Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1
WEDNESDAY October 28,2015
Qccer Ill0: 8 Will ef $9f 55 nj er? PrePs SPORTS • C1
OUTDOORS • D1
bendbulletin.corn TODAY' S READERBOARD Freshman 15 — Theweight gain is closer to 5 or10 actually. A study finds lack of sleepcould be a contributing factor.A3
Yelp —The review site begins rolling out warnings about restaurants that score poorly in health inspections.A4
• The deal includes an 8.25 percentwage increaseover 3 years
disagreement between the
By Tara Bannow
this week after more than six
The Bulletin
months of negotiations and
and no health insurance premium hikes. The agreement
egon Nurses Association, and the hospitaL
St. Charles Bend and the more than700 registered
help from a federal mediator.
is unchanged from a tentative
Contract provisions take
nurses who work there ap-
The contract includes an 8.25 percent total wage in-
effect retroactively beginning July 1, 2015, and expire July
proved a three-year contract
crease over the three years
version approved earlier this month and contains compromises on key points of
nurses, represented by the Or-
1, 2018. Contract negotiations
broke down over the summ er, and thepartiesbegan working with a mediator in early September to resolve more than 30 points of dis-
agreement, primarily issues of breaks and pay. See Nurses /A5
2 dead in WNI tank blast
Yeuth SpertS — Acommunity responds to rising tension — andtheescalation to threats of violence.C1
World Series —Kansas City scores in the14th inning to beat the Mets in Game 1.C1
Beer's dig merger —its hopes are pinned onthe growing market for beer inAfrica. C6
Bulletin staff report An explosion inside
By JosephDltzler • The Bulletin
And a Wedexclusive
— "Model minority?" Asian immigrants in the U.S. find varying degrees of success. benlfbulletin.corn/extras
a World War II-era
Skjersaa's Sport Shop, a descendant of Bend's first ski shop, is moving. Photos by Andy Tullis l The Bulletin
The ski and snowboard shop at 130 SW Century Drive is playing Skjersaa's Sport Shop owner Jeremy Nelson musical chairs with Gear Fix, an outdoor-equipment consignment
EDITOR'5CHOICE
tank killed two people Tuesday afternoon at a public shooting range east of Bend in Millican, according to
and repair shop two blocks south at 345 SW Century Drive.
a news release from
Deschutes County Sheriffs Office. The explosion occurred just after 3 p.m. on U.S. Highway
removes a historic photo of Bend's first ski shop owner, Olaf Skjersaa, skiing at Mount Bachelor while moving the business. Below,
Nelson stacks boxes for the move.
20 near milepost 24. Bend Fire Depart-
'Bacon-ing' of the end for bacon craze?
ment responders tried lifesaving efforts
e«x ««
on the two, but both died. The victims' names have not been
«
« ««
R« 'R
V
released. The OSP Arson and Explosives Section and detectives
from the sheriff's office were investigat-
ing. Investigators at the scene were taking photographs of the
Ro
By Dominic Basulto Special to The Washington Post
For bacon lovers everywhere, the decision by the
inside of the tank. «t«
!,
R
World Health Organization
to classify bacon asacarcinogen — right up there
Debates are now must-see
with smoking and asbestos
— has to come as deeply concerning. Ever since the first bacon
Internet meme appeared more than a decade ago,
««««
there's been one consistent
«q
truth embraced by bacon
l
+~««1~ g~ ««« '« >« «n «««@
nh t h' e « «h
«««« «« ~««« ««
,«ht
«unhh sh ehh~
fans — just about any
bt,
product, service or concept could be made better by adding bacon. Think of bacon as a secret sauce — the one
By Mark Z. Barabak
«
Los Angeles Times
The surprise breakout hit of this television season isn' t
some Kardashian spinoff or another
ingredient that could turn
just about any banal, runof-the-mill product into a world-beater. Bacon wasn' t
so much a product category as it was a frame of
Gear Fix is moving to a larger space in the Old Mill Marketplace. Owners of the respective shops said
it up in a pan. Bacon, let' s face it, has innovation siz-
zle that other food products
Monday. "I know that sounds
don' t. And certainly, the
absurd."
