three citizens should be on the committee. Citizens who met the Sept. 13 application deadline have a variety of backgrounds, according to their resumes and letters ofinterest. SeeMirror Pond/B5

home on Northwest Odem Avenueon Sunday after receiving reports of a foul odor and dead sheep.Depu-

More than 300 union members from acrossthe state will convene Friday in Bend to discuss the future of labor at the biennial Oregon AFL-CIO Convention. "It's going to have a different feel than conventions in the past," said Elana Guiney, legislative and communications director with the Oregon AFL-CIO. "It's going to be less politician-heavy and focus on the work we're doing as a labor movement, and that's reflected in our speakers." The biennial convention, which is being held at the Riverhouse Convention Center, will kick off 5:30

COTTONWOOD CANYON

ties found more than 20

decomposing sheepcarcasses, someburied in shallow pits and others

lying above ground. Investigators found

another 89 sheepand three donkeys that were not being adequately cared for, seized the

animals and arrested Williams on Monday. — From staff reports

p.m. Friday and wrap up

Nore briefing and News of Record, B2

Riversideopen to Galveston The intersection of Riverside Boulevard and Tumalo Avenue, which is

undergoingimprovements for pedestrians and

cyclists, is partially open, allowing traffic to move between the Galveston corridor and downtown by way of Drake Park. Traffic

may be reduced toone

Photos courtesy of Oregon State Parks

The JohnDay Riverflows through the new Cottonwood Canyon StatePark. Th e new state park,between Wasco and Condon, opens to the public this weekend. To see a video about the park, visit H www.bendbulletin.com/cottonwoodcanyon.

r II u/ y

Rivers d Blvd'

paftiaiiy

By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

Sheriff's deputies were called to Williams'

lane at times while work continues. Riverside will remain closed south of the intersection, as will Tumalo to the east.

convenes in Bend on Friday

' open

at noon Sunday. Featured speakers include Gov. John Kitzhaber,Sen. Jeff Merkley,American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, and presidentof Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste Ramon Ramirez, among others. The conference will follow many of the themes laid out by the national AFL-CIO convention that took place in Los Angeles three weeks ago, and will discuss how to raise environment standards for all workers and how to strengthen relationships between unions and community groups on a local level. Topics will also include how to organize a union. See Labor/B2

Galveston Ave.

Remains closed Stgp„„ At/eg

LOefflei BEND)

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Third Street underpass detour Third Street is closed at

the underpass between Franklin Avenueand Wilson Avenue, from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m., tonight,

Friday night and oneday next week that has yet to be determined.

Additional landscaping and painting will continue into October. The Third Street stormwater project will stop dirty storm runoff

from draining into an injection well at the bottom of the

Opening this weekend as the second-largest state park in Oregon, Cottonwood Canyon State Park along the John Day River could be the largest in a couple of years. Oregon State Parks has applied to the Bureau of Land Management to lease more than 10,100 acres of public land adjacent to the new, 8,000-plus-acre state park, BLM officials said this week. That creates the potential for an 18,000-acre state park. Silver Falls State Park near

Salem is currently the largest state park in Oregon, with justmore than 9,000 acres. "This could turn eventually into the largest state park if all goes as planned," said Chris Havel, Oregon State Parks spokesman. Cottonwood Canyon is starting with camping sites along the river and about a dozen miles of trials, but could eventually include more than 40 miles of trails and hike-in camping, if Oregon State Parks achieves its vision. SeePark/B5

gets life in wife's IYIUI'del' By Branden Andersen

@' ' -i~ 4

The Bulletin

The LoneTree Campground in Cottonwood Canyon State Park has 21 campsites and views of cliffs flanking the John Day River. The newest state park in Oregon, Cottonwood Canyon State Park, opens to the public this weekend. The park itself has more than 8,000 acres, but there is more than 10,100 acres of nearbyland overseen by the BureauofLand Management. Oregon State Parks has an application in with the BLM to lease the land. If the lease is approved, the park would be the largest state park in Oregon.

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STATE NEWS

Base LineRd.

MILES

• Special session:

LEGEND

Critics emerge on

Bureau olLandManagement

many sides. • Crater Lake:Snow comes early. Sources: Oregon State Parks, Bureau of Land Management

Stories on B3

C lumbfa River ~

Oregon StaleParks OregonDepartment ol Slate Lands

MILES 0

5

$To Madras, Bend Greg Cross /The Bulletin

Holly Heimbruch said her life changed on Jan. 28. Her optimism has been vanquished, her view on humanity diminished, she sa>d. "I have all this anger now that I didn't want or ask for," she said in a court Wednesday. "I hate being sad all the Loeffler t ime. " Heimbruch'smother, Be tty Jane Loeffler, 83,was murdered Jan. 28 by her husband, Lawrence Loeffler, 86, with two shots from a .25-caliber pistol. The pair lived in south Deschutes County, outside La Pine. "I still haven't recovered from the shock," Heimbruch said in the Bend courtroom. Wednesday, Deschutes County Circuit Court Judge A. Michael Adler sentenced Lawrence Loeffler, found guilty Tuesday of murder after a four-day trial, to life in prison. Heimbruch and her daughter, Jennifer Rios, traveled from Pasadena, Calif., to witness and testify at Loeffler's trial. As the jury delivered a guilty verdict Tuesday, the two embraced. See Loeffler/B6


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

E VENT

Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. ol'g. FALL RV SHOWANDSALE: Seenew floor plans and technology advances REEL PADDLINGFILM FESTIVAL: The eighth annual international for 2014 models; free; 9 a.m.-6 film tour featuring whitewater, sea p.m.; Deschutes County Fair& Expo kayaking, canoeing and more; $12 in Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, advance, $15 at the door, plus fees; 8 Redmond; 541-548-2711. p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall IRONMAN CHAMPIONLINSEY St., Bend; 541-317-9407 or www. CORBIN RECEPTION:The three towertheatre.org. time Ironman champion and BUCK65: The Canadian alternative graduate of Mountain View High hip-hop artist performs, with School is honored, followed by Driftwood Insomnia; $18 plusfees a Q-and-A; free; 5 p.m.; Sisters in advance,$23 atthe door;9 p.m ., Athletic Club, 1001 Desperado Trail; doors open at 8 p.m.; TheAnnex, 51 541-549-6878. N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541MARIAN CALL: TheAlaskan 408-4329 or www.randompresents. singer-songwriter performs; $10 com. artist donation suggested; 5-7 p.m.; Strictly Organic Coffee Bar, 450 S.W. BUCKLERASH: The Ashland Powerhouse Drive, Suite 400, Bend; country-punk band performs; $3; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing 541-647-1402. 8 Taproom, 24 N.W.Greenwood BEND ROOTSFAMILY PARTY: Live Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. music outside at The Victorian Cafe silvermoonbrewing.com. and inside Parrilla Grill; free; 5:30 p.m.; The Victorian Cafe, 1404 N.W. Galveston Ave.; 541-382-6411 or www.bendroots.net. FRIDAY BENDFILMKICKOFF PARTY 8(10TH FALL RV SHOWANDSALE: Seenew YEAR BREW PREVIEW: Featuring the tasting and naming of a BendFilm floor plans and technology advances for 2014 models; free; 9a.m.-6 10th Year Belgian IRA created by p.m.; DeschutesCounty Fair& Expo Deschutes Brewery to honor the Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, festival plus live music; receivetwo Redmond; 541-548-2711. beer tickets, appetizers and the first available copies of the BendFilm RED DOG CLASSIC: A shotgunGuide; proceeds benefit BendFilm; style golf tournament; includes $20 in advance, $25 at the door; 6-9 cart, breakfast, barbecuelunch, auction and raffles; proceeds benefit p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; BrightSide Animal Center; $100, 541-388-3378 or www.bendfilm. registration requested; 9 a.m.; Eagle OI'g. Crest Resort,1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-923-0882 or www. "CLEAN GUYSOF COMEDY" brightsideanimals.org/events/redENCORE: Ascreening of comedians dog-golf-tournament/. Dave Coulier, Jamie Kennedy, Andy Hendrickson, Ralph Harris and MT. BACHELORKENNELCLUB Heather McDonald; $12.50; 7:30 FALL AGILITY TRIALS: More than 120 dogs of different breeds race p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, through a timed obstacle course; Bend; 541-312-2901. free; 1:30-5 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., "THE DIXIE SWIMCLUB": A comedy about five Southern women Prineville; 541-388-4979 or www. who met on their college swim team mbkc.org. and get together once ayear; $19, PICKIN' AND PADDLIN' $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; MUSIC SERIES: Includes boat Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. demonstrations in the Deschutes

TODAY

treatments, food and beverages, raffle and silent auction; proceeds benefit Healthy Beginnings; $45 in advance, $50 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-383-6357 or www.myhb.

information and locations; Newberry National Volcanic Monument, Newberry Crater Road, Bend; .(t 541-233-6110. -p PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Free; 9a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 OI'g. N.E. Third St.; 541-447-6217 or "THE DIXIE SWIMCLUB": A prinevillefarmersmarket@gmail.com. comedy aboutfive Southern women PROJECTCONNECT2013: One who met on their college swim team day, one stop for more than 50 and get together once ayear; $19, services including medical care, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; urgent dental care (extractionsj, legal Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. aid, birth certificate/identification Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389services, housing and more for 0803 or www.cascadestheatrical. those on low income or struggling Ol'g. to make ends meet; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo NAOMI HOOLEY:The Portland Submitted photo Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, rock singer-songwriter performs; The comedy "The Dixie Swim Club" plays this weekend at the Redmond; 541-385-8977 or www. $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing Greenwood Playhouse in Bend. volunteerconnectnow.org. 8 Taproom, 24 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN silvermoonbrewing.com. PATCH: Aneight-acre corn mazewith River and progressive newgrass CRUXTOBERFEST:A celebration pumpkin patch and market featuring performedby The Giraffe Dodgers; featuring three newfresh hop beers pumpkincannons,zootrain,pony and live music; free admission; 6-9 proceeds benefit Bend Paddle rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages Trail Alliance; $5, free for children p.m.; Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SATURDAY 6-11, free ages 5and younger for 12 and younger; 3:30-5:30 p.m. S.W. Division Street, Bend; 541-385Corn Maize; $2.50 for most other demonstrations, 5-9 p.m. music; 3333 or www.cruxfermentation. MT. BACHELORKENNELCLUB activities;10a-7 p.m., pumpkin patch Tumalo Creek Kayak 8 Canoe, 805 com. FALL AGILITY TRIALS: More than open until 6 p.m.; Central Oregon S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Local 120 dogs of different breeds race PumpkinCo.,1250N.E.W ilcoxAve., 541-317-9407 or 411@tumalocreek. author Ted Haynes will read from through a timed obstacle course; Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www. com. hisbook"On The Roadfrom Burns: free; 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; Crook County pumpkinco.com. Stories of Central Oregon"; $5; Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., COMMUNITY FALLFESTIVAL: A BEND ROOTS REVIVAL: Afestival Prineville; 541-388-4979 or www. celebration of fall featuring hay rides, 6:30p.m.;Paulina SpringsBooks, that celebrates and showcases 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; mbkc.org. a pumpkin patch, face painting, a the musical, artistic and cultural 541-526-1491. treasure hunt and more; hosted DD RANCHFARM FESTIVAL: character of our community; free; by Mission Church; free; 4-8 p.m.; BRADYTOOPS:The Nashville, Tenn.- Featuring hay rides, pony rides, kids' 11 a.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. Taylor Ranch, 22465 McArdle Road, based singer-songwriter performs, corral, petting zoo and live music; Armour Drive; 541-389-7047 or Bend; 541-306-6209 or www. with Kasen andCo.and Chadthe proceeds benefit the Opportunity www.bendroots.net. experiencethehighlife.com. Baptist; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; A.R. Foundation; $30 per vehicle; 9 a.m.-3 FAN FEST2013: Featuring barbecue, Bowman Memorial Museum, 246 N. p.m.; DD Ranch,3836 N.E.Smith LOCAVORE KICKSTARTERFINALE drinks and live music; proceeds Main St., Prineville; 408-638-9348 or Rock Way,Terrebonne; 541-548PARTY: A finale rally for Locavore's benefit the Family Access Network; 1432 or www.ddranch.net. Kickstarter program to help farmers www.bradytoops.com. $35, free for children13 and younger access more resources to grow GUEST CHEFSERIES WITH ROBERT FALL RVSHOWAND SALE: See new with adult; noon-5 p.m.; Volcanic their operations; free admission; CURRY: A dinner and demonstration floor plans and technology advances Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, 5-9 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop with the guest chef from Auberge du for 2014 models; free; 9 a.m.-6 Bend; 541-693-5675 or www. & Ale Cafe,1740 N.W. PenceLane, Soleil in Rutherford, Calif; $120 for p.m.; DeschutesCounty Fair8 Expo familyaccessnetwork.org. Suite 1, Bend; 541-420-8603 or both events; 6:30 p.m. for dinner; Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, SISTERSFRESHHOPFESTIVAL: centraloregonlocavore.com. demonstration and reception on the Redmond; 541-548-2711. The annual festival featuring the afternoon of Sept. 28; Pronghorn BEND ROOTS REVIVAL: A festival NATIONAL PUBLICLANDSDAY: freshhop brewsfrom170regon Resort, 65600 Pronghorn Club that celebrates and showcases Featuring interpretive talks and breweries, live music, beer tasting Drive, Bend; 541-693-5300 the musical, artistic and cultural hikes, caving in Lava River Cave, and more; free admission, $5 pint or www.pronghornclub.com/ character of our community; free; photography workshop, trail glass, $1 per 4 oz. taste; noon-8 guestchefseries.html. 5:30 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 restoration projects and more; free, p.m.; Village GreenPark, 335 S. S.E. Armour Drive; 541-389-7047 or GIRLS NIGHTOUT: Apampering all recreation pass fees arewaived; Elm St.; 541-549-0251 or www. www.bendroots.net. evening for women with salon 9 a.m.-4 p.m., call for detailed sisterscountry.com.

Labor

BRIEFING

each otherand common issues," said Bruce Morris, Continued from B1 event organizer. Various org a n izations Morris said he anticipates plan to submit 30 resolutions about 150 people to particiat the convention seeking pate in the rally. the Oregon AFL-CIO supThe theme of this year's port. The resolutions cover c onvention i s "The New everythingfrom increasing Face of Labor," and will aim the federal minimum wage to update the outdated imto making high-quality pre- age many in the public have school programs available of labor unions. "There are a lot of stereoto all families. "That's a huge number of types about labor u nions resolutions," Guiney said. — a lot of people have this "We haven'thad that many 1950s view of them as a

Continuedfrom Bf

Truck crashes, spills fuel in Warm Springs

rolled on to its side and slid approximately 400 yards into a stand of trees on the edge of the highway.

One laneofU.S.Highway 97 through the Warm Springs lndian

Several thousandgallons of fuel were spilled, triggering the com-

Reservation was still closed asof Wednesday night, a dayafter the crash of a fuel truck. Shortly after 9 p.m. Tuesday, a truck driven by Kyle Tabor of Bend strucka bull elk on the north end of the reservation. Tabor's truck

piete closure of the highway for multiple hours. A hazardous materials team working with the Oregon

Department of Transportation and Warm Springs Fire Department is coordinating cleanup efforts. — From staff reports

PUBLIC OFFICIALS For The Bulletin'sfull list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit v((M(M(bendbulletin.com/officials.

CONGRESS lj.S.Senate • Sett. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http:I/merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 W eb: http:I/wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142

U.S. House of Representatives • Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone:202-225-6730 W eb: http:I/walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

LEGISLATURE Senate • Sett. Ted Ferrioli, R-District 30 (includesJefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sett. Tim Knopp, R-Dlstrlct 27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whltsett, R-District28 (includes Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett

House • Rep. Jason Conger, R-Dlstrlct 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. John Huffman, R-Dlstrlct 59

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

AL E N D A R

(portion of Jefferson)

900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane, R-District55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whlsnant, R-Dlstrlct53 (portion of DeschutesCounty) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

in years."

group of good old boys,"

The convention will also host a solidarity rally and march Saturday night. The rally will feature convention delegates, leaders of local labor organizations and community members marching for issues such as marriage equality, worker's rights and immigration reform. "It's to show that all of

these groups are marching

Guiney said. "But that's not what the labor movement is these days." Members of the community are welcome to attend convention speeches and the rally. The rally will take place in front of the Riverhouse Convention Center at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. Visit www.faceoflabor.org for more details.

together and that we're are s tanding in s o lidarity f o r

— Reporter:541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com.

NEWS OF RECORD

The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhensuch a request is received Any new information, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at3:04 a.m. Sept. 21, in the 2700 block of Northeast Hope Drive. DUII — Steven Harold Owen, 56, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:57 p.m. Sept. 21, in the area of Northeast Fifth Street and Northeast Hawthorne Avenue. DUII — Caleb Grant Krause, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:22 p.m. Sept. 22, in the area ofNorthwest Bond

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

Marine accused

of killing prostitute

has hearing By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher The Associated Press

KANEOHE BAY, H awaii — A Marine accused of killing an Oregon prostitute visiting Hawaii met her outside a Waikiki bar and then took her to his hotel room, a Honolulu police detective testified at a military hearing Wednesday. Dru A k agi s ai d s u rveillance footage captured outside the bar May 16 showed Master Sgt. Nathaniel Cosby and Ivanice Harris walking away together. Footage from a Waikiki hotel showed them kissing in an elevator. That was the last time Harris was seen in surveillance

footage, Akagi said. Several hours later, footage shows Cosby alone in the el-

evator, dragging a large duffel bag and loading it into the back of a sport utility vehicle. T he hearing a t Ma r i n e Corps Base Hawaii will determine whether Cosby will be court-martialed for m u rder, patronizing a prostitute and other charges.The Article 32 hearing is the military's equivalent of a preliminary hearing in civilian court. Harris was v isiting fr om Las Vegas to celebrate her 29th birthday. She was with her boyfriend, who was also her pimp, and two other women, Akagi said. Akagi testified Harris' disappearance started out as a m issing person case,after one of the women who traveled to Hawaii with her and the pimp reported her missing. She was found on May 20. A boy and his family called police to report they found a body in a remote area near Yokohama Beach Park, about 40 miles west of Waikiki. Police used fingerprints to identify the body as Harris. The H o n olulu me d i cal examiner's office ha s s aid s he died from an i njury t o the neck. The office ruled her death a homicide. Cosby was arrested at Honolulu International Airport in June after returning from a mission in China, Akagi said. Cosby was on a mission with the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command, which searches forand recovers remains of American military members in past conflicts. Cosby told detectives he met Harris in Waikiki but couldn't recall what happened, Akagi said, and that she was gone when he woke up. "He couldn't recall where he went that morning" after waking up, Akagi said. "His explanation to us was he went to breakfast." Cellphone r ecords s h ow that Cosby's phone pinged on a tower in Waianae, about four miles from where the body was found, he said. The prosecution's theory is that Cosby drove almost to the western-most point of the island to scout a location to dump the body, said Maj. Doug Hatch, t r ial c o unsel. Cosby then returned to Pearl Harbor for work and then later dumped the body at about midnight, then returned to the hotel, he said. Cosby showed up about 45 minutes late for work on May 16 and had a fresh gash above an eye, fellow Marines who saw him that morning testified. "He seemed kind of out of it or distracted," said Sgt. 1st Class Jonathan Cherwa. Cosby, 39, is being held at a military detention facility in Pearl Harbor. Honolulu police began the investigation into Harris' disappearance and death, but the Naval Criminal Investigative Service took over the case. Col. Doug Gardner, who is presiding over the hearing, will m ak e a r e c ommendation about w h ether Cosby should be court-martialed, or whether any charges should be dropped or added.

AROUND THE STATE

riticsmo iizea ainst

GetaWay driVer —A getaway driver in a murder and two armed robberies is avoiding prison becauseprosecutors in Eugenesay she helped put several dangerous people behind bars. Misty DawnLad-

s ecia session By Jonathan J. Cooper

defeated bill made it onto the

The Associated Press

agenda.

SALEM — Critics are mobilizing against a package of bills aimed at cutting Oregon public-employeepensions, revising the tax code and limiting local regulation of genetically modified crops. The deal, hashed out by Gov. John Kitzhaber and legislative leaders, comes before lawmakers in a special legislative session on Monday. Supporters, including business groups and education advocates, say it would lower costs for state and local governments and free up more money for schools. Environmental gr o u p s, unions and others who oppose the plan contend lawm akers are looking in t h e wrong place for ways to improve schools. To make the package more appealing t o R e p ublicans and moderate Democrats, legislative leaders agreed to include a measure that would prohibit local governments from regulating seeds and seed products. The measure is aimed at blocking efforts to create new restrictions on genetically modified crops, which farmers and agricultural companies say would create a patchwork of laws t hat would b e d i f ficult t o comply with. Some farmers and environmentalists said they were stunned to learn the once-

O rganic f a rmers w o r r y that pollen from genetically modified plants will pollinate their crops. They say they're seeking l o cal r e g ulations because state agriculture officials have not created statewide regulations on genetically modified organisms. "It's a blunt instrument," said Ivan Maluski, director of Friends of Family Farmers. "It was put forward by groups closely aligned with out-ofstate agrichemical interests, and it hasn't been vetted." Maluski's organization has teamed with environmental

groups and organic food proponents in urging their supporters to speak against the measure. The efforts to cut annual cost-of-living increases are

being targeted by public-employee unions. "These changes attack the lowest wage retirees — the janitors, the clerical workers and other low-wage workers and seniors — and we feel like the proposals remain illegal," said Arthur Towers, political director for the Service Employees International Union Local 503, which represents thousands of state employees. Even the tax plan, which was supposed to a ppease Democratic law ma k e rs weary of cutting benefits for pensioners, has come under fire because it includes a tax

ner, 36, was sentenced Monday to five years in probation. Deputy District Attorney Erik Hasselman says Ladner convinced authorities

that she has turned her life around andhas agood chance of becoming a law-abiding citizen. He says Ladner will remain under supervision for five years. If she violates any of the many conditions placed

break for certain businesses. Some liberal g r oups f ear the tax break — worth $38 million in the first two-year budget — will balloon in future years and erase revenue gainsfrom increases on other taxpayers. Any teachers hired with the additional revenue would have to be laid off later, Towers said. "We only represent a few hundred school employees a round the state, but o u r members' kids and grandkids go to public school," Towers said. "We need teachers, not temps." The package does have the support of cities, counties and school groups, including Stand for Children and the Oregon School Boards Association. Eleven influential business and agriculture groups also wrote a l etter Wednesday urging lawmakers to support it. "We would have preferred that the plan refrain from increasing taxes on any segment of a business community that is just now regaining its footing after a long and deep recession, but we recognize that this is a package of bills that, on the whole, is good for Oregon, and it will help us continue to build economic growth," the organizations wrote. The public will be able to weigh in during hearings at the Capitol today and Friday.

on her, she will face immediate imposition of the full sentence for the crimes of almost 20 years. Hlddell IllllS —It turns out the $100 bills a handful of Salem shoppers reported finding in such unlikely places as acarton of eggs were placed by a Portland country music radio station as part of a contest.

On Tuesday, reports said seven of the bills had beenreported found at a Fred Meyer store and one at a Walmart store. On Wednesday, the music director for 98.7 The Bull confirmed that the station had been

planting bills. According to rules on thestation's website, the bills make the finders eligible to participate in a contest for a $1,000 prize. The station said the bills are planted without the knowledge of store

owners. Celumdia Chinaak —The state Department of Fish andWildlife says chinook salmon caught on the lower Columbia River no longer have to be fin-clipped to be retained. Theagency says fishery managers decided to letanglers keep both marked and unmarked chinook throughout a 58-mile stretch of the Columbia between Buoy10 and Warrior Rock. The restriction was to expire on Sept. 30, but has been

lifted early based onnewocean harvest information and because wild chinook destined for lower Columbia tributaries have likely moved out of the main stem. Unclipped coho salmon and steelhead still can't be kept.

Sailor killed —A sailor from Aurora was oneof two people killed in the crash of a Navy helicopter Sunday in the Red Sea. The Defense

Department says 32-year-old Chief Warrant Officer Jonathan Gibson of Aurora and 35-year-old Lt. Cmdr. Landon Jones of Lompoc, Calif., died when their Knighthawk copter went down. They were assigned

to Helicopter SeaCombat Squadron Six out of Naval Air Station North Island, San Diego. The copter was operating with the destroyer William P. Lawrence. The Navy says the crash was not the result of

hostile action. InSuranCe reStitutiOn —State regulators say a former McMinnville insurance agent hasbeenordered to reimburse seven clients for $46,000 in premiums he kept instead of forwarding to insurers. The

state Department of Consumerand Business Services said Wednesday its lnsurance Division has revokedthe expired agent license and active insurance consultant license of Raymond Madison. The department said the victims included a restaurant, a fire equipment

store, and agutter and siding business. — From wire reports

I

Weekly Arts & Entertainment

Data showCapitol has less security thanmany The Associated Press SALEM — National surveys bear out the notion that Oregon's Capitol is open and accessible. Oregon is one of 18 states that don't require ID badges for staffers or visitors at the building. It's one of 16 without security at entrances, and one of 11 that allow citizens w ith firearms to walk t h e building's halls, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. A de m onstration l a s t week raised questions about security. Two protesters broke away from a guided tour, secured ropes at the top of the Capitol dome, and rappelled down to display a l a rge banner protesting plans to sell state forest acreage in the Coast

subtle presence. Some say security hasn't been a major concern because there have been few incidents. States with the most security tend to be more populous or to have gone through a threat,said researcher Morgan Cullen of the state legislatures group. In 2007, Colorado police killed an armed man inside that state CapitoL At the time, the building had no security checkpoints. Today the buildingis amongthe nation's most tightly patrolled capitols. "Accessibility is a luxury you don't f ully a ppreciate until it's gone," said Cullen, a Colorado resident. Oregon's Capitol has seen unsettling incidents. In 2005, a suicidal man wielding a Range. 10-inch knife strode into the "Our state Capitol is as ac- Senate chamber. A tempocessible as any in the country. rary shutdown followed and It's the people's building," said the man surrenderedafteran Senate President Peter Court- hour. ney, a Salem Democrat. "The Discussions were held at thought we would limit that the time about increased seor shut it down worries me." curity, but few changes took Visitors who move through place. the building's revolving doors Courtney h opes m i n or find a lobby without metal changes in the way tours are detectors, X-ray machines or conducted will suffice for the posted security guards. moment, but he's not optimisThey can circle the block tic for the long run. "If you look at what's hapoutside without seeing per imeter w a ll s o r tr a f f i c pening around the w orld, blocks known as bollards. you'd say in 20 years we'll Many credit the open feel have ratcheted up security," of the Capitol to the Oregon Courtney said. "That is just State Police, who maintain a what's happening."

Fridays InTheBulletn

M A GA Z I N E

-

Friday, September 27 — Sunday, September 29

• 'e

The party starts the 27th with Happy Hour from 5-Spm and will roll on throughout the weekend with 20% off all regular priced merchandise,fun door prizes and a free raffle from brands you love like Keen, Osprey, Hydro Flask, Ibex and more!

Snow beginning early at Crater Lake The Associated Press KLAMATH FALLS — Fall has barely arrived in Oregon, and already it's snowing bigtime at Crater Lake. M arsha McC a be , a spokeswoman for the only national park in Oregon said there was an unusually early snowfall Tuesday night, amounting to about 8 inches. It's expected to keep snowingthrough Wednesday, adding an inch to three inches. McCabe says September

snowfall at Crater Lake is rare — usually a dusting of an inch or two. But when things get going in the winter, the snowfall at Crater Lake is prodigious: averaging more than 5 00 inches a year. McCabe says the North E ntrance to the park a nd West Rim Drive are temporarily closed but should be reopened by the weekend as the forecast calls for nice weather.

Come celebrate OutsidelN the FootZone way! In the original FootZone location at 845 NW Wall Street.

•g

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

Om eXI O ' ran ai' ain' IS I'OLI in

AN INDEPENDENT NEwsPAPEB

BETsY McCooc

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Fditur in-Clnrf Editor of Edttorials

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obody likes all the pieces in the evolving "grand bargain" to send more money to Oregon schools. It can pass only if a variety of coalitions can be

NSA ~~Q

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Gelo.

formed around specific bills, or if enough lawmakers will vote for things they don't like in order to get things they do like. The Legislature starts hearings the proposed legislation. todayonaPackagethatincludes reT h~~~s alsp the w p ab put tirement sYstem cuts and changes what happens ff one biII passes and new taxes, a small-business tax cut, anpther fails The gpvernpr has an exPansion of the earned income he will veto bills that pass unless tax credit, limits on local the whole package is governmentalregulation approved. of geneticaiiy modi"ed it'S aiso CritiCai Tougher to solve is foods, and dedicated retABt Iegl SIBtOIS the wild card of court cipients for the new revrulings. Opp o nents enue.Aspecialsessionis fi nd a Way to have already sued to scheduledforMondayto pr o teot fpom try to block smaller reconsiderpassingthefive tIIe Ossit iiit tirement system cuts bills that would implep y t clt tclx approved by the Legisment the changes. lature earlier this year. It's the latest stag'" e of in CreaSeS take If the Leg slature ap effeCt and proves a package ofbills quest for an agreement PERS Iefotms but courts reject one to reform the Public Empart, thebargain doesn't ployees Retirement Syswork. tem and provide more We are big supportmoney for education. The 20I3 Legislature failed to agree ers of the effort to reform PERS and on a grand bargain, and the gover- hike education funding, but the innor has spent months traveling the creasing complexity of the bargain state and taiking to legislators. The is troubling. It isn't clear that the package grew more and more com- gains for education are sufficient to plicated as additional provisions j ustify the complex new web of prowere added in the search for legisla- visions, especially the tax increases. It's also critical that legislators There's broad agreement that f i n d a way to protect from the posschools need more money, but less sibility that tax increases take effect agreement on other provisions in a n d PERSreformsdon't.

Don't surrender your vote by not mailing in a ballot he worst thing about the Nov. 5 election could be its turnout. There's no presidential race at the top of the ticket. There are no congressional elections.There are no city council races, no school boards, no judges. Local ballots will have local tax measures. There's a lodging tax increase in Bend and in Deschutes County. Some people in Jefferson and Deschutes will be voting on alevy for Crooked River Ranch. Folks in the Alfalfa area will be voting on a fire district. There's a jail levy in Jefferson, and in Culver there's a $8 million school bond. Of course, people care about taxes. But if you look at the history of voter turnout for elections similar to this one at the Secretary of State's website, turnout drops by as much as 20 percent-

T

age points in such elections. Locally, that could mean many fewer voters decide the taxes for everyone else. That would be a pitiful example to children of why being able to vote matters so dearly. It's not OK not to vote. It's not OK to be too busy to peer into the voters pamphlet and figure out what the issues are. The people who research such things say that one of the most powerfulpersuaders to get people to vote can be peer pressure. So put the pressure on when you hear one of the custodians of excuses looking to surrender a vote without a fight. If you're not registered, you have until Oct. 15 to change that. Most people can do it online at oregonvotes.org. It only takes a few minutes. Ballots go out on Oct. 18.

M Nickel's Worth Try underground parking

ingly regulated; wilderness permits, parking permits, boating permits and so on. The "rescuers" were lucky Haynes is a nice guy. Others, feeling the pressurefrom people taking on the role of "helpers" might not be so accommodating. The whole situation smacks of ageism. What right do other people have to question one's physical and mental capabilities after being assured that the person is OK and knows what he or sheisdoing? Just because someone is walking slowly doesn't mean he orshe is in trouble and needs to be "saved." It's insulting to anyone, older or not. Once I say I'm fine, I shouldbe left alone to continue my journey. Oh well, I found another use for hiking

The location of OSU-Cascades on property that presently contains an abandoned pumice mine pit offers a unique opportunity in designing the campus. Like it or not, significant space will be needed for vehicle parking. Rather than filling the entire pit to surface level, part of the pit should be left unfilled and used as an underground parking garage. This will create a more pleasant campus, with most vehicles underground and separated from the people. It also allows a larger amount of the property free to be developed in the future as the university grows. The 56 acres designated for the campus is not huge. Care should be taken so that the space is used in the best mannerpossible.

Sandy Hook school or the Navy yard shooting, the next time a mentally deranged person starts randomly shooting their customers, there won't be anyone there to stop the threat. Bill Logan Bend

Don't reduce food stamp funding

I encourage Congress not to reduce the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP or food stamps). Our nation, out of its great bounty, should be able to feed its people. It seems strange that Congress allows corporations such as Apple to pay little or no taxes on billions of dollars of profit and cannot find poles: to keep self-righteous do-good- funding to feed our senior citizens ers away. and families. Don Minney The communityhere in Bend, and Laurence Spiegel Bend my church, all work hard to further Lake Oswego reduce hunger needs by donating, No-guns policy will have stocking and working at our local 'Rescue'smacksofageism unintended consequences food bank. The food needs are real with great effort made to work with nGod save us from people who " Starbucks wants guns out o f and assist our neighbors. The promean well." — Vikram Seth shops." That article appeared on posed congressional cuts to SNAP The above quote sums up my feel- page A4 of a recent Bulletin. That's will shift the burden to the food ings after reading the article about fine. Every business has the right to bank, making it very difficult. People Robert Haynes, th e 8 2 -year-old their "no guns" policy, but as a duly li- have been through so much in the South Sister climber who was "res- censed hand gun permit holder, I will past five years of the economic colcued" while descending the moun- not patronize Starbucks or any other lapse and steady good jobs are still tain. Despite his repeated assertions business that displays a "no guns" hard to find. that he was fine and would make it sign on the door. I am a law-abiding The GOP proposal cutting food to dovm, he was bullied into accepting citizen and use my weapon only for poor families and seniors sounds like a helicopter rescue. the defense of my family and myself. something King George III would When does interference into an- Bad guys don't care about nno guns" have done in the 18th century. otherperson'slife become badgering signs. There are unintended conseHenry Burwell or bullying? Our lives are increas- quences of a nno guns" policy. Like Bend

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FDA should fully research e-cigarettes before regulation By Michael Smerconish The Philadelphia lnquirer

ext month, the Food and Drug Administration is expected to issueproposed regulations for e-cigarettes. Having been exposed to them during the summer, I'm hoping the rules are not overly restrictive. My sister-in-law, with whom we traveled to Italy in June, is a pack-aday smoker. In Perugia, she discovered a small vendor selling e-cigarettes. Her purchase was my introduction to e-cigs, or personal vaporizers, as they are knovm, or electronic nicotine delivery systems. What I saw was a cartridge with a reservoirand a mouthpiece. A battery heats a liquid solution (which often includes nicotine), and an atomizer facilitates vaporizing. They look like fancy cigarettes, some with LED lights at the tip that resemble a conventional light. However, much to the relief of those in the company ofsomeone "vaping,n ecigs don't produce smoke. They emit a mist that quickly disappears.

My sister-in-law argues that e-cigs are safer than cigarettes,can help you cut down or eliminate the habit, and don't produce secondhand smoke. Detractors say that they attract new

(potentially young) smokers and that the ones with nicotine still have an addictive quality. E-cigs are still so new that my spell-check default thinks I am typing e-digs. But the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that sales in 2011 doubled from 2010. (It's troublesome that teen usage has spiked.) And Big Tobacco sees the future. Altria, parent of Philip Morris USA and manufacturer of Marlboros, has premiered the MarkTen e-cig. R.J. Reynolds, maker of Camels, has the Vuse e-cig. And Lorillard (think Newports) owns blu eCigs. Into this debate will soon step the Food and Drug Administration, which could decide whether to ban e-cigs that are flavored, permit advertising, require warning labels, impose age restrictions, and demand premarket approval.

Azim Chowdhury, a Washington attorney who specializes in food and drug law, agrees that e-cigs, which don't burn tobacco, are less harmful than conventional cigarettes. "One thing the FDA should address is the need for good manufacturing practices and quality-control standards for the ingredients used in e-liquid," he told me last week. "These are necessary to ensure those ingredients are free of trace impurities, which could pose health hazards." Chowdhury said e-cigs were developed in 2003 by a Chinese company and introduced in the United States three or four years later. In 2009, with the enactment of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, the FDA was given the authority to regulate tobacco. The FDA could also "deem" other tobacco-based products to be within its jurisdiction, as long as there is a rule-making process. Some e-cigs qualify because the nicotine used in ae-liquidn is derived from tobacco. E-cigs without nicotine, or

those with nicotine from nontobacco sources, aren't covered under the FDA's tobacco authority. Research as tosafety of e-cigs is thin, according to A n drew Strasser, the director of the Biobehavioral Smoking Laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine. "It's a newer product and the definitive clinical trials have not been conducted andthere'sbeen some smaller-scalestudies that have been done, but the results are kind of all over the place," he said. "There are some reports that there's a reduction in cigarette smoking when people adopt ecigarettes. And there's some support that some people will quit smoking, but at the same time there are some studies that show that people quit even with a very low-nicotine or no-nicotine cartridge, so a lot more has to be done." Strasser acknowledges the anecdotal evidence from those like my sister-in-law, who say they've been able

to abstain from conventional cigarettes after trying e-cigs. Still, he said, "the real clinical trials have not been conducted yet." In the meantime, he concedes that the presumption is that e-cigs are not as harmful as conventional cigarettes. "However, I think the sort of level of analysis you need tp think about is, How do people use them? So if people are mixing use between e-cigarettes and commercial cigarettes ... (and) still smoking five to 10 cigarettes a day when they get the opportunity, they are still ingesting a lot of harmful toxins into their body. " Of course he's right. It would be best if everyone just quit. For years, my sister-in-law has tried. However, she is down to half a pack per day, filling the void with e-cigs, which are seemingly less harmful, don't stink, and don't imperil others. It is hoped the FDA will not impede what seems to be helping. — Michael Smerconish writes for The Philadelphia Inquirer. Readers may contact him via Mtww.smerconish.com.


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

Park

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Elden Dale Andrus, of Bend Feb. 12, 1927 - Sept. 23, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471 Services: No service is being planned at this time. Contributions may be made to:

CRAFT, 65480 78th St., Bend, OR 97701.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but

specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries

are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.Theymay be submitted by phone,

mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please

include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of

these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

DEATHS

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon

ELSEWHERE

for next-day publication

Deaths of note from around theworld: Harl Haas, 80: Retired Multnomah County circuit judge and former district attorney; He created the nation's first rape victim assistance program in a prosecutor's office and the state's first crime victim assistance program. Died Saturday in Portland. Christopher Koch, 81: who was widely regarded as one of Australia's finest novelists and whose best-known book, "The Year of Living Dangerously," became even better known as a film. Died Monday in Hobart, Australia.