You don't just bring home the bacon — you fry
among aspiring songsters.
the moves take place Saturday. "We' re actually going to try and do it without closing" the shop, Jeremy Nelson, who owns Skjersaa's with his wife, Shannon Casgar-Nelson, said
Inlnd.
cheesy competition It's the prime-time
Gear Fix has occupied its at 550 SW I n dustrial Way, to Skjersaa's, built to resemtwo-story building since Oc- Suite 183, next to Immersion ble a ski chalet by its original, tober 2010, shop owner Josh Brewing. namesake owners in 1965, is "There' ll be a couple of late for sale by its current owner, Sims said Monday. He said he hoped to accomplish the nights and early mornings," Martha Coker Merrill, with a move over the weekend and Sims said. list price of $1.25 million. open Monday in the new space The property that is home See Move /A5
presidential debates, which have attracted
huge national audiencesandshapedand reshaped the 2016 race long before any votes have been cast. See Debates /A4
type of sizzle that's hard to replicate with any vegetarian options.
See Bacon /A5
Corrections In a story headlined "Clean Fuels program's next threat: disputed science," which appeared on Monday,Oct. 26, on PageA1,the job title of Rich Plevin was incorrect. He is a research scientist. The article also misstated how much carbon biofuels and traditional fuel emit. Government programs deembiofuels cleaner than traditional fuel, but the two emit virtually the sameamountofcarbonwhen burned. The Bulletin regrets the errors.
Medical tourism still growing under Obamacare By Alexa D'Angelo
popular with American
percent cheaper," Jim Reed,
Cronhlte News
tourists.
74, said. "It's so expensive
NOGALES, Mexico — A
slew of dental offices and pharmacies line a block of shops selling metal lawn sculptures shaped like donkeys, and handcrafted red and white Mexican dresses
Many visitors bypass the shops and head straight for the pharmacies and dentists
strategically located just a few steps from the border crossing. "Everything is at least 50
TODAY'S WEATHER Some rain High 53, Low 35 Page B6
cleaning," said Keith Reed, 46, dental coverage and he canJim's son. "I don't have insur- not afford supplemental inback home and it's good qual- ance at home in Denver, so a surance on fixed income. "Everyone is kind of in the itywe can afford here." cleaning there for me would Reed walked with his wife be between $120 and $135, not same boat. Things are getting and son down the cobbleincluding X-rays.e too expensive back home so stoned sidewalk after visiting a dental clinic.
"It was just $35 for a teeth
Reed is a small-business owner. His father has Medi-
C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State E1-6 Dear Abby D5 Ob ituaries
for cheaper services."
care but that does not include
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
we are starting to come here
An Independent
S B5 TV/Movies
See Tourtsm /A4
Q t/i/e use recycled newsprint
Vol. 113, No. 301
C
D5
s sections
0
88 267 0 23 29
1
A2
THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
HOW to reaCh US
A REFUGEE AT 105
STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
ISlamiC State fight —Signaling a possible escalation of U.S. military action in the Middle East, DefenseSecretary Ash Carter said Tuesday that the United States is retooling its strategy in Iraq and Syria and would conduct unilateral ground raids if needed to target Islamic State militants. The U.S.hasdone special operations raids in Syria and participated in a ground operation to rescue hostages last week in northern Iraq that resulted in the first U.S. combat death in Iraq since 2011.Carter did not say under what circumstances the U.S. might conduct more groundaction, but said, "Once welocate them, no target is beyond our reach."
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Ddama OII pOliCe —Defending police officers who havecome under scrutiny like never before, President BarackObamaonTuesday said themmenand womenwho risk their lives to provide security are wrongly scapegoatedmfor failing to deal with broader problems that lead people to commit crimes. Unemployment, poor education, inadequate drug treatment and lax gunlaws are not the responsibility of police officers, Obama said in remarks to the International Association of Chief of Police, which held its annual meeting in the president's Chicago hometown. Hecalled for rebuilding the trust that once existed between them.
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ISrael amf PaleStiIIiaIIS —An Israeli proposal that could potentially strip tens of thousands of Palestinians in Jerusalem of their residency rights has sent shudders through the targeted Arab neighborhoods — areasthat were dumped outside Israel's separation barrier a decade ago,eventhough they arewithin the city's boundaries. The government's review of the status of these neighborhoods, hometo tens of thousands of people, illustrates the fragile position of Palestinians in a city where theyhavelong suffered discrimination and are caught between the pragmatic conveniences of living under Israeli control and the loyalties to the Palestinian cause.
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Bibihal Uzbeki, 105, from Kunduz,Afghanistan, rests in Croatia's main refugeecamp at Opatovac, Croatia, near the border with Serbia, onTuesday. The centenarian crossed into Croatia on a stretcher from Serbia with a large group of refugees, including hersonandseveral other relatives, amongtens of thousands who have traveled across continents, fleeing warand poverty to search for a happier, safer future in Europe. The trek is dangerousandexhausting, evenfor people one-fifth her age.
mMy legs hurt, but I'm fine," Uzbeki said in Farsi, speaking through a translator while sitting on the floor inside a RedCross tent. Her hands shook asshe spoke. Shesaid her17-member family had traveled for 20 days to reachEurope, with her 67-year-old son and her 19-year-old grandson often carrying her on their backs. More than 260,000 migrants havepassedthrough Croatia sinceSept. 15, whenHungary closed its border with Serbia, diverting the flow of refugees toCroatia.
Death rate —Gains in the American life span haveslowed in recent years, according to a newreport. Researchers said their analysis — which was published in JAMA onTuesday andwas the first of its kind using the most recent federal data —wasintended to identify the broader trends, not explain them. Death rates (measured asthe number of deaths per 100,000 people in agiven year) in the United States havebeen declining for decades. But the declines flattened in the most recent period, from 2010 to 2013, dropping by anaverage of just 0.4 percent annually.
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than a default or shutdown W ASHINGTON — C o n - that could upend the global gress and the White House economy. spent September bracing for Under the proposed deal, a disruptive government shut- short-term expenditures, nodown, and most of October tably on military programs, fearing a possible default on will rise and long-term budthe federal debt. get caps will remain in place. In b e tween, r ebellious Meanwhile, spending priorHouse Republicans o usted ities will be set the old-fashtheir speaker, John Boehner, ioned way, by seasoned lawand derailed his preferred makers on A ppropriations successor, Kevin M cCarthy, subcommittees. forcing the rest of their party The deal, which will into plead with a reluctant Paul crease spending by $80 bilRyan of Wisconsin to accept lion over two years, is almost the gavel and try to control a underwhelming in its modest majority that his predecessor size and scope.But after five could not. years of all-out brawling, legAnd then, suddenly — al- islative gridlock and general most implausibly — a budget dysfunction, that may be the deal was delivered just be- inherent genius of it. fore midnight Monday that By combining the relativepromises relative tranquility ly small spending increasif not a full-on detente. The es, which temporarily break rancor that had defined Con- through the budget limitations gress gave way to a complex, loathed by Democrats, with 144-page bill. Its passage to- small cuts to entitlement proday was virtually guaranteed grams loathed by Republicans, before many lawmakers had the accord reached Monday a chance to read the table of night seems to provide a comcontents. promise that will attract a solid As a result of the accord, majority of lawmakers. "You' re going to see bricks officials said, congressional Republicans and the White flying from those that don' t
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like the fact that there's a bi-
conventional policy battles
partisan agreement," said
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Slfrla 'talks —Iran has beeninvited to join talks in Vienna this week with Russia, the United States andEuropeannations on whether a political resolution is possible in the Syrian civil war. If Iran accepts, it will be the first time Secretary of State JohnKerry will enter formal negotiations with Tehran onissues beyond the nuclear accord reached in July. Russia hasbeenpressing to include Iran, and senior U.S. officials havebegun toacknowledge in recent weeksthat no serious discussion of a possible political succession plan in Syria can happen without Tehran's involvement. Catalah SeCeSSIOII —As the secessionist drive by Catalonia has heated up, it has followed afamiliar tit-for-tat pattern: Catalan separatist politicians announce anew wayto circumvent fierce opposition from Madrid, and Madrid immediately denounces themove as illegal. That wasthe case again Tuesdaywhen Catalonia's main separatist parties announced that they had agreed on adeclaration to create an independent Catalan republic, which they expected to be rubber-stamped byCatalonia's newly elected regional parliament by Nov.9. Their planmwasswiftly denounced by Mariano Rajoy, Spain's prime minister, as an act of provocation."
Boehner, who perhaps had more reason than anyone to
celebrate a final achievement before leaving Congress at the end of the week. "But there it
is. It's a solid agreement. And I told my colleagues there isn' t any reason why any member should vote against this."