Monday through Friday and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be

received by 5p.m. Monday through Thursday for

publication on thesecond day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for

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Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

— From wire reports

FEATURED OBITUARY

Vincenzoniwasknown as a spaghetti western scribe, to hischagrin By John Schwartz

Few Dollars More," which was breaking box-office records. Luciano Vincenzoni, an ur- They not only bought the overbane Italian screenwriter who seas rights but also wanted to worked with Billy Wilder, Dino know about the next film in the De Laurentiis and other giants series. of film but to his dismay was With the "tacit agreement" best known for writing two of his Italian partners, Vincenspaghetti westerns starring a zoni told the author, "I began young Clint Eastwood, died to invent things," spinning out Sunday in Rome. He was 87. the idea for a movie on the fly, The cause w a s c a n cer, describing what would become "The Good, the Bad and the said Federico Vincenzoni, a Ugiy." grandson. Vincenzoni contributed to One U.S. executive asked about 70 films, chiefly as a what it would cost to make, screenwriter or script doctor. and Vincenzoni responded, "I His humorous touch could be million dollars." "He told me, 'It's a deal,'" found in films like "Seduced and Abandoned," which he Vincenzoni recalled. "The Good, the Bad and the made with Pietro Germi in 1964, and "The Best of En- Ugly,"which starred Eastwood, emies," which De Laurentiis, Lee Van Cleef and a magnifithe producer,released in the cently bumbling Eli Wallach, United States in 1962. reached the United States in But to the general public Vin- late 1967. cenzoni was most associated The British film critic Raywith "For a Few Dollars More" mond Durgnat called the triland "The Good, the Bad and ogy "the code of the West as it the Ugly," two hugely success- might have been interpreted by ful Italian-made westerns di- Machiavelli." rectedby Sergio Leone that are T he films, fa r f r o m b e now recognized as classics. ing c h ea p e n t ertainment, "I have written movies that "changed the way we look at won prizes at Cannes and Ven- the West," said Jeffrey Richice," he told Sir Christopher ardson, the curator for WestFrayling, a cultural historian ern history, popular culture and Leone biographer. "These and firearms at the Autry Nawere screenplays for which we tional Center in Los Angeles. suffered on paper for months. Between the vision of Leone, Do you know how long it took the acting of Eastwood, the me to write 'For a Few Dollars music of Ennio Morricone and More'? Nine days." the writing o f V i n cenzoni, The spaghetti western craze Richardson said, "the packbegan with Leone's film "A age that these four contribuFistful of Dollars," which gave tors were able to put together viewers a morally murky land- r adically t r a n sformed t h e scape and a t aciturn "Man genre" and in the 1960s "signiWith N o N a me" c h aracter fied where America was at the played by Eastwood. Released time." i n Italy in 1964 and in t h e Some took a less exalted United States in early 1967, the view. In The New York Times, movie revitalized the western the critic Renata Adler called genre. the third film "The Burn, the "He was more appreciated in Gouge and the Mangle," writthe United States than in Italy," ing that it "must be the most his grandson said, adding that expensive, pious and repellent Vincenzoni "had been in love movie in the history of its pecuwith America" and that he had liar genre." lived on and off in the United L uciano V i ncenzoni w a s States for 20 years. b orn i n T r e viso, Italy, o n V incenzoni wr o t e the March 7, 1926. Besides his screenplay with Leone for the grandson, he is survived by a follow-up, "For a Few Dollars son, a daughter and two other More," imbuing it with humor grandchildren. and irony that the first film His first film, "They Stole a lacked. Eastwood even smiled. Tram," appeared in 1954; other Vincenzoni was also a canny films, some decidedly lowbrow, businessman. In his book "Ser- included "Duck, You Sucker" gio Leone: Something to Do (1971), also directed by Leone; With Death," Frayling relates "Orca" (1977); "Raw D eal," an encounter between Vincen- with Arnold Schwarzenegger zoni and Hollywood execu- (1986); and "Malena" (2000), tives from United Artists who for which he wrote the original had come to Italy to see "For a story. New York Times News Service

Continued from B1

The rugged park would c ontrast t h e gr o o m ed lawns of state parks elsewhere a r ound O r e gon, said Chip Faver, BLM field manger in Prineville. "This is going to be a much more primitive park e xperience a n d mu c h more representative of the region," he said. O regon S t at e P a r k s turned i n i t s l e ase application to the BLM last winter and the agreement could be up for public review next year. Finalizing the deal would likely take another year a fter t h at, said Anna S m ith, p r oject lead for the BLM. She said State Parks wouldn't pay to lease the land, but it would assume the costs of building and maintaining trails on it. State Parks and the BLM agree toallow public access from the park onto the nearby BLM land. Oregon State Parks held an opening ceremony for the park Wednesday and the park opens to the public Saturday. C ottonwood Can y o n State Park features an e ight-mile stretch of t h e river flanked by large, rocky cliffs, Havel said. "It's typical for the John Day area," he said, "but it is quite unique compared to what we have in the rest of the park system." State Parks has more than 250 p arks a r ound Oregon. Prominent state parks in Central Oregon include Pilot Butte State Park in Bend, Smith Rock State Park n ea r T e r rebonne and La Pine State Park along the Deschutes River near La Pine. Cottonwood Canyon is a 2-hour, 45-minute drive from Bend. The park includes what has been J.S. Burres State Park, a takeout for boaters on the John Day River since 1964. The new park is named

Unlike the groomed lawns of state parks in the Willamette Valley, Cottonwood Canyon State Park along the John Day River is defined by

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rugged terr

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rain. The new state park is the state's second largest. Photo courtesy of Oregon State Parks

after the Cottonwood Canyon along the river and lies between Wasco in Sherman County and Condon in Gilliam County. The river represents the line between the two counties. The new park will be a good thing for Sherman County, said C ounty Judge Gary Thompson. "It could bring quite a few visitors," he said. Gilliam County Judge Steve Shaffer shares Thompson's e xcitement about th e p a rk and visitors it may draw. "We do feel we are going to reap some economic benefits to it," he said. The park offers beautiful views of the John Day River, which Shaffer said visitors can discover by foot or on a mountain bike. "You'll be able to be a long

The family decided it wanted to sell the ranch, which lies on both sides of the John Day River, about five years ago, Havel said. State Parks was interested in making the purchase but didn't have the

30 years, and has "a good perspective of Bend and the Continued from B1 importance of Mirror Pond." Daniel Wadosky owned M att S c hiffman o w n s a Bend accounting and tax Venable Auction House LLC firm from 1984 to 2003. Re- in downtown Bend, just a cently, Wadosky worked as couple of blocks from Mira volunteer on river habitat ror Pond. Schiffman wrote restoration projects; he wrote the pond is a centerpiece of in a statement that this expe- culture for the city, and "it is rience provided him with a the touchpoint for so many valuable perspective on Mir- Central Oregon residents to ror Pond. international visitors." Mike Olin wrote that he Jan Wick owns Avion Wahas lived in Bend for 39 ter Co. and in a letter to the years, and was involved in a ad hoc committee wrote that previous Mirror Pond com- he served "over many years mittee and in the Old Bend on a number of planning and Neighborhood Association. user groups with respect to J. Ned Dempsey is a civil the management of the flows engineer and the owner and in the Deschutes River ..." president of Century West Wick wrote that he has exEngineering Corp., which perience working with entiworks on projects such as tiessuch as the Oregon Wadesigning and operating wa- ter Resources Department, ter quality and flow monitor- Trout Unlimited and the Desing stations. Dempsey pre- chutes River Conservancy. viously worked for the U.S. Foster Fell wrote that his Geological Survey, studying bachelor's degree in soil scisediment buildup and work- ence and his experience asing on other stream projects, sessing stream habitat proaccordingto hisresume. vide him with valuable exRick Storm wrote in a let- pertise for the committee. ter to th e committee that Ed Boero owns Cascade he has experience in large Advisory Group Inc., an inconstruction projects for the vestment firm, and wrote in U.S. Army Corps of Engi- a letterto the park distri ct neers, and is now retired and that the community needs wants to contribute to the to decide soon how to mancommunity. age Mirror Pond because the Michael Minckler wrote cost will only increase in the that he has lived on North- future. "Although I currently west Federal Street, near the do not have a strong opinion Deschutes River, for nearly on the best course of action, I

Jeep

I R AM

Park will cost $9 per night until Tuesday, when off-

season prices start. From

asking price, nearly $8 mil-

lion, available to do so. The Western Rivers Conservancy, a Portland-based nonprofit conservation group, bought the land and then sold it to the state in four segments. Havel said the group sold the land to the state for as much as it paid the family for it. Danny Palmerlee, spokesman for the Western Rivers Conservancy, did not return voicemails left this week at the group's office in Portland. Construction a t C o t t onwood Canyon State Park began last year. The first phase ways from any (other) single of the park is now complete individual if you so choose to and the park will be open this do so," he said. weekend to its first visitors. "It will really cater to peoUsing funds from lottery ticket sales, Havel said State ple who like to fish, hike or Parks purchased the former bicycle," Havel said. ranchland for $ 7.9 m i l lion So far park amenitiesare and then spent $5.3 million focused near where Oregon to transform it i nto a state H ighway 206, w hich l i n k s park. But the state agency Wasco and Condon, crosses didn't buy directly from the the John Day River. There is Murtha family, which sold a 21-site car campground, a the ranch. Instead it took the group tent camp for up to 25 help of a third party to secure people and a camp for hikers the land. and cyclists with seven sites.

Mirror Pond

If yougo Camping fees at Cottonwood CanyonState

fully realize that Mirror Pond and the Deschutes River are iconic symbols of our community," Boero wrote. Craig Coyner was mayor of Bend in 1984, the last time the community dredged sediment from M i rror P ond. Coyner wrote that he has historical knowledge of M i r ror P ond and experience writing legal contracts. Matt Shinderman is a member of the Mirror Pond Steering Committee, which has also reviewed options to manage the pond. Shinderman is also a board member of the civic group Bend 2030. Betsy Warriner, president of the Bend 2030 board ofdirectors,wrote that "as a member of the OSUCascades faculty, Matt specializes in environmental policy, sustainability, ecological assessment of urban landscapes, and ecological restoration." Mirror Pond Project Manager Jim Figurski said city and parks officials have not yet scheduled the next meeting of the Mirror Pond ad hoc committee. "We're really waiting for the resolution of some of those discussions with Pacific Power," Figurski said. "That's go-

then until May camping will

cost $5 per night. There is no day usefee. For more information about the park, visit http:I/bit.ly/16fxOZv.

The camps have running water and vault toilets. There is also the start of a trail system, which about a dozen m iles ready for h i k in g s o far. Future development will

include a campground for horseback riders and hike-in camping spots. Cottonwood Canyon will be open for hunting, as long as the animals are in season. The park has elk, deer and upland birds, particularly chukar. The next p h ase, w h i ch could be done in 2015, would include building a welcome center and cabins, at the new park, according to the State Parks lease application for public lands around Cottonwood Canyon. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarlintr@bendbulletin.com

ing to happen the first part of October." The next committee meeting might be as soon as midOctober, and Figurski said the agenda will include a discussion of applicants for openings on the committee. The goal is that after the Pacific Power meetings, officials will have the information necessary to make decisions about the future of Mirror Pond, Figurski sa>d.

"My personal hope as a

project manager is that we can keep this moving so that we don't lose the momentum that's been created with the project so far," Figurski said.

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Expires 9/30/13


B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.

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'

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•B4

iI

j SW W W

Today: Decreasing clouds and chilly

HIGH

Sunny to partly cloudy and milder

Tonight: Mostly clear with widespread h

LOW

31 I,

62/48

Umatilla

Hood

Seasideo 62/53 •oCannonPeach

River

6

McMinnville 65/43

Lincoln City 60/47

Maupin ee/4o

Government

67/43 • • oWasco 6 41

SandY

• 63/45

Arlingtan

Condon 60/39

Willowdale

Albany~

allt ' Yachats• ~ 61/48

Florence• 61/48 ~

64/34

Eugene •

j

56/23

53/20

Nysso,x

5 2/1 9

57/30

66/3

• Beach

51/28

Frenchglen 55/31

Rome

53/27

• 68 0

55/30

Paisley

Chiloquin

MedfOrd

63/49

Yesterday's state extremes

Jordan Valley ~x

52/26

l.ake rants Pass

0

60/33

Chr i stmas Vagey

5j iv e r

Port Orford

Juntwa ''5 X X X 6209 '5'5

• Burns

• port Rock 54/26

Chemult

65/di

sx Vale• .i • ixx x

— oHamptOn

La Pine 57/23

48/27

Roseburg • 63/47

Hermiston

55/24

• 66/40

• Klamath

• Brookings

• 31

Fields•

• Lakeview

Falls 54/27

66/47

Baker City

McDermitt

55/32

5i/26

51/28

4

Quebec 59/4

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• 101'

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Phoenix

81 /et • ' Attanta~

89/6

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New Orleans

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Houston E) 88/73 •

Chihuahua

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1/ 72

84/61

95/59

50/41

Miami 91/78

Monterrey

a Paz Anchorage

Mazatlan

88/73 •

• 8 3/76 x

Juneau 52/45

CONDITIONS

FRONTS

O 'ALA S K A

PLANET WATCH

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....9:04 a.m...... 7:33 p.m. Venus.....10:57 a.m...... 8:26 p.m. Mars.......2:58 a.m...... 5:15 p.m. Jupiter.....12:21 a.m...... 3 32 p.m. Satum......9:57 a.m...... 8;22 p.m. Uranus.....7:01 p.m...... 7:37 a.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 54/38 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.1 2" Record high........ 92 m 1952 Month to date.......... 0.20" Record low......... 18 in 1970 Average month todate... 0.34" Average high.............. 71 Year to date............ 3.78" Averagelow .............. 37 Average year to date..... 7.1 0"

Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.88 Record24 hours ...0.50in1948 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

WATER REPORT

sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central La Pine...............................Low Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as Redmond/Madras........Low Prineville..........................Low

a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme

Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 31,428...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 42,723..... 200,000 Crescent Lake...... . . . . . 57,586......91,700 Ochoco Reservoir.... . . . . 10,227 . . . . 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 85,513..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 216 for solar at n. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 818 L OW DIUM HIGH gg gg Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 89 Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 270 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 151 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,435 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res.. ... . . . . . . 2 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res.... . . . . . 172 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 12.1 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 270 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

IPOLLEN COUNT

OY, •

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

o www m (in the 48 contiguous states):

61 42

Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

HIGH LOW

62 47

Astoria ........ 61/47/0.29....62/48/pc.....62/51 lsh Baker City..... 53/31/trace.....57/29/c.....62/36/pc Brookings......58/48/0.21 ....66/47/pc.....69/50/pc Burns..........46/38/0.32.....53/26/c......60/35/s Eugene........62/48/0.18....66/41/pc.....68/43lpc Klamath Falls .. 47/35/0 25 ...54/27/pc ...61/37/pc Lakeview.......50/34/0.05....51/26/pc..... 58/35/s La Pine........51/34/0.02....57/23/pc.....63/27/pc Medford.......58/47/0.20.....66/40/s.....73/44/pc Newport.......59/45/0.37.....60/46/s.....62/48/pc North Bend.....61/48/0.56.....62/49/s.....64/51/pc Ontario........59/45/0.01 .....64/39/c......65/41/s Pendleton..... 63/44/trace....65/38/pc......67/47/s Portland .......62/50/0.19....67/48/pc.....65/51/pc Prineville....... 49/39/0.14....60/32/pc......66/36/s Redmond.......53/39/0.11 ....58/27/pc.....63/38/pc Roseburg.......59/48/0.24....65/41/pc.....71/47/pc Salem ....... 63/50/011 .67/43/pc ...68/46/pc Sisters.........58/35/0.00....60/28/pc......65/33/s The Dages......67/50/0.01 ....67/43/pc.....69/50/pc

%84/40 5 Q, X X X X

Crescento • Crescent Lake

63/47 •

HIGH LOW

72 45

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

55/2K x x '55'5'5 50ll4rlO 5 x x x v x x 64/39

• Brothers 57/29

with a chance of showers

Yesterday Thursday Friday Bend,westofHwy97.....Low Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,eastof Hwy.97......Low

K

pa ulina 61/28

58/27

56/31

Oa k ridge 59/36

• Jollll 56/36

Redfnnnd •

60/28

GrOVe

o Mit c hell 59/39

Sunriver Bend

66/4 i

X XX M z e i i i ..ii h h h h

• Prineville 60/32

Sisters'

Coos Bay

„„ ' Baker t1ty' „„

67/37

Camp Sherman

Chance of rain and snow in the mountains.

x

HIGH LOW

OREGON CITIES

EAST

44/26

Partly sunny

Mostly cloudy with a chance of light rain

62 39

SunsettodaY.... 6 55 P.m, Last New pi r st Full Sunrise tomorrow 6 59 a m Sunset tomorrow... 6:53 p.m. Moonrisetoday... 11:47 p.m. Moonsettoday .... 2:04 p.m. SePt. 26 Oct. 4 Oct.11 Oct. 18

Partly to mostly sunny and cool.

59/37

Granite • 5„

Warm s prings~

6/

Cottage

xo,y x E tergi(g C • Meachami~x 54/33 54/3i,xQ'xxxn x x x x x x x LaGrande i<i~i' 57/36 ntJnto~ 5 3 /33 x x '5 x

65/38

Ruggs

Be

HIGH LOW

Sunrise today...... 6:57 a.m. MOOn phaSeS

• Pendleton 5,52/3~,, > ' '.",', CENTRAL

70/45

65/36

Newport

™er miston 69/41 / W allowa '

61/41

CamP 47/36

Saiem Sa lem

D a g ee ~~ '

HjgsboroPortland x67/48

70/45

The Biggs

65/42 64/46

x

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

WEST Skies will become mostly sunny.

As t oria

Tdlamook•

Partly sunny and warmer

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:STATE

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Be

Cold

* *

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• +++Q

.++++ '

* * *

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***+*

4>

W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......93/63/000...92/65/s .. 88/69/s GrandIlapids....73/45/0 00... 75/48/s .. 77/50/s RapidCity.......81/54/000..68/42/pc. 55/39/sh Savannah.......80/70/0 58...81/64/t. 81/64/pc Akron..........74/45/0.00...73/49/s.. 74/51/s Green Bay.......70/41/0.00...73/49/s.. 75/55/s Reno.......... 58/48/trace..57/38/pc.. 66/42/s Seattle..........61/51/008..64/48/pc. 61/52/sh Albany..........70/41/000...69/47/s. 70/47/pc Greensboro......69/55/0.00 ..74/53/pc.. 73/52/s Richmond.......79/50/000..75/54/pc. 73/53/pc Sioux Falls.......78/49/000...82/65/s...77/53/t Albuquerque.....84/53/000 ..81/56/pc. 74/49/sh Harnsburg.......73/44/0.00 ..73/48/pc. 74/47/pc Rochester, NY....68/41/0.00...70/49/s .. 72/51/s Spokane........54/42/0.01..64/39/pc. 64/45/pc Anchorage......51/39/094..50/41/sh.51/41/sh Hartford,CT.....72/45/000...71/48/s.70/49/pcSacramento......74/49/0.00... 76/53/s .. 79/55/s Springfield, MO ..79/54/0.00... 82/62/s .. 82/63/s Atlanta.........67/65/OA4..76/59/pc.. 80/60/s Helena..........51/40/004.. 49/32/rs. 58/38/pcSt. Louis.........84/66/0.00... 83/63/s .. 85/63/s Tampa..........80/72/1.44... 88/74/t. 88/71/pc Atlantic City.....74/45/000 ..70/58/pc. 71/59/pc Honolulu........84/73/0 08...87/75/s .. 87/75/s Salt Lake City....70/52/008 ..53/40/sh. 51l39/pc Tucson..........96/67/000... 88/62/s .. 82/59/s Austin..........96/63/000...94/67/s.. 90/75/s Houston ........95/66/000...94/74/s. 92/77/pc San Antonio.....97/69/0.00...94/69/s .. 91/76/s Tulsa...........85/57/0.00...90/67/s .. 88/69/s Baltimore.......78/46/000 ..76/56/pc. 75/52/pc Huntsvile.......80/66/0.03..80/61/pc.. 83/59/s SanDiego.......71/66/000...70/62/s .. 74/63/s Washington, DC..78/54/000 ..76/58/pc. 76/54/pc Billings.........53/47/014..53/38lsh. 55/39/pc Indianapolis.....79/57/000...78/54/s.. 80/57/s SanFrancisco....67/56/0.00... 71/52/s.. 77/56/s Wichita.........84/51/0.00... 90/66/s .. 87/64/s Birmingham .. 85/67/000 ..82/63/pc. 83/59/s Jackson, MS.... 86/70/0.00. 87/66/s .. 90/66/s SanJose........66/56/000 .. 75/51/s 80/56/s Yakima.........68/43/000 67/41/pc. 68/45/pc Bismarck........78/52/000 ..70/47/pc. 60/43/sh Jacksonvile......82/73/003... 86/67/t. 80/66/pc SantaFe........77/43/000 ..75751lpc 69/41/pc Yuma...........97/71/000...88/61/s .. 88/62/s Boise...........54/44/008 ..59/37/sh.. 61/41/s Juneau..........53/32/0.00... 52/45/r...52/45/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........63/52/000...67/53/s. 66/53/pc Kansas City......78/54/0 00... 85/68/s .. 86/67/s Bndgeport,CT....71/48/0.00..70/53/pc. 70/52/pc Lansing.........71/40/0.00...74/49/s .. 76/48/s Amsterdam......64/52/000 63/44/pc 61/44/s Mecca.........108/88/000 104/79/5. 103/80/s Buffalo.........71/43/0.00... 71/49/s .. 72/52/s LasVegas.......88/75/0.00... 74/56/s .. 76/57/s Athens..........85/63/000..81/64/pc .. 82/66/s Mexico City .....72/57/087... 71/52/t.. 66/51/t Burlington,VT....67/41/000 ..67/46/pc.. 70/44/s Lexington.......79/63/000...80/56/s .. 80/56/s Auckland........61/57/000..65/53/pc. 65/52/pc Montreal........63/45/000..65/48/pc.. 72/54/s Caribou,ME.....56/44/000..58/45/pc.66/38lpc Lincoln..........80/47/000...87/63/s. 84/58/pc Baghdad........89/71/000... 96/73/s .. 98/75/s Moscow........48/39/003 ..42/32/sh. 47/35/pc Charleston, SC...81/68/0.00... 79/64/t. 80/62/pc Little Rock.......85/61/0.00... 88/64/s .. 88/67/s Bangkok........91/81/0.43... 83/76/c...77/77/t Nairobi.........84/59/0.11 ... 78/58/t...80/58/t Charlotte........72/62/015 ..77/56/pc.. 78/56/s LosAngeles......76/65/000...70/60/s .. 77/61/s Beifng..........77/45/000...78/63/s .. 76/60/s Nassau.........91/79/000..86/81/pc...84/78/t Chattanooga.....70/66/029 ..82/61/pc.. 83/59/s Louisville........80/64/000... 82/59/s.. 82/5Ns Beirut..........81/72/019...80/69/s.. 80/68/s Newgelh/.......93/81/000..97/83/pc. 99/81/pc Cheyenne.......74/43/0.00 ..70/41/pc. 52/37/sh Madison,Wh....72/42/0.00... 75/50/s .. 78/56/s Berlin...........55/43/000...59/38/c .. 59/42/c Osaka..........91/73/000 ..79/54/pc. 82/57/pc Chicago.........70/51/000...74/56/s. 77/59/s Memphis....... 85/71/000 86/67/s .. 87/69/s Bogota .........66/50/0.00... 66/47/t...68/47/t Oslo............43/36/0.00 ..49/33/pc. 51/34/pc Cincinnati.......74/53/0.01 ... 78/55/s.. 80/56/s Miami..........91/76/0.39... 91/78/t. 90/75/pc Budapest........66/45/0.00..72/45/pc .. 61l46/c Ottawa.........70/41/0.00...68/45/s .. 70/48/s Cleveland.......73/45/0.00... 72/54/s .. 73/54/s Milwaukee......66/51/0.00... 70/55/s ..72/5is BuenosAires.....61/39/0 00..65/47/pc. 67752/pc Paris............77/52/0 00..72/53/pc.. 73/55/c ColoradoSpnngs.80/42/000...74/48/s. 65/40/sh Minneapolis.....74/54/000...81/64/s. 82/62/pc CaboSanLucas..90/75/0.00..91/70/pc...91/70/t Rio deJaneiro....75/66/0.00..75/59/pc. 79/58/pc Columhia,MO...76/56/000...83/61/s .. 84/64/s Nashville........73/64/018... 81/61/s .. 84/62/s Cairo...........84/68/000.. 89/65/s.. 87/67/s Rome...........77/55/0.00..75/63/pc. 77/65/pc ColumhiaSC....77/66/007 ..76/58/pc.. 80/58/s New Orleans.....90/74/0 00... 88/73/s. 89/74/pc Calgary.........52/39/000..48/34/pc.. 59/37/s Santiago........73/39/0 00 59/50/pc.. 56/49/s Columbus GA....82/69/008..81/62/pc.. 81/62/s NewYork.......73/52/000..71757/pc. 73/56/pc Cancun.........88/81/000..87/77/pc. 86/76/pc SaoPaulo.......59/50/0 00..62/47/pc. 66/51lpc Columbus OH....73/49/000...78/52/s.. 80/56/s Newark Nl......75/50/000..71756/pc.73/55/pc Duhlin..........59/55/006...62/58/c. 64/54/pc Sapporo ........61/59/1 21..64/43/pc. 62/46/pc Concord,NH.....69/38/000 ..69/43/pc. 72/44/pc Norfolk VA......74/53/000..71759/pc.72/58/pc Edinburgh.......55/43/0 00...53/49/c. 60/49/sh Seoul...........73/57/0 00..70/50/pc.. 72/56/c Corpus Christi....97/72/000...93/76/s. 93/78/pc OklahomaCity...89/53/000...92/67/s .. 88/69/s Geneva.........77/50/000...75/59/t...75/59/t Shangha/........77/68/0 11..75/64/pc. 75/68/sh DallasFtWorth...94/61/000...95/71/s.. 90/75/s Omaha.........82/50/000...84/65/s. 85/59/pc Harare..........88/55/0.00...89/60/s.. 89/59/s Singapore.......86/72/2.08...89/80/t...89/80/t Dayton.........74/50/000...76/51/s .. 79/54/s Orlando.........83/74/0.00... 91/72/t. 88/70/pc HongKong......91/82/0.00...81/71/t. 81/75/pc Stockholm.......46/34/0.00..50/38/pc. 43/40/sh Denver....... 82/45/0.00...76/46/s. 61/39/sh PalmSprings.... 94/66/0.00. 86/62/s.. 88/58/s Istanbul.........77/63/000...76/66/s.74/65/sh Sydney..........86/61/000...84/54/5 .. 73/52/s DesMoines......80/56/0.00...84/65/s .. 86/69/s Peoria ..........82/56/0.00...82/57/s .. 83/61/s lerusalem.......75/60/000...83/63/s..78/61/s Taipei...........88/77/000..77772/sh. 79/73/pc Detroit..........73/48/000...72/54/s.. 73/56/s Philadelphia.....74/52/000..75/57/pc.74/54/pc Johanneshurg....84/66/000..85/64/pc. 84757/pc Tel Aviv.........82/70/000...87/68/s. 85/69/pc Duluth..........69/48/000...71/59/s. 72/57/pc Phoenix.........97/72/000...89/68/s .. 86/64/s Lima...........64/57/000..64/60/pc. 64/60/pc Tokyo...........75/72/000 ..77/55/pc. 71/61/pc El Paso..........90/58/000 ..89/65/pc. 87/62/pc Pittshurgh.......74/45/000... 74/51/s .. 75/53/s Lisbon..........72/63/000 .. 73/66/t 71/64/t Toronto.........70/48/000 70/50/s .. 70/54/s Fairhanks........57/37/000 ..49/31/pc. St/31/pc Portland,ME.....63/43/000 ..67/48/pc. 70/46/pc London.........72/55/0.00... 64/46/c .. 67/47lc Vancouver.......59/46/0.02... 61/50/s...57/52/r Fargo...........78/56/0.00..80/56/pc. 64/49/sh Providence ......70/46/0.00...69/49/s. 68/50/pc Madrid .........88/59/000... 86/65/s .. 83/59/c Vienna..........66/48/000..71l41/sh.. 60/46/c Flagstaff ........68/47/0 00..63/37/pc. 58/30/pc Raleigh.........75/53/0.00..75755/pc.73/54/pc Manila..........84/77/011...89/78/t...87/76/t Warsaw.........57/41/000..50/39/sh. 53/40/pc

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Loeffler

uDue to your health, I don't know how long you will live," Continued from B1 he said. uBut, I do know you "It's like a merry-go-round,u will spend the rest of your life Heimbruch said after the sen- in prison." tencing. "When we heard it, we Deschutes County C h i ef were happy. But, we were still Deputy District Attorney Mary sad because of why we were Anderson said after the senhappy." tencing that she had difficulty Adler dismissed Loeffler's putting her feelings into words. defense claim as unbelievable, Overall, she said, she felt satisand unjustifiable. fied with the sentence and with "Even if your vrife intended the effort prosecutors put into to kill you — which she wasn't the trial. "It was a constant alloca— or even ifyou believed she was trying to kill you — which tion of resources," she said. "I I don't think you did — you worked a lot with my boss (Diswould not have had any right trict Attorney Patrick Flaherty), or justification to kill her that who is a very experienced trial morning," he said. attorney, and the Sheriff's OfLoeffler removed amplifying fice, who handled a lot of the headphones during Adler's sen- evidence gathering." tencing and made no statement Rios, Betty Jane Loeffler's on his own behalf. granddaughter, said everybody According to testimony at involved with the case made a Loeffler's trial, uncontested by diNcult situation bearable for the defense, Loeffler told Des- her family. uWe COuldn't haVe dOne thiS chutes County sheriff's deputies that he intentionally shot without family and f riends," hiswife of39 years.H e claimed she said. "But also, we couldn't he fearedfor his life because have done it without our new hiswife and stepdaughter were family and friends here — the plotting to kill him. DA, Sheriff's Office, Dr. (MiInterviewed after his arrest chael) Bell (a neurologist and the day of his wife's killing, prosecution witness) — they Loeffler told sheriff's Lt. Scott have all been so amazing." Beard that he led Betty Loeffler Rios and Heimbrtfch are to the back door, shot her once returning home Saturday to in the neck and again in the California. Although the trial top of the head uto make damn is over and Loeffler may die in sure she was dead." Assistant prison, the impact of losing a District A t t orney M a t thew mother and grandmother is not Nelson played the videotaped lost on them. "I have a good life and this interview at Loeffler's trial. Adler handed the 86-year-old is an awful tragedy," Rios said. a life sentence, with a possibil- "But, I k n o w m y g r a ndma ity of parole after 25 years, and wants me to be happy." said that no matter the sentence — RePOrter: 541-383-0348, the result would be the same. bandersen@bendbuffetin.com

• '

Betty Loeffler stands at Mt. Bachelor Resort with her two greatgrandchildren, Mia Rios, left, and Eve Rios, right, in April 2012. Betty Loeffler's husband Lawrence Loeffler, was sentenced to life in prison for her murder on Wednesday.

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Gol f, C2 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

TRACK & FIELD

YACHTING

PREP FOOTBALL: WEEK 5 PREVIEW

ocumentar eatures s ton aton Madras • A film about the Olympic gold medalist in thedecathlon hits the big screen inSisters Oracle TeamUSA skipper Jimmy Spithill

kisses theAmerica's Cup onWednesday.

Oracle rallies for America's Cup SAN FRANCISCO — The big black cat almost used up its last life at the start, burying its bows in a wave and falling behind a boatload of Kiwis.

Of course, it was only fitting in this America's

Cup that OracleTeam USA would need to sur-

vive near-defeat again. With one last

The Bulletin

He won an Olympic gold medal last year and a world title this year, so Ashton Eaton is now ready for a long-awaited break. The decathlon world-record holder plans to enjoy ofthe some downtime between documentary now and late November, '48 Hours to when he will begin trainFame,' visit The ing for the 2014 World InBulletin's website: door Championships that dendbulletin.com/ take place next March in eatonfilm Poland. But he is taking a little time to help promote the decathlon. Eaton, who grew up in Central Oregon and now lives in Eugene, will be in Sisters next W ednesday for the big-screen premiere of "48 Hours to Fame," a documentary about Eaton and fellow decathlete Trey Hardee and their

O

spectacular push in a

quest for Olympic glory.

winner-take-all finale

The movie will be shown at the Sisters Movie House, and a Q-and-A session with Eaton will follow at the Sisters Athletic Club. Filmmaker Andrew Brereton, of Atlanta, followed the decathletes to the 2012 U.S. Olympic Trials in Eugene, where Eaton set the world record of 9,039 points. See Eaton/C4

Wednesday, theUnited Statesmanaged to hang onto the Auld Mug in

closing out the longest, fastest and, by far, wild-

est America's Cupever with one of the greatest comebacks in sports. Skipper Jimmy Spithill steered Oracle's space-age, 72-foot

k® ®'-

By Mark Morical

Ashton Eaton shows off his gold medal in the men's decathlon during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. Eaton is the subject of a documentary called '48 Hours to Fame.'

By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

Matt Sioccm/The Associated Press file

For Madras High coach Rick Wells, Friday night will

feel like a road game. An unfamiliar football stadium will surround the White Buffaloes as they lineup for a 7p.m. kickoff against Aurora's North Marion, leading to Wells' feeling of a fifth straight matchup away from Madras. But then the third-year head coach will see his team, draped in its home blues. This, oddly, will be the White Buffaloes' home

Top athletescomingto Sisters Athletic Club • Olympic gold medalist and decathlon world-record holderAshton Eatonwill be at the Sisters Athletic Club on Wednesday, Oct. 2. The documentary in which Eaton is featured, "48 Hours to Fame," will be shown at the Sisters Movie House at4:30and 7 p.m., followed by a Q-and-A session with Eaton. Tickets ($25 for adults and $15 for

ages18 and younger) areavailable only at the Sisters Athletic Club. The event is a fundraiser for the Sparrow Clubs USA. For

more information, call 541-549-6878.

• Professional triathlete and

three-time Ironman champion Linsey Cordlnwill be at the Sisters Athletic Club tonight. A reception is scheduled for

5 p.m., followed by aQ-and-A sessionat5:30 p.m. The event

is free and open to the public. Corbin grew up in Bendand graduated from Mountain View High School. For more information, call 541-549-6878.

opener. As part of a Jefferson County School District bond measure that was passed last November, a new stadium is being built in Madras. In June, the old stadium was used as a trainingburn for the Jefferson County Fire Department and then torn down. After 50 years or so of

GOLF: PACIFIC AMATEUR GOLF CLASSIC

catamaran to its eighth

straight victory, speeding past Dean Barker

and TeamNewZealand in Race19 on aSan Francisco Baycourse

playing in the same facility, the Buffs, at least for 2013, are without a home. Fortunately, nearby Culver stepped in, reached out a neighborly hand, and offered its field. See Madras /C4

bordered by the Golden

Gate Bridge, Alcatraz and the Embarcadero. All but defeated a

week ago, the 34-yearold Australian and his international crew twice

rallied from seven-point deficits to win 9-8. Owned by software bil-

lionaire Larry Ellison, Oracle TeamUSAwas

• Not much was onthe line for the trio making upthe PacAm's 'Weekend Warrior' flight

InSide • A look at all the football

By Zack Hall

in warmup regattas and had to win11 races to

keep the trophy.

velop Quail Run Golf Course.

"It really is about the team, man," Spithill

For most of the golfers playing Wednesday in the third round of the Lithia Pacific Amateur Golf Classic, such a shot could doom their tournament. But Yaillen was not concerned. "I thought, 'Who cares?," said the 50-year-old Yaillen, the executive director at the Southern Nevada Golf Association. "I was having fun." Yaillen, a former director of marketing and communications for the Oregon Golf Association, was one of just three golfers in the Pac Am's inaugural Weekend Warrior flight. For the Weekend Warriors, the PacAm's lone noncompetitive division that uses no handicaps, Wednesday's third round would be their last. There was no championship round at Crosswater Club for the flight. And no matter how well they played there would be no trophies, nor would a winner even be declared. For Yaillen, Frank Thomas, a 56-year-old electrician from Terrebonne, and Steve Waldo, a 49-year-old landscaper from Seattle, the Pac Am was about three rounds of pressure-free

illegally modifying boats

said. "On your own you're nothing, but

when you've got a team like this around you, they can makeyou look great. They did all of that today and the whole

series. I'm so proud of the boys.... They didn't flinch." — The Associated Press

CYCLING

Horner releases passport results Bend's Chris Horner

on Wednesday released his biological passport on his website,

chrishornerracing.com. He did it, according to the website, to "allow fans to feel confident in his victory at the Vuelta

a Espanaandthe current state of the sport of

cycling." Horner, 41, became the oldest cyclist ever

to win a grand tour

games involving teams from Central Oregon,C4

The Bulletin

LA PINE — Eric Yaillen hit a booming drive on his first shot of the day, which sailed through the fairway and into the ponderosa pines that en-

docked two points for

setfor 'home' opener, onroad

GOLF

Bend's Downs to become head coachat Portland State

j

l

By Zack Hall The Bulletin

Bend's Kailin Downs is getting her

first opportuAndy Tulfis/The Bulletin

From left, Frank Thomas high fives Eric Yaillen for his drive, as Steve Waldo looks down the fairway on No. 1 at La Pine's Quail Run Golf Course on Tuesday. The three golfers were a part of the 'Weekend Warriors' at the Pacific Amateur Golf Classic, a noncompetitive flight where a winner wasn't declared.

golf.

"I've enjoyed it a lot," Thomas said as he sipped a post-round beer in the Quail Run clubhouse. "Great guys to golf with. There were only three of us, but it was fun. I'd do it again." SeePac Am/C4

The PacAm,at aglance The Lithia Pacific Amateur Golf Classic ends today at Crosswater Club, with the Tournament of Champions featuring the winners of ever flight.

• For flight winners, see Scoreboard,C2. Formore information and complete results, visit www.pacamgolf.com

d j j g ~tt >

nity to head an NCAA Division I

women's golf program. Downs Downs, 30, was announced Wednesday as the new women's golf coach at Portland State University. For Downs, who has been an assistant golf coach for five years at Oregon State, the chance to run her own program was an offer she could not refuse. SeeDowns /C4

when he won the Spanish Vuelta earlier this

month. Horner releasedall of his biological passport results (39 tests in

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Beavers keepingMannion onhisfeet

total), beginning with the inception of the

UCI (International Cycling Union) biological program in 2008 and through his victory in

By Kevin Hampton

Spain.

A biological passport is an individual, electronic record for professional athletes, in which

profiles of biological markers of doping and results of doping tests are collated over aperiod of time. — Bulletin staff report

lead the Beavers to a 34-30 win. "Last week was hard, lots of The San Diego State blitzes pressure,"coach Mike Riley said. came relentlessly, wave after wave "Eighty-percent of the plays were blitzes and he throws 55 balls with crashing against the wall of Oregon State offensive linemen. no interceptions and gets sacked The Beavers stood firm through- once." Mannion has been able to avoid out the game. Only o nc e d i d a de f e nder some sacks with quick decisions in break into the backfield and get the pocket and getting the ball out all the way to quarterback Sean quickly. Mannion. Even so, the Beavers have been Mannion had enough time to able to throw the ball 194 times and put together another big game and given up four sacks for 40 yards. Corvallis Gazette-Times

Jim Uroahart I rhe Associated Press

Oregon State quarterback Sean Mannion, left, has been able to throw for more than1,600 yards this season in part because of his offensive line.

Not a small accomplishment, considering all the new l ineups and position switches the Beavers have gone through due to injuries. K eeping Mannion upright i s critical to OSU's success. He's been able to throw for 1,604 yards and 15 touchdowns in four games. "I think they've been great in pass protection," Mannion said. "So far,I've also been impressed with the way our young guys have been able to step in. SeeMannion /C3


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY GOLF European Tour, Alfred Dunhill Links

Time 5:30 a.m.

Web.com Tour,Web.comTour Championship noon BASKETBALL WNBA, playoffs, Indiana at Atlanta WNBA, playoffs, Phoenix at Minnesota FOOTBALL

College, Virginia Tech atGeorgia Tech College, lowa State atTulsa College, Howard at North Carolina A&T NFL, San Francisco at St. Louis College, Cal Poly-SLO at Portland State SOCCER

4 p.m. 6 p.m.

ESPN2 ESPN2

4 :30 p.m.

ESP N

4:30 p.m. FoxSports1 4:30 p.m. 5:25 p.m. 7 p.m.

E S P NU NFL Root

Women's college, Washington State at Oregon7 p.m.

Pac-12

FRIDAY GOLF European Tour, Alfred Dunhill Links

Time TV/R adio 5:30 a.m. Golf Golf Web.com Tour,Web.comTour Championship noon Champions Tour, First Tee Open 3:30 p.m. Golf MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup,AAA400, practice

8 a.m. Fox Sports 1

NASCAR, Nationwide, Dover 200, practice NASCAR, Sprint Cup, AAA400, qualifying SOCCER Men's college, SMU at Washington MLS, Philadelphia at Kansas City

9:30 a.m. Fox Sports1 noon ESPN2

4 p.m. Pac-1 2 5 p.m. NBCS N Mexico Primera Division, Queretaro vs. Tigres5:25 p.m. E S P N2 FOOTBALL College, Utah State at San Jose State 6 p.m. ESPN College, Middle Tennessee at BYU 6 p.m. ESPN U High school, Wilsonville at Mountain View 7 p.m. 111 0 -AM High school, Ridgeview at Bend 7 p.m. COTV

High school, Edison (Calif.) vs. Mater Dei(Calif.) 7 p.m. Fox Sports 1 CFL, British Columbia at Winnipeg (taped) 7:30 p.m. N B C SN VOLLEYBALL College, Arizona State at Stanford College, Washington State at Oregon State

COREBOARD

TV/Radio Golf Golf

ON DECK Today Boys soccer:BendatSummit, 6p.m4MountainView at Ridgeview, 3pm4CottageGroveat Sisters, 430 p.m4Madrasat North Marion, 4p.m.; Junctron City atLaPine,4:30 p.m.;RedmondatCrook County, 3 p.m. Girls soccer:MountainViewat Ridgeview,4:30p.m.; Sisters atCottageGrove, 4:30 p.m.; NorthMarion at Madras,4:30p.m.; La Pineat Junction City, 4:30 p.m.;BendatSummit, 7:30p.m4Redmondat CrookCounty, 4.30p.m. Volleyball: MountainViewat Ridgeview,6:30 p.m.; Srsters at La Pine,6:45 p.mzMadrasat North Marion, 6p.m.; Culvervs. ToledoandWaldport at Santi am,3and6 p.m.;SummitatBend,6:30p.m., CrookCountyatRedmond, 6:30p.m. Cross-country: Sisters,LaPineatHarrier's Challenge at Schwarz Parkin Cottage Grove TBA Boys water polo: BendatMountain View,TBA Girls water polo: BendatMountain View,TBA

Saturday Boys soccer:CentralatBend, noon;Irrigon atCulver, 1p.m4Central ChristianatNorth ClackamasChristian, 1p.m. Volleyball: Ridgeview at Cotage GroveTournament, TBA;Sistersat SantiamChristian Tournament,TBA; Central Christian at North Clackamas Christian, TBA; Triad atTrinity Lutheran,2:45p.mnCrook County atSouthAlbanyTournament, TBA;Mountain View atSouthAlbany,TBA;Grlchrist atMitchell, 1 p.m. Cross-country: Sistersat OutlawInvite, TBA,Summit, Redmond,LaPine, Madrasat MadrasInvite, TBA;Bend,Mountain View,Summit, CrookCounty at Nike PreNationals at PortlandMeadowsRace Track, 9a.m. Boys waterpolo: MadrasatBend, TBA Girls water polo:MadrasatBend,TBA

Pac-1 2

College, Washington at Oregon

6 p.m. Pac-12 Oregon 8 p.m. Pac - 12

BASEBALL MLB, Oakland at Seattle

7 p.m.

Root

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by Nor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER

All TimesPDT

Eastern Conference

W L T P t sGF GA NewYork 1 5 9 6 5 1 47 36 S porting KansasCity 14 9 6 4 8 43 28 Montreal 1 3 9 6 4 5 46 42 Houston 1 2 10 7 43 37 36 N ew England 1 1 1 1 7 4 0 41 33 Chicago 1 1 12 6 3 9 36 43 Philadelphia 10 1 0 9 3 9 37 39 Columbus 1 1 14 5 3 8 36 39 TorontoFC 4 15 11 23 25 44 D.C. 3 20 6 1 5 19 48 Western Conference W L T P f sGF GA Seattle 1 5 8 5 5 0 38 28 R eal SaltLake 1 4 1 0 6 4 8 53 39 Portland 11 5 13 46 45 31 LosAngeles 13 1 0 6 4 5 46 36 Colorado 1 2 9 9 4 5 37 31 Vancouver 1 1 10 8 4 1 42 38 SanJose 1 1 11 8 4 1 31 41 FC Daffas 10 9 10 40 40 42 ChivasUSA 6 16 8 2 6 29 54 NOTE: Three points for victory, onepoint for tie.

wHis arm flat-lined ... CLEAR!!"

Seattle St. Louis SanFrancisco Arizona

Martin wins time trial

WOrld title —Tony Martin of

portunity to show off two of its best buildings in what it's tout-

ing as a weeklong celebration of basketball.

Germany won his third straight title in the individual time trial at the road cycling world cham-

Gearge —The Pacers and

pionships with a dominating performanceonW ednesdayin

Wednesday morning, announc-

Florence, Italy, while Olympic

champion Bradley Wiggins finished a distant second. Martin completed the flat 35.5-mile route from Montecatini Terme

Pacers officially sign Paul George made it official ing a contract extension to keep the All-Star forward in lndiana

for the next six years. The6foot-7 George signed adeal valued between $80 million and

to Florence in1 hour, 5 minutes,

$90 million, joining team Presi-

36.65 seconds. Wiggins, of Britain,finished second,46.09 sec-

Vogel at a newsconference.

onds behind, andFabianCancellara of Switzerland was third, 48.34 behind. Cancellara won

the event a record four times, in 2006, '07, '09 and '10. Martin is the second rider to win three

straight after Michael Rogers of

dent Larry Bird and coach Frank The contract could ultimately be worth more than $100 million if

George hits an escalator clause. Last season, the 23-year-old averaged 17.4 points, 7.6 rebounds

and 4.1 assists — all careerhighs — and ledthe Pacers to

Australia accomplished it from 2003-05. "The first title is al-

the Eastern Conference finals.

ways the nicest, but this comes

WOStdrOok'S StatuS

pretty close," Martin said. "Now

uncertain for Thunder-

finish and hugging his team sup-

for All-Star point guard Russell Westbrook's return from a

I have a lot more pressure onmy shoulders." After crossing the porters, a joyful Martin dropped to the road on his backandgave a wide smile. Vasil Kiryienka of Belarus finished fourth and Tay-

lor Phinney, theAmerican who finished second last year, was fifth. No races are scheduled for

today. Theworlds end Sunday with the featured road race over a169-mile route that starts in

Oklahoma City general manager Sam Presti says the timetable

At CoursesThroughout Central Oregon Final Round(Four in eachflight advanceto championship round) Flight1 — I, SteveBorreffi 233.2,Jerry Close,

236. 3, KirkBrown,239.4, DerykRachinski, 240. Flight 2 — 1 (tie), Kris Fay,222; Scott Miller, 222; ChrisSiebers,222.4, RyanBarker, 226.

Flight 3 — 1,LukeSpiering,214. 2 (tie), Vemon Carlson,216;Scott Fehr,216;4,JohnHaake, 225. Flight 4 — 1 (tie),DonSherman,215; RickBarnett, 215;BartJohnson,215. 4,DonGoethals, 217. Flight 5 — 1,Robert Hoffand,209.2,Alan Mitcheff, 212.3, DaveGiese, 214.4,JamesWilson, 215. Flight 6 — 1 (tie),TomReynolds, 215; Michael Jackson,215.3, BrianSleight, 2224,Robert Seabeck,

Today'sGame San FranciscoatSt. I.ouis,5:25p.m.

BaltimoreatBuffalo,10 a.m. ArizonaatTampaBay,10 a.m. Indianapois atJacksonvi le,10a.m. Cincinnatiat Cleveland,10a.m. ChicagoatDetroit,10 a.m. Pittsburghvs. Minnesotaat London,10 a N.Y.Jetsat Tennessee,1:05 p.m. WashingtonatOakland,1:25 pm. Dallas atSanDiego,1:25 p.m. PhiladelphiaatDenver,1:25 p.m. NewEnglandat Atlanta, 5:30p.m. Monday's Game Miami atNewOrleans, 5.40 p.m. Open:Carolina,GreenBay

College Schedule Aff TimesPDT

(Subject tochange) Today's Games

Buffalo

playoff series against Houston.

with10 laps of a hilly circuit in

Westbrook had surgery April 27 and hasn't been fully cleared

medicallyyet. Presti says it

BASKETBALL KRICkS, NetS toShare All-Star Weekend —Two

would be "irresponsible" to say when that might occur, but didn't dispute the notion that Westbrook could miss the

Thunder's season openerOct.

Miami N.Y.Jets

Dallas Philadelphia NY Giants Washington

30 at Utah.

FOOTBALL Bucs denchQBFreeman

NewOrleans Carolina

— The TampaBayBuccaneers have benchedquarterback Josh

TampaBay

Freeman and replaced him with

Chicago

events, highlighted by the slam

rookieMikeGlennon.Themove dunk contest, on Saturday beW ednesday came twodaysafter fore the 64th All-Star game goes coach GregSchiano insisted to Madison SquareGarden on Freeman remained thestarter Sunday, Feb. 15. "To have two brand-new buildings, in effect, is

what we have insupport of New York City. It's good for basketball. It's good for the teams. It's

good for the NBA,and it's great

renovation project at the Garden — both with $1 billion price

tags — the leaguesawthe op-

South

Pct PF PA 1.000 59 34 1.000 74 53 .667 55 50 .333 65 73

Atlanta

Detroit

GreenBay Minnesota

L T Pct PF PA W 21 1 0 667 83 55 2 0 333 79 86 3 0 000 54 115 0 3 0 000 67 98 South L T Pct PF PA 0 1.000 70 38 W 31 I 0 2 0 .333 68 36 2 0 .333 71 74 0 3 0 .000 34 57 North L T Pct PF PA 95 74 W 21 01 00 1.000 3 .667 82 69 2 0 .333 96 88 0 3 0 .000 81 96

best chance to win. Thecoach changed his mind after meeting Tuesday with general manager Mark Dominik and later discussed the switch with owner-

ship. "This is a performancebaseddecision,"Schianosaid a news conference that included Wednesday.oWe're not getting

Barclays Center, which opened last September, and athree-year

Friday's Games

FAR WEST MiddleTennesseeat BYU 6pm UtahSt.atSanJoseSt., 6 p.m.

UCLA

Colorado USC

Utah ArizonaState

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

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

Los Angeleat s Portland, 12:30p.m. Columbus at FCDallas, 5:30p.m. NewYorkat Seattle FC,6pm. TULSA 3 2.5 lowaSt SanJoseatChrvasUSA, 8p.m. Friday 21 BYU 23 M i d Tenn St UtahSt 8 9.5 SAN JOSE ST BASKETBALL Saturday PITTSBU RGH 7 6 Virginia VVNBA N. Illinois 3.5 3.5 PU RDUE DUKE 11 Troy WOMEN'SNATIONAL 105 BASKETBALLASSOCIATION Connecticut 25 1.5 BU FFALO Playoffs BALLST 3 3 Toledo 24 C . Michigan All Times PDT NC STA TE 23.5 3 2.5 W.MICHIG AN KentSt N. CARO LINA 11.5 11.5 E . Carolina CONFERENCE FINALS FloridaSt 21.5 22 BOSTONCOLL (Best-of-3) VANDE RBILT 20.5 Eastern Conference 20 Uab Atlanta vs.Indiana ILLINOIS 24.5 24.5 Miami-Ohio Today, Sept.26:Indi anaatAtlanta,4 p.m. TCU 18.5 19.5 Smu MISSOUR I 20.5 21 A r kansas StSunday,Sept.29: Atlantaatlndiana,noon PK 1 M I NNESOTA WesternConference lowa Minnesot avs.Phoenix COLOR ADOST 12.5 135 Utep GEOR GIA 3 3 Lsu Today, Sept.26:PhoenixatMinnesota,6p.m. 10 WASHINGTON 7 Arizona Sunday ,Sept.29:MinnesotaatPhoenix,2p.m. 15 M i ssissippi ALABAMA 17.5 36.5 37 Cal ifornia OREG ON DEALS ARIZONA ST 6.5 6 Usc d-Army 2 (L) 1 5 LouisianaTech Texas A&M NL NL A RKANSAS Transactions Oklahoma 3 3 N OTRE DAME BASEBALL BOISE ST 26.5 28 SouthernMiss American League Miami-Fla 20 19 S . FLORIDA BALTIMORE ORIOLES— Released 3B Wilson CLEMSO N 28 28 W ake ForestBetemrt .Placed INF MannyMachado onthe60-day Temple IDAHO 85 8 DL, retroactivetoTuesday. Selected thecontract ofOF UL-MONR OE 11.5 13 Tu ane Jason Pri diefromNorfolk (IL). Houston 2.5 3 TEX S.ANTONIO NEW YORKYANKEES— Placed LHP CC Sabathia 15 Akron BOWLINGGREEN 15.5 10 11 Col orado on the 15-dayDL,retroactive to Saturday.Reinstated OREGO NST 7 7 C.FLORIDA DH TravisHafnerfromthe60-dayDL. S. Carolina Florida 14 13 K ENTUCKY TAMPABAYRAYS—Assigned RHPJ.D. Martin outright toDurham(IL) s-Stanford 10.5 10 WASHINGTONST National League Wyoming 10 11.5 T EXAS ST CINCINNATI REDS—ReleasedRHPKyleLotzkar. Navy 1.5 3 W . KENTUCK Y MILWAUKE E B REWERS—Assigned1BBlake Laffi 13 13.5 F la. Atlantic RICE TENNE SSEE 20 SA labamaoutright toNashvile(PCL). 18.5 NEVAD A 7 8 Air Force NEWYORKMETS—ReinstatedOFJordanyValdespin fromthe restricted list andassignedhimto Las OklahomaSt 21 19 W . VIRGINIA OHIOST 7.5 7 Wis consin Vegas(PCL). BASKETBALL Unlv 2 2.5 NEW MEXICO National Basketball Association San Diego St 18 17.5NEW MEXICO ST PISTONS— NamedHenryBibbyand Maz FresnoSt 18.5 18.5 HA WAII DETROIT Trakhassistant coaches,RasheedWallaceandBernard d-Daff as;s-Seattle Smith pl a yer development coaches, Kamran Suli adNote: = LLouisiaanTech openedasthefavorite vancescout andRamanSposato videocoordinator. INDIANA PACERS Signed FPaul Georgeto a six-yearcontract. TENNIS FOOTBALL National Football League Professional ARIZONACARDINALS— PlacedLB Alex Okaforon Pan Pacific Open injured reserve.SignedLBKenny Demensfrom the

Wednesday At Ariake Colosseum Tokyo Purse: $2.37 million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Thrrd Round Eugeni eBouchard,Canada,def.JelenaJankovic (6), Serbia7-5, , 6-2. CarolineWozniacki (4), Denmark, def. Magdalena Rybarikova,Slovakia,6-1, 6-1. VenusWiliams, UnitedStates,def. SimonaHalep (1 3),Romania, 4-6,7-5, 6-3 Lucie Safarova,CzechRepublic, def.SamStosur (12), Australia,6-4,6-4. Agnieszka Radwanska (2), Poland,del. Dominika Cibulkova (16), Slovakia,6-3, 6-4. Angeffque Kerber (5), Germany, def. AnaIvanovic (11), Serbia6-4, , 6-2. Thailand Open Wednesday Af Impact Arena Bangkok, Thailand

Purse: g631,630(WT260)

Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles First Round Yen-hsunLu, Taiwan,del. EvgenyDonskoy, Russia, 6-3,6-2. Mikhail Youzhny(5), Russia,def. PaoloLorenzi, Italy, 6-3,6-2 Denis IstominUzbeki , stan,def.JeongSuk-young, SouthKorea6-3,6-0. Second Round Betting line Igor Sijsling,Netherlands,def.RobinHaase, NethNFL erlands,6-7(7), 6-4, 7-6(2). (Hometeamsin CAPS) Felicianol.opez(6), Spain,def. GoSoeda, Japan, Favorite Opening Current underdog 7-6 (5),6-3. Today Tomas Berdych(1), CzechRepublic, def.Roberto 49ers 3 .5 3 RAMS BautistaAgut,Spain,6-3, 6-3. Sunday I-Steelers PK 1.5 Vikings Malaysia nOpen BILLS Ravens 3 3 Wednesday Bengals 55 4.5 BROWN S At Putra Stadium Colts 9 8 JAGUAR S Kuala Lumpur,Malaysia Seahawks 3 3 TEXANS Purse: $984,300(WT250) BUCCAN EERS 3 2.5 Cardinals Surface: Hard-Indoor 2 .5 3 Bears LIONS Singles CHIEFS 4 4 Giants First Round TITANS 5 4 Jets Joao Sousa,Portugal, def. RyanHarrison, United Cowboys 1 2 CHARG ERS States,6-3,6-2. Redskins 3 3 Raiders MarcosBaghdatis, Cyprus,def. CarlosBerlocq, B RONCOS 10.5 10 . 5 Eagles Argentina,7-6(3), 6-3. FALCONS P K 2 Patriots Dmitry Tursunov(6), Russia, def. RajeevRam, Monday UnitedStates,7-5,6-0. SAINTS 55 6.5 Dolphins Julien Benneteau (5), France, def. Michal l-l.ondon Przysiezny, Poland,7-6(6),6-4. SecondRound College FedericoDelbonis, Argentina,def. VasekPospisil Today (7), Canada, 7-6(2), 7-6(1). GEOR GIATECH 7.5 7 . 5 Vi r ginia Tech Adrian Mannarino,France,del. NicolasAlmagro

Saturday'sGames ColoradoatOregonState, noon ArizonaatWashington, 4 p.m. StanfordatWashington State, 7p.m. California atOregon,7.30 p.m. USCatArizonaState, 7:30p.m.

practicesquad. CINCINNAT I BENGALS—Released OT DennrsRoland. Signed SChris Crocker. DALLASCOWBOYS— Signed CB Chris GreenwoodfromDetroit's practicesquad DETROITLIONS —Released DTJustin Bannan. SignedWRCharles Hawkinsto thepractice squad. INDIANAPOLI S COI.TS— Released WR Danny Coale and RB Miguel Maysonetfrom the practice squad.SignedWRDa'Rick Rogers andRBKerwynn Williams tothepracticesquad. NEWYOR KGIANTS—Placed FB Henry Hynoski on injuredreserve.SignedFBJohnConner. NEW YORKJETS— Released LB Troy Davisfrom the practicesquad. SignedRBKareemHuggins to the practicesquad. SAN DIEGOCHARGERS Released LB Terreff Manning.SignedOLStephenSchiling. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—SignedC-GJasonSpitz. HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague BUFFALO SABRES— SignedD NikitaZadorov toa three-yearcontract. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—AssignedFBradWinchesterandDTheoPeckhamto Rockford (AHL). DALLAS STARS—Assigned DCameronGaunceto

Texas(AHL). DETROIT REDWINGS— Recalled C RileySheahan, RWTeemuPulkkinen andDXavier DueffetfromGrand Raprds (AHL). FLORIDA PANTHERS—LoanedFVincentTrocheck to SanAntonio (AHL). NEWJERSEYDEVILS—AssignedGScot Wedgewood; D BrandonBurlon, EricGelinasandJonMerril; and FsStefanMateau, RodPeffey, TimSestito and Mike Sislo toAlbany(AHL). RetumedDDamon Seversonto Kelowna(WHL). NEW YORKRANGERS— Assigned G Cam Talbot; DTommy Hughes, AaronJohnson, DylanMcffrathand DannySyvret; andFsMicheal Haley,Michael Kantor, DannyKristoandAndrewYoganto Hartford (AHL). COLLEGE AIR FORC E—Suspended QBJaleel Awini.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement ofadult chinook,jackchinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselected Columbia RiverdamslastupdatedonMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlbd Wstlhd B onneville 11,596 1,884 9 9 7 27 4 The Daffes 11,150 92 1 5 ,737 1,987 J ohn Day 12,094 2,010 2,203 7 6 8 M cNary 17,212 2,510 2,146 6 3 6 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelheadandwild Fridayat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,006,619 151,095 219,356 94,507 The Da les 637,603 123,238 147,477 63,603 John Day 452,593 116,983 97,281 40,687 McNary 424,1 78 74,361 84,113 33,245

becausehe gavethe team the

for the city," Commissioner David Stern said Wednesday at Mayor Michael Bloomberg and officials from both teams. With two state-of-the-art venues after the construction of the

T 0 0 0 0

East

city. The NBA is bringing its AllStar weekend back to New York in 2015, and the Knicks and Nets are putting aside a strengthening rivalry on the court to share it. host the Rising Stars Challenge on Friday night and the skills

L 0 W 21 0 3 1 2

L T Pct PF PA Houston I 0 667 70 82 Indianapolis W 0 1 0 667 68 48 2 Tennesse e 1 0 667 60 56 Jacksonville 3 0 000 28 92 North L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 1 0 667 75 64 W 2 1 Baltimore 1 0 667 71 64 Cleveland 2 0 333 47 64 Pittsburgh 0 3 0 000 42 76 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 3 0 0 1.000 127 71 Kansas Cit y 3 0 0 1.000 71 34 Oakland 1 2 0 .333 57 67 San Diego 1 2 0 .333 78 81 NATIONA LCONFER ENCE

sparkling arenas. OneAll-Star

Barclays Center in Brooklyn will

SOUTH VirginiaTechat GeorgiaTech, 4.30p.m. Howardat NCA8T,4:30p.m SOUTHWES T lowaSt.atTulsa,430 p m FAR WEST Cal Polyat PortlandSt., 7:15 p.m.

Top 25 Schedule Saturday'sGames No. 1Aiabamavs. No.21Mississippi, 3 30p.m. No. 2Oregonvs. California, 7:30p.m. 213 Flight 16 — 1 (tie), Rod Ritchie, 210; Ken No. 3Clemsonvs.WakeForest, 12:30p.m. 40hioStatevs. No.24Wisconsin,5p.m. Schwoerer,210. 3, DevonBratsman,216. 4, Ron No. No. 5Stanfordat Washington State, 7p.m. Goodrich,217. No.6LSUatNo.9Georgia,12:30p.m. Flight16 — 1, GilbertLeVander, 218.2, Stewart No. 8FloridaStateat Boston College,12:30p.m. Johnson,226. 3, PatIribarren, 228. 4, Jim Handa, No. 10TexasA&Mat Arkansas, 4p.m. 229. Flight17 — 1, SharonMccarty, 213.2, Mary No. 11OklahomaStateatWest Virginia, 9 a.m. o. 12SouthCarolina atUCF , 9a.m. Daby 220.3,LindaKueny, 224.4, SueWassom,232. N No. 14Oklahomaat No.22Notre Dame,12:30 p.m. Flighf18 — 1,ValerieLaRoche,215. 2,MaryElNo. 15MiamiatSouth Florida, 9a.m. len Knowles,221. 3, SunBaker, 232.4, PamStewart, No. 16Washington vs.Arizona, 4p.m. 235. Flight 19 — 1, SharonShattuck, 204. 2, Julia No. 20Floridaat Kentucky, 4p.m. Spilker,208. 3,KathyMcDonald,213. 4, KeikoHana- No. 25FresnoState atHawai, 9p.m. moto,219 Pac-12 Conference Weekend Warriors — I, Eric Yaiffen,290. 2, Aff TimesPDT Frank Thomas,301.3,SteveWaldo,307. North Conf. Overall 1-0 3-0 Stanford FOOTBALL OregonState 1-0 3-1 1-0 3-1 WashingtonState NFL Oregon 0-0 3-0 0-0 3-0 NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE Washington 0-0 1-2 Aff Times PDT California South Conf. Overall AMERICA NCONFER ENCE Arizona 0-0 3-0 East

NewEngland

Lucca near the coast andends and around Florence.

Flight 7 — 1(tie) Cliff Cowan,211; RickGehrke, 211; Joe Murray,211.4, Terry Miwongtum,217. Flight 8 — 1,JoeAbrams, 202.2,RichardColarchik,206.3, Stan Richins,210.4, DamonBuff,212. Flight 9 — 1,BruceOlson,208. 2,JimWalis Jr., 210. 3,KenKranz,212 4, Chris Carter,217. Flight 10 — 1,LarryKirk, 203.2, RolandRhue, 207. 3 BeauJohnson,209.4,MikeMirgeaux,213. Flighf11 — 1,JohnWilson, 201.2, Garet Mouat, 213. 3 RobertReedal, 214.4,Al Stautz,215. Flight 12 — 1,BruceBurson,203. 2, Jefl Cornwell, 208. 3 (tie), TimothyCoats, 212, JohnMorris, 212. Flight 13 — 1,JohnFairchild, 207.2, Al Davis, 209. 3,KenLauren, 215.4, Roger Kluth,216. Flight 14 — 1, CharlesBrank,209. 2, Joseph Gaffardo,211.3 (tie), RogerPitkin, 213;Jerry Hess,

knee injury remains uncertain

Wednesday, Presti fielded many questions about Westbrook's status. Westbrook tore the lateral meniscus in his right knee during Game 2 of the first-round

Pc t PF PA 1 . 00086 27 .3 3 3 58 86 .3 3 3 44 84 .3 3 3 56 79

N.Y.GiantsatKansasCity, 10a.m. Seattle atHouston,10a.m.

Local

as the Thunder open training camp. During his "state of the

franchise" news conference

West W L T 3 0 0 1 2 0 1 2 0 1 2 0

SundaytsGames

2013GOLFWORLD PACIFICAMATEUR GOLFCLASSIC Sept. 25

Friday's Game PhiladelphiaatSporting KansasCity, 5p.m. Saturday's Games D.C. United at Toronto FC,10a.m. RealSaltLakeatVancouver,4 p.m Housto natNew England,4:30p.m. Montrealat Chicago,5:30p.m

Sunday'sGames

224

CYCLING

6-2, 6-3. wwwgocomica.com«omecleacaere

Friday Football: Ridgeviewat Bend, 7 p.m.; Redm ond at Summit, 7 p.m., Wilsonville at MountainView, 7 p.mnMadisonat CrookCounty, 7 p.mnNorth Marion atMadras,7 p.m.; Sistersat Sweet Home, 7p.m.;JunctionCityat LaPrne, 7p.m.; Culverat Vernonia,7p.m.;Gilchrist atPowers,4 p.m. Cross-country: Ridgeview atBridgette NielsonInvite at TheDaffes-Scorosis Park,TBA Volleyball: Sherman at Central Christian, 5 p.m.; NorthLakeatTrinity Lutheran,5:45p.m.;ButteFals at Gilchrist, 4p.m. Boys waterpolo: MadrasatRidgeview,TBA

GOLF 6 p.m.

(3), Spain,6-4,6-3. David Ferrer(1), Spain, def. MatteoViola, Italy,

IN THE BLEACHERS

the job done on the field." The winless Bucs have lost their first

three games, two on field goals in the closing seconds. Freeman has completed just 45.7 percent of his passes for 571 yards, two touchdowns and three interceptions. — From wire reports

LOCAL GOLF

Salem proedgestwo locals at FallTourinvite Bulletin staff report BLACK BUTTE R A N CH — Two Central Oregon professionais came within a stroke of the low round shot by Salem pro Tyler Austin Wednesday at Black Butte Ranch's Glaze Meadow in the third round of the Fall Tour Invitational.

T im Fraley, head pro o f Bend's Awbrey Glen Golf Club, and George Mack Jr., director of instruction at Black Butte Ranch each shot 1-under-par 71 and won $375 apiece. But Austin shot a 70 to win the $500 first prize. Jeff Fought, the director of

golf at Black Butte Ranch, shot a 72 to land in a four-way tie for fourth place. The Fall Tour is hosted by four different Central Oregon golf courses. The tournament is split into four one-round events and includes club professionaisand amateurs.

Charlie Rice, of Bend, shot an even-par 72, marking the second time in three days he has carded the low amateur gross round. The tournament continues with today's final round at Black Butte Ranch's Big Meadow course.


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Seattle Iwakuma W,14-6 8 4 0 0 1 Furbush I 1 0 0 0 E.Santana pitched to1batter in the7th.

Standings All Times PDT AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

W L x-Boston 96 63 TampaBay 89 69 Baltimore 82 76 NewYork 82 76 72 86 Toronto Central Division W L x-Detroit 93 66 Cleveland 88 70 Kansas City 83 75 Minnesota 66 92 Chicago 62 96 West Division W L x-Oakland 94 65 Texas 87 71 Los Angeles 78 80 Seattle 70 89 Houston 51 108

T—2'25 A—15,347(47,476) Pct GB .604 .563 Br/~ .519 13'/z .519 13'/x .456 23'/z

Tigers1, Twins 0 MINNEAPOLIS — Max Scherzer

earned his 21st win andDetroit

clinched its third straight AL Central title, beating Minnesota. 557 4 1/2 Torii Hunter's single followed a .525 9'/x leadoff triple by Austin Jackson .418 26'/z 392 30r/z in the first inning, and that was all Pct GB .591 .551 6'/x .494 15'/z .440 24 .321 43

Wednesday'sGames

L.A. Angels3, Oakland1 Cleveland7, ChicagoWhite Sox2

Tampa Bay8, N.Y.Yankees3 Baltimore 9, Toronto 5 Texas 7, Houston3 Detroit1 Minnesota 0 Boston15,Colorado5 Seattle 6,KansasCity 0 Today's Games Tampa Bay(Cobb 10-3) at N.Y.Yankees(Nova9-5), 4:05 p.m. Toronto (Buehrle12-9) at Baltimore(Mig.Gonzalez 10-8),4:05p.m L.A. Angels(Wigiams9-10) at Texas(Garza4-5), 5:05 p.m. Cleveland (McAgister 9-9) at Minnesota(A.Albers 24), 5:10p.m. KansasCity (Guthrie 14-12) at ChicagoWhite Sox (Rienzo2-2), 5:10p.m. Friday's Games Bostonat Baltimore,4:05 p.m. Tampa Bayat Toronto,4:07 p.m. Detroit atMiami, 4:10p.m. L.A. AngelsatTexas,5:05 p.m. ClevelandatMinnesota, 5:10p.m. KansasCity atChicagoWhite Sox,5:10p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat Houston, 5:10p.m. OaklandatSeatle, 7:10p.m.

Pct GB .589 .528 9'/z .462 20 456 21

Scherzer (21-3) and managerJim Leyland's Tigers needed to start

singles in seven innings. Scherzer struck out10 and lowered his ERA to 2.90, ensuring he'll finish the

season with the most wins in the major leagues. Minnesota ab r hbi ab r hbi AJcksncf 4 1 2 0 Presleycf 3 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 2 I Dozier2b 3 0 0 0 Micarr 3b 4 0 0 0 Plouffe 3b 4 0 1 0 Igle siasss 0 0 0 0 Thomspr 0 0 0 0 Fielderlb 4 0 0 0 Bemier3b 0 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 0 1 0 Doumitdh 2 0 0 0 D irkslf 3 0 0 0 Pintoc 3 0 0 0 I nfante2b 3 0 1 0 Parmellb 4 0 I 0 A vilac 3 0 1 0 CHrmnrf 3 0 0 0 R Santgss-3b 3 0 1 0 Mstmnlf 2 0 0 0 W ngh ph 1 0 0 0 Flormn ss 3 0 1 0 T otals 3 2 1 8 1 Totals 2 80 3 0 Detroit 1 00 000 000 — 1 M innesota 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 0 DP — Detroit 1, Minnesota 2. LDB Detroit 4, Minnesota8. 2B—A.Jackson (31). 38—A.Jackson (6). SB —Dozier (14), Florimon(15). CS—V.Martinez Detroit

ScherzerW,21-3 7

VerasH,9 SmylyH,20

Benoit S,24-25 I

Minnesota

CorreiaL,9-13 7

Duensing Swarzak

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

AxelrodL,4-11

Leesman

5 2 - 3 85 3 2 2-3 0 2 I I 12-3 I 0 0 0

1 I 1

51 - 3 6 2 2 1

8

to the NL Central title with a

1 1-3 1-3 1 1

3 1 1 1 2

victory. Jordan Zimmermann (19-9) missed his only shot at

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

Masterson HBP by Leesman (Kipnis). WP Axelrod2. T—3:06.A—30,942 (42,241).

Rangers 7, Astros 3 ARLINGTON, Texas — Leonys Martin hit a three-run double, lan pace in the AL wild-card chase, handing Houston its12th loss in a row and team-record 108th defeat

thisseason.Texascompleteda three-game sweep and finished 17-2 with11 straight wins against its instate rival. Texas

Houston

three-game sweep ofWashington and moved another step closer

ab r hbi ab r hbi Vigarss 4 0 0 0 Kinsler2b 4 2 2 2 Altuve2b 4 1 2 0 Andrusss 5 0 1 1 M Dmn3b 4 0 1 0 Riosrf 4011 Carter1b 4 1 2 1 ABeltre3b 4 0 1 0 J DMrtnlf 3 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 C rowe ph-If 0 0 0 0 JeBakr dh 2 I I 0 B.Lairddh 4 1 1 2 DvMrpph-dh 0 0 0 0 Hoesrf 4 0 1 0 Morlnd1b 2 1 0 0 C clarkc 3 0 1 0 Gentrylf 3 2 0 0 Paredsph 1 0 0 0 LMartncf 4 1 1 3 BBarnscf 3 0 0 0 Kraussph 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 5 3 8 3 Totals 3 27 7 7 Houston 0 00 300 000 — 3 7 Texas 001 501 Ogx -

Thielbar WP — Scherzer. T—3:08. A—26,517(39,021).

Rays 8, Yankees3

1 0 I

M.PerezW,10-5 7 Frasor Soria

1 1

6 3 3 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0

8 1 3

HBP —by Keuchel (Gentry). WP—Keuchel, R.cruz, M.Perez,Soria. T—2.42.A—43,207(48,114).

Angels 3, Athietics1

CINCINNATI — Daisuke Matsuzaka scattered four hits in 7/s innings to win his third

consecutive start, outdueling

20 wins, allowing four runs in

seven innings. Matt Adams hit his eighth home run since replacing for the Cardinals (94-65), who are a season-high 29 gamesabove .500. Washington St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi Spancf 3 1 1 0 Mcrpnt2b 4 0 0 1 Zmrmn3b 4 0 0 0 Beltranrf 4 0 0 0 W erthrf 3 0 1 0 Hollidylf 3 1 0 0 Harperlf 4 0 1 1 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 0 0 0 MAdms1b 4 2 2 1 A dl.Rc1b 3 0 1 0 YMolinc 3 0 1 2 W Ramsc 3 0 0 0 Jayct 30 2 0 Lmrdzz2b 3 0 0 0 Freese3b 3 0 0 0 Zmrmnp 2 0 1 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Tracyph 0 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Hairstnph 1 0 0 0 CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 SRonnlf s 0 0 0 0 Descalsss-3b 3 I I 0 SMigerp 1 0 0 0 Kozmass 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 0 1 5 1 Totals 2 94 6 4 W ashington 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 — 1 St. Louis 001 201 Ogx — 4 E—Desmond(20) DP—Washington1, St. Louis 2 LDB Washington 5, St.Louis 3. 28 Ma Adams

Cincinnati's Mat Latos. Eric Young Jr. drove in the only run for the Mets, who won two of three in

the series to further dampen Cincinnati's hopes of hosting the NL wild-card playoff game, Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi EYonglf 4 0 1 1 BHmltncf 4 0 1 0 J uTmr3b 4 0 1 0 Choolf 2 0 0 0 D nMrp2b 4 0 1 0 Vottolb 4 0 0 0 Dudalb 3 0 0 0 BPhgps2b 4 0 0 0 L agarscf 4 0 0 0 Brucerf 3 0 1 0 Baxterrf 2 0 0 0 Frazier3b 3 0 0 0 Satinph I 0 0 0 Mesorcc 3 0 0 0 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 Clztursss 2 0 1 0 Centenc 3 0 0 0 DRonsnph 1 0 1 0 Reckerph-c 0 0 0 0 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 T ovarss 2 1 0 0 Latos p 2 0 0 0 M atszk p 2 0 1 0 MParr p 0 0 0 0 Felicin p 0 0 0 0 Cozart ph-ss 0 0 0 0 dnDkkrrf 0 0 0 0 T otals 2 9 1 4 1 Totals 2 80 4 0 N ew York 001 0 0 0 0 00 — 1 C incinnati 000 0 0 0 0 00 — 0 DP — NewYork1, Cincinnati 1. LOB—NewYork 7, Cincinnati 6 28 —C.lzturis (7). SB—Dan.Murphy New York

2

ATLANTA — Kyle Lohse pitched a two-hitter and Milwaukee

overcame Carlos Gomez'sejection in the first inning. After losing three of four, Atlanta has fallen a

Philadelphia Miami ab r hbi ab r hbi CHrndz ct 5 0 1 1 DSolan 2b 4 0 1 0 Roginsss 5 0 0 0 Lucas1b 4 0 1 0 U tley2b 4 0 2 0 Yelichlf 3 0 0 0 Ruizc 4 0 0 0 Stantonrf 4 0 0 0 DBrwnlf 4 0 2 0 Rugginct 2 2 0 0 Rufrf 3 1 1 0 Polanc3b 4 1 3 0 Fmdsn1b 3 1 1 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 1 3 G alvis3b 4 0 3 1 K.Higc 3 0 0 0 Hamelsp 2 0 0 0 B.Handp 2 0 0 0 Mayrryph 0 0 0 0 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Ascheph 1 0 0 0 Pierreph 1 0 0 0 CJimnzp 0 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 EMartnp 0 0 0 0Qualsp 0 0 0 0 Berndn ph I 0 0 0 Dobbs ph 0 0 0 0 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 2 10 2 Totals 3 1 3 6 3 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 0 0 0 200 — 2 Miami 020 000 01x — 3 E—Rogins (11). DP—Miami 1. LDB—Philadeiphia 9,Miami10.28—Ruf (11), Lucas(14), Polanco

(13) 3B Hechavarria (8) Philadelphia IP Hamels 6 C.Jimenez 1

H 5 0 1

R 2 0 1

ER BB SO 2 2 6 0 2 0 1 2 2

E.Martin L,2-5 1 Miami B.Hand 6 1-3 7 2 2 I A.Ramos BS,4-4 2- 3 1 0 0 0 M.Dunn 2-3 1 0 0 0 Quals W,5-2 1-3 0 0 0 1 CrshekS,33-35 1 1 0 0 0 T—2:54. A—I9,180(37,442).

3 1 0 0 2

Interleague

(21), Bruce2 (7). CS—B.Hamilton (1). S—MatsuRed Sox15, Rockies 5 zaka,Cozart. New York IP H R E R BB SO MatsuzakaW,3-3 72-3 4 0

0 2

6

1-3 0 0 0 I 0 (13), Descalso (24).HR—Ma.Adams(17). SB—Span FelicianoH,5 HawkinsS,13-16 1 0 0 0 0 0 (20). — S S.Miger. Washing ton I P H R E R BB SO Cincinnati Z immermann L,19-9 7 6 4 4 0 2 Latos L14-7 7 4 I I 2 7 Stammen 1 0 0 0 0 0 M.Parra 1 0 0 0 0 1 St. Louis Achapman 1 0 0 0 1 2 HBP—byMatsuzaka(Frazier), byl.atos(Tovar, Duda). S.MigerW,15-9 6 4 1 I 3 3 W P — F e l i c i a no. PB — Me sor ac o. ManessH,15 I 0 0 0 0 0 Siegrist H,11 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 T—2:51.A—26,223 (42,319). Ca.MartinezH,2 2-3 0 0 0 0 1

E—C.clark (I), Vi lar (15), M.Perez(I). LDBHouston 7,Texas7. 28—Altuve(31), A.Beltre (31), L.Martin (20). HR —B.Laird (5), Kinsler (13). SBE R BB SO RosenthalS,3-8 1 0 0 0 0 (41), Gentry (20). 0 6 10 Andrus IP H R E R BB SOSMiller pitchedto I batter inthe7th. 0 0 0 Houston HBP — b y Z im m e rm an n ( H ogi d a y). 7 6 3 5 0 0 1 KeucheL,6-10 5 2 - 3 6 11-3 I 0 0 I I T—2.28. A—40,597(43,975). R.cruz 0 0 2 De Leon 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 Texas Brewers 4, Braves 0

7 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2-3 1 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0

Mets1, Reds 0

injured Allen Craig and doubled

Kinsler homered andTexas kept

the party. Scherzer gave up two

(2), Florimon(6). S—Mastroianni. Detroit IP H R

Kipnis (29),M.carson(3). S—Aviles. SF Stubbs. Molina had the go-ahead hit for IP H R E R BB SO Chicago St. Louis, which wrapped up a Petricka Cleveland SalazarW,2-3 ShawH,12 R,HrgH,13 Allen H,11 M.Albers

Pct GB .585

WILD-CARDGLANCE TampaBay 89 69 .563 Cleveland 88 70 .557 Texas 8 7 71 . 551 1 x-clinched division

NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L x-Atanta 93 65 Washington 84 75 NewYork 73 85 Philadelphia 72 86 Miami 59 100 Central Division W L z-St. Louis 94 65 z-Pittsburgh 91 68 z-Cincinnati 90 69 Milwaukee 71 87 Chicago 66 93 West Division W L x-LosAngeles 91 67 Arrzona 80 78 SanDiego 74 84 San Francisco 73 85 Colorado 72 87

9 0

Cubs 4, Pirates 2 CHICAGO — Darnell McDonald hit

a three-run homer to leadChicago to the win that hurt Pittsburgh's

hopes of winning the NLCentral. With three games remaining in the

regular season for eachteam, the Pirates trail division-leading St.