— From wire reports
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Classroomarrest video prompts civil rights case The Associated Press warning the girl to leave her COLUMBIA, S.C. — A girl seatorbe forcibly removed on who refused to surrender her Monday. phone after texting in math The officer then wraps a class was flipped backward forearm around her neck, and tossed across the class- flips her and the desk backroom floor by a sheriff's dep- ward onto the floor, tosses her uty, prompting a federal civil toward the front of the classrights probe Tuesday. room and handcuffs her. The sheriff said the girl "may Lott pointed out at a news have had a ntg burn" but was conference that the girl can not injured, and said the teach- also be seen trying to strike er and vice principal felt the of- the officer as she was being ficer acted appropriately. Still, taken down, but said he's fovideos of the confrontation be- cused on the deputy's actions tween a white officer and black as hedecides within 24 hours girl stirred such outrage that he whether Fields should remain called the FBI and Justice De- on the force.
The numbers drawnTuesday night are:
partment for help. Richland County Sheriff
Qs(®Qz 7Q2sQ74 Oe
Leon Lott suspended Senior Deputy Ben Fields without
The estimated jackpot is now $1 29 million.
pay, and said what he did at Spring Valley High School in
"I think sometimes our offi-
cers are put in uncomfortable
positions when a teacher can' t control a student," the sheriff said, promising to be fair. E mail, p h one
and t e xt
Columbia made him want to "thrOW up.m
messages for Fields were not
"Literally, it just makes you sick to your stomach when
The deputy also arrested a second student who verbally
you see that initial video. But again, that's a snapshot," he Bald.
returned. objected to his actions. Both
girls were charged with disturbing schools and released
Videos taken by students to their parents. Their names were not officially released.
and posted online show Fields
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015•THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Wednesday,Dct. 28, the 301st day of 2015. Thereare 64 days left in the year.
RESEARCH
HAPPENINGS
resman cure? ou esee
DenniS HaStert —The former U.S. Housespeaker is expected to plead guilty to an indictment that alleges hewas making cash withdrawals as part of an agreement to paya total of $3.5 million to cover up wrongdoing from years ago.
HISTORY
The "freshman 15"weight gain among college students ism ore like 5 or 10 pounds,researchers say,and an underlying cause may be inconsistent bedtimes. By Jan Hoffman
just be disorganized and doing unhealthy things that contribute to weight gain." Then er-
New York Times News Service
Highlight:In1965, Pope Paul Vl issued a Declaration on the Relation of the Church with Non-Christian Religions which, among other things, absolved Jews of collective guilt for the crucifixion of JesusChrist. In1636,the General Court of Massachusett spassedalegislative act establishing Harvard College. In1914,Yugoslav nationalist Gavrilo Princip, whoseassassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria andSophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, sparked World War I, was sentenced in Sarajevo to 20 years' imprisonment. (He died in 1918.) In1940, Italy invaded Greece during World War II. In1968, the RomanCatholic patriarch of Venice, Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli, was elected Pope; hetookthe nameJohn X XIII.
In1962, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev informed the United States that he hadordered the dismantling of missile bases in Cuba; in return, the U.S. secretly agreed to remove nuclear missiles from U.S. installations in Turkey. In1980, President Jimmy Carter and Republican presidential nomineeRonald Reaganfaced off in a nationally broadcast, 90-minute debate in Cleveland. In1991,what became known as "The Perfect Storm" began forming hundreds of miles east of NovaScotia; lost at sea during the storm were thesix crew members of the Andrea Gail, a swordfishing boat from Gloucester, Massachusetts. Tea years ago:Vice President Dick Cheney's top adviser, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, resigned after he wasindicted on charges of obstructing a grand jury investigation and lying about his actions that blew the CIA cover of an Iraqwar critic's wife. (Libby was convicted of most of the counts brought against him, but had his 30-month prison sentence commuted by President George W.Bush.) Five years ago:Investigators with the president's oil spill commission said tests performed before the deadly blowout of BP's oil well in the Gulf of Mexico should haveraised doubts aboutthecementused to seal the well, but that the company and its cementing contractor used it anyway. (The cement mix's failure to prevent oil and gasfrom entering the well has beencited by BP andothers as one of the causes of the accident.) One year ago:An unmanned commercial supply rocket bound for the International Space Station exploded moments after liftoff, with debris falling in flames over the launch site in Virginia.