Louis by three games.

half game behind St. Louis for the

DENVER — Todd Helton homered, doubled and drove in three runs in his final game at Coors Field, but Boston used Will Middlebrooks'

two homers andcareer-high seven RBls to beat Colorado. Helton also had a sacrifice fly in his Colorado farewell. The first baseman is retiring at the end of his17th season with the Rockies. The Red Sox, who clinched the AL East title last week, moved

two gamesaheadofOakland for the best record in the league. Jacoby Ellsbury didn't take long to

energize theRedSox lineup as he returned after missing 16 games with a fractured right foot — he singled, walked and scored twice

Pittsburgh Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi before being replaced in thefourth. SMartelf 4 1 2 0 Stcastrss 401 0 pitched seven innings of fiveNWalkr2b 4 0 1 0 Barney2b 4 1 2 0 playoffs for only the second Boston Colorado Milwaukee Atlanta hit ball, Josh Hamilton drove in Pct GB M cctchct 3 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 3 0 2 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi time in19 years, getting ab r hbi ab r hbi 591 Mornea1b 3 0 2 1 DMrph3b 4 1 1 0 two runs and the Los Angeles Egsurycf 2 2 1 0 Blckmnct 5 1 1 0 Aokirf 5 0 3 2 Smmnsss 4 0 1 0 GJonesrf 4 0 0 0 LakeIf .572 3 mathematically eliminated during 3I 00 BrdlyJrct 3 0 0 0 Rutledg2b 5 1 2 0 Angels did a bit more damage CGomzcf I 1 I I J.Uptonrf 4 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 4 0 0 0 DMcDnrf 4 1 3 3 .566 4 Victom rf 5 2 3 3 Tlwtzk ss 3 0 0 0 Bay. Evan LSchfrcf 4 0 0 0 FFrmn1b 0 0 0 0 .449 22r/z their loss to Tampa to Oakland's home-field playoff TSnchzc 4 0 0 0 Sweenycf 4 0 0 0 Berryrf 0 0 0 0 Cuddyrrf 3 1 1 0 Lucroyc 5 0 1 0 Uggla2b 3 0 0 0 .415 28 Longoria homered twice asthe Piepr 0 1 0 0 Boscanc 3 0 0 0 Pedroia2b 5 1 0 0 Helton1b 3 1 2 3 hopes. A rRmr3b 1 0 0 0 Gattislf 30 10 B armesss 3 0 0 0 Arrietap 2 0 0 0 Rays won their sixth straight JMcDnl2b 1 0 0 0 Arenad3b 4 0 2 1 YBtncr3b 3 1 2 0 Mccnnc 3 0 0 0 Pct GB Tabataph 1 0 1 1 Schrhltph 1 0 0 0 D .Ortiz1b 3 1 1 2 CDckrslf 2 1 0 0 Oakland Los Angeles KDavislf 4 0 0 0CJhnsn3b-lb3 0 0 0 and lowered to three their magic 576 Lirianop 2 0 0 0 Grimmp 0 0 0 0 B Snydr1b 1 1 0 0 Torrealc 3 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Bianchiss 3 0 1 0 EIJhns2b-3b 3 0 0 0 506 11 M azzarp 0 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 number over Texasfor clinching N avaIf 5 2 2 0 Pachec c I 0 0 0 C rispcf 3 1 1 0 Shucklf 4 1 1 0 Halton1b 3 0 1 1 BUptonct 3 0 0 0 .468 17 Lamboph 1 0 0 0 Bogsvcph 1 0 0 0 Sltlmchc 5 2 4 3 Chacinp 1 0 0 0 an AL wild-card berth. S ogard2b 4 0 1 0 Aybarss 4 1 3 1 G ennett2b 4 2 2 0 Mahlmp 2 0 0 0 .462 18 M orrisp 0 0 0 0 Greggp 0 0 0 0 Drewss 5 1 2 0 Culersnph 1 0 0 0 Lowriess 3 0 0 I Calhonrf 3 0 0 0 Lohse p 3 0 1 0 Varvar p 0 0 0 0 .453 19'/z JGomzp 0 0 0 0 M dlrks3b 5 2 2 7 Scahigp 0 0 0 0 Mosslf 3 0 0 0 JHmltndh 4 0 2 2 SDownsp 0 0 0 0 TampaBay New York B yrdph 1 0 0 0 Peavyp 3 1 1 0 Pomrnzp 0 0 0 0 L oe p 00 0 0 Cespdsdh 4 0 1 0 Trumo1b 4 0 0 0 WILD-CARDGLANCE ab r hbi ab r hbi T otals 3 4 2 6 2 Totals 3 34 9 4 Carpph 0 0 0 0 JHerrrph 1 0 0 0 RJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 Reddckrf 4 0 2 0 GGreen2b 4 0 1 0 z-Pittsburgh Zobristss 5 0 I 0 Nunez3b 5 2 2 I 9 1 68 5 72 P ittsburgh 001 0 0 0 0 01 — 2 T azawap 0 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 C agasp3b 4 0 0 0 lannettc 2 0 0 0 T otals 3 6 4 12 4 Totals 2 9 0 2 0 Chicago z-Cincinnati WMyrsrf 5 2 1 0 ARdrgzdh 3 0 0 0 90 69 . 566 — 4 100 003 Ogx F Morlsp 0 0 0 0 Dswaltp 0 0 0 0 Barton1b 3 0 0 0 AnRmn3b 2 1 0 0 M ilwaukee 100 1 0 0 101 — 4 z-clinched playoff berth Loney1b 4 2 3 1 ISuzukiph-dh1 1 1 0 E — Mor nea u (1), St . C a stro 2 (22). DP — P ittsburgh Bogartsph 1 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Vogtc 3 0 1 0 Cowgigcf 2 0 1 0 Atlanta 0 00 000 000 — 0 x-clinched division L ongori3b 5 3 3 4 Cano2b 4 0 2 I 1, Chicago1. LOB Pittsburgh8, Chicago8 28 B reslwp 0 0 0 0 RWhelrph I 0 I 0 T otals 3 1 1 6 1 Totals 2 93 8 3 DP — Atlanta 1. LOB—Milwaukee 8, Atlanta 2. D eJesscf-If 5 1 3 2 ASorinlt 4 0 0 0 M orneau (4), St . castro (32), Ba rney (2 5), D. M cD on al d Dmpstrp 0 0 0 0 Aoki (20). HR—C.Gomez (23). S—Lohse. 2 (4). 38 Oakland 0 00 001 000 — 1 28 — DYongdh 5 0 1 0 VWegsrf 3 0 0 0 Wednesday'sGames — T ab ata (5). HR — D .M cD ona l d (1). SBTotals 4 4 151615 Totals 33 5 105 Los Angeles 0 0 0 1 2 0 Ogx— 3 SF Halton. J oycelt 2 0 I I MrRynllb 3 0 I 0 N.Y.Mets I, Cincinnati0 Boston 301 330 050 — 16 E—Barton (I). DP—Oakand 1. LOB —Oakland Milwaukee IP H R E R BB SO S.Marte3(40), Rizzo(6), Do.Murphy(2). DJnngsph 1 0 1 0 Overayph-1b 0 0 0 1 St. Louis 4, Washington1 Pittsburgh IP H R E R BB SO Colorado 0 22 010 000 — 5 2 0 0 0 5 6, Los Angeles 6. SB —Sogard (10), Aybar(12), LohseW,11-10 9 F uldpr-cf 1 0 1 0 Grndrscf 4 0 1 0 Chicago Cubs4, Pittsburgh 2 Liriano L,16-8 5 8 4 4 I 8 E — Tul o wi t zki (8). DP —Boston 2. LOB —Boston J.Hamilton (4). S — Crisp, An.Romine, Cowgig. Atlanta JMolinc 5 0 0 0Ryanss 4 0 I 0 Milwaukee 4,Atlanta 0 Mazzaro 1 0 0 0 0 0 7, Col o rado 6. 28 — D .O rtiz (38), Saltalamacchia(39), SF — Lowrie. MaholmL,10-11 7 8 3 3 0 7 K Jhnsn 2b 3 0 0 0 CStwrtc 4 0 0 0 Miami 3,Philadelphia2 Morris 1 1 0 0 1 1 Drew(28), Peavy(1), Helton(22), Arenado(28), TorIP H R E R BB SO Varvaro 1 2 0 0 1 0 T otals 4 1 8 158 Totals 3 53 8 3 Oakland Boston15,Colorado5 JGomez 1 0 0 0 0 1 realba(8). HR—Vrctorino (15), Mrddlebrooks2(17), 62- 3 7 3 1 2 5 S.Downs 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 T ampa Bay 1 0 2 0 0 4 001 — 8 Straily L,10-8 San Diego12,Arizona2 Chicago Helton(15).SB—Rutledge(11). SF—Helton. Loe 1-3 0 0 0 0 I Bre Anderson 2 3 1 0 0 0 I New York 1 01 000 010 — 3 SanFrancisco6, L.A.Dodgers4 A rrieta W,4-2 6 4 1 1 2 1 Boston IP H R E R BB SO 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 WP—Maholm. E A.Soriano (1), Ryan (12). DP New York Cook Today's Games GrimmH,3 1 0 0 0 0 2 PeavyW,12-5 6 8 5 5 4 5 Los Angeles T — 2:31. A — 1 9,558 ( 49, 5 86). Arizona(Cahill 8-10) at SanDiego(Erlin 3-3), 3:40 1. LOB —Tampa Bay 9, NewYork 7. 28—W.Myers StropH,14 1 1 0 0 0 1 Tazawa 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 eaverW,11-8 7 5 1 1 1 2 (20), Loney2 (31), DeJesus (9), Nunez(15), Cano W p.m. G regg S,33-38 1 1 1 0 0 3 2-3 0 0 0 0 I F.Morales DDe LaRosaH20 1 0 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee (Hegweg 1-4) at N.Y.Mets(Gee12-10), (40). HR Longoria2 (31), DeJesus (2), Nunez(3). Giants 6, Dodgers 4 Lirianopitchedto 3baters in the6th Breslow 1 0 0 0 0 0 Frieri S,37-41 1 1 0 0 0 2 SF — Joyce. 4:10 p.m. HBP —by Mazzaro (Boscan), by Arrieta (S.Marte). Dempster 1 1 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia(Cloyd2-6) at Atlanta(Hale0-0), 4:10 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO T—2:31.A—36,226(45,483). WP — Morris. PB—TSanchez. Colorado SAN FRANCISCO — Barry Zito PriceW,98 7 6 2 2 0 8 p.m. T—3:05.A—26,171(41,019). ChacinL,14-10 4 9 7 7 2 3 2-3 2 1 I I I won in what likely was his final L.A. Dodgers (Volquez9-12)at SanFrancisco(Lince- B.Gomes Orioles 9, Blue Jays5 Scahig 1 3 3 3 0 0 Jo.PeraltaH,39 1 - 3 0 0 0 1 0 cum10-14),715 pm hurrah for San Francisco and Pomeranz 1 0 0 0 0 2 Padres 12, Diamondbacks2 AI Torres 1 0 0 0 0 1 Friday's Games Belisle 1 0 0 0 1 2 BALTIMORE — Ryan Flaherty Pablo Sandoval backed him with New York Detroit atMiami, 4:10p.m. t 1 4 5 5 0 1 PHughesL,4-14 2 7 3 3 1 2 hit a pair of two-run homers, Milwaukee atN.Y.Mets,4:10 p.m. SAN DIEGO — lan Kennedy's solid Dswal a two-run homer. Zito (5-11) Brothers I 0 0 0 I I Huff 32-3 5 4 4 1 2 PittsburghatCincinnati, 4:10p.m. HBP — b y O s w a lt (8 Sn yde r). Jonathan Schoop had a sol o outpitched Ricky Nolasco (13-11), pitching and offensive production T—3:30. A—48,775(50,398). Daley 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphiaat Atlanta,4.30 p.m. Cabral 1 1 0 0 0 1 shot in his big league debut and throughout San Diego's lineup Chicago CubsatSt Louis,515 p.m. whose late-September struggles D.Robertson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Baltimore beat Toronto to snap a Washington atArizona, 6:40p.m. was enough to beatArizona. have the Dodgers a bit concerned Leaders Claiborne I 2 1 I 0 1 Colorado at L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m. six-game skid. PHughespitchedto 4 baters inthe3rd. with the playoffs looming. The San Diego atSanFrancisco, 7:15p.m. ThroughWednesday's Games Arizona San Diego WP — Huff. PB—C.Stewart. AMERICANLEAGUE right-hander is 0-2 over his past ab r hbi ab r hbi T—3:22. A—37,260(50,291). Toronto Baltimore BATTING —Micabrera, Detroit,.345; Mauer,MinEatoncf 4 0 0 0 Venalecf 4 2 1 0 American League three outings. ab r hbi ab r hbi nesota,.324;Trout, LosAngeles, .324; ABeltre, Texas, A .Hill2b 4 0 1 0 Denorfirf 5 3 3 2 Reyesss 5 1 2 1 McLothlf 4 0 1 0 .317; Cano,NewYork, .315;DOrtiz, Boston, .307; Indians 7, White Sox 2 Gldsch1b 4 1 1 0 Gyorko2b 4 1 1 2 Kawskdh 5 0 4 0 Hardyss 5 1 2 0 Los Angeles San Francisco Donaldson, Oakland,.305. Mariners 6, Royals 0 Pradolf 3 0 1 0 Headly3b 5 0 3 3 Lawrie 3b 3 1 0 0 Markks rf 4 1 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi RBI — Micabrera, Detroit,137; CDavis, Baltimore, Campnph I 0 0 0 Medicalb 4 2 2 I CLEVELAND — Rookie Danny Lind1b 4 0 1 0 C.Davisdh 4 0 I I P uigrf 4 1 1 0 Pagancf 4 0 1 0 137; Cano, NewYork, 106; Fielder, Detroit, 106; M Mntrc 4 0 0 0 Blankslf 3 0 0 0 AJones,Baltimore,106; Encarnacion,Toronto, 104; SEATTLE — Hisashi Iwakuma RDavisrf 5 0 0 0 Valenciph-dh1 0 0 0 C rwfrdlt 4 2 2 0 GBlanclf 4 0 0 0 Salazar gaveClevelandamuchD avdsn3b 3 0 0 0 Fuentslf 2 0 0 0 Gosecf 5 1 1 1 Pearce1b 3 1 2 1 K empct 4 I 3 2 Beltlb 4 0 I 0 DOrtiz,Boston,100. pitched eight scoreless innings GParrarf 3 1 1 0 Amarstss 3 1 0 0 needed quality startand Nick T holec 5 2 4 1 Pridiecf 4 0 1 1 M Yong 1b 4 0 0 0 Posey c 3 2 2 0 HOMERUNS—CDavis, Baltimore, 52, Micabreand Mike Zunino homered twice O wingsss 3 0 1 0 RRiverc 4 1 3 1 Goins2b 5 0 2 0 Clevngrc 4 0 1 0 A.Egis c 3 0 0 1 Pence rf 2 2 0 0 ra, Detroit,44;Encarnacion,Toronto,36; Trumbo,Los Swisher hit a two-run homer as Delgadp 2 0 1 1 Boxrgrp 0 0 0 0 Pigarlf 5 0 I I S choop2b 3 3 2 I HrstnJr 3b 3 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 3 2 2 2 as Seattle endedKansas City's Angel es,34;ADunn, Chicago, 32;AJones, Baltimore, the Indians tightened their grip Lngwgp 0 0 0 0 Kenndyp 3 1 0 0 Flahrty3b 2 3 2 4 DGordnph 1 0 0 0 Scasigp 0 0 0 0 32 Longoria,TampaBay,31. playoff hopes. All three teams B lmqstph 1 0 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Totals 4 2 5 154 Totals 3 4 9 139 S chmkr2b 4 0 0 0 Pigph 00 0 0 STOLEN BASES—Ellsbury, Boston,52; RDavis, on one of the AL wild-card spots Sippp 0 0 0 0 CRonsnph-c 1 1 1 3 Toronto,45,Andrus,Texas, 41; Rios,Texas, 40; AlToronto 0 12 001 001 — 5 P untoss 3 0 1 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 ahead of KansasCity in the with their14th straight win over EDLRsp 0 0 0 0 B altimore 002 1 3 1 0 2 x— 9 AdGnzlph 1 0 1 0 Bcrwfrss 4 0 0 0 t uve, Ho u s t o n ,35;LMartin,Texas,34;JDyson,Kansas wild-card hunt — TampaBay, Bellp 0000 E—Hardy (12), B.Norris (1). DP—Toronto 3, BalChicago. Salazar (2-3) struck out Nolascop 1 0 0 0 Abreu2b 4 0 2 4 City, 33;Trout,LosAngeles,33. Totals 3 2 2 6 1 Totals 3 8 121412 Cleveland andTexas— won on LOB —Toronto14, Baltimore7.28—Kawa- L eaguep 0 0 0 0 Zitop 10 0 0 PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit, 21-3; Colon,Dakeight in 5/a innings for the Indians, timore1. Arizona 0 01 100 000 — 2 land, 17-6; CWilson,LosAngeles, 17-7, MMoore, saki (6), Thole (3), Pilar (4),McLouth(30), C.Davis VnSlykph I 0 0 0 Kschncph 1 0 0 0 Wednesday. TheRoyals' loss San Diego 100 1 4 1 1 4x — 12 TampaBay, 16-4; Tillman, Baltimore,16-7; Lester, who won their final six home (42). 3B —Gose (5). HR —Pearce (4), Schoop(1), Howegp 0 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 DP — San Diego1. LOB—Arizona 4, SanDiego Boston,15-8; 7 eliminated them. Flaherty2(10). SB Lawrie(8). Marmlp 0 0 0 0 Monellph 1 0 0 0 tiedat14. games to stay with the wild-card 6. 28 — Goldschmidt (36), G.Parra(43), Denorfia Toronto IP H R E R BB SO H Rmrzph 1 0 0 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 leaders. E .Rogers L,5-9 4 1 3 8 6 6 I 2 (20), Headl e 2 y (32), R. R i v era (3). HR — G y ork o ( 21), KansasCity Seattle Noonan 3b 0 0 0 0 NATIONALLEAGUE Medica(3), C.Robinson (I). Loup 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 T otals 3 4 4 8 3 Totals ab r hbi ab r hbi 3 16 8 6 BATTING —Cuddyer, Colorado,.335; CJohnson, Arizona IP H R E R BB SO Atlanta,.325;Mcarpenter,St Louis, 321; Mccutch1-3 1 1 1 1 0 L os Angeles 0 0 0 2 0 1 010 — 4 AGordn If 4 0 2 0 BMiller ss 4 1 2 0 Chicago Cleveland Drabek DelgadoL,5-7 5 7 6 6 0 4 en, Pittsburgh,.318;Werth,Wa Jeffress 12-3 1 0 0 0 3 San Francisco 030 201 Ogx — 6 Bonitac 2b 4 0 0 0 Frnkln 2b 3 1 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi shington,.316; FFree1 2 I 1 0 2 R.Romero 1 2 2 2 2 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 I 0 Seager3b 4 0 I 2 D eAzalf 3 0 0 0 Brantlylf 5 1 3 1 E Abreu (3), BCrawford (15). DP San Fran- Langweg man,Atlanta,.315; Craig,St.Louis,.315; YMolina,St. Sipp 1 1 1 1 I I Baltimore BButler dh 4 0 0 0 KMorls dh 4 0 1 0 LeGarc2b 4 0 1 0 Swisherrf-1b 4 1 1 2 cisco1. LOB— LosAngeles5,SanFrancisco5.28Louis, .315. 3 4 4 1 0 B.Norris 4 7 3 3 2 5 C.crawford(30), Kem S .Perezc 3 0 0 0 Ibanezlf 3 0 0 0 AIRmrz ss 4 1 2 0 Kipnis 2b 2 1 I 0 p(15), Ad.Gonzalez(32), Posey E.De LaRosa 1 - 3 RBI — Goldschmidt, Arizona, 124;Bruce,CincinBel 2-3 1 0 0 1 2 McFarlandW,3-1 1 3 1 1 1 1 (34), Abreu M axwgrf 3 0 I 0 AAlmntrt 0 0 0 0 Gigaspi1b 4 0 0 0 CSantn1b 3 0 1 0 (11). 38—Abreu(2). HR —Sandoval(14). nati, 107;FFreem an, Atlanta, 106; BPhigips, CincinSan Diego Mostks3b 3 0 1 0 Smoak1b 3 0 0 0 AGarcirf 4 1 2 1 Mcarsnpr-rf 0 1 0 0 StinsonH,2 1 0 0 0 0 1 CS — Abreu(2). S—Nolasco. SF—A.Egis. nati, 102; AdGonza lez, Los Angeles, 98; PAlvarez, 6 2 2 1 7 PattonH,B 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Los Angeles JDyson cf 2 0 0 0 MSndrs rf-If 3 1 1 1 Viciedodh 4 0 1 1 YGomsc 4 0 0 0 IP H R ER BB SO KennedyW,7-10 7 Pittsburgh,97,Craig, St. Louis,97. 1 0 0 0 0 1 A Escorss 3 0 0 0 Zuninoc 4 2 2 2 JrDnkscf 4 0 2 0 Ascarrss 4 1 2 2 HammeS,1-1 21 - 3 4 1 I 0 3 NolascoL,13-11 52-3 8 6 6 1 7 Thayer HOME RUNS —Goldschmidt, Arizona, 36;PAIBoxberger 1 0 0 0 0 1 varez,Pittsburgh,34; Bruce,Cincinnati, 30;DBrown, McFarlandpitchedto 2baters inthe 6th. Ackley cf 4 1 1 0 Semien3b 4 0 00 Giambidh 2 0 1 0 League 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—bySipp(Venable). Balk—Kennedy. HBP —byE.Rogers (Flaherty), byStinson(Lawrie). T otals 3 0 0 5 0 Totals 3 26 8 5 Pheglyc 4 0 0 0 Bournpr-dh 0 0 0 0 Howell 1 0 0 0 0 3 Phrladelphia27; , CGonzalez, Colorado, 26;JUpton, T—2:50.A—29,528(42,524). T—3.19.A—23,698 (45,971). K ansas City 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 Raburn ph-dh 1 0 0 0 Marmol 1 0 0 0 2 2 Atlanta,26; Zimmerman,Washington, 26. Seattle 000 030 12x — 6 Chsnhg 3b 2 1 0 0 San Francisco STOLENBASES—Segura, Milwaukee,44, EYE E.Santana(1), W.Sm ith (1). DP—Seattle 2. Avilesph-3b 1 0 0 0 Zito W,5-11 5 4 2 1 0 1 Marlins 3, Phillies 2 oung,NewYork,42; SMarte, Pittsburgh,40; Ecabrera, National League LOB —KansasCity 4, Seatle 6. 28—A.Gordon (26), Stubbs ct 3 1 0 1 KontosH,5 1 1 I 0 0 0 San Diego,37;CGomez, Milwaukee,37; Mccutchen, Maxwell(16), Moustakas(26), B.Miger(11), Seager Totals 3 5 2 8 2 Totals 3 17 9 6 Machi H,11 1 0 0 0 0 2 Pittsburgh,27; Pierre,Miami, 23. MIAMI — Adeiny Hechavarria 0 1 0 001 000 — 2 PITCHING —Zimmermann, Washington, 19-9; (32), Ackley(18). HR—MSaunders (12), Zunino2 Chicago S.casiga H,22 1 2 1 1 0 0 Cardinals 4, Nationals1 C leveland 020 0 2 1 2 0 x — 7 Wainwright,St. Louis,18-9; JDeLaRosa, Colorado, (5). SB —J.Dyson(33). RomoS,37-42 1 1 0 0 0 0 drove in three runs, including a Kansas Cily IP H R E R BB SO E—Phegley (5), Semien (3). DP—Chicago 1. HBP —byNolasco(Pence). 16-6; Liriano,Pittsburgh,16-8; Greinke,LosAngeles, go-ahead run in the eighth inning, —Chicago 7, Cleveland6. 28—Brantley (26). ST. LOUIS — Rookie Shelby Miller T—3;04. A—41,377(41,915). 15-3; Kershaw, LosAngeles, 15-9;SMiler, St.Louis, E.SantanaL,9-10 6 5 4 4 4 2 LDB W.Smith 2 3 2 2 0 3 HR — A.Garcia (7), Swisher(21). SB—Brantley (17), won his15th game, and Yadier for Miami. 15-9.

NEW YORK — The New York 371 34r/z Yankees failed to make the

Mannion Continued from C1 "Guys have been kind of thrown in the fire and they've stepped up well," Mannion continued. "I don't think we've had very many missed assignments, which is a big concern when

you have a young guy stepping in, but that hasn't been the case." Last week, freshman Sean Harlow had to burn his redshirt when he was forced into action at right tackle. Gavin Andrews was slated as the starter at right tackle before the season, but mononucleosis has kept him off the field so far. Right guard Grant Enger moved over one spot

ANAHEIM, Calif.— Jered Weaver

and Roman Sapolu stepped in at right guard, but they were both lost to injuries. Starting center Isaac Seumalo took over at right tackle with Josh Mitchell filling in at center and Grant Bays at right guard, but Mitchell was hurt at San Diego State. So in stepped Harlow and Seumalo returned to center. "He battled in there," Riley said of Harlow. "The thing that we have to avoid with the new linemen that we have playing is assignment mistakes as much as anything. That's our biggest area with all those new guys that are in there is they've got to get their assignments down. Then it

NL's best winning percentage.

we've kind of tailored it to them too, a little bit with what we can do having guy." carried a ton of different protections Riley has a reputation for running and a lot of different run concepts. an offense that can get fairly com- We've kind of narrowed that down plex at times for the players. so that we know what we're doing O ffensive c o ordinator D a n n y and I think that's helped them. But Langsdorf said the staff has boiled they've done a nice job of preparing down the blocking schemes to make and being ready to play, too." life easier for the younger players. Lack of continuity in the lineup "We've got a lot of stuff and we've would overwhelm many teams. got some complexity in our schemes," The presence of o ffensive line Langsdorf said. "Eut really for the coach Mike Cavanaugh has been new guys we've been running quite crucialfor the Beavers as they work a few zone schemes, so we're able to with the patchwork line. "He's done a good job of preparing simplify it for the new guys. "I think they've done a nice job us, getting us ready for the game," of studying and learning and then left guard Josh Andrews said. "Letcomes down to performance, but you at least have got to get on the right

ting us know what we need to do to get the job done." Andrews said Cavanaugh keeps the team focused on the basics and then builds them up to the advanced work. Having older players such as Andrews, left tackle Michael Philipp

and Enger around has helped as well. "That's what we've been doing,

especially with the younger guys, because they're only like a year or two in the program, so they don't know what's really going on," Andrews said. "But we have the experienced guys helping them out, so t h at's

really paid off."


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

Eaton Continued from C1 He would go on to win the Olympic gold medal in London, while Hardee claimed the silver medal. The decathlon includes 10 track and field events contested over two days: the 100 meters, long jump,

shot put, high jump, 400, 110 hurdles, discus, pole vault, javelin and 1,500. Reached by phone in Eugene on Wednesday, Eaton said the film would provide good exposure for the decathlon, which he said is still sometimes misunderstood by those outside of track and field and often gets overshadowed by other events. "I think th e decathlon should be one of the premier events i n a t h l etic championships, because if people actually understood what it was like, it's so interesting to watch and follow the stories of the athletes," Eaton said. "It's kind of like keeping track of your fantasy football team in a way, because there's different stats and people are good at different things over two

Prep footballthisweekend,at aglance

Madras

Here is a quick look at the games involving area teams on Friday, with records in parentheses:

Ridgeview (3-1) at Bend(0-4), 7 p.m.: The Lava Bears and thesecond-year Ravenswill square off in a meeting of one ofCentral Oregon's oldest

7 p.m.:After a 51-13 loss to Crook County in

programs and its newest. Ridgeview's Boomer Fleming, after running for 221 yards in a 35-21

home, sort of, to begin Tri-Valley Conference play. Playing in Culver while its new stadium

win against CascadeChristian last Friday, brings

is being built, Madras looks to bounceback

his160 rushing yards per game to Punk Hunnell

behind Chad Lindgren, Cody Shepherd and Jered Pichette. Through four games, Lindgren

Stadiumto go upagainstBend,whichhasbeen outscored144-7 in its past three games.But

North Marion (2-2) at Madras(2-2) in Culver, Prineville last Friday, the White Buffaloes return

has passed for 502 yards andsix touchdowns (293 yards and five scores to Shepherd), while

Lava Bears freshman QB Creighton Simmonds

has completed 57 percent of his passes for a total of 479 yards, andChris Wallace, who

Pichette has averaged128.5 yards rushing per

is expected to be the primary back if Jordan

which lost at home to Junction City last week, 34-7.

game. TheBuffs host Aurora's North Marion,

Neelon cannot go due to an injury, comes off a 105-yard rushing performance in a 55-0 loss to Redmond (1-3) at Summit(2-2), 7 p.m.: Tyler

Sisters (0-4) at Sweet Home (1-3), 7 p.m.: The Outlaws openSky-Em Leagueaction against the Huskies, the reigning conference champs. Logan

Mullen has been the do-it-all player for the

Schutte, who rushed for123 yards in a 48-10

Marist in Eugene last week.

Storm, averaging more than 50yards passing, rushing and receiving through four games.

loss to Cascade inTurner last week, andTristan Lewis (averaging nearly185 yards passing per

Mullen posted his third 110-plus-yard receiving

game with three TDs in the past three contests)

game last Friday in a42-28 loss to The Dalles

lead Sisters into the conference game, asthe

Wahtonka. His total of13 touchdowns, plus

Outlaws seek their first victory of the season. Sweet Home has dropped three straight since its

Bransen Reynolds completing nearly 57 percent of his passes for 439 yards andfive scores, could test Redmond on Friday in each team's Intermountain Conference opener. The Panthers

come off a 41-32 defeat to Franklin in Portland

season-opening win, including last Friday's13-7 home loss to North Valley of Grants Pass.

Junction City (3-0) at LaPine(0-3), 7 p.m.: The Hawks come off a 51-0 home loss to Burns last Friday, during which La Pine accumulated just

last week, during which freshman QB Bunker Parrish threw for four touchdowns, two each to

Derek Brown andCodyWinters. Wilsonville (3-1) at Mountain View(2-2), 7 p.m.:The Cougars have dropped back-toback games, and things get no easier on Friday,

62 yards of total offense. After being outscored 108-0 over the past two games(andcompiling a total of just140 yards of offense), the Hawks

look to turn things around in their Sky-Em League openeragainst the resurgent Tigers.

days. If people knew more

when Mountain View hosts Wilsonville. The

Junction City, which defeated North Marion in

about it ... they'd have a way better appreciation of it

Wildcats dispatched Mountain View during

Aurora last week, hasalready matched its win

the 2012 regular season, but in the first round

total from 2012.

of the Class 5Astate playoffs, and once again at Wilsonville, it was the Cougars coming out

Culver (0-2) at Vernonia(1-2), 7 p.m.: After a

on top, 21-14. Conor Nehl has completed 64.6

go back to work with a trip to Vernonia for a

and probably be way more interested in watching it." Brereton — whose previous works include "Born 2 Run," a documentary on Jamaican sprinting — said he hopes the film gives viewers a better appreciation of the decathlon.

"A lot of people give a

lot of respect to a sprinter or a pole vaulter or a high

jumper or a long jumper, but these guys (decathletes) do everything on a high level for two days," Brereton said. "We thought we could give people an idea of what actually takes place in those two days, so the next time they see a decathlon competition, they have a different insight or perspective." Brereton, 40, traveled to Eugene to film and interview Eaton during some of his training. The film includes footage from the 2011 World Championships in Daegu, South K orea, footage from Eaton's worldrecord performance in Eugene, and training scenes with Eaton in Eugene and with H ardee i n A u s tin, Texas. Brereton said he could n ot afford th e r i ghts t o NBC's footage of the Lon-

don Olympics. "We just kind of showed them in their own element, as well as their competit ions," Brereton said o f Eaton, 25, and Hardee, 29. "Everybody knows the end result, so we just wanted to kind of capture the story more than the actual event." The film includes Tate Metcalf, E aton's f o rmer coach at Mountain View High School in Bend and owner of the Sisters Athletic Club. Metcalf arranged for the movie to premiere at his club. "It kind of goes behind the scenes of what these guys do," Metcalf said of "48 Hours to Fame." Eaton said he likes that the film features both him and Hardee, but he wishes more of it highlighted Hardee, who was his mentor before he surpassed Hardee in the decathlon. "I understand that I'm the gold medalist and worldrecord holder, but he kind of set the foundation, along with Bryan Clay and other guys before him, for myself," Eaton said. "I competed with (Hardee) for two to three years beforehand, before I became good. I was watching him and learning from him as welL" Once Eaton gets back to training, his focus will be the World Indoor Championships, in which the multi competition is the sevenevent heptathlon. But the

2015

(outdoor) World

Championships in Beijing — and, of course, the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro — are also on the horizon. "I think d efinitely the indoor first, but also the worlds in '15 is the next step," Eaton said. "To be back-to-back world cham-

pion would be good, and then after that I think that will set me up for the Olym-

pic year." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com.

38-28 loss to Waldport last Friday, the Bulldogs

percent of his passes for 812yards and eight touchdowns.Nehliscomplementedby Keenan

nonconference contest against the Loggers of the Northwest League. Vernonia won 58-0 over

Springer, who went from13 yards rushing

Class 3A Chemawa inSalem last week, and

against Sprague two weeksagoto114 and a touchdown last Friday in a 26-25 loss to Class

the Loggers have taken two of the past three meetingsagainst the Bulldogs, including last

6A McNary.

season's 51-0 victory in Culver. Gilchrist (2-1) at Powers(1-2), 4 p.m.: The Grizzlies were dealt their first loss of the season

Madison (2-2) at CrookCounty (1-3), 7 p.m.: Freshman quarterback Mike Irwin has the

Cowboys rolling after accounting for five of

last Friday in a 38-8 decision at Prospect. After committing six turnovers in that matchup,

Crook County's seven touchdowns in a 51-13

win against Madras last Friday, snapping a three-game skid. Irwin rushed for 94 yards (the Cowboys totaled 340 yards onthe ground) and three scores while passing for152 yards and two touchdowns. Collbran Meeker,who

Gilchrist looks to reboundagainst Class1A Special District 2 foe Powers, which lost 44-34 last week at Elkton. In 2012, the host Grizzlies

won a 44-42 thriller after forcing a Powers

recorded three touchdowns last week, also looks

to contribute in CrookCounty's nonconference matchup against Class 5AMadison, which

fumble in Grizzlies territory with less than 40

seconds left.

defeated Benson 26-12 in Portland last Friday.

of the high school. But as the AD soon came to find out, lights Continued from C1 would need tobe hauled in,and So for three games this sea- portable bleachers would need son, Madras has a home — away to be rented. The cost continued from home. to rise. "That's not the best thing in Then Ostercontacted Culver, the world for our fans,espe- which offered its complex to the cially for seniors — it's a little Class 4A Buffs virtually costdisappointing for them," Wells free. Culver's proximity sits well s aid last m o nth d u r in g p r e - with Wells, especially since the season practices, speaking from 2A school is located just 10 miles the high school parking lot and southwest of Madras. "They've been great neighstaring at a massive hole in the ground where the Madras sta- bors," Oster said, "and have dium grandstands once stood. really helped us out in a bind." "But our team, we've discussed Madras High is being reinvigit, and we just said, 'Give us 100 orated. A new logo — featuring yards and we'll play.' We're fine a modern and ferocious White with it." Buffalo — was released this past Currently, the Buffs practice spring, and the school's gymnajust outside the high school, on a sium now sports a new scoregrass expanse roughly the size board as well as flooring that inof a football field. As a backup, cludes the new emblem. And in Wells has the baseball and soft- June, the stadium that has stood ball fields. There may be a time, since the 1960s was b u rned perhaps during weeks with a and torn down. The event was "home" game, when he calls opened to community members, up Culver athletic director and many of whom watched from a football coach Shea Little to see distance. It was awe-inspiring, if the White Buffaloes can roam Wells said, and a once-in-a-lifethe Bulldogs' territory. time experience for Oster. "There were a lot of people in But a s W e ll s e m phasized: Give the Buffs 100 yards, and the community that were actuthey will come, they will play. ally sad to see it go, and I can un"We haven't made it an issue," derstand that," Wells said. "But Wells said on Tuesday. "My phi- I'm just looking forward to, in losophy as a coach is to play 2014, having a wonderful, beauwhere we get to play." tiful place for us to play football The bond that passed in 2012 games and having a good footcalled for, among other things, a ball team to show the commuperforming artscenter Madras nity what we're all about." For three games thisseason never had as well as a new surface for the track, which Buffs — one Friday night and two Satathletic director Rory Oster said urday afternoons — Madras has had become unsafe topractice a home away from home. (The on. The new football stadium White Buffaloes were scheduled and field, according to Oster, be- to play four games at home this came a byproduct of those proj- season but, f o r c o n venience, ects, with the new performing o pted to c h ange t heir h o m e arts center housing the locker opener against Stayton to a road rooms. contest.) With the new facilities in the It might not feel that way for early stages o f c o n struction Wells and the Buffs on Friday. — Oster said he expects the It may even be a bi t s u rreal. stadium to be ready and open But Wells and his team are not before the 2014 football sea- concerned about it. Their apson — Madras football for the proach is still the same, and he time being has a second home. reiterates: "Give us 100 yards and we'll Oster's first option for a temporary facility, back in the winter, play." — Reporter: 541-383-0307; was Jefferson County M i ddle School, located about a mile east glucas@bendbutletirLcom.

Pac Am Continued from C1 T homas is n o P a c A m rookie. In fact, this was his ninth appearance in the Pac Am, which is in its 17th year. But he had not played in the tournament in years. H aving played golf o n ly twice this year, though, he w as wary o f p l aying i n a net tournament like the Pac Am. Tournament organizers pitched the Weekend Warrior flight, and it was appeal-

I4 '

/

ing enough to lure him back,

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Thomas said. Eric Yaillen, left, and Steve Waldo look to where Eric's ball ended The one drawback is that up as the two prepare to move down the fairway from the 18th the Weekend Warriors pay tee box during the Pacific Amateur Golf Classic at Quail Run Golf the same tournament entry Course in La Pine on Tuesday morning. fee as every other player, even though there is no chance to advance to today's champi- tournament's tee prizes and three Weekend Warriors. myriad activities. The only onship round at Crosswater. The Central Oregon VisiStill, Thomas said, it was exception, he said, that there tors Association, which orworth it. are no trophies for the Week- ganizes the Pac Am, created "We get treated the same end Warriors. the noncompetitive flight as "But we can say we won a a way to attract golfers like a nd ge t e v e r y thing t h a t (other Pac Am players) get," flight," interrupted Yaillen, Thomas, who want to play said Thomas, referring to the who scored the lowest of the but for one reason or another

Downs

amateur career she won the W omen's W e stern J u n i or Continued from C1 Amateur, the Oregon Ama"I am r e ally excited for teur, Oregon Women's Stroke t he opportunity t o c o a c h Play and the Pacific Northand lead the Portland State west W o m en' s A ma t eur w omen's golf t e am," s a i d championship. I n a d d ition, Downs, who graduated from she advanced to the round Mountain View High School of 16 in both the 2004 U.S. in 2001. "I feel like my five W omen's Amateur and t h e years of coaching experience 2005 U.S. Women's Public in the Pac-12 (Conference) Links. and my playing experience will be very beneficial in run-

are reluctant about playing in a tournament setting, said M ike Patron, the Pac A m tournament director. The idea for a W e ekend Warrior d i v i sion, a c cording to Patron, came when a longtime Pac Am player, Bob Sweatt, of Georgia, expressed concern about playing in the tournament after having a leg amputated. He still wanted to play but did not feel he could compete. "This tournament isn't the right fit for everybody, but they still like to golf and still like the parties," said Patron, a dding that Sweatt had t o withdraw from the Pac Am this year because of other ailments. "We wanted to create something that was a l i ttle less intimidating." Though the flight is in its

tor said, adding that his goal next year will be to attract a dozen or so golfers to the flight. Yaillen, who runs the Las Vegas World Amateur, a I year-old amateur tournament not unlike the Pac Am, said there might be room for such a flight in his event, too. "I think Mike came up with a good idea," said Yaillen. Thomas said he will likely return to a more conventional flight for next year's Pac Am. Then again, he might stick with the Weekend Warriors. "I kind of enjoyed not hav-

ing any pressure," Thomas said. "I played with a bunch of good guys. It was kinda cool." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall®bendbulletirLcom.

infancy and included only t hree players, Patron h a s been encouraged. "It worked like we hoped, so we will probably push it more in the future," the direc-

D owns spent tw o y e a r s course thrilled to have this as a touring professional afopportunity and still be close ter college before accepting to my family in Bend." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, the OSU job in 2007. As a zhall®bendbulletin.com. pro, she played primarily on the Futures Tour, the LPGA Tour's main d evelopmental circuit. Now she has the chance to write a new chapter in her golf career. Said Downs: "I am of

r'x

g

u

ning my own program." Downs is taking over a traditionally strong program. Portland State has won six Big Sky Conference championships in 1 0 y e ars and has made frequent appearances in the NCAA Division I Women's Golf Regionals. "I am a very competitive person so I a m t h r i l led to build off of that recent success and take the program to the next level," said Downs, who is r e placing Kathleen Takaishi. Takaishi left PSU in August to take the head coaching job at the University of Nevada. Downs is among the most decorated golfers Central Oregon has ever produced, winning 24 high school tournaments at Mountain View. At the University of New Mexico, Downs was a twotime A l l - American b e fore graduating in 2005. In h er

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

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 NASDAO ~

S&P 500

7 $5

+

3,761.10

Toda+

1,760

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Tracking the economy

1,720 "

Economists anticipate the L.S. economy grew 2.6 percent in the

1 ,680

April-June quarter versus a year earlier. The Commerce Department's third estimate on second-quarter growth is due out today. The previous estimate, issued last month, said that the economy grew at an annual rate of 2.5 percent — a sluggish but stronger pace than in the previous quarter. The government's estimates of economic expansionmeasures changes in the gross domestic product, the broadestgauge ofthe economy.

Gross domestic product Annualized quarterly change 3.7% est.

2.8

4 55

1,692.77

"

"

+

10 YR T NOTE 2.63%

SILVER

+

$1,335.90

S&P 500

Dow jones industrials

Close: 1,692.77

Close: 15,273.26

Change: -4.65 (-0.3%) 10 DA Y S

• 15,240 '

16,000 "

1,750

1,700

Ch a nge: -61.33 (-0.4%)

1 0 DA Y S .

15,600 '

1,650 15,200 1,600 14,800 "

1,550 1'500

A

14,400

M

StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (In mil.) 3,076 1,761 Pvs. Volume 3,174 1,742 Advanced 1537 1165 Declined 1522 1307 New Highs 1 10 154 New Lows 20 16

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

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C H G . %CHG. wK Mo OTR YTD -0.40% L L +16.55% -0.66% +24.58% -0.73% L L +7.36% -0.17% L L +14.87% -7.15 -0.19% L +24.56% -4.65 -0.27% L +18.69% + 1 . 04 +0.08% L L +21.76% -36.59 -0.20% L L +20.49% -1.17 -0.11% L L +26.39%

-61.33 -43.79 -3.60 -16.25

NorthwestStocks ALK 32.77 ~ 68.00 63.43 -.31 -05 L L AVA 22 78 ~ 29 26 26.99 12 - 0.4 L L BAC 8. 7 0 ~ 15.03 14.14 +05 + 04 w L '12 ''13 BBSI 26 19 — 0 7349 72.25 +1.43 +2.0 L 1 Q 2Q 3 Q 4 Q ' 1 Q 2 Q BA 6918 ~ 1 20 3 8 118.51 49 -0.4 L Source: FactSet Cascade Bancorp CACB 4.65 ~ 7.18 5.80 09 -1.5 V V Columbia Bukg COLB 16.18 — 0 25.59 24.87 04 -01 ~ L Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 ~ 66.69 59.94 72 -1.2 L L Improved sales? CostcoWholesale COST 93.51 ~ 1 20.2 0 115.41 93 -0.8 w L 15 -1.1 ~ L The world's largest athletic footwear Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5 62 — 0 1385 13.48 FLIR 18 58 ~ 33 82 31.18 -.40 -1 3 w w and clothing company reports fiscal FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 ~ 27.78 21.40 + 16 +0 8 L V first-quarter financial results today. Home Federal Bucp ID HOME 10.26 ~ 1 4.8 1 12.93 +.28 +2.2 L W L Nike is expected to show a INTC 19.23 ~ 25.98 2 3. 7 0 - .01 . . . V L pickup in earnings and revenue for Intel Corp Keycorp KEY 7. 8 1 ~ 1 2.63 11.4 5 +. 0 3 +0 .3 w w the quarter compared to a year Kroger Co KR 230 9 — 0 41 14 40 .67 -.18 -0 4 w L ago. Nike has benefited this year Lattice Semi LSCC 3.46 ~ 5.71 4.64 -.11 - 2.3 w w from strong demand for its athletic LA Pacific L PX 12.19 ~ 22.55 1 7. 3 9 -.12 -0.7 W L wares, despite a fluctuating MDU Resources M DU 19 . 59 ~ 30.21 27. 7 2 +. 0 1 ... L L economy in Europe and a MentorGraphics M EN T 13,21 — o 23,60 23.03 + .21 +0,9 L L slowdown in growth in China. ty Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 36.43 32 .51 +. 05 +0.2 w w Investors will be listening for an Nike Iuc 6 NKE 44 83 — 0 70 56 68 .92 -.51 -0 7 V L update on the company's efforts to NordstromIuc JWN 50.94 tt— 63.3 4 55. 8 1 -.60 -1.1 w w adapt its offerings to changing Nwst NatGas NWN 39.96 tt — 50.8 0 4 1. 9 2 -.17 -0.4 L L consumer tastes in China. OfficeMax Iuc OMX 6.22 13.17 12 .43 +.19 +1.6 L L PaccarIuc PCAR 39.43 60.00 56 .41 -.36 -0.6 V L Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 2.36 1 .8 5 09 -4.6 L L Plum Creek PCL 40.60 54.62 46 .68 37 -0.8 V L Prec Castparts PCP 159.84 270.00 228.01 1.98 -0.9 w L Safeway Iuc SWY 15.00 — o 32.61 31 .92 -.16 -0.5 L L Schuitzer Steel SCHN 23.07 32.99 27 .56 +.08 +0.3 L L Sherwin Wms SHW 138.36 194.56 179.86 14 -0.1 V L Staucorp Fucl SFG 30.88 56.40 55 .11 +.48 +0.9 L L StarbucksCp SBUX 44.27 77.85 76 .34 -.21 -0.3 L L Triquiut Semi TQNT 4.30 8.49 8 .2 0 -.04 -0 4 L L UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 17.48 16 .25 +.02 +0.1 L W Accenture update US Baucorp USB 30.96 38.23 36 .76 14 -0.4 w L Three quarters into its fiscal year, WashingtonFedl WAFD 15.64 22.78 20 .42 +.20 +1.0 L V Accenture's earnings and revenue Wells Fargo &Co WFC 31.25 44.79 41 .81 +.08 +0.2 w L are running ahead of where they Weyerhaeuser WY 2 4.75 33.24 28 .53 +.18 +0.6 V L

were last year. The consulting firm has enjoyed growth from its outsourcing business, even as its consulting revenue has trended lower of late. Investors will be watching today to see if Accenture's consulting bookings improved in its fiscal fourth quarter. $90

ACN

$76.12 '13

'12

80 $65.78 ' 70

L +47 2 +90 1 406 15 0 .80 V +11 . 9 +8. 8 285 18 1 .22 L + 21. 8 $. 5 5 383626 25 0 .04 L + 89. 7 + 1 50.1 11 35 0 . 52 L +57 . 3 $ . 72.63469 22 1 . 94 V -7.3 +1 4.8 2 5 L +38 6 +32 5 254 20 0 . 40 V +12 . 3 + 2 0 .5 60 19 0 . 88 L +16. 9 +21 . 3 2088 25 1 . 24 L +10 8.0 + 6 7 .9 29 cc L +39 7 $. 5 21 610 20 0 3 6 V +50 2 + 26 6 16838 dd 0.58

+4. 0 + 16.7 233 cc0.24a W +14. 9 +7. 9 1 8759 13 0 . 9 0 L + 36.0 +3 0 .4 7 9 41 1 3 0. 2 2 L +56 3 +75 , 0 3 4 65 1 4 0 , 66f w +16 . 2 $ .15.5 78 8 d d L -10.0 +26.1 2301 11 L +30.5 + 26 .2 6 2 6 c c 0. 6 9 L +35, 3 +4 1 ,0 43 1 2 4 0, 1 8 w +21. 7 +8. 4 2 6536 13 1 .12f L + 33 6 +47 , 4 3 8 95 2 6 0, 8 4 w +4.3 +4.4 28 5 7 1 5 1. 2 0 W -5.2 -10.6 103 2 0 1. 8 2 L +44.2 +70 .4 2 2 80 2 0 . 0 8 a L + 24. 8 +4 0 .9 1 791 20 0 .80a L +29.4 +42 . 6 10 dd + 5.2 + 9 . 2 6 9 0 3 2 1. 7 6 L +20. 4 + 42 .7 3 3 6 2 2 0. 1 2 L +76.5 + 1 06.0 4209 15 0 . 8 0 L -9.1 - 1.9 20 9 9 8 0 . 75 L +16.9 +2 1 .7 5 7 4 2 6 2. 0 0 L +50.3 +74 . 8 19 1 13 0. 9 3f L + 42.3 +5 1 .3 3 5 51 3 7 0. 8 4 L +69 7 + 56 3 1 9 90 d d L +37. 8 +2 6 .1 1 818 1 7 0 .60a L +15. 1 +10 .3 9 0 83 1 2 0. 9 2 L +21.0 +20 .9 3 9 4 1 5 0. 4 0f L +22.3 + 22 . 0 18849 11 1 . 2 0 L + 2.6 +8.8 34 4 1 2 6 0 . 88f

Operating EPS

AutoZone 4Q profit up ".."'"."

4Q '12 4 Q '13 Price-earnings ratio:

AutoZone(AZO ) Wednesday's close:$425.07 Total return YTD:20%

16

based on trailing 12 month results

$342~ 3- YR*: 23%

AP

FundFocus

Annual dividend: none

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK Managers of this large-cap growth FAMILY FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 fund prefer to own companies Marketsummary American Funds BalA m 22.91 - . 0 4+13.8 +15.2 +12.7 +9.0 A A A with strong balance sheets and Most Active CaplncBuA m 56.50 -.07 +9.9 +10.8 +9.4 +6.5 8 A C long-term competitive advantages, CpWldGrlA m 42.58 -.06+16.6 +20.6 +10.5 +6.9 C 0 C NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG according to Morningstar. 49.46 +1.01 14.14 + . 05 41.55 —.32 3.79 $ -.18 25.52 + . 44 4.89 —.05 3.93 + .33 8.01 -.53

Gainers NAME MAKO Srg

PacBiosci

ChiBAK rs Ottcothyr GlobusMar

Gain Cap QuantFu rs AscepaRtl PranaBio U niPixel

LAST 29.46 5.98 2.36 2.18 3.22 14.31 3.09 20.06 4.18 18.39

CHG %CHG $ .13.29 +2.52 +.46 $ -.38 +.53

+2.23 +.46 +2.74 +.56 +2.39

+ 8 2 .2 + 7 2 .8 + 2 4 .3 + 2 1 .1 + 1 9 .6

DaqoNE rs RareEle g KaloBios tt

Penney

AMAG Plt

LAST 24.40 2.79 4.63 10.12 22.42

CHG %CHG -7.39 -23.2 —.53 -16.0 —.83 -15.2 -1.78 -15.0 -3.74 -14.3

Foreign Markets

Oakmark

+ 1 8.5 Mornirtgstar OwnershipZone™ Oppeuheimer + 1 7 .5 + 1 5 .8 O o Fund target represents weighted + 1 5 .5 average of stock holdings + 1 4.9 • Represents 75% of furtd's stock holdings

Losers NAME

EurPacGrA m 46.36 +.07+12.5 +18.2 +7.1 +6.0 D D A FrtlttvA m 48.4 4 - . 08+19.8 +22.4 +14.7 +8.8 8 C C GrthAmA m 41 .96 -.10+22.2 +25.0 +15.5 +9.0 A C C Prudential Investmeu JeuuGrA mPJFAX IrtcAmerA m 19.72 -.03 +12.0 +13.5 +11.6 +8.7 8 A 8 IttvCoAmA m 35.92 -.10 +20.5 +21.0 +14.1 +8.6 C D C VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m 36.71 -.05 +17.4 +21.8 +12.5 +9.2 8 8 8 WAMutlttvA m 37.14 -.14 +20.8 +21.0 +16.3 +8.9 D A 8 cC o 03 Dodge 8 Cox Income x 13.51 -.09 - 0.4 + 0.7 + 4.3 +7.4 A 8 8 0O IntlStk 4 1.08 +.06 +18.6 +27.1 +9.3 +6.8 A A A $L Stock x 151.68 -.39 $.25.9 +29.2 $.17.7 $9.7 A A A Fidelity Contra 93.25 -.25 +21.3 +19.6 +15.4+10.2 C C 8 GrowCo 118. 67 - .47+27.3 +24.4 +19.1+13.3 A A A LowPriStk d 46.90 +.10+24.7 +28.4 +18.0+13.4 C B A Fidelity Spartan 500 l dxAdvtg60.27 -.16+20.5 +20.0 +16.2 +9.3 C 8 8 FrankTemp-FraukliuIncome Cm 2.37 ... +9.0 +10.5 +9.9 +9.7 A A A «C 03 IncomeA m 2. 3 5 ... +9 . 5 + 11.2 +10.4+10.3 A A A FrankTemp-Templetou GIBondAdv 12.98 -.05+0.2 +4.3 +5.0 +9.9 A A A «C 4o

CATEGORY Large Growth MORNINGSTAR RATING™ ** * y y yy ASSETS $956 million EXP RATIO 1.06% MANAGER Spiros Segalas SINCE 1999-02-01 RETURNS3-MO +13.5 YTD +22.4 1-YR +20.9 3-YR ANNL +16.2 5-YR-ANNL +11.2

LAST CHG %CHG -.26 -.01 4,195.35 London 6,551.53 -19.93 —.30 Frankfurt + 1.03 + . 0 1 8,665.63 Hong Kong 23,209.63 + 30.59 + . 1 3 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 41,724.03 +514.08 +1.25 Google, Ittc. Class A Milan 18,089.24 + 24.66 + . 14 Tokyo -.76 Apple Inc 14,620.53 -112.08 Stockholm 1,265.69 -17.04 -1.33 MasterCard Incorporated Class A Sydney 5,270.1 0 + 40.60 + . 7 8 Amazon.com Inc Zurich 8,055.23 + 8.21 + . 10 Pricelirte.com, Ittc. NAME Paris

i)O44

Hovnanian HOV Close:$5.27%0.07 or 1.3% Americans ramped up purchases of new homes in August, showing higher mortgage rates are not slowing a recovery for builders. $6.0 5.5

15

J A 52-week range $9.93 ~

S

J A 52-week range

$27.00

Vol3100.7m (4.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $2.23 b

P E: . . Yield: .. NE

Close:$38.60 %0.67 or 1.8% The drilling contractor will spin off older drilling rigs into a separate company to drive higher valuation for its assets. $42 40 38

PIMCO T Rowe Price

Vanguard

Irttl I

J A 52-week range

$3.27~

$7.43

Vol3 4.9m (1.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$656.35 m

P E: .. . Yield :...

Carnival CCL Close:$32.70 V-1.84 ol' -5.3% Wall Street weighed in on the cruise operator; Morgan Stanley downgraded the stock and JP Morgan lowered its target price. $38 36

$33.02~

S $42.34

J A 52-week range

PCT 4.17 3.9 3.76 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 3.62 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 2.72 redemption fee. Source: Morningstat

S

$32.07 ~

$39.95

Vol.:5.6m (2.1x avg.) P E: .. . Vol.:23.5m (6.2x avg.) PE: 21.5 Mkt. Cap:$10.27 b Yiel d : 2 .6% Mkt. Cap:$19.37 b Yiel d : 3. 1%

Mako Surgical

MAKO Close:$29.46 L13.29 or 82.2% Stryker will spend $1.41 billion to acquire the fellow medical equipment maker, along with all of its robotic

technology. $30

Facebook FB Close:$49.46 %1.01 or 2.1% Canaccord initiated coverage of the social networking giant with a "buy" rating, saying advertising money is on the way. $50 40

20

30

J A 52-week range

S

$10.00

$29.59

Vol.:46.0m (28.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.39 b

P E: . . . Yield: ...

J A 52-week range

S

$18.80

$49.66

Vol.:87.4m (1.3x avg.) P E : 224.8 Mkt. Cap:$89.89 b Yield: ...

Clovis Oncology

CLVS Ascena Retail ASNA Close:$64.99 V-8.53 or -11.6% Close:$20.06 %2.74 or 15.8% The biopharmaceutical company The owner of the Dressbarn and slumped after reports that its effort to Lane Bryant retail chains posted sursell itself is not generating much inprisingly strong profit numbers for its terest from buyers. latest quarter. $100 $22 80

20

60

18

J A 52-week range

Vol.:1.2m (3.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.96 b

S $99.29

PE: .. Yield: ..

J A 52-week range

S

$19.99 ~

$21.39

Vol.:14.5m (9.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.19 b

PE: 25.4 Yield: ... AP

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

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

Commodities Oil prices fell for the fifth day in a row due to an unexpected increase in U.S. oil and gasoline supplies. Metals mostly increased, led by gold. Soybeans and oats rose, but corn fell.

26.21 -.01 $.25.2 +39.3 $.14.4 $.13.2 A A A

RisDivA m 20. 14 - .05+16.6 +17.4 +13.9 +7.1 E D E RisDivB m 18. 23 - .06+ 15.8 +16.3 +12.9 +6.1 E E E RisDivC m 18 . 14 - .05+ 16.0 +16.5 +13.1 +6.3 E D E SmMidValA m 41.24 +.02 + 27.2 +33.7 +13.7 +7.7 A E E SmMidValB m34.60 +.01 +26.4 +32.5 +12.8 +6.8 A E E TotRetA m 10 . 81 +.01 -2.3 -1.3 +3.5 +7.3 C C 8 Eqtylnc 3 1.53 -.05 +20.3 +22.4 +15.6 +8.7 C 8 8 GrowStk 46.72 -.18 $-23.7 +22.5 $.17.4$-12.1 8 A A HealthSci 56.54 -.22 +37.2 +34.4 +30.2 +19.3 8 A A 500Adml 156.01 -.42 +20.5 +20.0 +16.2 +9.4 C 8 8 5001ttv 156.01 -.43 +20.4 +19.9 +16.1 +9.3 C 8 8 CapOp 44.65 -.13 $-32.8 +39.2 +18.4+11.8 A A A Eqlnc 28.66 -.06 +20.3 +20.3 +17.9+10.2 D A A StratgcEq 27.38 +.06 +27.6 +32.9 +20.7+11.3 A A 8 TgtRe2020 26.34 -.02 +10.5 +11.9 +10.0 +7.6 A A A Tgtet2025 15.24 -.01 $-12.1 +13.6 +10.8 +7.7 8 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.67 +.02 -1.9 -1.7 +2.9 $5.3 D D D Totlntl 16.23 . . . +10.5 +16.9 +6.1 +4.4 D E C TotStlAdm 42.85 -.08 +21.9 +22.2 +16.9+10.0 8 A A TotStldx 42.84 -.08 +21.8 +22.0 +16.7 +9.9 8 A A USGro 25.91 -.11 +21.9 +22.4 +17.1+10.0 8 A 8 Welltn 37.81 +.01 +13.1 +14.2 $-11.7 $9.2 8 A A

S

34

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note slipped to 2.63 percent on Wednesday. Yields affect interest rates on Pric e -earnings ratio consumer loans.

A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP

169.04 —.49 10.12 -1.78

+

1.3521

. 01 .01 . 0 4 .05 .09 .09

-0.01 L

2-year T-note . 34 .33 +0 . 01 L 5-year T-note 1 .39 1 .43 -0.04 W 10-year T-ttote 2.63 2.66 -0.03 W 30-year T-bond 3.65 3.67 -0.02 W

BONDS

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell versus the euro and other currencies amid concerns about the possibility of a partial

government shutdown. It

edged higher against Canadian and Australian currencies.

h5N4 QG

.10 .14 .17

W

W

W W W W

T .27 T .64 L 1.67 L 2.85

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclay s LoogT-Bdldx 3.44 3.47 -0.03 W W BondBuyerMuni Idx 5.09 5.10 -0.01 W W ~ ~ ~ 452 (trailing 12 months): 15 Barcl ays USAggregate 2.36 2.40 -0.04 W W PRIME FED B arclays US 5 -Y R*: 27% 1 0YR - *: 1 7% Market value: $15.1 billion High Yield 6.08 6.07 +0.01 w w RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.53 4.60 -0.07 W L *Annualized Sour c e : FactSet Total returns through Sept. 25 YEST 3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.57 1.60 -0.03 w w 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.29 3.34 -0.05 w w 1 YR AGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualFunds

52-WEEK RANGE

Source Factset

S&P500ETF 1082325 Penney 1001071 Facebook 838283 BkofAm 836256 iShEMkts 541704 Zynga 536491 MktVGold 480987 RiteAid 477390 DryShips 444876 BlackBerry 442586

JCP Close:$10.12 V-1.78 or -15.0% Shares traded at their lowest level in nearly 13 years, as the troubled retailer faces a challenging turnaround. $20

An extra week in its fiscal fourth quarter benefited Analysts predicted earnings of $10.32 per share, AutoZone. The auto parts retailer's net income rose 15 a c cording to a FactSet survey. Revenue increased to $3.1 billion percent on a 12 percent increase in ~ ~ ~ revenue. ~ fr o m $2.76 billion, helped by the extra 30M 2 W $ 3 4 4 0 40$3 09 0N3 2 „| I 0 2 ~$ ( 7 $$ earned $371.2 million, or $10.42 per ~ 8"~ " billion in revenue. share, for the period ended Aug. 31. For the year, AutoZone earned . ~g That compares with $323.7 million, or $1.02 billion, or $27.79 per share. In -24 $8.46 per share, a year ago. Excluding .'+ t h e previous year it earned $930.4 the extra week in the latest quarter, million, or $23.48 per share. Adjusted earnings were $9.76 per share. earnings were $27.15 per share.

I

EURO

StoryStocks

$11.19~ Dividend Footnotes: 2 Extra - dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock 0 - Liquidating dividend. 2 - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, wh>cttwas mcreased bymost recent diwdend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends pad after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dwidends pad ttt>$year. Most recent dwuend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pad ttt>$year, a cumulative issue with dividends m arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. r - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approtsmate cash value on ex-distrittution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-2nd fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 9a dd - Loss in last t2 months

-

60

' 47

Stocks finished lower on Wednesday, as the growing possibility of a government shutdown weighed on investors. The market also got rocked by a news report that Wal-Mart is cutting product orders from its suppliers for the rest of this year due to sluggish sales. The retail giant called the report completely false, but that didn't keep the blue chips from being dragged down. On the bright side: A report showed durable goods rose in August. Still, investors remain worried that a partial government shutdown could harm the economic recovery. Congressional wrestling over language in a temporary funding bill is expected to go through the weekend.

Noble

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1YR VOL TICKER LO HI C LOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

NAME

+

J.C. Penney

HIGH LOW C LOSE 15372.48 15253.16 15273.26 6674.97 6602.28 6611.33 491.97 486.46 486.46 9746.14 9693.63 9698.95 3782.92 3754.94 3761.10 1701.71 1691.88 1692.77 1248.81 1238.20 1242.52 18161.26 18054.37 18068.19 1082.00 1072.58 1073.51

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

$102.66

.

2.6

1.2

CRUDEOIL

3()

$21.84

L 2. 56 L 4. 22 W 1 .63 w 6.3 2 L 3.45

w w

.95 2. 8 4

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 102.66 103.13 -0.46 + 11.8 Ethanol (gal) 1.89 1.83 -0.38 -13.7 Heating Oil (gal) 2.97 2.96 +0.41 -2.4 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.49 3.49 + 0.03 + 4 . 2 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.67 2.66 +0.52 -5.0 FUELS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1335.90 1316.00 21.84 21.54 1428.80 1418.80 3.28 3.27 724.20 718.35

%CH. %YTD +1.51 -20.2 +1.39 -27.6 +0.70 -7.1 -9.9 +0.46 + 0.81 + 3 . 1

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -1.8 1.28 1.27 +0.18 1.17 1.18 -0.51 -18.5 4.55 4.49 +1.34 -34.9 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.84 0.83 +0.36 +11.4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 348.40 356.90 -2.38 -6.8 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.30 1.28 +2.23 +12.4 Soybeans (bu) 13.22 13.13 +0.70 -6.8 Wheat(bu) 6.71 6.58 +1.86 -13.8 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6076 +.0070 +.44% 1 .6211 Canadian Dollar 1.03 1 2 + .0013 +.13% . 9 7 98 USD per Euro 1.3521 +.0044 +.33% 1 . 2926 —.35 —.36% 77.77 Japanese Yen 98.48 Mexican Peso 12.9 935 + .1071 +.82% 12.8647 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5557 +.0185 +.52% 3.8976 Norwegian Krone 6. 0053 +. 0342 +. 57% 5.7190 South African Rand 9.9826 +.1396 +1.40% 8.2071 6.4188 +.0223 +.35% 6.5593 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9095 —.0029 —.32% .9362 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0681 + .0035 +.33% .9 6 09 Chinese Yuan 6.1198 -.0013 -.02% 6.3069 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7540 +.0003 +.00% 7 .7538 Indian Rupee 62.385 -.390 -.63% 53.375 Singapore Dollar 1.2548 +.0015 +.12% 1 .2270 South Korean Won 1076.55 +2.15 +.20% 1119.55 -.07 -.24% 2 9 .33 Taiwan Dollar 29.55


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

BRIEFING

New home sales rebound Sales of new U.S. homes rebounded in August, posting the

fastest growth since January, according to government data released Wednesday. Sales of new U.S.

homes rose 7.9percent — the fastest growth since the beginning of

the year — to aseasonally adjusted annual rate of 421,000 in August, with rising results in

three of four regions, according to the U.S.

Department of Commerce. Economists polled by MarketWatch had

expected sales to climb in August to a rate of 420,000, compared with

an original Julyestimate that pegged the rate at 394,000. On Wednes-

day, the government revised July's rate to 390,000.

ro By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

Three separate developments could mean new homes, industrial buildings and possibly apartments for Bend's south side, including the former Bend Trap Club site. The largest of the three starts with more than 50 acres of bare land south of Reed Market Road between Brosterhous Road and American Lane. In July, a development group that includes U.S. Rep. Gary Miller, R-Calif., paid $5 million to buy the property. Darrin Kelleher, a broker with Coldwell Banker Morris Real Estate who represents Miller's development group, said Wednesday that the group is also working on a deal to purchase the adjacent 40-acreformer trap club site, which has sat vacant since 2005. Firm timelines for develop-

c o u c ome 0 sou e n ment aren't set. Kelleher said the group is working on a master plan that could include

single-family homes, commercial development and multifamily housing. "We have got an exciting project," Kelleher said. "Gary Miller doesn't do anything half-heartedly." A local group is developing a new subdivision southeast of R.E. Jewell Elementary School, near Murphy and Brosterhous roads. Roughly 150 homes could eventually be built there, said Tom Bahrman, one of the developers. But they're focusing on a first phase right now, totaling 30 lots. "We'll probably have 10 homes starting construction within the next 30 days," he said. Separately, developers also could be getting ready to resume construction on a pro-

Amazon unveils new tablet puters with new devices called Kindle Fire HDX,

which are significantly faster and lighter than

the previous generation. The 7-inch and 8.9-

inch versions also have sharper, more colorful displays than older New York Times News Service

than the latest iPad. To help those who are unfamiliar with tablets,

Like many small-business o wners, Hanna and M a r k Lim gave little thought to fulfillment until they had no choice. For the husband-and-wife owners of Lollacup, a maker

with a feature called "Mayday," which allows

users to summon a live customer service representative in a tiny video window. The helpers can explain new features or troubleshoot

problems while guiding users with on-screen hand scribbles. They

can even takecontrol of the device from afar. While the new Kindles

are upgraded in several ways, Amazonalso cut the price on what will

be its entry-level 7-inch tablet, the Kindle Fire HD with 8 gigabytes of

memory, to $139 from a $199 version that had 16 GB of memory. — From wire reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY

• Communicators Plus Toastmasters: 6:30-7:45 p.m. IHOP,30 N.E Bend River Mall Drive, Bend; 541-388-6146. • Soroptimist International of Bend: $10, registration required by Sept. 25; noon-1 p.m.; Boston's, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 140; 541-408-9333 or www. sibend.org. • Fall RV Show and Sale: See new features of 2014 models; free; 9 a.m.-6 p.m., through Sunday; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541 -548-2711. MONDAY

• Build a Professional Website for Your Business: Createand customize awebsite without programming; create a webhosting account with your own domain name; registration required; $149; 9 a.m.noon, Mondaysand Wednesdaysthrough Oct.16; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 54 I-383-7270. • Travel Oregon101: Learn howto help your business or organization; registration required; 1-3:30 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 503967-1565 or www.cvent. com/d/q4q7cf. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulietirtcomlbizcal

Three developments, in various stages, could bring new homes, industrial buildings and possibly businesses and apartments to the

area overthe next several years.

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neighdorhood

— Reporter: 541-617-7820 eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Freddie Mac fails to chase 4.68

By Mark Cohen

more pixels per inch

the new Kindles come

Southside Bend developments

in in

Amazon is refreshing its lineup of tablet com-

models, and both have

posed 13-building industrial complex onAmerican Lane, just west of the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad tracks. Four of the buildings were constructed starting in mid-2007. Last week, an attorney representing the developers filed new documents with the city of Bend, trying to determine whether the group's old application still met planning requirements. The attorney didn't immediately return a call seeking comment. If built out, the developments would add traffic in the Reed Market Road area, and city officials would likely have to look for solutions, said Nick Arnis, Bend's transportation engineering manager. "There are some real (infrastructure) needs in that area," Arnis said.

By Kathleen M. Howley Bloomberg News

• r am, ~

of specially designed sippy

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Freddie Mac failed to go afterforeclosed homeowners who owed more than $4.6 billion on their government-

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guaranteed loans, passing up

cups, the moment of t r uth came about 36 hours after a segment about their comp any was shown i n A p r i l 2012 on "Shark Tank," the A BC reality show. At t h e time, the Lims, parents of young daughters, were handling their own f u l fillment

the chance to seize second homes and cars from people who defaulted on their mort-

tvtlelve

gage payments.

— the packing and shipping

of products ordered online — from their Pasadena, Calif., living room. After the show was broadcast and their daily orders doubled to 800, the Lims decided that something had to

change. "We had boxes piled everywhere," Hanna Lim said. "We were begging f riends and family to come over and help, bribing them with wine, and we still couldn't keep up." It was then that they made a choicecommon among early-stagee-commerce vendors: They decided to outsource their orders to a third-party l ogistics p r ovider, k n o w n in the business as a 3PL, in exchange for a p ercentage of revenue. In this case, that was about 3.5 percent of each retail sale and 7 percent of each wholesale order, not including delivery costs. The challenge of fulfilling orders is one of those problems that al l e - commerce companies want to have, until they do, at which point it can swallow margins, alienate customers and even sink a business if not managed carefully. "In a w o rl d w h ere customers have more choices online, most businesses realize you need to be able to get your product to them quickly and cheaply to stay competi-

J. Emlllo Flores / New York Times News Service

Hanna Lim and her husband, Mark, owners of Lollacup, a maker of specially designed sippy cups, at their warehouse in Monrovia, Calif. The husband-and-wife team used to handle fulfillment from their living room, but outsourced their orders to a third-party logistics provider after sales jumped. tive," said Bob Halpin, an eng ineering consultant w i t h UPS Customer S olutions, who helps UPS customers improve t h ei r fu l f i l lment operations. The pressure on small businesses to manage fulfillment costs stems from expectations in the marketplace generated by large retailers, especially Amazon. The online giant has 40 large fulfillment centers around the U nited States that it uses to offer free two-day shipping to its Prime s ubscribers, and it i s n o w building five new f acilities that are expected to enable it to deliver many items the day they are ordered. Some smaller e-commerce sites have responded with something of an if-you-can'tb eat-them-join-them at ti tude, turning to Fulfillment by Amazon, a program that lets them use the retailer's state-of-the-art d i stribution system to ship items not even sold by Amazon. But it typi-

cally charges more than a standard 3PL provider, about $6 per sale for a product with the approximate size and

said. "Once we went the 3PL route, it could have been easy to say, 'OK, that's done.' But instead we kept questioning weight of a sippy cup. and evaluating. We still are." Other businesses treat fulAlthough no two in-house fillment as something of an f ulfillment o p erations a r e existential exercise, one sub- the same, certain principles ject to constant reappraisal apply. In most successful opand revision. Several months erations, warehouse space is after the L i m s s igned on divided into a section for bulk with their 3PL provider, for inventory and an area where example, they took another product can be found quicklook a t t h e a r r a ngement. ly to fill o rders, a process Not only were they spend- known a s pi c k -and-pack. ing about $8,000 in monthly One trend Halpin said he had 3PL fees, they were enduring noticed in recent years was far more shipping mistakes. the heightened sophistication They priced other options, of theoff-the-shelf software and they realized they could products used to manage asimprove quality control and pects of the process. save money by shifting final At Lollacup, for example, assembly to their manufac- the company's online store is turer and bringing inventory powered by an e-commerce and shipping back in-house, package from Shopify, which this time to a 2,500-square- e xports inventory data t o foot warehouse staffed by the Lims' QuickBooks proone new employee. gram, and i nterfaces with "We're probably going to ShipStation to print shipping save about $50,000 this year labels and generate the right doing it this way," Hanna Lim amount of postage.

The company, rescued by the government along with Fannie Mae in 2008, neglected torefer 58,000 foreclosures to servicers for review to find borrowers with assets to repay deficiencies, according to a report from the Federal Housing Finance Agency Office of Inspector General in Washington. Among those not pursuedwere realestate investors and other borrow-

ers who stopped repaying their loans while keeping up on other bills, according to the review. The mortgages were all secured by homes in stateswhere post-foreclosure collections are allowed. Targeting strategic defaulters, those who choose to stop paying on a house that's losing value, serves as a deterrentto borrowers considering walking away to escape bad real estate investments, according to the report. To set an example, they should be pursued even though recoveries may be only a fraction of the amount owed, the audit sald. "These are pennies on the dollar, but it sets an example," Frank Pallotta, managing partneratLoan Value Group, a mortgage consulting firm in Rumson, N.J., that advises lenders on avoiding strategic defaults. "There's a contagion effect that kicks in when people who are underwater see their neighbors walk away without having to give up cars or boats or vacation homes."

PERMITS City of Bend • Simply Land LLC,1225 N.W. RockwoodLane, $299,329 •RPB Land Investments LLC, 674N.E Vail Lane, $185,738 •RPB Land Investments LLC, 682 N.E.Vail Lane, $185,252 • HaydenHomesLLC, 21194 KeyteRoad, $273,165 • Peter Caine Trust,61345 Larry, $198,996

• HaydenHomesLLC, 20559 S.E.Goldenrod Lane, $205,325 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC,61662 Daly Estates Drive, $182,876 • Long TermBend Investors LLC,61674 Daly Estates Drive, $182,876 • Thane C.Moon,21264 Dove Lane,$283,762 • Peter B. Dinsdale, 20869 Bobwhite Court, $197,595 •RPBLand lnvestments LLC, 698 N.E.Vail Lane,

$185,738 •RPB Landlnvestments LLC, 690 N.EVail Lane, $185,252 • Edwin A. Olsen, 61451 Tam McArthur Loop, $100,000 eSlgnature HomeBuilders LLC, 61418S.W.Sunbrook Drive, $198,373 • BrittaneyCocciolo, 63330 OB Riley Road,$118,610 • Deschutes County, 63333 W. Highway20, $8,000,000

• Jeremiah Wilson, 626 IO Mcglain Drive, $309,590 • Craig Smith,1266 N.E. Shane, $221,324 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC, 1302N.W.Albany Ave., $238,709 • Hap Taylor, 61245 Crescent Court, $421,879 • Dutchland Properties LLC,167S.E RiceWay, $235,873 •RFW il son,2897 N.W. Horizon Drive, $488,977

Deschutes County • Jason Lee and Victoria L. Curr Johnson ABTrust, 22179 Calgary Drive, Bend $ I01,651.55 • Kent W. Phippen, 58021 Tokatee Lane,Sunriver $150,000 • Kathleen G.Bellairs, 56844 DancingRockLoop, Bend $398,253.l2 • Jerry and Louise Pascoe, 22099 Nelson Road,Bend $304,558.1 I •Timothy L. Roth, 14987

Saddlebag,Sisters $287,582.48 • SFI CascadeHighlands LLC, 61463Hackleman Court, Bend$348,519 • Craig Zimprich and Kimberly Gossen, 20945 Arid Ave.,Bend $164,483.12 • Michael W. Massey, 16183 North Drive, LaPine, $217,097.60 • Aero Facilities, 63205 Gibson Air Road,Bend $349,600

• Garyand Becky Townsend,16827Delicious St., Bend $423,391.28 • Ski Pond RanchLLC, 16615 JordanRoad, Sisters $128,496 City of Redmond •Judie D. NeelFamily LLC, 1438 S. U.S.Highway97, Redmond $310,000 • Gregory J. andKaren Steen, trustees for the Steen Family Trust, 3160 S.W. CascadeVista Drive, Redmond $295,139


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Money, D2 Medicine, D3 Nutrition, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

DIET TRENDS

Si in meas: Researc is mixe By Jill U. Adams Special To The Washington Post

Three square meals a day: For years we've been told they are essential to health. But popular dieting advice suggests that eating more meals — al-

NUTRITION ones — may be a better approach,especially forthose looking to shed extra pounds. Some new diets advocate going the other way: consuming only one small meal a couple of days a week followed by days of unrestricted eating. These diets claim to help people manage the tricky business of taking in fewer calories. What does science say about their effectiveness'? Let's start with the idea that lots of little meals is better than three squares. While numerous studies have indicated a link between a snacking diet (four to six small meals or adding healthful snacks to the three squares) and maintaining a healthy weight, the research remains inconclusive. A classic study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1989 compared "nibbling" — 17 snacks a day — to a traditional three meals that were equivalent in calories. Seven men ate each way for two weeks, and researchers found lower cholesterol and insulin levels with the nibbling diet — factors that lower riskfor heartdisease and metabolicdiseases such as diabetes. And in large surveys of how people eat, researchers have found lower body weights in people who report eating more often than three times a day. While this might suggest that nibbling (within reason) is good, surveys can find only associations, not cause and effect. In addition, though a recent review of clinical studies found that frequent meals make peoplefeellesshungry, this eatingpattern does not necessarily correlate with weight loss. That may seem confusing, but it's the current thinking, according to Heather Leidy, an assistant professor of nutrition and exercise physiology at the University of Missouri in Columbia who co-authored the review. At the Johns Hopkins Weight Management Center in Baltimore, overweight people seeking to shed pounds are generally advised to spread out small meals over the course of a day while keeping an eye on calories. The act of eating and digesting increases the resting metabolic rate — the calories

your body burns to keep up physiologic functions without any physical exercise — so eating more frequently should favor weight loss, according to the center's director, Lawrence Cheskin. Also, he says, "it keeps people satisfied — they're less likely to do a big overeat." Unless — and this is a big unless — eating more frequently leads people to consume more calories. You can guess what happens then.

Breakfast How about skipping breakfast? We've long been told to eat breakfast for health and attentiveness. For dieters, breakfast is thought to keep hunger at bay and prevent overeating the rest of the day. A small study published last month pokes holes in this conventional wisdom. SeeMeals/D4

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

ewinsurers ouseco-o mo e the seats on the companies' • Nonprofits will bring innovative approachofboard of directors. The two nonprofit comto Central Oregon'sinsurancemarketplace panies, Health Republic and

By Dennis Thompson For The Bulletin

Two new insurance companies are among those preparing to vie for customers on Cover Oregon's about-toopen health plan marketplace — part of the implementation of the Affordable Care Act — but these are not like any insurers you've ever seen. They are required by law to plow any profits back

into the company, either to lower premiums or improve benefits. They plan to pursue innovative

Oregon's Health, are co-ops — an acronym for Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan. They also are, in a word, MONEQ p o licies such as populist. allowing natuThese plans function much ropathic physi- like a credit union does in cianstoserve as primary banking or an electric co-op care physicians. does in utilities. Customers They are creating health hold the reins, and much of plans they say will be affordthe decision-making is made able and easy to comprehend. with the customer squarely And customers will fill most in mind.