BIRTHDAYS Jazz singer CleoLaine is 88. Musician-songwriter Charlie Daniels is 79. Actress Jane Alexander is 76. Actor Dennis Franz is 71.Popsinger Wayne Fontana is 70. Olympic track and field gold medalist Caitlyn Jenner is 66. Actress Annie Potts is 63. Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is 60. Rock musician StephenMorris (New Order) is 58. Actress Daphne Zuniga is 53.Talk show host-comedian-actress Sheryl Underwood is 52. Actress Jami Gertz is 50. Actor Chris Bauer is 49. Actor-comedian Andy Richter is 49. Actress Julia Roberts is 48. Singer Ben Harper is 46. Country singer Brad Paisley is 43. Actor Joaquin Phoenix is 41. Singer Justin Guarini (" American Idol" ) is 37. Popsinger Brett Dennen is 36. Singer/rapper Frank Ocean is28. Actor Nolan Gould is 17. — From wire reports
As the first semester of the
school year reaches the halfway mark, countless college freshmen are becoming aware that their dothes are feeling rather snug.
ratic sleep and diet may not be
causally related, he said. But at the very least, the study "points to the importance of consisten-
cy in sleep."
While the so-called fresh-
Habits developed the first
man 15 may be hyperbole, studies confirm that many stu-
Juliette Borda /The New YorkTimes
dents do put on 5 to 10 pounds
during that first year away from home. Now new research suggests that an underlying cause for the weight gain may be the students' widely vacillating patterns of sleep. A study in the journal Behavioral Sleep Medicine looked at
late bedtimes the scale-tipping
The impact was more pro- of sleep or the time that individnounced with boys, whose bed- uals go to bed or wake up. Daito bed around 1:30 a.m. A study times and wake times shifted ly variability makes the sleep this month in the journal Sleep daily by an average of 2 hours, puzzle more complicated, he factor'? On average, they went
that followed teenagers into
37 minutes. It was as if they had
adulthood found that each hour to adjust to jet lag every day. later that bedtime fell during As they reset their body
The study of freshmen at
docks, they set themselves up the sleep habits of first-semes- associated with about a two- to pack on the pounds. Much
Brown can only suggest a correlation. Some students lost a
ter freshmen. Researchers fol- point increase in body mass like shift workers and frequent
few pounds; others maintained
daily sleep diaries. After nine weeks, more than half of them
had gained nearly 6 pounds. There are many poor sleep habits that might have exac-
erbated their weight gains, a growing body of research indicates.
Was it abbreviated sleep? Optimally, experts say, teenagers need about nine hours and 15 minutes a night. These
freshmen averaged about seven hours and 15 minutes. In a
study earlier this year, in the journal PLOS One, researchers found that when teenagers
are slee p-deprived, they more readily reach for candy and desserts. Or were the Brown students'
on their own and their health
behaviors are solidifying into long-term behaviors," said Roane, who analyzed data said, but also adds an import- from researchers at Brown's ant piece. SleepforSciencelaboratory.
the school or workweek was
lowed 132 first-year students at Brown University who kept
year of college can be significant, researchers said. "It's a crucial period when they' re
Girls vs.boys The Brown
s t udy f o und
some interesting gender difindex. fliers, their metabolism rates their weight. They did not keep ferences. More girls than boys While both the amount of might keep readjusting, and detailed food diaries. Nor did gained weight. But individually, sleep andthe lateness of bed- they might feel too tired to ex- they keep precise activity logs, the boys gained more weight. time may have played a role, ercise and gravitate toward en- although Brandy Roane, the The highest gain for a girl was the researchers in the Brown ergy-boosting foods dense with lead author and an assistant ll pounds and, for a boy, 18. study identified a new sleep sugar and starch. professor at t h e U n iversity In general, the girls' sleep factor for predicting weight In other words, even if a stu- of North Texas Health Sci- was more consistent than the gain: variability, or the extent to dent got seven hours of sleep ence Center, said that because boys', and they tended to go to which a student's bedtime and two nights in a row, going to Brown students generally get bed earlier. But more signifiwaking time changed daily. bed the first night at midnight around campus by walking, cantly,the researchers said, and waking at 7 a.m., and on they almost certainly took they woke up earlier, too, which Schedules influx the next, falling asleep at 2 a.m. 10,000 steps a day. The students in turn helped them get to sleep Unlike workers, who typi- and waking at 9 would have w ere just asked whether they earlier . By contrast, because cally wake around the same made that sleep deprivation ate more or less than the previ- the boys were less consistent time at least five days a week, even tougher on the body. ous day, and whether their ex- with their sleep schedules, how 'Variability is taking the ercise routine had changed. students whose class schedmuch they slept day to day flucules differ daily are inclined to fieldof sleep research a step Without a controlled sleep tuated more. sleep in one morning and get further," said Dean Beebe, an study in a laboratory to confirm Roane noted that by risup earlier the next. Lures of the expert on a d olescent sleep these findings, Beebe said, vari- ing earlier, the female freshnonacademic variety, to which and aprofessorofpediatricsat ability might well be a marker men might also be able to eat freshmen may be especially Cincinnati Children's Hospital for something else, such as a breakfast, which can be a prone, can also wreak havoc on Medical Center. Researchers freshman who is struggling to weight-management anchor for a good night's sleep. typically measure the amount regulate daily life: "They may the day.