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"Co-opsare not just another carrier," said Dawn Bonder, CEO and president of Health Republic. "This truly poses a new way of looking at your health care and how your healthcare dollars are used. The idea is that health care is a public good. It shouldn't be a profit-making business." Both health plans will be active in Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson counties. Health Republic has contracted to use the Providence Health Plan network throughout the state, while Oregon's Health has

signed relationships in place with St. Charles Health System and the Central Oregon Independent Practice Association, a group of physicians and health practitioners.

Origins Co-ops are written into in the Affordable Care Act as an alternative to the "public option," in which a Medicarelike government-sponsored health plan would have competed against private insurers in state marketplaces. SeeCo-ops/D2

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By Jane E. Brody New York Times News Service

idney disease doesn't get the attention, funding or concern associated with cancersofthe breast orprostate. But it actually kills more Americans — 90,000 a year — than both malignancies combined. Even when it is not fatal, the cost of treating end-stage kidney disease through dialysis or a kidney transplant is astronomical, more than fivefold what Medicare pays annually for the

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average patient over age 65. The charges do not include the inestimable costs to quality of life among patients with advanced kidney disease. uchis MEDICINE known about who faces the greatest risks of developing chronic kidney disease and how it can be prevented, detected in its early stages, and treated to slow or halt its progression. But unless people at risk are tested, they are unlikely to know they

have kidneydisease;itproduces no symptoms until it is quite advanced. Perhaps no one knows this better than Duane Sunwold, 55, a culinary arts instructor at Spokane Community College in Spokane, Wash., whose compromised kidney function was not uncovered until a blood pressure crisis landed him in the hospital. A physician assistant found that abnormal amounts of protein were spilling out in his urine. Sunwold, then only 43, was

referred to a nephrologist, who diagnosed a condition called minimal-change disease: damage to the tiny blood vessels within the kidney that filter wastes from the blood to make urine. Protein is not supposed to be among those wastes. Although Sunwold's personal physician was treating him for high blood pressure, a leading cause of kidney failure, the doctor never checked to see how well his vital organs were functioning. See Kidney/D3

How few minutes of exercisecanyou get away with? By Leslie Barker The Dallas Morning News

DALLAS — In the futuristic world of winsome dreams, cheeseburgers have singledigit calories; workouts, single-digit minutes. Well, hold tight to your jet pack. The magic wand has been waved — not for cheeseburgers, but itseems so for workouts. Cases in point:

Research published in the American College of Sports Medicine's Health & Fitness Journal

FITN E55

to uts the ef-

fectivenessofa strength-training workout using only body weight and lasting merely seven — albeit very uncomfortable — minutes. A Norwegian study found that four minutes of high-in-

tensity activity — heart rate at 90 percent of maximum capacity — shares similar benefits to four such efforts separatedby three minutes of downtime. The benefits of high-intensity training have been known for a while, experts tell us. But in our busy lives, new research on shorter and shorterworkouts continues to tantalize, especially when

compared with the 150 weekly minutesofexerciserecommended by the ACSM. Three monthsafter "The Scientific 7-Minute Workout" story appeared in The New York Times magazine and its Well blog, it's still among the top five viewed stories on the newspaper's health website. Don't let the numbers fool you, experts caution. Caveats abound.

"What's important to remember is that there's no

magic in any of this," says Allen Jackson, chairman of the department of Kinesiology, Health Promotion and Recreation at the University of North Texas. The point, he says, "is getting active, the muscle groups you're working, the specificity of training." SeeExercise/D5


D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

HEALTH EVENTS POWERFUL TOOLSFOR CAREGIVERS:Learn how to take care of yourself while caring for a relative or friend; free, registration required, $25 optional textbook; 1:30-3 p.m. today; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-678-5483. OBAMA CARE IS HERE! ARE YOU READY?:Learn howthe Cover Oregon exchange will work, key facts, what to do to avoid penalties and more; free, registration required by today; 3-4:30 p.m. today;HospiceofRedmond, 732 S.W. 23rd St.; 541-318-5968 or www.noble-agency.com. "NO PAINLIFEGAIN" WORKSHOP SERIES: ANTI-INFLAMMATORY FOODS:Learn strategies that help with chronic pain; free; noon1 p.m. Friday; Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, 404 N.E. Penn St., Bend; 541-318-7041 or www. healingbridge.com. THISLIFETO MORE LIFE: DECISIONSFOR THE TRANSITION: Learn why advanced care planning is important through a panel discussion; free; 7-8:30 p.m. Sunday; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-382-4401. HEALTHY BEGINNINGS COMMUNITY FLUSHOT CLINIC: Walk in and get a flu shot, no appointment necessary; Medicare, Pacific Source, Regence Blue Cross and OOS/MOOAare health providers that can be billed; a portion of the proceeds benefit Healthy Beginnings;$25;noon-5 p.m. Tuesday; Ray's Food Place, 635 N. Arrowleaf Trail, Sisters; 541-389-7211. "OBAMA CAREISHERE!ARE YOU READY?":Learn how the Cover Oregon exchange will work, key facts, what to do to avoid penalties and more; free, registration required by Tuesday; 6-7 p.m. Wednesday; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-318-5968 or www.noble-agency.com. LIVING WELLWITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS:Learn a healthier way of living for people with ongoing health conditions; $10 includes the book, "Living a Healthy Life with Chronic Conditions," registration required; 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Oct. 5, Saturdaysthrough Nov. 9; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-322-7430 or www.livingwellco.org.

MONEY

I(ids' food3ller g es i cost U.S. 25bllion ayear, studysays By Karen Kaplan

was th e m o ney p a r ents gave up by staying out of the LOS ANGELES — Chil- workforce, taking lesser jobs dren's allergies to peanuts, or otherwise restricting their dairy and other foods cost careers to accommodate the U.S. nearly $25 billion a their children's medical conyear, according to the first dition. Among the parents survey to come up with a surveyed, 9.1 percent said comprehensiveprice tag for they had incurred some type a condition that affects 8 per- of work-related opportunity cent of American kids. cost. (Some parents even R esearchers led b y D r . said they'dbeen fired as a Ruchi Gupta, a p e d iatri- result of dealing with their kids' allergies.) Altogether, cian at Ann 8r Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of these costs added up to $14 Chicago and a professor at billion a year. Northwestern U n i versity's The grand total for these Feinberg School of M e di- expenses came to$24.8 bilcine, surveyed 1,643 parents lion a year, or $4,184 per a round th e c ountry w h o child,the researchers found. have at least one child with After excluding medical exa food allergy. The parents' penses that would be covresponses were weighted to ered byhealth insurance,the match the actual distribution costs borne by families was of children with food aller$20.5 billion. gies in the United States. To make sure their numHere's what they found: ber was in the ballpark, the Doctor's a p p ointments, researchers asked parents hospital stays, trips to the to consider this hypothetical emergency room and other question: How much would direct medical expenses ac- you pay each month for a counted for $4.3 billion of the medicine that would cure tab, researchers reported. your child's allergy? The avThe lost productivity of parerage response, annualized, ents who had to take their was $3,504. children to t hese appointWhen extrapolated across ments added $773 million. every single kid with a food Then there were the exallergy in the entire country, penses associated with buy- the parents' total willingness ing s p ecial a l l ergen-free to pay to be rid of allergies foods, placing children in was $20.8 billion per year. a llergy-sensitive sch o o ls That was surprisingly close and making special arrange- to the $20.5 billion per year ments for child care in facili- that food allergies actually ties that are willing to banish cost them, and seemed to peanuts. These costs totaled validate the high price par$5.5 billion. ents pay in their careers (or T he biggest cost by f a r lack thereof). Los Angeles Times

How to submit Health Events:Email event information to healthevents@

bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of

publication. Ongoing class listings must beupdated monthly and will appear at www.bendbulletin.coml

healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358.

People:Emailinfo about local people involved in health

issues to healthevents© bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

FDA requires tracking codes on implants By Matthew Perrone The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Federal health regulators will begin tracking millions of medical devices,from pacemakers to hip replacements, using a new electronic system designed to protect patients by catching problematic implants earlier. The Food and Drug Administration published new rules Friday that require most medical devices sold in the U.S. to carry a unique code, identifying its make, manufacture date and lot number. The codes will be stored in a publicly accessible database to help regulators, doctors and companies monitor safety issues with devices. The tracking system has been promoted by doctors and public safety advocates for years. Other industrieshave used u n i que i d e ntification codes to track products through the supply chain for decades. "The rule that came out today is a victory for patients, hospitals and clinicians," said Josh Rising, director of Pew Charitable Trusts' medical device initiative. "Up until now medical deviceswere among the only products on the market that could not be uniquely identified. This is going to be a tremendous victory for all of those interested in improving the performance ofdevices."

Co-ops

Prows said. That can leave coordinated care organizations — networks of providers who try to manage patient care to-

Continued from 01 That option was scuttled from the ACA, but Obamacare insteadcreated the coops, along with a program to loan seed money to the fledgling enterprises. The plan had been to see at least one co-op in all 50 states, but that notion was quashed when the seed funding got cut during January's fiscal cliff battle. T wenty-four co-ops h a d been approved with f u nding secured prior to the program's demise, however, and those have been allowed to go ahead. Oregon is the only state with two active co-ops, and both say they are ready to do business when the Cover Oregon marketplace opens for business on Oct. l. "We are l i censed, a ccredited, experienced, wellfunded and ready to go," said Dr. Ralph Prows, CEO of Oregon's Health CO-OP. "We have claimsreserves that are five times the required statutory minimum. We're here for the long term." The two Oregon co-ops have very different origins. Health Republic i nitially was sponsored by the Freelancers Union, a group that advocates for the rights of the self-employed, Bonder said. "They have a strong invest-

gether — struggling to keep patients healthy. "The Medicaid providers and the CCO organizations invest in those members and try to coordinate their care, but when they leave the Medicaid plan it all falls apart," Prows said. "About 20 to 30 percent churn two or three or four times a year, and typically when they come back into the CCOs, their claim costs are twice as high as when they left." Oregon's Health will welcome any new customers, but hopes to make it easier for that coordination of care to be transferred when a patient goes from Medicaid to the coop or back again, Prows said. Despite their different beginnings, both c o mpanies share the same focus on consumers. They say they have created health plans designed to address common complaints people have about "typical" insurance plans. For e x ample, O r egon's Health will allow a person to use a naturopathic physician as a primary care doctor, something not usually allowed by health plans. "We h eard c o nsistently that people received a level of health and wellness coaching and preventive care coaching from naturopaths that they don't necessarily receive from other providers," Prows said. "In Oregon, naturopaths can be licensed to practice primary care, so we have built the criteria that will allow us to c redential n aturopathic physicians." This stance places Oregon's Health on the cutting edge of

normally have had difficulty getting benefits," she said. The Freelancers Union also helped sponsor co-ops in New York and New Jersey. Oregon's Health began as an effort by Care Oregon, the largest Medicaid carrier in the state, which saw the potential for a co-op to help people on the edge of poverty who "churn" on and off of Medicaid as jobs come and go,

'

paying money after you've

Consumer focus

ment in helping people who

health care, said Laura Farr, executive director of the Oregon Association of Naturopathic Physicians. "From ourperspective,they are absolutely demonstrating the kind of innovation that Gov. Kitzhaber has demanded," Farr said. "Naturopathic physicians specialize in preventive medicine. At this time, when every decision maker in the state says we need to focus on prevention, it only makes sense to put naturopathic physicians on the front line." Both co-ops also say they have addressedcomplaints regarding the often bewildering cost-sharing arrangements of health plans — copays, coinsurance and deductables. Their plans will feature fixed copaysformost services. "You pay a lot of money in premiums, and then you keep

paid a lot of money in premiums," Bonder said. "It's really hard to budget what your health care is going to cost in a year. So we designed a plan under which, at the end of the day, you will know exactlythe least amount of money you will pay for health care and the absolute most you will

pay. The big challenge now is getting their names out there. Health Republic hopes to insure 15,000 people in its first year, while Oregon's Health would like to sign up about 34,000. "The whole idea of health plans that express the voice of the consumer ina very direct way and health plans that embody the idea of helping your neighbor, I think that resonates very well in this state," Prows said. "It's the key piece that's been missing for a very long time." — Reporter: dennisthompsonjr@ yahoo.com

Health law coverage may mimiccost shifts seen in theworkplace

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next level of coverage, a silver plan. The savings from WASHINGTON — Presi- going with bronze adds up dent Barack Obama's health to $744 annually, and that's care law appears tomirror off thesticker price, before a trend in job-based insurfederal tax credits that will ance, where employees are reduce premiums foran esbeing nudged into cost-sav- timated 4 out of 5 customers ing plans that require them in the new markets. It's "likely to entice healthto pay a bigger share of their medical expenses. ier enrollees to opt for a less Two recent independent generous benefit package," studies highlighted attrac- said Caroline Pearson, a tiveprices for less-generous lead author of the study. "bronze" plans that will ofThe law's tax credits will fer low monthly premiums make low-cost plans even but require patients to pick m ore appealing. The t a x up more of the cost if they credits work b y l i m i t i ng get sick. what you pay for premiums Consumers might avoid to a g i ven percentage of "rate shock" over p r emi- your income. ums, but some could end up B y p a i r in g t h e i r ta x struggling with bigger bills credit with a bronze policy, forthe care they receive. some younger consumers The Obama plans will be can bring their premiums available starting Oct. I for down to the range of $100 people who don't have ac- to $140 a month, the Kaiser cess to coverage on the job. study found. Older people Studies by the nonpartican drive t h ei r m o n thly san Kaiser Family Founda- cost even lower — well betion and Avalere Health pro- low $100, and zero in some vided the first look at rates cases — if they are willing filedby insurers around the to take a chance with higher country, ahead of the Oct. I deductibles and copays. It's a trade-off that some opening of new state insurance markets under the law. consumers unfamiliar with Consumers will use the insurance might not f u l ly markets to find out whether grasp. "A bronze plan is a very they qualify for tax credits to help pay their premiums basic plan," explained Levand to pick a private insuritt. It "will enable consumers ance plan from a range of to pay very low premiums coverage levels: bronze, sil- up front, zero in some cases. ver, gold and platinum. But when they actually need Come Jan. I, virtually ev- medical care, they will pay eryone in the United States higher costs out of their own will be required to have cov- pockets." For the most part, erage, or face fines if they you're stuck with the plan don't. At the same time, in- you pick until the next annusurance companies no lonal open enrollment season. ger can turn away people in J ob-based p l an s h a v e poor health. been shifting costs to em"What was really strikployees for some time. In ing as we dug into the num- 2009, when Obama took ofbers is h o w i n e xpensive fice, 22 percent of workers the bronze plans are," said were in plans with an anLarry Levitt, a Kaiser vice nual deductible of $1,000 or president. more for single coverage, Avalere, a p r ivate data according to Kaiser. By this a nalysis fi rm , f o und t h e year, the share had nearly average monthly premium doubled, to 38 percent, infor a bronze plan is $274, cluding 3 out of 5 employees compared with$336 for the of small companies.

I

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

MEDICINE

x orin

e ac e r i a r o n ier

• The medical world is shifting the wayit views our microbes DALLAS — At 60, Marty Wichter of Arlington, Texas, found himself in constant digestive distress and at a loss for what to do. Then he tried a probiotic capsule packed with live bacteria. Within 48 hours, his problems went away. Wichter is now 67, and the problems haven't returned except for the handful of occasions when he's taken less than five a week, he says. Introducing bacteria into the body is part of a bold new way of thinking about health, says biologist Rob Dunn, author of the best-selling "The Wild Life of Our Bodies: Predators, Parasites, and Partners That Shape

Who We Are Today" (HarperCollins, $26.99). Like an increasing number of experts, Dunn, a biology professor at North Carolina State University, believes our bodiesare ecosystems that require a good balance of healthy bacteria to help digest food and fend offcertain diseases. He sees acorrelation between our war against bacteria in the form of an overuse of antibiotics and antibacterial wipes, and the rise in a host of chronic conditions from C r ohn's to inflammatory bowel disease, rheumatoid arthritis, l upus, diabetes, multiple sclerosis, schizophrenia and autism. "I don't mean to discredit antibiotics," he s a ys. "The

Kidney Continued from 01 Such a lapse is not uncommon. Kidney disease often is not on the medical radar, and in as many as three-fourths of patients with risk factors for poor kidney function, physicians fail to use a simple, inexpensive test to check for urinary protein. This fact has turned Sunwold into a proselytizer with a potentially lifesaving message for 26 million Americans who have kidney disease (many of whom don't yet know it) and an additional 76 million at high risk of developing it: Make sure your doctor checks the protein level in your urine at least once a year. After his diagnosis, Sunwold brought all his risk factors under control and succeeded in improving his kidney function. He offers tips and recipes online for good kidney health, which are also good for the heart, diabetes and weight control. A study published in April online i n The A me r i can Journal of K i d ney D i sease demonstrated how common l ifestyle factors ca n h a r m the kidneys. Researchers led by Dr. Alex Chang of Johns Hopkins University followed more than 2,300 young adults for 15 years. Participants were more likely to develop kidney disease if they smoked, were obese or had diets high in red and processed meats, sugarsweetened drinks and sodium, but low in fruit, legumes, nuts, whole grains and low-fat dairy. Only 1 percent of participants with no lifestyle-related risk factors developed protein in their urine, an early indicator of kidney damage, while 13 percent of those with three unhealthy factors developed the condition, known m edically as proteinuria. Obesity alone doubled a person's risk of developing kidney disease; an unhealthy diet raised the risk even when weight and other lifestyle factors were taken into account. Overall, the risk was highest among A f r i can-Americans; those with diabetes, high blood pressure or a family history of kidney disease; and those who consumed more soft drinks, red meat and fast food. In commenting on the study, Dr. Beth Piraino, president of the National Kidney Foundation, said, "We need to shift the focus from managing chronic

their years. proved Botox injections

What may help your microbes (andcertainly won't hurt),

to temporarily ease the

according to Rob Dunn, author of "The Wild Life of Our Bodies": • Take probiotics in the form of unsweetened yogurt or capsules. • Stick to a healthy, balanced diet that is high in fibers, low in

appearance of crow's

sugar and processed foods, and asfree as possible of antibiotics and pesticides. • Spend time outdoors among trees, plants and animals. • Use plain soap andwater for sanitizing, not antibacterial soap.

The Dallas Morning News

It's getting easier for baby boomers to hide Federal regulators for the first time have ap-

Microbe health

By Nancy Churnin

Botox OK'd to treat crow's feet

• Discuss with your doctor limiting use of antibiotics and over-

the-counter medications to whenthey areabsolutely necessary.

feet. The Food and Drug Administration recently

approved thedrug, made by Irvine, Calif.-based Allergan Inc., to treat

wrinkles that form onthe outside edge oftheeyes. The decision comes 11 years after the FDA approved Botox for the

Ron Basehce I Dallas Morning News

Marty, left, and Sharon Wichter take probiotic pills for their indigestion. Marty says the pills have kept digestive distress at bay. use of antibiotics to control pathogens has saved billions of lives. But we're starting to learn that in addition to warding off bad bacteria, we need to start gardening good ones. There are thousands of species in our bodies and we don't know which ones are important yet, but we do know that having a good community is important." Wichter t a kes p r obiotics with the support of Dr. Jay Yepuri, his gastroenterologist with Digestive Health Associates of Texas and on the medical staff at Texas Health HEB in Bedford. Yepuri says that while much remains to be learned about probiotics and recommended amounts, research and his personal experience with patients have shown him that "we don't know how much good it does, but it's not going to hurt you." The same principle applies to fecal transplants. That pro-

kidney disease to preventing it in the first place." Dr. Leslie Spry, d i rector of the Dialysis Center of Lincoln in Nebraska and another online proselytizer for a kidney-healthy l i festyle, noted that people with high blood pressure, Type 2 diabetes or obesity who manage to avoid a heart attack or stroke remain at risk fo r k i dney disease, which he likened to the third rail. Having just one risk factor raisesthe chances of developing kidney disease from 1 in 10to Iin3,Sprysaid. A family history of kidney disease is not the only genetic risk. In addition to AfricanAmericans, Hispanic Americans, Asian-Americans and American Indians are more likely than white Americans to develop kidney disease. "People can't change their genetics," Spry said. "But I wouldn't have to work so hard if they didn't smoke, reduced their salt i ntake, ate more freshfruits and vegetables and increased their physical activity. These are things people can do for themselves. They involve no medication." He also urges everyone with any risk factor for kidney disease to be screened annually with inexpensive urine and blood tests. That includes everyone 65 and older, for whom the cost is covered by Medicare. Free testing is also provided by the National Kidney Foundation for people with diabetes. The urine test can pick up abnormal levels of p r otein, which is supposed to stay in the body, compared with the amount of creatinine, a waste product that should be excreted. The blood test, called an eGFR (for estimated glomerular filtration rate), measures how much blood the kidneys filter each m i nute, indicating how effectively they are functioning. Anyone found to have kidney disease should be referred to a nephrologist, a specialist who can work with the family physician to control the disease. Two medications commonly used to treat high blood pressure can often halt or delay the progressionof kidney disease in people with diabetes: angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs). Careful control of blood sugar levels also protects the kidneys from further damage.

cedure injects bacteria in the bodyby transferring stool from a healthy person into the intestines of those infected with Clostridium difficile, a bacterium that can lead to diarrhea and colitis and affects up to 3 million people in the United States. A January report in the New England Journal of Medicine declared that in one study in the Netherlands, fecal transplantscured 94 percent of the patients and was such a success that the study was stopped and the treatment offered to the control group. The Food and Drug Administrationrestricted its use earlier this year, with doctors required to submit an extensive application and wait up to 30

days for a response. After an outcry, the FDA lifted the restrictions June 17 and allowed the procedure for infections that aren't responsive to standard therapies. Dr. Lora Hooper, an associate professor of immunology and of microbiology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, says that before she began her research in 1996, she had thought all bacteria were bad and it would be good to eliminate as many as she could. Then, as she learned about the extent of bacterial species within the body, she was impressed with their beauty and complexity, she says. "I found out we're actually more bacterial than we are human. We've got 100 trillion bacteria in our gut. That's 10 to 100 times more b acteria than cells i n y o ur body. It's almost as if we have another organ inside us with a

mind of its own." That's a good thing, says Hooper, who also serves as a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at UT Southwestern's Cancer Immunobiology Center and its Center for the Genetics of Host Defense. "There's no question that the composition of our microbial communities determines our health." The National Institutes of Health is studying that composition as part of the Human Microbiome Project, which it launched in 2008 to investigate how changes in the human microbiome affect health or disease. Dunn says it's an exciting time, with scientists finding that the more we know, the more we realize we don't know. The inside of our bodies is like a wildernessand the more we explore, the more questions we have, he says.

temporary improvement of wrinkles between the eyebrows, known as frown lines. Now, Botox can be used to treat frown lines and crow's feet at the

same time. The FDA approval

came after Allergan studied the use of Botox in 833 adults with

crow's feet who randomly received Botox or a placebo injection. Patients who received

Botox had fewer visible wrinkles than those who

received the placebo drug, the FDA said in a news release. The most common side effects were swelling and excess liquid around the eyelids. — Los Angeles Times

Natalie Hoshaw, MD Clare Thompson, DNP, CNM St. Charles OB/GYN St. Charles Medical Group is pleased to welcome Dr. Natalie Hoshaw and Clare Thompson to its team of providers.

hi

As a certified nurse midwife, Thompson works closely with physicians to provide non-surgical obstetric and gynecologic services including hospital deliveries. Dr, Hoshaw is an experienced OB/GYNwho has worked inbothU.S.Army and civilian hospitals during her career, often serving as department chief and on committees tasked with improving patient safety. Both believe in the health advantages of eating organic, locally sourced food and when not at work, their free time is spent

caring for a largegardenand morethan 70 animals. They look forward to sharing healthy eating ideas with their new Central Oregon patients, especially moms-to-be.

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D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013

NUTRITION

in Thinkstock

RESEARCH

Protein helps aging muscles Foods packedwith protein aren't just for young weightlifting

bodybuilders anymore. Emerging research links eating high-quality protein foods with healthy muscles no matter how

much you can press to impress or how many birthdays havepassed. Acup ofteaand a cookiemayseem likea nice afternoon snack for seniors looking to relax

and have anibble, but it's not doing their aging

muscles any favors. Muscle mass declines at a rate of1 to 2 percent

a year from age50 onwards (hello, baby boomers!). But snack time might

be able to help turn things around if it's fueled with protein-rich

foods such as ahardboiled egg, a glass of fat-free milk or half of a

roast beef sandwich. Nutrition research suggests that skimping

on high-quality protein foods can lead to

skimpymuscles.

"It's estimated that

20 percent of people between age 51 and 70

have an inadequate protein intake," says epide-

miologist Paul Jacques, of the Human Nutrition

Research Center onAging at Tufts University.

Jacques andcolleagues reported in the British Journal of Nutrition that the win-win of physical activity plus

consuming adequate dietary protein can protect and even in-

creasemusclemassin middle-aged andolder Americans. The U.S. Department of Agriculture

research shows that consuming 90 grams of high-quality protein

a day supports muscle strengthening. For reference, there

are 7 grams of protein in an ounce of cooked meat, 8 grams in acup of milkand 6 grams in one egg. The medical term for

the loss of muscle mass is a condition called

sarcopenia. Registered dietitian

Susan Hewlings, assistant professor at the

University of Central Florida College of Medi-

cine in Orlando, says, "We're seeing sarcopenia, which commonly occurs in the elderly, in

younger subjects in their early to mid-50s."

Experts suggest balancing protein intake throughout the day with

at least 30 grams per meal becausemuscles are hungry for amino acids found in protein

foods all day long. In fact, Robert Wolfe,

professor of geriatrics at University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock, warns,

"When there areperiods of the day when no

amino acids are being absorbed from the gut, muscle serves asthe only significant reser-

voir of protein." That means your body starts robbing protein in muscles to keep other tissues humming

along. Hewlings emphasized that protein alone can't

do the job of preserving and building musclesas we age, "I call exercise the 'poor man's plastic surgery.' Physical activity boosts leanbodymass only if you've gotenough protein in your diet." — Carolyn O'Neil, The Atlanta JournalConstitution

s' ener rin consum ion

• Experts are facing industry opposition as theywarn parents of the health risks

Stacey Cifani, 25, left, of McKinney, Texas, had to undergo a heart operation for a heart condition she believes was aggravated by energy drinks. Her brother, Cody, 15, has cut back on the drinks but has not given them up.

By Nancy Churnin The Dallas Morning News (MCT)

D ALLAS — N o t h ing, i t seemed, could get Cody Cifani to cut back on his daily energy drinks. Then last month, the 15-year-old from M cKinney, Texas, had two espresso shots, followed by t h ree M onster drinks to pump himself up for his job at a car shop. Instead of the expected rush, he felt so sick he has avoided them since. "It was a pounding feeling in my entire head. I was extremely fatigued, and I didn't want to move," he said. "It felt like a really bad crash. I felt really bad the entire day and had stomach pains when I woke up." While energy drinks may look and taste like sodas, they are packed with significantly higher levels of caffeine. That may sound benign, but doctors note that caffeine is a stimulant that can, in excess, lead to convulsions, an irregular heartbeat and, inextreme cases, death. A report from the Drug Abuse Warning Network, a U.S. public health surveillance system that monitors possible drug-related deaths and visits to hospital emergency rooms, noted that there were 20,783 visits related to energy drinks in 2011 alone. That's why, even as makers of the drinks say their products aresafe and are not marketed to children, some health experts are warning parents to be aware. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration says that sodas, which are classified as beverages, cannot contain more than 71 milligrams of caffeine per 12 ounces. (For comparison, a C oca-ColaClassic has 30 to 35 milligrams per 12 ounces, and a 16-ounce McDonald's coffee has 100 milligrams, according to the Mayo Clinic.) Ifenergy drinks are labeled as dietary food supplements, as some are, the FDA doesn't restrict the caffeine.Monster' s Worx Energy contains 200 milligrams of caffeine in two

Meals

Brad Loper Dallas Morning News

o unces, C oca-Cola's N O S energy 260 milligrams in 16 ounces, and Rockstar energy 240 milligrams in 16 ounces. That's way more stimulant than Dr. Marcie Beth Schneider, an adolescent pediatrician based in Greenwich, C onn., believes an y c h i l d should have. Schneider testified before the Senate Commerce Committee on July 31 about her concerns. "We don't t h in k e n ergy drinks should ever be consumed by kids because they cause a whole host of medical sideeffects," she says in a phone interview. "They raise heart rate and blood pressure, cause rhythm d i sturbances and anxiety, gastrointestinal upset and sleeplessness, and we don't know w hat t hose things do to a developing neurological and cardiovascular system."

Abuse Warning Network's report, noting that the reported number of 20,000 ER visits was a tiny percentage of the total number of ER visits, and that "most of the ER visits did not require further treatment because they were not serious." She added, "Coffee and tea,rather than energy drinks, are the most significant sources ofcaffeine for Americans, including teens and children." As the drinks' popularity has grown — they are a $12.5 billion business, according to Forbes — there have been attention-grabbing incidents. As of October, the Federal Drug Administration was investigating five deaths and one nonfatal heart attack by people consuming Monster. Two wrongful-death lawsuits have been filed against Monster since 2012, one from the family of Anais Fournier of Maryland, a 14-year-old who died in 2011 after consuming Competingmessages two 24-ounce drinks in a 24Experts generally agree. hour period. Another, filed in The National Collegiate Ath- June, is from Paula Morris of letic Association prohibits the California, who blames the drinks for student-athletes. In death of her son, Alex Morris, June, the American Medical 19, on drinking two cans of Association re c o mmended Monster's energy drink every banning the marketing of en- day forthe three years before ergy drinks for those younger he died of cardiac arrest. than 18. Monster Beverage Corp. The 14 energy-drink com- r esponded last year with a panies that issued statements statement maintaining t h at at the Senate meeting said its product is safe and in full that they do not market their compliance with all laws and product to children and teens. regulations. A statement from Janet WeinThe Associated Press has er, chief operations officer reported that Monster's lawand chief financial officer of yer, Daniel C allahan, said Rockstar, questioned the Drug the company hired a team of

about 500calories,or roughly 25 percent of their own usual daily intake. On the intervening days, they could eat whatever they wanted. Over eight weeks, the participants lost 12.3 pounds, on average. Krista Varady, an assistant professor of kinesiology and nutrition at the University of Illinois at Chicago, who coauthored the study, said she was surprisedby the results. She thought the participants might eat so much on their eating days that they'd make up for those calories lost on t he fasting days, but t h at wasn't the case. They only ate about 10 to 15 percent more on feeding days than their daily intake before the diet, Varady says, which, combined with the fasting-day savings, resulted in a whole lot of calories cut. On fasting days, dieters w ould look forward to t h e next day. Still, though they'd make a big breakfast, they couldn't finish it. (Varady is in the midst of a study following obese people

Continued from 01 Researchers at Cornell University either fed breakfast to or withheld breakfast from 18 student volunteers. Those who skipped breakfast reportedbeing hungrier than those who ate breakfast; they also ate more at lunch. Still, they did not eat enough to fully compensate for the missed meal. In fact, those who had skipped breakfast took in 40 8 f ewer calories over the course of the day than those who ate breakfast. Study author David Levitsky, a professor of nutritional sciences at Cornell, says his work adds to a growing body of evidence that overturns a long-held belief: that people will compensate for missed calories. Rather, skipping a meal is "one small weapon" people can use to fight the battle of weight, he says. "If you skip two to three meals per week, you can decrease" your caloric intake, he says. A more extreme version of this is the alternate-day fast- for a year, comparing the aling diet, a technique popular- ternate-day fasting plan to a ized by such books as "The more typical calorie-reducFast Diet" and "5:2." Such di- tion p l an . O n e i m p o rtant ets advocate drastically limitaspect will be whether paring calories on certain days; ticipants can stick to such a on other days, a person can diet.) eat as he or she pleases. The Not everyone is convinced approach is thought to a dby the fasting fads. "Skipping dress diet fatigue — the con- meals, particularly the breakstant strain of counting calo- fast meal, leads to greater hunries and skipping dessert that ger throughout the day and can occur with dieting — by reduced fullness," says Leidy. "Our data show this pattern limiting willpower work to a few days per week. leads to overeating in the eveStudies have shown mixed ning, particularly on high-fat results w i t h a l t e rnate-day and/or high-sugar snacks." fasting. A 2010 study showed Given the inconclusiveness the technique effective among of theresearch, figuring out a group of obese patients. The which approach is right for 16 participants ate only one you might depend on which is meal — lunch — every other more important to you: manday. Caloric intake on these aging hunger or managing fasting days was limited to willpower.

Cheskin says it's important to understand how and why people eat. "We hardly ever eat because of physiological hunger," he says. "People eat because it's noon or because I'm tiredor because my husband is eating." If a patient tells him she doesn't like eating breakfast, that's fine, Cheskin says. Another patient may say skipping breakfast leaves him famished. To which he'll advise: Eat breakfast and spread those calories out. "There's so much individual variability," Cheskin says. But there's only one bottom line: "You have to cut calories."

physicians to review medical records. The team found no medical evidence for an autopsy report that said caffeine toxicity was a factor, he said, which he said suggests Anais Fournierdied ofnaturalcauses brought on by her pre-existing heart conditions. Similarly, Monster issued a statement to beveragedaily.com that there was nothing in the coroner's report that connects Alex Morris' death with his consumption of Monster drinks.

Schneider says energy-

25, of McKinney, Texas, had been trying to get him to cut back on energy drinks months before he finally did. Cifani blames her own daily Monster drinks for l eading to her SVT, supraventricular tachycardia, a r a pi d h e art rhythm, which brought her heart rate up to 180 this year. Luckily, she is a medical assistant for Dr. Akram Khan, a cardiologist and m edical director for Cardiac Center of Texas in M cKinney and director of preventive medicine at Medical City Plano. He noticed the signs and rushed her to Baylor Heart Hospital, where she received life-saving ablation surgery in March. Khan says he's learned to ask patients who r eport a rise in palpitations and chest pains about their consumption of energy drinks. He's talked to his 13-year-old about the risks. He says he's been flabbergasted by how ubiquitous the drinks have become, recently even showing up in his physician lounge. "The kids drink it like water, and it's like a time bomb. It can be fatal if you have an underlying condition, and it can also damage a healthy heart," he

says.

drink companies like to comCifani could have been one p are the c a ffeine i n t h e i r of the casualties, Khan says. "I've told her, 'No more enproduct to that in coffee, but energy drinks have addition- ergy drinks.'" al ingredients that magnify the effects of the stimulant, such as taurine and guarana. She says not enough kids are aware of how much stimulant they may be consuming in a COVERINGS day, particularly if they also drink coffee,use medication Also see usfor for attention-deficit disorder or take an over-the-counter Awnings, Solar Screens drug that helps them pull an all-nighter.

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DS

FITNESS Q&A

Why do myfeet feel numb during exercise? Worn-out or ill-fitting shoes cancreate

• For whatever reason, when I'm on . the elliptical machine trying to do my cardio, my feet start to feel like they're falling

foot and ankle problems. Footwear must be wide enough to allow room for the toes and

asleep, and I haveto stop. Anyidea what

forefoot yet not so loose that they prevent adequate support.Shoesshouldbendonly

could be causing this?

. Thecausesoffootnumbnessor • pain during exercise can vary. One common reason is that with weight-bearing

exercise the feet canswell, sometimes as much as afull shoe size, impeding circulation. Weight-bearing activities are those where the body is upright such as stairclimbing, walking, running and the elliptical. Faulty movement patterns, rolling the feet

out or in excessively, canalso place unnatural pressure on the feet.

size, buy the sizemeasuredfor the larger foot.

Try on more thanone pair of shoes before making a decision andwalk around for a minute or two to get a good idea of comfort

at the ball of the foot, not in the center of the arch. Laces should not be pulled too tightly. More tips:

and support. The heels of your shoesshould be snug

When using cardio equipment, avoid

are walking, and thereshould be enough room to wiggle your toes(~/~to afull thumb's

coming up onto the toes, which places weight onto the forefoot rather than keeping it evenly distributed. Instead, try to keep the entire foot in contact with the pedal surface.

When shopping for shoes, haveyour feet measured while you're standing, andbecause feet are usually not exactly the same

enough so that they do not slide when you

distance between the end of your longest toe

and the end ofthe shoe's toe box). Shoes should not need a "breaking-in" period; they should fit comfortably immediately. — Majrie Gilliam, CoxNewspapers

Thinkstcck

If your feet feel numb during exercise, check the fit of your shoes.

Exercise via video chat: Personal trainers are teaching online of Julie Bobek — even though Zemlo was in her Bethesda, Athome, anyone with a DVD Md., living room and Bobek player can start a workout with was in New York City. the push of a button. Tamara Their "Core and More" apZemlo would rather have a pointment was set up through trainer push her buttons. Expertory, a site that promises "I was trying to cheat a little to help visitors "learn, teach bit, but she was telling me, and consult practically any'Keep those abs in.' It motivated thing online via video chat." me to keep going," says Zemlo, Founder and CEO Tony Jarboe 44, wh o r e cently s w eated came up with the idea after he through a one-on-one workout read a newspaper article about session under the watchful eye a piano teacher using Skype

with clients. In the article, the teacher mentioned some hurdles,such as setting up scheduling and processing online payments. Reading that, Jarboe realized he could establish a site that would deal with the logistics for a cut of the fee. His next thought? This format is ideal for fitness. "You just have to get up and change clothes," Jarboe says. The site isjustone ofa series of startups giving more people

access to exercise whenever and wherever they want it . There's FitnessGlo, which offers a catalog of videos taught by top i nstructors available on demand for a monthly fee. There's FitBlok, which bills itself as the iTunes of fitness classes. And there are a few options like Flirty Girl Fitness Live, which lets people peek into classes streamed directly from a Toronto studio. What's missing i n t h o se

programs is the ability to form relationships, says Viva Chu, co-founder of Powhow. Like Expertory, his site aims to give instructors an online platform to interact directly with students. Videos can be helpful — they're available on his site as well — but nothing beats real-timefeedback, Chu says. When instructors sign on with Powhow, they open up a virtual studio to showcase their expertise, whether that's

yoga in sign language or belly

Exercise

ty aerobic intervals, you have a nice change in the heart," Levine says. "The heart muscle gets stronger, your muscles get stronger and better able to utilize oxygen." Without a doubt, Jackson says, "short bouts of intensive activity h av e p e r formance benefits and health and fitness benefits. It's true." There are problems inherent with these, he cautions: a "potential risk for injury," or a "cardiovascular event" becausethe heart is working extremely hard. "More moderate, longerterm exercise will have lower

risk for injury. Joggers get

"My concerns are a bout injury an d a b out s omeone who really isn't ready to do a high-intensity exercise bout," he says. "You just can't start that off. It just isn't a good idea, especially when you talk about sedentary people going all-out." Still, he and Levine do agree that shorter stints can have a place in a workout regimen.

"Four minutes," he says, " would be b etter t ha n n o m inutes. Bu t ma k e s u r e you're ready to do those four minutes."

By Vicky Hallett

The Washington Post

ommended minutes spread over a w eek, fo r e x ample, Continued from 01 burns more caloriesthan the It's also the level of inten- shorter bursts. That's somesity, which, in order to make thing to keep in mind if you're the exercises effective, has to exercising to lose or maintain be extreme. Four minutes at weight. 90 percent of maximum heart The t r ic k o f i nt e r vals, rate is hardly casual. Levine says, is that they "allow "That's the highest range of you to do something harder intensity that the A merican for a short period of time and College of Sports Medicine allow you to build up to that recommends," he says. "The level of intensity. If it's just lonhighest! The highest! That's ger periods of lower intensity Michael Phelps!" you do, you'll never be able to Benjamin L e v ine, m e di- do more." cal director of the Institute of Plus, the shorter bursts offer Exercise and E n v ironmen- positive physiological results. "When you do high-intensital Medicine at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas, puts it this way: "Here's the deal. We talk about exercise as medicine. Like any drug, exercise has a dose and a frequency. You can take a baby aspirin once a night or two to four times a day and get different effects. "Exercise is the same way. Different types of exercise probably affectdifferent systems in different ways." Working out for the 150 rec-

guick tips Here are sometips for incorporating single-digit workouts into your own regimen: • Go slowly.If you're just starting out, do eachsegment slower. As you build

strength and confidence, pick up the speed. • Use it on a time-

strapped day."If you're normally a jogger but can't do your 30 minutes, and can get a hard run of four or five minutes in? Sure, do it," Jackson says. "Why not?" • Build in intensity. That's the principle of inter-

injured. Walkers don't very much. The drawback? It takes more time, and time is definitely a barrier." Still, saying a workout will last four minutes, or seven, or even shorter periods of time isn't entirely accurate, Levine

says. " Of course you h ave t o warm up. There's recovery between," he says. "Nobody should think you put on your shoes and in f ou r m i nutes you'll be finished." Additionally, these aren't w orkouts just a n yone c an

In-Home Care Servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

plunge right into, Jackson says.

W HAT YO U N E E D T O K N OW

One in six men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during his lifetime. Prostate cancer can be a serious disease, but most men diagnosed with it do not die from prostate cancer. Men diagnosed with

prostate cancer quickly learn that they have powerful options to help them fight against their disease.

Rex C. Curry/ Dallas Morning News

Kim Williams, a trainer at Baylor Tom Landry Fitness Center in Dallas, Texas, demonstrates her boxing technique.

Got aminute? You can find anabundance of short-and-not-so-sweet workouts online. We asked Kim Williams, a personal trainer with

Baylor Health CareSystem, to recommendone onthe longer side — a whopping 10 minutes. If you prefer, you can dohalf in the morning and (if you have the energy) repeat the workout later in the day. On the boxing

moves mentioned, you canpunch the air if you don't have a punching bag handy. Minute 1:Jump rope. Minutes 2-5:Alternate 20 seconds of each of these moves with 10 seconds of rest: Jabs, cross, right hook, left hook, jump squat,

push-up, mountain climber, burpee (amovecombining a squat thrust, push-up and jump). Minutes 6-10:Repeat minutes1 through 5.

Join the Physicians from Bend Urology to learn how this complicated disease is diagnosed and how you can manage thecondition. Saturday, September 28th Refreshments available af 8:45 a.m. Presentation begins af 9:00a.m.

Located at St. Charles Medical Center 2500 NE Neff Rd Bend located in Classroom D via main entrance

Call 541-382-6447

to register now Registration isnot necessary for this free seminar

vpurc &ttttttfs6o.

~~ BendUrolo SfiYING CfNIIALAND EASTERN OREGON SINCE ndl

and then "for a few minutes now and then, go after it."

Levine, who incorporates this at least weekly into his other training. For the four-

minute segments,yougo all-out. Between each, go slower — heart rate at 50

or 60 percent of maximum — for three minutes. As each four-minute

OPING SPECIALIST "Just a little guidance can make all the difference. That's my specialty — I focus on my patients' emotionalneeds

and help guide them through the challenges they face.

segment winds down, you

It might be helping facilitate family discussions, or providing

should feel ready to stop, he says. At the end of the

some much-needed counseling, or just offering coping ideas,

three-minute cool-downs, "you should beable to say, 'OK, I'm ready to goagain.'" "Patients with heart disease, with heart failure, with diabetes, with hyper-

tension — everybody can

Sharing in the journey is a real privilege for Partners ln Care."

®e

do it. At the end of the day,

itends up beingas hard as you can go for four minutes and keep going."

Partners In Care

775 SW BonnetWay Suite 120 Bend Main: 541-728-0521 www.elevationcapital.biz

PROSTATE CANCER

hard." Or go at a normal pace on the elliptical trainer

workout."We affectionately call it the 4-by-4," says

E LEVATIO N Elevation Capital Strategies

EVERGREEN

val training, he says. "Swim two lengths easy, one

• Try the four-minuteintervals-four-times

dance, and get the tools to offer classes ranging in size from one to 100 students. For busy parents, the online set-up can make all the difference, says Zemlo, who has three kids in elementary school and runs a honey business out of her backyard. On the rare occasion she can find time to get to the gym, "I need to have someone tell me what to do," Zemlo says.

541-382-5882 partnersbend.org •



ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 •

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cantact us: •

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Place an ad: 541-385-5809

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e • B u l l e t i n : •

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264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood

r

A v e

, • B g n d • O r e gg n

208

210

212

245

246

246

Furniture & Appliances

Antiques & Collectibles

Golf Equipment

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing

DON'T MISS THIS

QUALITY SHOTGUNS: Weatherby 1 2 0/ U $875; Alex Martin 16

people/kids, very energetic, to approved home only. $450. 541-678-2628

CHECK YOUR AD

Antiques wanted: tools, furniture, marbles, beer cans, early B/W photography, Western items. 541-389-1578

Just too many collectibles?

High Quality King on the first day it runs Bedroom Set with The Bulletin reserves to make sure it isn corStoraqe - 1 yr old, in the right to publish all n rect. Spellcheck and Sell them in P E RFECT condition! ads from The Bulletin human errors do ocBeautiful medium oak newspaper onto The The Bulletin Classifieds hardwood bedframe Bulletin Internet web- cur. If this happens to your ad, please conwith storage drawers, site. tact us ASAP so that 541 n385-5809 king pillow-top matcorrections and any tress, 2 night stands, gentng rentrat Oregon t nte tggg Yorkie pups AKC, sweet, 2 lamps, 1 5-drawer adjustments can be adorable, potty training, 2 dresser, 1 dresser+ made to your ad. 541-385-5809 boys, 2 girls, $450 & up. mirror. Price Get your Health guar.541-777-7743 reduced! Now $2700, The Bulletin Classified all. 541-410-1010 business Yorkie pups, f emale, $650, male, $550, 8 wks, Just bought a new boat? AKC. 541-410-1722 Sell your old one in the a ROW I N G 210 classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! with an ad in Furniture & Appliances AMMO: .308 WIN, 150 541-385-5809 rain soft-points, 90 rds, The Bulletin's

The Bulletin

"Call A Service Professional" Directory

A1 Washers&Dryers

$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355

215

Freezer

Commercial upright Delfield 6000 Series freezer, 20 cubic feet, stainless, $1200. 541-325-2691

208

Pets 8 Supplies

We're selling half a house full of very nice furniture! Teak sideboard, $400; w/hutch, $800. Large maple exec. corner desk, $1000. Oak armoire, $500. 3 Tiffany lamps, $125 ea. Oak computer desk 8 chair, $350. Small antique painted desk, $100. Large beautiful area rug, $700. 541-593-8921 or 541-410-2911

Coins 8 Stamps Private collector buying postagestamp albums 8 collections, w orld-wide and U.S. 573-286-4343 (local, cell phone).

95. 541-604-5115

Bend local pays CASH!!

for all firearms & ammo. 541-526-0617

Rc BzIfs

Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.

People Look for Information Good classified ads tell About Products and the essential facts in an Services Every Daythrough interesting Manner. Write The Bulletin Classiffeds from the readers view - nol the seller's. Convert the 241 facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will Bicycles & help them in someway. Accessories

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Washer or dryer

> TIake a'Tumble? ~+'

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advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 OI'

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Ad must include price of tt

t $5 0 0

or less, or multiple items whose total does notexceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809

SxS, $1800; Aya 16 SxS, $2200; Ithaca 20 0/U, $425; Continental Arms 410, $175. 541-306-0346.

Call The Bulletin At 544 -385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

Remington 700 rh Bmm

Rem mag rifle scope mount, in box fired 10 times, includes ammo

$1000 n o t ra d e s, 541-279-4363

Remington 700 SPS, left hand 243 ca.with 6 -2 4 AO

s cope,

$7 0 0 .

541-536-7924.

www.bendbulletin.com

541-480-5203

CASH!! For Guns, Ammo &

I l l l

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

R emington mod 7 0 0 7mm mag, 3x9 scope, Find exactly what Glo c k m odel 23, third $395. 541-815-4901. you are iooking for in the g e neration, w/extras. Ruger 10/22 Take Down, $500. 541-382-0776 new, unfired, $330 cash.

Chihuahua/Yorkie puppy, POMERANIAN MALE female, born 7/1, very AT STUD, Proven. Blue Tipped. Show quality, sweet! $300. 541-815-4052 excellent personality. Want to mate with like Donate deposit bottles/ quality purebred female cans to local all vol- Pomeranian (papers not The Bulletin unteer, non-profit resnecessary) ASAP. recommends extra ' This 0gvlizn 541-410-8078 or cue, for feral cat spay/ advertising tip l cat o ne p - Electric Bike, Easy Rider I Want to Buy or Rent Visit our HUGE 541-306-1703 neuter. Cans for Cats chasing products or, 350, less than 100 miles, brought to you by home decor trailer a t Gro c ery POODLE Toy pups 8 services from out of I battery + 2 c h argers, Wanted: 30" white natu- Outlet, 694 S. 3rd; or consignment store. The Bulletin area. Sending t $500. 541-420-0301 ral gas cookstove 8 Also, POMAPOOS l the New items d onate Mon-Fri a t teens. cash, checks, or Call 541-475-3889 stackable natural gas Smith Sign, 1515 NE arrive daily! l credit i n f o rmation washer and d r yer. 2nd; or a nytime at 930 SE Textron, Queensland Heelers may be subjected to Call 541-508-0916. Bend 541-318-1501 CRAFT in T u malo. Standard 8 Mini, $150 www.redeuxbend.com l FRAUD. For more www.craftcats.org 8 up. 541-280-1537 Wanted: $Cash paid for information about an f www.rightwayranch.wor vintage costume jewI GENERATE SOME advertiser, you may I elry. Top dollar paid for dpress.com DO YOU HAVE Ore g onI EXCITEMENT in your I call t h e Attor Gold/Silver.l buy by the SOMETHING TO ney ' Rodent issues? Free neighborhood! Plan a ' State Estate, Honest Artist SELL l General's O f f i ce adult barn/shop cats, garage sale and don't Elizabeth,541-633-7006 FOR $500 OR P r otec- • fixed, shots, s o me forget to advertise in Consumer LESS? t ion ho t l in e at I f riendly, some n o t . classified! Non-commercial l 1-877-877-9392. 280 282 Will deliver. 389-8420 541-385-5809. I Pe ts 8 Supplies advertisers may Estate Sales Sales Northwest Bend place an ad with St. Bernard Puppies, Hidebed, full-sized, like OUI' 1st shots, wormed. new, rust brown color, The Bulletin recomEstate Sale. 939 NW Fir TOTAL LIQUIDATION "QUICK CASH $400. 541-977-4686 $500.541-408-0846 mends extra caution Ave., Redmond. Fri., of Bonnie Baldwin's SPECIAL" 9/27 Sat., 9/28. 9-4. when purc h asBeaded Jewelry & 1 week 3 lines 12 541-480-4835. ing products or serCraft business. Sat., ~ g k ae! Call we have it all! vices from out of the 9/28, 9 a.m. until? 84 Ad must include area. Sending cash, boxes of all sorts of price of single item SUNRIYER Pre-Estate, checks, or credit inbeads, tools 8 supof $500 or less, or F ri., 9/27, 8 -4 , 3 8 plies. Volumes of craft f ormation may b e multiple items Yellow Pine Ln. Besubjected to fraud. and beading books. whose total does t ween circle 4 & 5 . Cutting tools, punches, For more i nformanot exceed $500. Vintage, tools, books, high intensity lamps & tion about an adverfashion, toys, Holiday. too much more to list. tiser, you may call Call Classifieds at the O r egon State 64100 No. Hwy 97 Sp. 541-385-5809 Attorney General's USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! ¹32 way in the back at www.bendbulletin.com Office Co n s umer Four Seasons Mobile Protection hotline at Home Park. Door-to-door selling with 1-877-877-9392. English Mastiff puppies. fast results! It's the easiest Show q u a lity. 8 -'k way in the world io sell. Need to get an The Bulletin months old, F a wn, r egistered an d a l l ad in ASAP? The Bulletin Classified shots. 2 females left You can place it Adopt a rescued kitten $1500 541-279-1437 541-385-5809 Lightly Used washer or cat! Fixed, shots, /541-548-1185 online at: L dryer set out of ID chip, tested, more! uacation home. 2 262 www.bendbulletin.com Nonprofit sanctuary at German Shepherds AKC years old and roiis Sales Northwest Bend 65480 78th St., Bend, www.sherman-ranch.us greatl very clean was 54i-385-5809 541-281-6829 open Sat/Sun 1-5; $1,000 new, oneiing Ford Diesel tractor, 10' kitten foster home by for only long trailer, power tools, 2 s650 appt. (call 815 7278). Heeler/Amstaff Terrier, 1 284 rototillers, dolls, m i sc 541-000-0000 Photos, map & more yr spayed female, black household items, furni- Sales Southwest Bend at www.craftcats.org. 8 white, current shots, ture. 9am-6pm Fri-Sun, 541-389-8420, or like free to approved home only. 541-508-9585 Item Priced af: Yo u r Total Ad Cost onl: Sept 27-29, 65135 97th St Electrical tools, ladders, us on Facebook. drills, wire & more! • Under $500 $29 Multi Family Sale, Sat., American Bullies UKC blue Lab purebred black feHousehold, clothes, • $500 to $999 $39 9-3, 65362 Saddle Dr. autos, collectibles, great nose,1 champagne, 6wks, male, 9 wks, 1st shots, wormed, Housewares, books, $1000 & up. 541-704-8000 dewclaws, deals. Fri-Sat, 8-3, • $1000 to $2499 $49 $200. 541-389-5893 clothes, toys, b l dg 60812 Park Vista Circle. • $2500 and over $59 A ussies, M in i A K C , supplies, tools, garparents on site, 1st Labrador, 7 month old den equip., and more. shots/wormed, blk/red male, all shots current, Includes up fo 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color 286 $400. 541-504-1330 tri, 541-598-5314 SATURDAY ONLY!!! photo, bold headline and price. Sales Northeast Bend 9am-2pm, Boston Terrier puppies Labradors, AKC black & • The Bulletin, • The Cent ral OregonNickelAds 64870 Glacier View Dr, Beachy distressed furniAdorable purebred, 6 chocolate puppies, exBend, OR 97701. ture, Adirondacks, potweeks old, parents on cellent pedigrees, male & • Central Oregon Marketplace o bendbullefin.com tery barn dishes, hip des ite, $ 4 0 0 eac h . female, $45 0 e a c h. 541-680-0009 TOO BIG TO BELIEVE signer clothing, shoes, 541-420-1 048 541-385-5809 YARD SALE! handbags, jewelry, boys' Chihuahua/Yorkie Mal t ese/Yorkie puppies, Sat 9-3. Lots of furniture, skate clothes, fun for ev'Private partymerchandiseonly - excludespets&livestock, autos, Rvs,moiorcycles, boats, airplanes, mix puppies, beautiful! females$300; males,$250 BBQ, household stuff. eryone! See you here Sat and garagesale categories. 20964 Gift Rd. 9-2, 653 NE 12th SL $250. 541-977-0035 CA S H. 541-546-7909

I

9 7 7 0 2

Pets & Supplies Yorkien 4 mo. female, loves

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo and Video 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

: Monday- Friday 7:30a.m. -5p.m.

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Kel-TBC PMR-30. N.I.B $695,Kel-Tec KSG Shotgun N.I.B $995.00, Tikka stainless.300 Win. Mag w/3x9 stainless Leupold scope $975.00, AR-15 complete lowers $249.95 each. Call Brad's Bait & Tackle after 2 p.m. 541-475-6892

+Ruger Security S+ix

i .357 mag stainless

i with hard case, hol- l l ster,2speedloaders. l w/4-in barrel, excel-

l lent condition, comes

Savage 270 (new) lefthanded bolt, Model 110L, Deerfield 3x9 s c ope, $400. 541-788-9364

Check out the classifieds online Savage mod. 111 7mm www.bendbulletin.com mag, 3 x 9 sc o p e. Updated daily $295. 541-815-4901

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286

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

Sales Redmond Area i Garage Sale 9/27-9/28, 8am-3pm. Winter clothes galore - coats, suits, sweaters, dresses & more. Good labels, low prices. 42" rnd dining tbl, student desk/chair, toys, brand new Canon fax/ phone machine. 1354 NW Spruce/15th St. HUGE GARAGE SALE c ombining ho u s eholds, Fri. 9-4 Sat. 8-4 3468 SW GLACIER

PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

Sales Other Areas

1777 SW Chandler

Downsizing Sale! Household items, truck stuff, lumber rack, antiques, hutch, Fri 8 Sat, 8am5pm, 67342 Hwy 20, Bend, 5 mi. S of Sisters.

Ave., Bend, OR 97702

The Bulletin

MOVING SALE Frl Sun Three family Garage 9/27-29, 8:30-2 30 at Sale, Fri., Sat. & Sun., 993 East C ascade 8-3, 1169 NE Revere Ave., Sisters. Maytag Ave., s al e a r o und SS G emini r a nge, corner on 12th. Dis- cust. blue-buggy ent. ney V HS , q u a lity cnter w/TV/DVD, Pott. cookbooks, and more. Brn coat cab, child's dresser, chandelier. 266

NOTICE

Remember to remove Sales Southeast Bend your Garage Sale signs (nails, staples, etc.) after your Sale event ESTATE SALE is over! THANKS! 21125 Wilderness Way From The Bulletin Furniture, wheelchair and your local utility 8 walker, collectibles, companies. artwork, antique lamps, clothing & more! Fri-Sat, 9-4Serving Central Oregon ttnce 1903 no early sales!

The Bulletin

www.bendbulletin.com


E2 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809 270

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletinscom

333

fg,!F~>J!P) JI,J j Jlq tJjjJ~ jg

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • . •• • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri •

Lost & Found Poultry, Rabbits, & Supplies Found Digital Camera Can be found on these pages: near Mt. View High 2 b l ack-tailed, w h ite School on 9/25. Call Japanese hobby roostto identify ers, free! 541-382-8423 EMPLOYMENT FINANCEAND BUSINESS 541-480-4744.

375 Found Suzuki car key (single) found in Cas- Meat & Animal Processing cade V illage M a l l, parking lot. Top quality natural beef $3/lb. cut 8 wrapped. 541-678-4269

Tuesday. • • • . Noon Mone Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tuese Lost: 9/17, Single key cross shaped key Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. on ring. East side; near area. Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. hospital 541-382-0890 Cat, black 8 white Saturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Lost male, friendly, corner of Underwood & Studio Rd. collar, but m icroSaturday • . • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri.No chipped. If found, please Mary, 541-389-2249 Sunday.. • • • • • • • . • • • 5:00 pm Fri • call LOST since Sat.. 9/21 •

...don't let time get

away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

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

*UNDER '500 in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

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

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

383

Produce 8 Food

541-647-7899

THOMAS ORCHARDS

507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

BARTENDER An opportunity tojoin the

Livestock Truck Driver Must have CDL,2yrs exp, progressive co., 401k, $50,000/yr, insurance NW only. 541-475-6681

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

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

in Glacier Ridge dev. off Neff Rd., black med. short hair male cat with white patch o n chest, white t i p front paws, REWARD.

Starting at 3 lines

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

541-480-81 85.

410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - Independent Positions

M & J Tavern! Part-time Bartenderneeded, Sunday-Monday days, plus fill-in.

Apply at the M & J Tavern, 102 NW Greenwood Avenue,in Bend.

Medical Jefferson County EMS District currently has a position open for an EMS Chief. JCEMS is a 3rd service special district serving small communities i n a large rural area. Inquires can be made at

LOST S m ith s un- Kimberly, Oregon 541-934-2870 glasses, at Phil's trail541-475-7476. Deadhead parking lot. on Starting Tues, Oct. 1st line for application is Garage Sale Special NEW FALL HOURS! 9/20. 541-280-4999 Sept. 27, 2013. (call for commercial line ad rates) 4 lines for 4 days ................................. Closed Tues. & Wed. Customer Service open Thurs. thru Mon. Hurry!!! Call now to e 10 a.m.-4 p.m. only. schedule interview, Say egoodbuy A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: 541-389-0154 U-pick & to that unused If you have the desire to R ~ ead PickedBend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. work hard in a positive item by placing it in • Golden Delicious * B ELOW MARKED WITH A N ( ) team-oriented MISSING: Tan / White apples, Ambrosia The Bulletin Classifieds environment then REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well apples, Jonagold Chihuahua since 8/2 WE NEED TO HEAR apples. i n C r ooked R i v er as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin FROM YOU! 5 4 1 e385-5809 Ranch. Male, 8 years • O'Henry peaches $10/hour plus. bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at old, a bout 6 lbs . • Prunes $4,500 cash reward. BRING CONTAINERS IT Professional any time. is located at: No questions asked! The Bulletin for U-PICK!!! Needed! 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Call 503-805-3833 or Full-time position avail- I Recommends extra 628 Open 7 days wk, 8-6! 541-325-6629 caution when purBend, Oregon 97702 See us on Facebook able starting on Oct. Loans & Mortgages 2 1, 2 0 1 3 . S m a l l , chasing products or I & Bend Farmers Marfull-service computer services from out of ' ket on Wed., 3-7 p.m. WARNING PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracythe first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction r etail, r e pair an d i the area. Sending The Bulletin recomREMEMBER: Ifyou is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Internet Service Pro- c ash, c hecks, o r mends you use cauto accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these have lost an animal, vider business estab- l credit i n f o rmation tion when you prodon't forget to check newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party AINijge lished i n 1 9 8 5 in l may be subjected to vide personal The Humane Society Lakeview, OR. Must FRAUD. Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. information to compaBend have excellent net- For more informanies offering loans or 541-382-3537 work ma n agement tion about an advercredit, especially 260 Redmond skills and experience. l tiser, you may call those asking for adGuns, Hunting Misc. Items Tools Fuel 8 Wood • 541-923-0882 Computer repair ex- the Oregon State • vance loan fees or & Fishing Pr e i i e perience re q uired.l Attorney General's companies from out of Buying Diamonds Craftsman toolbox, with 541-447-717ik Starting salary com- Office Co n s umert state. If you have WHEN BUYING assorted carpet tools, /Gold for Cash or Craft Cats Protection hotline at l mensurate with expeconcerns or ques470 Taurusstainless 4g4 FIREWOOD... Saxon's Fine Jewelers $100. 541-548-7200 541-389-8420. rience. Health insurI 1-877-877-9392. tions, we suggest you mag, 8-3/8e barrel 541-389-6655 Domestic & ance benefits avail. New 10e Delta table saw To avoid fraud, consult your attorney with custom leather, LThe Bulletin In-Home Positions Call Marcia at Goose The Bulletin BUYING with dust bag & roller or call CONSUMER SOLD!Remington Lake Comp u ting Lionel/American Flyer s tand, $ 1 2 0 cas h . recommends payHOTLINE, I 700with BSAscope 541-947-4513. Email trains, accessories. 541-318-8503 ment for Firewood Caretaker 10 yrs exp. 1-877-877-9392. 270 ca., sling, case 541-408-2191. Exc. references, avail. resume to only upon delivery FIND YOUR FUTURE and ammo. SOLD! RV Generator, 3600 LP P T. S i sters, R e d - jobs@gooselake.com HOME INTHE BULLETIN Need help fixing stuff? and inspection. Both sold 1st day! BUYING & SE L LING +2, 119 hrs, all accord is 128 cu. ft. mond, N. Bend area. Call A ServiceProfessional All gold jewelry, silver cess. for RV. $800. • A 4' x 4' x 8' 530-409-5068 Your future is just a page find the help you need. and gold coins, bars, 541-593-1455 • Receipts should away. Whether you're looking www.bendbulletin.com Wanted: Collector rounds, wedding sets, 476 for a hat or a pl a ce to hang i t , seeks high quality include name, class rings, sterling silfishing items. The Bulletin Classified is BANK TURNED YOU phone, price and Employment ver, coin collect, vinCall 541-678-5753, or Building Materials 308 DOWN? Private party kind of wood your best source. tage watches, dental Opportunities 503-351-2746 will loan on real espurchased. gold. Bill Fl e ming, Farm Equipment Every daythousands of REDMOND Habitat equity. Credit no • Firewood ads 541-382-9419. buyers and sellers of goods tate & Machinery RESTORE problem, good equity MUST include CAUTION: and services do busi n ess in Building Supply Resale is all you need. Call species 8 cost per Art, Jewelry TURN THE PAGE Ads published in 5' brush hog, tires to pull these pages.Theyknow Quality at Oregon Land Mortcord to better serve d own hwy, pull P TO "Employment O p 8 Furs For More Ads you can't beat The Bul l etin LOW PRICES our customers. gage 541-388-4200. 3-point, $350. 5' wide C- portunities" in clude Classified Section for The Bulletin 1242 S. Hwy 97 employee and indeIt's Print Season! tine harrow, 3 sections, 7 selection and conveni e nce LOCAL MONEyrWe buy 541-548-1406 t ines wi d e , $12 5 . pendent p o sitions. - every item isjust a phone secured trustdeeds & Buy a Shingledecker Deschutes Memorial Open to the public. Ads fo r p o s itions 541-480-7085 note,some hard money call away. print and get a matching Gardens, Catholic that require a fee or loans. Call Pat Kellev mini print as a bonus! Gardens, lot 41 C, Look at: The Classified Section is All Year Dependable upfront i nvestment 541-382-3099 ext.13. Garage Sales BruceShin ledecker.com space 2. Bargain at easy to use. Everyitem Firewood: Seasoned Bendhomes.com must be stated. With or chaforthefinest.com Call $750. is categorized andevery Lodgepole, Split, Del. for Complete Listings of any independentjob Garage Sales e • Cha for the Finest i 541-504-8868 I cartegory is indexed onthe Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 Area Real Estate for Sale opportunity, please 183 East Hood St., in section's front page. Garage Sales for $365. Cash, Check i nvestigate thor Sisters - 541-549-1140 How to avoid scam or Credit Card OK. oughly. Use e xtra and fraud attempts 326 Whether youare lookingfor Western Washington Find them 541-420-3484. c aution when a p Guy seeks gal 48-65, a home or needa service, v'Be aware of internaHay, Grain & Feed plying for jobs onThousands of ads daily slim/average build, to in your future is in the pages of I TV, Stereo & Video tional fraud. Deal lo269 line and never proin print and online. share quiet times; The Bulletin Classified. cally whenever pos1st Class Grass Hay The Bulletin Gardening Supplies vide personal infortrips, walks, nature, 47" Samsung HD TV Barn-stored, sible. mation to any source & Equipment moon-light, cuddling! Classifieds works great, moving sale v' Watch for buyers $230/ ton. The Bulletin you may not have Greg, PO Box 3013 $295. 541-350-0898 Patterson Ranch 's' who offer more than researched and Arlington, WA 98223. 541-385-5809 Sisters, 541-549-3831 your asking price and BarkTurfSoil.com deemed to be repuwho ask to have table. Use extreme Computers money wired or Looking for your c aution when r e PROMPT DELIVERY handed back to them. next employee? I I I s ponding to A N Y 541-389-9663 T HE B U LLETIN r e - Fake cashier checks Place a Bulletin online employment quires computer adand money orders NOTICE TO help wanted ad ad from out-of-state. vertisers with multiple are common. ADVERTISER We suggest you call For newspaper today and ad schedules or those YNever give out perSince September 29, Call54IJ853809tctramoteyourserviceAdvertisefor28dcysstartingat'I4!trkiiipecelpdctegeaeeievdicileeeeereekrtei reach over the State of Oregon delivery, call the selling multiple syssonal financial infor1991, advertising for Consumer H o tline Circulation Dept. at 60,000 readers tems/ software, to dismation. used woodstoves has at 1-503-378-4320 541-385-5800 each week. close the name of the YTrust your instincts been limited to modFor Equal OpportuTo place an ad, call Your classified ad business or the term and be wary of els which have been Handyman nity Laws c ontact Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Carei 541-385-5809 "dealer" in their ads. will also someone using an c ertified by th e O r Oregon Bureau of or email Private party advertisappear on escrow service or egon Department of classitiedebendbulletimcom Labor & I n d ustry, NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY NOTICE: Oregon Landers are defined as bendbulletin.com agent to pick up your Environmental Quallaw r equires anyone SERVICES. Home 8 scape Contractors Law Civil Rights Division, those who sell one which currently merchandise. ity (DEQ) and the fedwho con t racts for Commercial Repairs, (ORS 671) requires all 971-6730764. ker cg Central Oregon e cce l903 computer. eral E n v ironmental receives over construction work to businesses that a dCarpentry-Painting, 1.5 million page Protection A g e ncy The Bulletin be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Pressure-washing, 267 SUPER TOP SOIL views every Construction ContracLandscape Construc(EPA) as having met www.hershe Honey Do's. On-time soilandbark.com 541-385-5809 Patio furniture set, Musical Instruments tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: smoke emission stan- Screened, soil & commonth at no promise. Senior 7' powder coated frame, dards. A cer t i fied post active license decks , extra cost. Discount. Work guar- p lanting, mi x ed , no glass table, 4 sling type means the contractor arbors, w oodstove may b e rocks/clods. High huBulletin Add your web address anteed. 541-389-3361 fences, chairs. Moving sale, is bonded 8 insured. water-features, and inidentified by its certifi- mus level, exc. for to your ad and reador 541-771-4463 Classifieds $125. 541-350-0898 Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ircation label, which is Bonded 8 Insured ers on The Bulletin's flower beds, lawns, Get Results! CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be CCB¹181595 Wanted- paying cash permanently attached gardens, web site, www.bendstraight Call 541-385-5809 www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the for Hi-fi audio 8 stu- to the stove. The Bulbulletin.com, will be s creened to p s o i l. or place your ad contractor.com Landscape Contracdio equip. Mclntosh, letin will no t k n ow- Bark. Clean fill. Deable to click through on-line at or call 503-378-4621. Home Repairs, Remod tors Board. This 4-digit Piano, Baldwin upingly accept advertis- liver/you J BL, Marantz, D y automatically to your haul. els, Tile, C arpentry bendbulletin.com The Bulletin recomnumber is to be i ni ng for the s ale o f right, with b e nch, naco, Heathkit, Sanwebsite. 541-548-3949. mends checking with Finish work, M a inte cluded in all adverexc. cond. $ 6 00. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. uncertified nance. CCB¹168910 the CCB prior to contisements which indi541-410-4087 woodstoves. Call 541-261-1808 tracting with anyone. Phil, 541-279-0846. cate the business has Some other t r ades a bond,insurance and WHEN YOU SEE THIS Take care of also req u ire addiworkers c o mpensaLandscaping/Yard Care tional licenses and tion for their employMOTORCYCLE: Custom Harley ~ Oo your investments Misc. Items certifications. ees. For your protecDavidson 1997 Sportster 1200 XL. with the help from M Ore P iX a t B e n d b u ll e t i ! I,CO m tion call 503-378-5909 BBQ Grill, 3 burner plus 5000 Miles. Lots of chrome. $10,000. On a classified ad or use our website: The Bulletin's • D e bris Removal side b u rner, v i n yl Great ride, but noroom for the softball go to www.lcb.state.or.us to Z~oe z guaEup cover, works great. www.bendbulletin.com "Call A Service team. Contact Cheryl at 000-0000. check license status JUNK BE GONE Moving sale. $50. to view additional Za~< t. ~ /,. before contracting with Professional" Directory 541-350-0898 I Haul Away FREE photos of the item. the business. Persons YCLE:Gently s For Salvage. Also Managing doing land s cape Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Central Oregon maintenance do not Mel, 541-389-8107 Landscapes r equire an L C B Since 2006 cense. YQUR ADWILLREcEIYEcLosE To 2,004000 Domestic Services EXPOSURES FORONLY$250! *Must state prices in ad

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541-385-5809

Prestige Housekeeping Housecleaning, Vacation Rentals, Move-ins/Outs Licensed 8 insured.

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DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances.Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible.503-772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives.com divorce@usa.com

$10 off 1stCleaning! I'll Clean Your Home Suitable for a Baby! • 18 years experience • Reasonable rates References 541-389-8315

Handyman

GORDON TRUCKING-CDL-A DriversNeeded! Dedicated and OTR Positions Now Open! $1,000 SIGN ON BONUS. Consistent Miles, Time Off! Full Benefits, 401k, EOE, Recruiters Available 7 days/week! 866-435-8590 Drivers - Whether you have experience or need training, we offer u n beatable career o pportunities. Trainee, Company Driver,LEASE OPERATOR, LEASE TRAINERS (877)369-7104 www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com

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AMERICAN GREETINGS is hiring Retail Merchandisers across Oregon! For 8 full listing ol available locations and detailed job information, please visit us at www.WorkatAG.com

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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD W'll Sh ert2

Th ursday,septem ber26,2013

ACROSS 1 Stop threatening 12"Howto Marry a Millionaire" actress 150ne'sinitial response to this clue, perhaps 16Police dept. broadcast 17Suspended avian home 18While, in brief 19Campaign pro 20 Bamboozled 21 de G uerre (French military award) 23 What shepherds may shepherd 25Superior home?: Abbr. 26Actors James and Scott 27Kind of jet 29Web opening 30 Deterrent to swimming 33 Three-time N.H.L. M.V.P. 34 t rap

38Auditionrebuff 66 Singer known 42"Or what shall as La Divina a man give in 67 Extremely tight exchange for his ? " : Mark DOWN 8:37 1Homer's Muse 43Sea urchin delicacy 2 Discombobulate 44 Many opera 3Two-time houses have Olympic them running gold 45Throwoff medalist 47 Dimwit Gebrselassie 49Lhasa 4Bolivian 51 Worked (up) president 52 Biltmore Estate Morales state: Abbr. 5Place 56Pooch,in Paris Concorde 57 Mantles 6Quick 59"Ti combination (Italian lover's 7lt may be full of declaration) dirt 600wnerof 8 Math ratios Moviefone 9Ancient theaters 61Site of W.W. II's first amphibious 10 Moroccan city landing known as the 64 Number of Athens of Africa colori on the 11Moneybags Italian flag 120ne being 65 Commercial passed in a race figure holding six beer mugs 13Blackfly, e.g. 14 Roadside fixture ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 22Rogue 5 A D A O W 5 24Germanwine made from fully 5 I N EW D E C O W A A C ripe grapes WA I AD S E E I S O 26PC key REO UN HA T 28 Reminisce G O O F F O A A G E T about M A R A S U R F S S T Y 29Muchof central C H A C HA S U RA L Eur., once S U L A E O F O M A N 30 Circular parts A RD O R S E N O R A 31Head overseas G I A L O U I S G E A R 32Animalwhose I S A A E O U S L Y young is a calf J AP A N ANN 33 Be obliged 0 I S U A T ES T E D 35Size up E I RE Z I N c I C A R E 36High, rocky hill S EE D I T C H L I N ES 37 N.S.W. locale

Caution observed By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

An optimist sees green lights, a pessimist sees red lights. A realist is color blind. In a t eam match, both N orthSouths reached four hearts, and West led the king of diamonds to dummy's ace. One South was an optimist and hoped for 12 tricks if the deal was friendly. He led a trump to his jack at Trick Two. West won, took two diamonds and led the 13th diamond. East overruffed dummy's eight with the nine, and South overruffed with the king and took the ace. East discarded, and West's ten was high. South escaped for down one by cashing his spades and exiting with a trump, forcing West to lead a club from his king.

BEST PLAY

passes. What do you say? ANSWER: Your hand is worth inviting game but not f orcing to game. Bid two diamonds, planning to raise a rebid of two hearts to three. A response of one spade might locate a 4-4 fit, but a 5-3 heart fit may play as well or better. Partner will be able to judge your prospects more accurately if you bid the side suit where your values lie. South dealer N-S vulnerable

NORTH 41 Q 9 98432 0 A65 18910952

WEST 4 10 6 3 2 9 Q106

EAST 4875 Q97 0 1092 4 J8 6 4 3

The second South was no red-light pessimist, but he knew enough to O KQ J 8 observe a y e llow c aution l i ght. 4 K 7 Taking his best play for the contract, South cashed the A-K of t r umps, SOUTH disdaining a f inesse, and ran the 4AK J4 spades to pitch dummy's diamonds. QAKJ 5 South then ruffed a diamond, led a C7 743 club to his ace and ruffed his last 4AQ diamond. He made an o vertrick, losing a trump and a club. S outh We s t N orth 2 NT P ass 34 30 Pass 4 Q DAILY QUESTION

Ea s t Pass All P a ss

Youhold: 4 1 0 6 3 2 Q Q 10 6 Opening lead — 0 K 0 K Q I 8 4 K 7. Y o ur partner opens one heart. The next player (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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

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PUZZLE BYSTU OCKMAN

39"O'Hara's Choice" novelist 401nebriate 41Fordlast produced in 1986 46ln the midst of, poetically 47The Blue Demons of the N.C.A.A. 48Verdiopera

49Hoy dia 50 Gobs 51Wasequipped for summer heat, as an auto 53 "That's enough!" 54 Ruben Phillies Gold Glove-winning shortstop 55 Class starter

56Soundof derision 57 Family head

58Agronomy and metallurgy: Abbr. 62

-Aztecan (language family)

63 Historical period

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

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41 Huge production 5 5 "But wait! There's 42 Logician's "E," more!" company perhaps 56 Vandalized, 47 Has to sell Halloween-style style 48 Bullish 57 Comedy routines 9 Stubborn one beginning? 58 Hea l thy berry 10 They have strings 49 Chianti, in 59 Cowpoke's polite attached Chianti assent 11 Boyfriend 51 Wipe out 63 Tolkien's talking 12 Animal shelter 52 "Eight Is Enough" tree 13 Under-the-sink actor Willie 64 IBM hardware joints 53 Soundquali ty 65 Ask too many CO. 1 8 Modest 54 Workers' backer ques t ions 21 Garr of "Mr. Mom" acknowledgment 22 "My place or ?" of praise ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: 23 SHUCKS 19 Banks in fashion R A G U F I S T A V OW 27 Unspecified 24 Bill stamp H 0 R N 0 P I E L E N A amount 25 From the top 280ne of the Seven 26 Hot spot 0 L E S R A R E G R E Y Sisters schools 29 Pop W AL T D I S N E Y 32 Joe'8 sister in 30 Compatriot AB 0 V E F R 0 C K TV's "Under the 31 Roger who played C A L V I N C O O L I D G E Dome" Lord Marbury on A A R P A D I N "The West Wing" E D D Y 35 Salinger girl S T R E E T 38 Soccer shout 32 BBs, e.g. RU S S E L L C R 0 WE 39 DARN 33 Spring tide SU S H I A N 0 D E 43 Goat quote counterpart S I N E T OG S 44 Hurdle for a 34 Hard-to-see pest A B B Y Storied Cow 35 WWII command Y I P E O D O N O D E S 45 Offers thanks, in a 36 "Dexter" network, C O R E B U S I N E S S way in listings F U R R E N E G E H 0 E 46 Decides one will 37 Word with best or A N T M I N I M A E U R 49 Itinerary word common D T S A D S A T O N A L 40 "Don't worry 50 SHOOT xwordeditorOaol.com 09/26/1 3 57 Setting for about me" "Beasts of the 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 12 13 Southern Wild" 14 15 16 60 Cloudburst, e.g. 61 Seasonal drink 17 18 19 62 FUDGE

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By Marti Duouay-1:arpenier (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 2013 E5

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

~

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652

745

Houses for Rent NW Bend

Homes for Sale

616

Deschutes River frontage in Tumalo, remodeled 3 bdrm/2 bath+ offc, 1 level, $1795 mo-to- mo, now thru April. 20076 Beaver Ln off Cline Falls. Virginia, 541-480-7501

Want To Rent

662

Houses for Rent Sisters

Room wanted $300 mo. Send reply w/phone to Box ¹20405220, The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Country living at its best, No work just pleasure, Bend, OR 97708

Great Family Home Great open floor plan with spacious kitchen 8 lots of windows. Huge backyard. Cascade Mountain & Smith Rock views. Move in ready. 3 bedrooms & 2 baths. RV parking too! Barbara Jackson, Bro-

860

Redmond Homes

Motorcycles & Accessories

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

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

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

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750

at

Health Forces Sale! 2007 Harley Davidson FLHX Street GlideToo many extras to list! 6-spd, cruise control, stereo, batt. tender, cover. Set-up for long haul road trips. Dealership svc'd. Only 2,000 miles. PLUS H-D cold weather

gear, rain gear, packs, helmets, leathers & much more. $15,000.