As largeanimalsdisappear, the lossof their poophurts the planet By Rachel Feltman
es sary for fertilizing plant
The Washington Post
growth. Scientists know that
It only takes a glance at a
animals help carry these nu-
history book and a look out the trients around by, well, not window to know that our plan- pooping where they eat. Withet has lost many of its biggest out thi s p r ocess, nutrients creatures:The world that was would end up following gravi-
once home to mammoths and towering dinosaurs can now barely maintain stable populations of rhinos and whales. But according to a new
ty onto the ocean floor, instead of spreading as high as the mountain tops. But these days most of the nutrient recycling
s tudy, we' ve got
— not wandering poopers.
m ore t o
mourn than just the animals themselves. We' ve lost their feces, too — and that's a bigger problem than you might think. Why should we miss steaming piles of dinosaur dung? Accordingto research published Monday in the Proceedings
that happens is due to bacteria "I wanted to know whether the world of the past with
IN PERSPECTIVE
phosphorus up from the deep that come inland after eating ocean to the surface each year. in the sea pike salmon, for exan order of magnitude larg- Sincewhales feed deep in the ample) are just 4 percent what er than today. Essentially, we water and come up to breathe they once were. havereplaced wild free-roam- — and poop — at the surface, There's some good news: ing animals with fenced do- they' re great at helping to recy- Some efforts to restore whale mestic cattle that cannot move cle these resources. populations have been wildly nutrients in the same way." But today, the researchers successful. "It was a relatively Some of these contributors estimate, whales only bring simple process," study co-au— the massive land animals 165 million pounds of phos- thor Joe Roman of the Univerthat onceroamed our plan- phorus up annually. That' s sity of Vermont told The Post. et — are gone for good. But just 23 percent of their previ- "Stop killing them, halt comothers are dwindling before ous contribution. Phosphorus mercial whaling, and they will our very eyes. In one example movement by birds and fish return." of the effect, the researchers
all the endemic animals was found that whales — which more fertile than our current have seen dramatic population world," lead study author Chris loss in the last century, mainly Doughty of Oxford University due to hunting and habitat dissaid. ruption — used to bring an es"Large free-ranging ani- timated 750 million pounds of of the National Academy of mals are much less abundant Sciences, megafauna play a than they once were. Today, e rr ' I r i greater role in the spread of nu- if scientists were to study the trients across the planet than role of animals they would find scientists ever realized. that it is important but small," View our presentation at The research focused on Doughty explained. "HowevTampklnswemlthpresents.corn modeling the distribution of er, in the past, we hypothesize charles rompklss,GFPI 541-2044eel Sacurltles & Advisory Sarvlcas offarad through KMS phosphorus, a nutrient nec- that it would have been at least Flnanclal Servlcas,Inc.MambarFINRAISIPC
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A4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
IN FOCUS:THE INTERNET AND PUBLIC HEALTH
A security officer and fencing block
Yelp beginsto label restaurants
entrance to the Coors Events Center in Boulder, Colorado, the venue for tonight's Republican presidential debate.
that have poorsafety ratings
• • ~Is + . • ~[ <s»l •
•
I
! ili
By Emily Badger The Washington Post
Yelp, the popular website data that t hey' re creating that lets consumers review with their tax dollars —
Brennan Linsley TheAssociated Press
Debates Continued fromA1 Much ofthat can be credited to Republican Donald Trump, a singular personality when it comes to getting noticed, and to Bernie Sanders,
If youwatch Tonight's GOPpresidential debate airs at 5 onCNBC (BendBroadband channels 54 or 654 for HD)
achieve in the Oval Office.