541-382-3135 after 5pm

HDFatBo 1996

762

Homes with Acreage

F

cabin on year-round creek. 637 acres surrounded federal land, Fremont Nat'I Forest. 541-480-7215 775

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished

on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

ker 541-306-8186

John L. Scott Real Estate 541-548-1712

: 0 0

'po o

541-447-4805

Fifth Wheels

541-382-2577

NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1

slide, Corian surfaces, wood floors (kitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection microwave, Vizio TV 8 roof satellite, walk-in shower, new queen bed. White leather hide-abed & chair, all records, no pets or s moking. $28,450. Call 541-771-4800

Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed slide-out oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388

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

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

The Bulletin

G ulfstream S u n sail- sport 30' Class A 1988 ne w f r i dge, boat with trailer, exc. TV, solar panel, new c ond., $2000 o b o . refrigerator, wheelCall 503-312-4168 c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, Goo d condition! $18,000 obo 541-447-5504

14' LAZER 1993

16'9" Larson All American, 1971, V-hull, 120hp I/O, 1 owner, always garaged, w/trlr, exc cond, $2000. 541-788-5456

r-

JAMEE 1982 20',

low miles on it, self-contained. Runs Great, everything works. $3,000. 541-382-6494

-

+

17' Seaswirl 1 968,

tri-hull o pen bow,

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new E-Z lift trailer with 3 tires, $2,200.

,• a

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air awning 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper that fits 6 t/~' pickup bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or

l arge screen TV w / entertainment center; reclining chairs; center kitchen; air; queen bed; complete hitch and new fabric cover. $22,900 OBO. (541) 548-5886

541-815-4121

.

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motor-

home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained, $8995obo. 541-350-7755

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

Monaco Lakota 2004 5th Wheel 34 ft.; 3 s l ides; immaculate c o ndition;

4 Bk

"F"

20 h p ou t board drive, 4 hp Evinrude ~ trolling motor, like

541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

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

MONTANA 3585 2008, WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearancein good condition. Smoke-free.

Tow with t/a-ton. Strong

suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

Nuyya 297LK HitchHiker 2007, All sea-

sons, 3 slides, 32' perfect for snow birds, left kitchen, rear lounge, extras, must see. Prineville 541-447-5502 days & 541-447-1641 eves.

Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months (whichever comes first!)

Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.

~~ g~ tAftN'

gppglAL

21' Crownline Cuddy Cabin, 1995, only 325 hrs on the boat, 5.7 Merc engine with outdrive. Bimini top & moorage cover, $7500 obo.

or place your ad

on-line at bendbulletin.com

Little Red Corvette"

so!id Featuresinclude rs,4-dr Surface counte, icro, f'deconvectionm' rlg, r,cebuilt-inwasher/dryer, ramictilefloor,TV,DUD, !!!tedish,airleveling, s „rog„ p tray,andakingsizebe -Agforonly $149,000 541-000-000

Keystone Laredo 31' RV 20 06 w ith 1 2 ' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w e r. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600

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

The Bulletin

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o Qyna

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for Monaco Windsor, 2001, l ife $ 8900 O B O . 40-ft, loaded! (was 541-379-3530 $234,000 new) Solid-surface counters, convection/micro, 4-dr, Advertise your car! fridge, washer/dryer, ceAdd A Picture! Reach thousands of readersi ramic tile 8 carpet, TV, Call 541-385-5809 DVD, satellite dish, levThe Bulletin Classifieds eling, 8-airbags, power cord reel, 2 full pass-thru trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 Diesel gen set. $74,900 503-799-2950 eu 20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L V6 w/OMC outdrive, open bow,Shorelander trlr, nds some interior trim work.

Trave l Trailers

The Bulletin

00+ 004 - LQ

Travel Trailers •

CHECK YOUR AD Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishr Street Glide 2006 black ing, drift, canoe, cherry metal f l ake, house and sail boats. good extras, 8 ,100 For all other types of miles, will take some watercraft, please go on the first day it runs trade of firearms or to Class 875. to make sure it is corMallard 22' 1995, small ironhead. 541-385-5809 rect. "Spellcheck" and $14,000. Pontiac G6 2007, low ready for hunting human errors do oc541-306-8812 miles, excellent tow car, season!Sleeps 7, cur. If this happens to has Brake Buddy, shield, two twin beds, fully your ad, please conT owmaster to w b a r , equipped, very good Suzuki DRZ400 SM tact us ASAP so that $10,000. 541-548-1422 cond, $4000 obo. 2007, 14K mi., corrections and any 541-678-5575 4 gal. tank, racks, adjustments can be Find It in recent tires, made to your ad. bought a new boat? $4200 OBO. The BulletinClassifieds! Just 541-385-5809 Sell your old one in the 541-383-2847. classifieds! Ask about our The Bulletin Classified Beautiful h o u seboat, 541-385-5809 Super Seller rates! $85,000. 541-390-4693 541-385-5809 www.centraloregon RV houseboat.com CONSIGNMENTS WANTED GENERATE SOME exar un» ~ IS 8 We Do The Work ... citement in your neig•a borhood. Plan a ga- You Keep The Cash! On-site credit rage sale and don't Fleetwood Prowler approval team, forget to advertise in 32' - 2001 Victory TC 2002, Monte Carlo 2012 Limweb site presence. classified! 385-5809. 2 slides, ducted runs great, many ited Edition, 2 slides, 2 We Take Trade-Ins! heat & air, great A/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps accessories, new Free Advertising. condition, snowbird serving central oregonsince 19rs 6-8 comfortably, has tires, under 40K BIG COUNTRY RV ready, Many upw/d, dishwasher, many Bend: 541-330-2495 miles, well kept. 875 grade options, fiextras, fully l o aded. Redmond: $5000. nancing available! Watercraft 541-548-5254 $29,600 obo. Located 541-647-4232 $14,500 obo. in Bend. 682-777-8039 Ads published in "WaCall Dick, 865 tercraft" include: Kay541-480-1687. aks, rafts and motorATVs Ized personal watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e Class 870. TIFFINPHAETON QSH • <m Orbit 21' 2007, used • ya 541-385-5809 2007 with 4 slides, CAT only 8 times, A/C, 350hp diesel engine, oven, tub s hower, $129,900. 30,900 miles, micro, load leveler Keystone Challenger Polaris Outlaw 450, 2008, great condition! hitch, awning, dual MXR Sport quad, dirt 8 Extended warranty, 2004 CH34TLB04 34' 880 batteries, sleeps 4-5, sand tires,runs great, low dishwasher, washer/ fully S/C, w/d hookups, Motorhomes EXCELLENT CONdryer, central vac, roof hrs, $3750 541-647-8931 new 18' Dometic awDITION. All accessatellite, aluminum ning, 4 new tires, new sories are included. wheels, 2 full slide-thru Kubota 7000w marine basement trays 8 3 TV's. $15,000 OBO. diesel generator, 3 Falcon-2 towbar and 541-382-9441 slides, exc. cond. inEven-Brake included. s ide & o ut. 27" T V Call 541-977-4150 dvd/cd/am/fm entertain RV 9' llll', 'tl ' Suzuki powered custom center. Call for more CONSIGNMENTS Fleetwood D i s covery Dune Buggy, twin 650 cc details. Only used 4 WANTED 40' 2003, diesel momotor, 5-spd, with trailer, times total in last 5 t/s We Do The Work ... torhome w/all $3500. 541-389-3890 years.. No pets, no You Keep The Cash! options-3 slide outs, smoking. High r etail I On-site credit satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Winnebago Suncruiser34' $27,700. Will sell for approval team, Boats & Accessories etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es.2004, 35K, loaded, too $24,000 including slidweb site presence. Wintered i n h e ated much to list, ext'd warr. i ng hitch that fits i n We Take Trade-Ins! 3 G'e g o r 1 5 h p shop. $89,900 O.B.O. thru 2014, $49,900 Denyour truck. Call 8 a.m. Free Advertising. Johnson, 3 hp 541-447-8664 to 10 p.m. for appt to nis, 541-589-3243 BIG COUNTRY RV Evinrude great cond., see. 541-330-5527. Bend: 541-330-2495 $1750. 541-420-5855 Redmond: • Tra v el Trailers 541-548-5254

FOR ONLY gu]P"~< fLLiE<

Motorhomes

$4500. 541-639-3209

151628 Ha c k amore. Custom 1325 sq. ft. home, with s h ops. Completely $244,900. High Lakes Rebuilt/Customized Realty 8 Pro p erty 2012/2013 Award Management Winner 541 -536-01 1 7 Showroom Condition Many Extras 763 Low Miles. Recreational Homes $17,000 541-548-4807 & Property PRICED REDUCED

881

Boats & Accessories •

NICE RNUCN~

bendbulletin.com

LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge NOTICE beautiful home for rent, Savings! 10 Year All real estate adver3 bdrm, 2.5 bath. Fully Want to impress the conditional warranty. furnished on 40 acres, tised here in is subrelatives? Remodel near Sisters. No pets or ject to t h e F e deral Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! smoking, $2000/mo.+ F air Housing A c t , your home with the Redmond, Oregon elec. Avail.11/1/13 thru which makes it illegal help of a professional 541-548-5511 5/1/14. 541-604-5792 to advertise any preffrom The Bulletin's JandMHomes.com erence, limitation or 687 "Call A Service discrimination based Rent /Own Commercial for Professional" Directory on race, color, reli- 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Rent/Lease gion, sex, handicap, $2500 down, $750 mo. familial status or na632 J and M Homes Fenced storage yard, tional origin, or inten- OAC. 541-548-5511 Apt./Multiplex General building an d o f f ice tion to make any such trailer for rent. In con- preferences, l i m itaCHECKYOUR AD venient Redmond lo- tions or discrimination. We will not knowingly cation, 205 SE RailI. cI . road Blvd. $800/mo. accept any advertising for r ea l e s tate Avail. 10/1. 541-923-7343. which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed on the first day it runs that all dwellings adBMI &iRi4 to make sure it is corvertised are available rect. "Spellcheck" and Pcn 4nks on an equal opportuhuman errors do ocnity basis. The Bullecur. If this happens to tin Classified your ad, please conSnowmobiles • tact us ASAP so that Stunning Sunriver corrections and any • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 Executive Home adjustments can be Stunning Home in the EXT, $1000. made to your ad. heart of Sunriver. This • Yamaha 750 1999 732 541-385-5809 Mountain Max, SOLD! NW contemporary The Bulletin Classified Commercial/Investment home has been pro- • Zieman 4-place Properties for Sale trailer, SOLD! fessionally remodeled 648 and comes "turn key". All in good condition. C ommercial lot n e a r Unobstructed MeadLocated in La Pine. Houses for Sunriver. Half acre lot Call 541-408-6149. ows Course/fairway Rent General on Spring River Dr. views. Big price reductions to Korina Chinchen, PUBLISHER'S $45,000. Near store, Broker 541-788-6154 Motorcycles & Accessories NOTICE restaurant and other John L. Scott Real All real estate adverCall toEstate 541-548-1712 tising in this newspa- businesses. day. per is subject to the 750 Scott McLean, F air H o using A c t Redmond Homes Principal Broker which makes it illegal 541-408-6908 to a d v ertise "any Eagle Crest, 257 HighRealty Executives preference, limitation l and Meadow L p . 2013 Harley or disc r imination The Bulletin 2321 sq.ft. 3 b drm, Davidson Dyna based on race, color, To Subscribe call 2.5 bath, + o f f ice, Wide Glide, black, religion, sex, handi- 541-385-5800 or go to great room plan, all only 200 miles, cap, familial status, www.bendbulletin.com premium fin i shes. brand new, all stock marital status or na$433,388 plus after-market tional origin, or an in745 Lynn Johns, Principal exhaust. Has winter tention to make any Homes for Sale Broker, 541-408-2944 cover, helmet. such pre f e rence, Central Oregon Selling for what I limitation or discrimi- 1050 NE Butler Market Resort Realty owe on it: $15,500. nation." Familial sta¹t 8. S p acious Eagle Crest, 942 Trail Call anytime, tus includes children Rd., 1810 sq ft., 3 bdrm, 541-554-0384 Creek Dr.. 2321 sq.ft. under the age of 18 bath, w/large loft, 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, + living with parents or 2.5 corner unit. $139,900 o ffice, g reat r o o m legal cus t o dians, TEAM Birtola Garmyn Buell 1125R, 2008 15k plan, all premium finmiles, reg. s ervice, pregnant women, and High Desert Realty ishes. $413,277 people securing cuswell cared for. factory 541-312-9449 Lynn Johns, Principal tody of children under Buell optional fairing www. BendOregon Broker, 541-408-2944 kit, Michelin 2cc tires, 18. This newspaper RealEstate.com Central Oregon will not knowingly acwill trade for ie: EnResort Realty cept any advertising 3149 NE Nathan. Cus duro DR 650, $5700 for real estate which is tom 4 bdrm, 3 bath. Eagle Crest C u stom obo. 541-536-7924. views, in violation of the law. Mountain beauty. 5 Bdrm, $50 , 000. built O ur r e a ders ar e reduced 3.5 bath, + b o n us Have an item to $374,900 hereby informed that room with office, 4895 sell quick? all dwellings adver- TEAM Birtola Garmyn sq.ft., tons of custom High Desert Realty tised in this newspaIf it's under work. $795,000. MLS 541-312-9449 per are available on ¹201301391 '500 you can place it in www. BendOregon an equal opportunity Lynn Johns, Principal RealEstate.com basis. To complain of Broker, 541-408-2944 The Bulletin discrimination cal l 3 bdrm, 3 bath, 3880 Central Oregon Classifieds for: HUD t o l l -free at Resort Realty sq. ft. $694,000 1-800-877-0246. The MLS¹201300784. FIND IT! '10 - 3 lines, 7 days toll f re e t e l ephone Call Linda Lou number for the hearSUY IT! '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Day-Wright ing im p aired is SELL IT! (Private Party ads only) 541-771-2585 1-800-927-9275. Crooked River Realty The Bulletin Classifieds

w

870

--r'flua&'.;:~ 2004 Corvette Convertible Coupe, 350, auto with !32 miles, gets 25-24 mpg. Add lots more description and interesting facts fOi' $9. Look how much fun a girl could have in a sweet car like this!

$12,500 541-000-000

• Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households.

• Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


E6 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2013 • THE BULLETIN •

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

v

Antique & Classic Autos

4

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

AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

935

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

PROJECT CARS:Chevy 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Chevy Coupe 1950 rolling chassis's $1750 ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, ELK HUNTERS! complete car, $ 1949; Cadillac Series 61 1950, Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. 2 dr. hard top, complete owner, 87k only 3k on w /spare f r on t cl i p ., new 258 long block. C lutch p kg , W a r n $3950, 541-382-7391 hubs. Excellent runSILVER AUCTIONS ner, very dependable. Presents Northman 6y2' plow, Collector Car Auction Warn 6000¹ w i nch. Sept. 27-28 $9500 or best reaPortland Expo sonable offer. 300 Cars Expected 541-549-6970 or TO BUY OR SELL 541-815-8105.

Sale Pending! \'O'I

Mazda MXS Miata 1000 2006 Grand Touring, 13,095 easy miles. Legal Notices Copper red w/tan uph olstery. Bose d eLEGAL NOTICE luxe sound. 6-spd Correction on the auto trans w / dual September 12, 2013 m ode shifting. A lfor Proposals w ays g araged & Request Announcement w ashed b y h a n d. Power brakes, steerThe original Septeming, mirrors, d oor ber 12th announcelocks. Like new cari ment of the Central Selling due to health Oregon Intergovernissues. $14,895 m ental Counc i l 503-807-1973

Legal Notices •

p olitan area) o r toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. This

Legal Notices Note until fully paid, (c) late charges in the amount of $400.00 as of March 21, 2013,

summons is issued plus any late charges pursuant to ORCP accruing t h e reafter 7. R C O LE G A L, a nd any o ther e x P .C., Michael B o tpenses or fees owed thof, OSB ¹113337, u nder the N ote o r 1-800-255-4485 mbotthof@rcolegal. T rust D e e d , (d) 908 www.SilverAuctions.com com, Attorney for amounts that BenefiFifth Wheels Aircraft, Parts P laintiff, 51 1 S W ciary has paid on or ("COIC") issuing a 10th Ave., Ste. 400, may hereinafter pay to 8 Service Request for ProposPickups Portland, OR 97205, protect the lien, inals (RFP) for conMercedes Benz cluding by way of ilExecutive Hangar 1952 Ford Customline tracting the operation P: (503) 977-7840 E500 4-matic 2004 l ustration, bu t no t of C ascades E a st F: (503) 977-7963. at Bend Airport (KBDN) Coupe, project car, flat86,625 miles, sunJeep Grand Cherolimitation, taxes, as60' wide x 50' d eep, head V-8, 3 spd extra Transit's Bend fixed roof with a shade, LEGAL NOTICE kee 1996 4x4, autow/55' wide x 17' high bi- parts, & materials, $2000 sessments, i n t erest route and dial a ride IN T H E CI R CUIT loaded, silver, 2 sets obo. 541-410-7473 matic, 135,000 miles. fold dr. Natural gas heat, on prior liens, and inservices m i stakenly COURT O F of tires and a set of THE surance p r emiums, OPEN ROAD 36' Great shape - very offc, bathroom. Adjacent indicated "bids" would STATE OF OREGON Buick 1983 Regal, chains. $13,500. 2005 - $28,000 nice interior, $3,600. to Frontage Rd; great be opened publicly at FOR THE COUNTY and (e) e xpenses, T-type, Project Car 1997 Dodge 3500 Du541-362-5598 King bed, hide-a-bed visibility for aviation busi- Transmission 541-81 5-9939 2:00 PM, October 4th. OF DESCHUTES, In costs an d a t torney rebuilt & sofa, 3 slides, glass ness. Financing avail- 3000 rpm stall converter; ally, Cummins diesel and trustee fees inReceipt of proposals shower, 10 gal. wa- able. 541-948-2126 or with 203,813 miles. 3 Jeep, Wrangler, Sport, Mustang GT 1995 red will be acknowledged the Matter of the Es- curred by Beneficiary 750 Holley double t ate of ST EV E N in foreclosure, includter heater, 10 cu.ft. email 1jetjock@q.com 1998, 4.0 L, soft top, speed automatic with 133k miles, Boss 302 at 2:00 PM, October pumper w/milled air horn fridge, central vac, VOOS, De c eased, i ng the c ost o f a O.D. (the OD is not w/ 9,000 lb. winch, motor, custom pipes, 4th at 334 NE Haw(flows 850 cfms); turbo Case No. 13PB0100. trustee's s atellite dish, 27 " Piper A rcher 1 9 80, rebuilt. $5000. 541-382-8762 working). Tires have Have receipts for 5 s p ee d m a n ual, sale g uarthorne Ave., B end, based in Madras, alTV/stereo syst., front TO INTERLeave message. 70-75% rubber. Has and any other all 3 items. $3300. power windows, cus- OR 97701. Content of NOTICE ways hangared since front power leveling ESTED P ERSONS. antee covered 11' utility box. environmental or apCall for addtional info tom stereo, very fast. all proposals will be jacks and s c issor new. New annual, auto IS HEREBY Truck is 2WD & has 541-480-5502 praisal report. By rea$5800. 541-280-7910 kept conf i dential NOTICE pilot, IFR, one piece stabilizer jacks, 16' GIVEN that the unAC, cruise, PS, PB, throughout the selec- dersigned has been son of said default, windshield. Fastest Ar- (leave ¹ & message). awning. Like new! A M/FM/cassette, t i l t B eneficiary and t h e tion process. cher around. 1750 to541-419-0566 Find exactly what appointed a d m inis- Successor wheel. $3950. T r u stee tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. you are looking for in the trator for the estate of Call 541-815-8176 have elected to foreLEGAL NOTICE 541-475-6947, ask for Steven Voos. All perCLASSIFIEDS IN TH E C I R CUIT the trust deed Rob Berg. Almost Perfect Chev Nissan Pathfinder 1997 sons having claims close by advertisement and 6cyl. 4x4, auto, air, COURT FOR THE S10 long bed, 1988 against the estate are sale STATE O F ORpursuant ORS elect. windows/locks, Cadillac Coupe de Ville 4.3 V6, professional required to p r esent 86.705 to ORSto 86.795 EGON IN AND FOR 1979 Anniversary Edition r ebuilt engine, 4 7 k moon roof, heavy duty them, with vouchers THE COUNTY OF and to sell the real tow pkg. $2,700. 79,000 orginial miles, since installed, dual attached, to the unproperty ide n tified 541-520-6450 DESCHUTES. 1 owner, great condition. pipes, custom grill, Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th dersigned a d m inisW ELLS FA R G O above to satisfy the $2800. 541-325-3376 707-280-4197 wheel, 1 s lide, AC, sunroof, full canopy trator at 747 SW Mill obligation that is seBANK, NA, its succab h i gh , C l a rion TV,full awning, excelSuperhawkView Way, Bend, Or- cured by th e T rust N issan Altima 2. 5 S cessors in interest AM/FM/CD r e m ote lent shape, $23,900. 97702, w ithin Only 1 Share D eed. N OTICE I S - )i' 2004, 1 04 K m i l es, and/or ass i g ns, egon 541-350-8629 radio. Looks g reat, four months after the Available HEREBY GIVEN that sunroof, a/c, power Plaintiff, v . UNruns strong, always date of first publicaEconomical flying the undersigned Sucw indows & do o r s , KNOWN HEIRS OF garaged. $3,550 firm. tion of this notice, or in your own Price Reduced! c essor T rustee o r good cond., service P AUL W . FR E E the claims may be IFR equipped Trustee's records, winter ready. MAN; BRIE FREEChev P/U 1968, custom Nissan Pathfinder SE barred. All p e rsons Successor Cessna 172/180 HP for agent will, on October $6300. 541-593-7482 MAN; V IRG INIA 350 crate, AT, new 1998, 150K mk 5-spd whose rights may be only $13,500! New cab, 15, 2013, a t one FAE WIL L IAMS; chrome, orig int, gas 4x4, loaded, very good affected by the pro- o'clock Garmin Touchscreen paint, (1:00) p.m., S ELCO C OM M U tank under bed, $10,900 ILi~ tires, very good cond, ceedings may obtain Porsche 911 avionics center stack! based on the stanRecreation by Design obo. 541-788-9648 $4800. 503-334-7345 N ITY CREDI T additional information Carrera 993 cou e Exceptionally clean! 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. UNION; STATE OF dard of time estabfrom the records of Hangared at BDN. Chevy 1955 PROJECT Top living room 5th lished by ORS OREGON; OCCUcar. 2 door wgn, 350 the court, the adminChevy 2500 HD 2003 Call 541-728-0773 wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 PANTS O F THE 187.110, just outside small block w/Weiand 4 WD w o r k tru c k , istrator, or the l awA/Cs, entertainment the main entrance of P REMISES; A N D 916 dual quad tunnel ram 140,000 miles, $7000 yers for the adminis- 1 164 N W . center, fireplace, W/D, Bo n d , THE REAL PROPwith 450 Holleys. T-10 obo. 541-408-4994. trator, Ry a n P. Trucks & garden tub/shower, in Bend, Oregon, sell for ERTY L O CATED C orrea. Dated a nd 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, great condition. $42,500 Heavy Equipment AT 64586 BOONES at public auction Weld Prostar wheels, Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD Toyota Highlander f irst p u blished o n cash or best offer. Call Peter, 1996, 73k miles, the highest bidder BOROUGH DRIVE extra rolling chassis + SLT quad cab, auto- 2 003 Limited A W D September 12, 2013. to 307-221-2422, Tiptronic auto. the interest in s a id matic, AC, high mileage, BEND, O R E GON extras. $6500 for all. R YAN VOOS, A d - real property, which ( in La Pine ) transmission. Silver, 99,000 mi., automatic $13,900. 541-389-7857 97701, Defendants. 541-389-7669. WILL DELIVER ministrator. $1 2,500 ob o . O ne blue leather interior, Case No. Grantor has or h ad People Look for Information owner. 816.812.9882 moon/sunroof, new power to convey at 1 3CV0592. S U M LEGAL NOTICE About Products and quality tires and RV MONS BY PUBLITRUSTEE'S NOTICE the time of the execubattery, car and seat CONSIGNMENTS Services Every Daythrough 940 CATION. TO THE OF SALE - R e fer- tion by Grantor of the 1987 Freightliner COE 3covers, many extras. WANTED TheBulletin Classi!feds Vans DEFENDANTS: ence is made to that Trust Deed, together axle truck, Cummins enRecently fully serWe Do the Work, with any interest that UNKNOWN HEIRS certain deed of trust Ford Ranger SuperCab viced, garaged, You Keep the Cash! gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 OF PA U L W. "Trust Deed") Grantor or the suc(the obo. 541-419-2713 Chevy Wagon 1957, 2011 XLT 4x4, V6, looks and runs like On-site credit cessors in interest to F REEMAN; B R I E dated November 7, 4-dr., complete, JR'n t ¹A06782 $24 , 9 88 new. Excellent conapproval team, F REEMAN: In t h e Grantor acquired af2 005, executed b y $7,000 OBO / trades web site presence. dition $29,700 ) name of the State of John T. Cranston Sr. ter the execution of Please call 541-322-9647 We Take Trade-Ins! O regon, you a r e and Patricia R. Cran- the Trust Deed, to 541-389-6998 Q Free Advertising. Oregon hereby required to ston (the "Grantor") to satisfy the foregoing GMC 1995 Safari XT, BIG COUNTRY RV Autosource appear and answer U .S. B a n k T ru s t obligations t h e reby Bend: 541-330-2495 seats 8, 4.3L V6, 541-598-3750 Porsche 91 1 Turbo the complaint filed Company, N a t ional secured and the costs Redmond: towing pkg. 133K mi. aaaoregonautosource.com against you in the Association Backhoe (the and expenses of sale. 541-548-5254 $3000. 541-312-6960 "Trustee"), to secure N OTICE I S FUR 2007 John Deere above-entitled Court a nd cause on o r 310SG, cab 4x4, payment and perfor- THER GIVEN that any 975 4-in-1 bucket "~la. before the expiramance of certain obli- person named in ORS Corvette Coupe 1964 Automobiles tion of 30 days from Extendahoe, gations of Grantor to 86.753 has the right, Canopies & Campers 530 miles since frame hydraulic thumb, the date of the first U.S. Bank National at any time prior to off restoration. Runs 2003 6 speed, X50 Association loaded, like new, p ublication of t h is (the five days before the "My little red and drives as new. added power pkg., "Beneficiary"), includ- date last set for the 500 hours. summons. The date FORD XLT 1992 Satin Silver color with 530 HP! Under 10k Corvette" Coupe of first publication in ing repayment of a s ale, to h a v e t h i s New $105,000. black leather interior, 3/4 ton 4x4 miles, Arctic silver, this matter is Seppromissory note dated foreclosure proceedSell $75,000. mint dash. PS, P B, matching canopy, gray leather interior, t ember 5, 2013. I f November 7, 2005, in ing dismissed and the 541-350-3393 30k original miles, AC, 4 speed. Knock new quality t i res you fail timely to apthe principal amount Trust Deed reinstated offs. New tires. Fresh possible trade for and battery, Bose Bigfoot Camper1993H, pear and answer, of $ 3 1 8,800 (the by payment to Benefi327 N.O.M. All Corclassic car, pickup, Ford 1965 6-yard premium sound ste"Note"). T h e T r ust ciary of t h e e n tire plaintiff will apply to 9.5 ft., great cond. dump truck, good vette restoration parts motorcycle, RV reo, moon/sunroof, the a b ove-entitled Deed was recorded a mount t he n du e Rebuilt fridge, shower in & out. Reduced to paint, recent over$1 3,500. car and seat covers. court for the relief o n N o vember 1 4 , (other than such porand toilet, furnace and 1996, 350 auto, haul, everything In La Pine, call Many extras. Ga$59,500. 541-410-2870 oven. always parked 132,000 miles. p rayed for i n i t s 2005, as I nstrument tion of the principal as 928-581-9190 works! $3995. raged, perfect conNon-ethanol fuel & complaint. This is a No. 2005-77965 in the would not then be due undercover. $ 4 500. 541-815-3636 dition $5 9 ,700. official real property had no d efault oc541-388-3095. synthetic oil only, judicial foreclosure 541-322-9647 of a deed of trust in records of Deschutes curred) and by curing garaged, premium which the p l aintiff County, Oregon. The any o t he r d e f ault Bose stereo, r equests that t h e Trust Deed was modi- complained of herein $17,000. I nternational Fla t fied by t hat i nstru- that is capable of bePorsche Carrera 911 plaintiff be allowed 541-923-1781 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 2003 convertible with to foreclose your ment recorded on De- ing cured by tenderFord Model A 1930 ing the performance ton dually, 4 s pd. hardtop. 50K miles, interest in the f olcember 23, 2010, as Coupe, good condition, Lance 8y~' camper, 1991 trans., great MPG, 2005 Buick LeSabre new factory Porsche lowing d e s cribed Instrument No. r equired under t h e $16,000. 541-588-6084 Ford F350 2006/ Brush Great cond; toilet & fullCustom, 101K, $6500. motor 6 mos ago with could be exc. wood real property: LOT 2010-51056 in the of- o bligation o r T r u st Bandit XL 150 wood size bed. Lightly used. hauler, runs great, 30+ mpg hwy, full-size 18 mo factory warFIVE, BLOCK TWO, ficial r ea l p r o perty Deed and, in addition c hipper Truck h a s Ford Ranchero 1965 Recently serviced, ranty remaining. 4-dr sedan, luxury ride new brakes, $1950. BOONES BORrecords of Deschutes to paying said sums V-10, 21k miles, HD Rhino bedliner cus$4500. 503-307-8571 $37,500. 541-41 9-5480. & handling ... OUGH '2', DESCounty, Oregon. The or tendering the perwinch w/custom HD tom wheels, 302V-8 541-322-6928 Why not drive a Buick? CHUTES COUNTY, legal description of formance necessary front bumper, air load a uto. Runs g o o d Call Bob, 541-318-9999 O REGON. S A ID the real property cov- to cure the default, by bags w/12' dump bed. $9,995. 935 p REAL PROPERTY ered by t h e T r u st paying all costs and Subaru Outback 2008 Chipper is 2006 w/250 541-771-4778 Sport Utility Vehicles M ORE ACCU Deed is as f ollows: expenses actually in0 0 What are you Immaculate! hrs, 12" feed 'drum' RATELY DEReal property in the curred in enforcing the Original owner. 82K w/1 10hp Cat diesel. looking for? miles, 2 new sets of SCRIBED AS: LOT County of Deschutes, obligation and Trust Set up like new. Cost State of Oregon, deDeed, together with new over $90,000. Sell tires, service records, FIVE (5), BLOCK You'll find it in TWO (2), BOONES scribed as follows AN Trustee and attorney $60,000 obo. new brakes & struts, The Bulletin Classifieds BOROUGH NO. 2, UNDIVIDED 3/12 INfees not e x ceeding 541-350-3393 leather seats, loaded! RECORDED JUNE T EREST I N UNI T the amounts provided Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 $15,900. 541-693-3975 29, 1982, IN CABI101, RES I DENCE by ORS 86.753. In GMC 2004 16' r eengine, power every- BMW X3 2 0 07, 9 9 K 541-385-5809 NET C, PAGE 64, CLUB AT P RONG- construing this notice, frigerated box van, thing, new paint, 54K miles, premium packAircraft, Parts WHEN YOU SEE THIS DESCHUTES HORN VILLAS CON- the singular includes original m i les, runs age, heated lumbar gvw 20,000, 177,800 COUNTY, ORDOMINIUMS, DES- t he plural, and t h e m i, diesel, 6 s p d great, excellent condi- supported seats, pan- AUDI 1990 V8 Quat& Service Oo tion in & out. Asking oramic EGON. Commonly CHUTES C O UNTY, word " grantor" i n ~ manual with on-spot moo n roof, tro. Perfect Ski Car. DE- cludes any successor $8,500. 541-480-3179 known as: 6 4 586 OREGON, automatic tire Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- LOW MILES. $3,995 M ore P ixa t B e n d b u l e ti n , c o m obo. 541-480-9200. Boones B o r ough SCRIBED I N AND in interest of grantor, non headlights, tan & chains. Thermo-King On a classified ad D rive, Bend, O r SUBJECT TO THAT as well as any other reefer has 1,635 enblack leather interior, go to egon 97701. N O CERTAIN C O NDOperson owing an oblin ew front & rea r gine hours. $23,000. BMW 525 2002 www.bendbulletin.com p e r forbrakes © 76K miles, TICE TO DEFENMINIUM DECLARA- gation, th e 541-41 9-41 72. Luxury Sport Edito view additional one owner, all records, tion, V-6, automatic, DANTS: READ T ION F O R RE S I - mance of which is sephotos of the item. 1/3 interest in Columbia very clean, $16,900. THESE P A P ERS D ENCE CLUB A T cured by th e T rust loaded, 18" new 541-388-4360 CAREFULLY! A PRONGHOR N V I L- Deed, and the words 400, $150,000 (located GMC Vi fon 1971, Only tires, 114k miles. I Bend.) Also: Sunrilawsuit has b e en LAS C O N DOMINI- "trustee" and "benefi$19,700! Original low GMC Yukon 1998, V8, $8,800 obo Need to get an ad ver hangar available for started against you UMS RE C O RDED ciary" include their remile, exceptional, 3rd auto, tow pkg excellent (541) 419-4152 sale at $155K, or lease, in th e a b ove-en- AUGUST 23, 2005 IN spective successors owner. 951-699-7171 in ASAP? cond, new tires, motor & in interest, if any. In O $400/mo. titled court by Wells VOLUME 2005, trans rebuilt, only $3300. 541-948-2963 accordance with the JCB 2006 214 E diesel BMW 5-Series 5 30xi F argo Bank, N A , PAGE 56019, DES541-633-8528 backhoe with Ham2007, grey, 74,143 mi. Fax it to 541-322-7253 plaintiff. P l a intiff's CHUTES C O U NTY Fair Debt Collection Honda CR-V EX 2012 Practices Act, this is mer Master 360 rock ¹Y18055 $21,995 claims are stated in OFFICIAL The Bulletin Classifieds t he w r itten c o m hammer 18" dig steel blue 2k mi. RECORDS, TO- an attempt to collect a debt, and any inforbucket, quick coupler, $25,995. ¹ 0 7 2382 p laint, a c opy o f GETHER WITH THE Oregon backhoe has 380 hrs, which was filed with LIMITED AND GENmation obtained will ANtnSnurce rock hammer has less MGA 1959- $19,999 the a b ove-entitled ERAL COMMON EL- be used for that pur541-598-3750 Oregon Looking for your t han 100 hrs. L i k e Convertible. O r igiC ourt. You mus t E MENTS A S SE T pose. This communi1/3 interest i n w e l l- new, $40,000 obo. AglnSogrce www.aaaoregonautonal body/motor. No next employee? "appear" in this case FORTH T H E REIN, cation is from a debt equipped IFR Beech Bo- Can purchase Kodiak rust. 541-549-3838 541-598-3750 source.com Place a Bulletin help or the other side will APPERTAINING TO collector. For further nanza A36, new 10-550/ GMC top kick 5 yrd www.aaaoregonautowanted ad today and information, p l ease win a u tomatically. SAID UNIT. (COMBuick 2006 silver CXS prop, located KBDN. dump and 28' trailer source.com reach over 60,000 To "appear" you MONLY KNOWN AS contact Jesus Miguel ~ OO $65,000. 541-419-9510 Lucerne. Northstar readers each week. for a d d' I $ 3 0 ,000 Palomares a t his must file with the INTERESTS G, H & 93k, black leather MorePixat Bendbulletin.com Honda CRV EXL Your classified ad 541-350-3393 court a legal docuspecial wheels & tires, I). No action has been m ailing address o f will also appear on Miller Nash LLP, 111 ment called a "moinstituted to r ecover Guaranteed you'll be bendbulletin.com tion" or "answer." the obligation, or any S.W. Fifth A v enue, happy with this fine car. which currently reThe "motion" or "anCome drive & see for part thereof, now re- Suite 3400, Portland, ceives over 1.5 milswer" (or "reply") maining secured by O regon 9 7 2 0 4 o r yourself! $7,500 will do lion page views telephone h i m at it. Bob, 541-318-9999 must be given to the the Trust Deed or, if every month at c ourt clerk or a d such action has been (503) 224- 5 858. 1/5th interest in 1973 Peterbilt 359 p o table 2009, 3 3k mil e s , Cadillac Ei Dor a do no extra cost. Bulleministrator within 30 instituted, such action DATED this 11th day Cessna 150 LLC water t ruck, 1 9 90, Mustang 1966 2 dr. tin Classifieds original owner, auto 1994, T otal C r e a m days of the date of has been dismissed of June, 2013. /s/ 150hp conversion, low 3200 gal. tank, 5hp coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 transmission, leather Puff! Body, paint, trunk Get Results! Call first publ i cation except as p ermitted Jesus Miguel Palotime on air frame and pump, 4-3" h oses, cyl. Over $12,000 in385-5809 or place interior, sun r oof, as s howroom, b l ue s pecified her e i n by ORS 86.735(4). 5. mares, Successor engine, hangared in camlocks, $ 2 5,000. vested, asking $9000. exc. tires, optional your ad on-line at leather, $1700 wheels along with the reThe default for which Trustee. F i l e No. 541-820-3724 Bend. Excellent perAll receipts, runs bendbuiiefin.com sport package, with w/snow tires although t he f o reclosure i s 080090-0799. quired filing fee. It formance & affordgood. 541-420-5011 931 r oof c argo b o x , car has not been wet in Jo h n T . must be in proper made i s Gr a ntor's Grantor: able flying! $6,500. dealer serviced 8 years. On t rip t o Automotive Parts, form and have proof failure to pay the Note C ranston, Sr., a n d 541-410-6007 s ince n ew , F l a t , Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., I The Bulletin recoml Patricia R. Cranston. of service on t he in full upon maturity. Service & Accessories towable. $20,995. $5000, 541-593-4016. mends extra caution t plaintiff's a t t orney By reason of said de- Beneficiary: U.S. 541-385-0753 when p u r chasing ~ Bank National Assoor, if t h e p l aintiff fault, Beneficiary has Tire chains, fits 2 15, f products or services does not have an d eclared al l su m s ciation. 225, 235. never used. from out of the area. Must Sell! Health forces a ttorney, proof of owing on the obliga$40. 541-788-4229 J S ending c ash , service on the plainsale. Buick Riviera 1991, tion secured by the checks, or credit inclassic low-mileage car, 932 tiff. If you have any Trust Deed immediCall a Pro garaged, pampered, formation may be I questions, ately due and payyou Antique & 1974 Bellanca non-smoker, exclnt cond, Whether you need a / subject to FRAUD. should see an attorable which sums are CORVETTE COUPE 1730A Classic Autos $4300 obo 541-389-0049 For more i nformaney immediately. If as follows: (a) the fence fixed, hedges Glasstop 2010 f tion about an adveryou need help in principal amount of infinifi FX35 2012, Grand Sport - 4 LT trimmed or a house 2180 TT, 440 SMO, tiser, you may call finding an attorney, $241,488.89 a s of Platinum silver, loaded, clear bra 180 mph, excellent f the Oregon State I built, you'll find you may contact the March 21, 2013, (b) 24,000 miles, with hood & fenders. Attorney General's S Oregon State Bar's condition, always accrued interest of professional help in factory wa r ranty, New Michelin Super 1921 Model T Office C o n sumer Lawyer hangared, 1 owner Ref e rral $32,214.95 a s of The Bulletin's "Call a f ully l o aded, A l l Sports, G.S. floor Delivery Truck f Protection hotline at S ervice online a t March 21, 2013, and for 35 years. $60K. Wheel Drive, GPS, mats, 17,000 miles, 1-877-877-9392. Restored 8 Runs Plymouth B a r racuda sunroof, etc. www.oregonstateinterest accr u ing Service Professional" Crystal red. bar.org or by calling thereafter on the prin1966, original cari 300 In Madras, $9000. Directory $37,500. $42,000. hp, 360 V8, center(503) 684-3763 (in cipal amount at the call 541-475-6302 541-389-8963 541-550-7189 503-358-1164. Serving Central Oregon smce 1903 541-385-5809 lines, 541-593-2597 the Portland metrorate set forth in the C.

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