Walker and Florida ex-Gov. Jeb Bush.
uations of their performance,
any candidate that doesn' t measure up, it gets magnibefore," said Alan Schroeder,a journalism professor at Northeastern University who
wrote a book covering half a century of presidential debate history. The nature of primary debates, and the audience they attract,
s t a r ted c h a n ging
when the cable TV networks took over. Instead of the Nash-
ua Telegraph hosting the contestants in a high school gym, and a candidate footing the bill the way Reagan did, the debates turned into nationally broadcast spectacles — and
much-hyped branding opportunities — featuring celebrity journalists roaming razzle-dazzle soundstages. When it comes to grabbing voters' attention, nothing else
comes close. Fox News attracted 24 million viewers for the first Re-
publican session in Augustthree times the expected audience — making it the most-
watched presidential primary debate in history. The second GOP debate on CNN d r ew
Carson, a former neurosurgeon with nocampaign experience, surged to the fore of the GOP field after a well-regarded performance in his first debate and now leads the
nearly 23 million viewers, and the Democrats' first debate,
race in Iowa, the first state to
spective, must-watch TV has turned the debates into must-
Kathleen Hall Jamieson, a vote next year. University of Pennsylvania Wisconsin Gov. Walker, expert on p olitical commu- who once topped the polls in nication, notes that d ebate
White House. "You' ve got so many millions of people watching and so many instantaneous eval-
fied in a way that wasn't true
kerous Vermont senator, who significant moments. is Hillary Clinton's chief DemIn 1980, Ronald Reagan asocratic rival and the year' s sumed command of the GOP other political phenomenon. race by taking control of a In a sense, the two are cast New Hampshire debate after members, along with the rest the moderator tried shutting of the presidential candidates, him down in a dispute over in a wonky form of reality TV. who was allowed to partic"We can't wait to see who' s ipate. "I am paying for this going to do what onstage, and microphone!" Reagan, who fihow they respond to one an- nanced the session, famously other," said Marty Kaplan, a bellowed. former Democratic campaign In 1984, Democrat Walstrategist who teaches in the ter Mondale deflated Gary c ommunications school a t Hart's "new ideas" campaign the University of Southern by seizing on a fast-food sloCalifornia. gan,demanding, "Where's the The next installment comes beef?" tonight, when Republicans But it is only in recent camhold their third face-to-face paigns that debates have meeting in Boulder, Colorado. played such a major role sortThe field will be divided once ing the field at such an early more, based on opinion poll- stage, overriding the influence ing, between 10 contestants of big donors and the political sharing the main stage and establishment by elevating the four also-rans serving as their likes of Ben Carson — and Miwarmup act. chele Bachmann and Herman There are, of course, sub- Cain in 2012 — and diminstantive reasons for voters ishing favorites such as Scott sound bites and pre-rehearsed zingers, candidates do reveal pieces of their personalities, offer their political philosophies and even answer specific questions about issues and what they would hope to
Iowa and was considered a
viewership traditionally ris- front-runner nationally for es in economically anxious the Republican nomination, times such as these, especially dropped out after l argely when a race is perceived to be sleepwalking through his two as competitive as the wide- times onstage. open 2016 contest. "Just beOn the D emocratic side, cause it's entertaining doesn' t former Sens.Jim Webb of mean you' re not going to learn Virginia and Lincoln Chafee things," Jamieson said. of Rhode Island dropped out Presidential primary de- last week after their widely batesused to be the province panned performances in the of high-minded civic types, party's Oct. 13 debate. playing to an audience of It is arguable whether the campaign insiders and other skills ofagood debaterarerepolitical obsessives watching quired to be a good president. from a handful of early-vot- But there is no doubt that they ing states. There were plenty are more important than ever of memorable and politically for anyone hoping to win the
also on CNN, drew an audience of more than 15 million viewers. From the candidates'perbe-there events.
In today's fragmented media environment, no presidential hopeful can afford to pass
up a chance to address such a massive audience, even if it means precious time away
from fundraising and oneon-one campaigning in Iowa, New Hampshire and other
crucial early-voting states. "Campaigns need to stimulate interest and create de-
mand,"said Kevin Madden, a Republican communications
strategist who worked on both of Mitt Romney's presidential races. "If you give away that opportunity, somebody else will take it and run
everything from bistros to
that's a great win-win."
experiment in San Francis-
the offline world. That's the
— has the review site wad-
I
Commonwealth Fund, a private foundation that aims to
"To the extent that we can
~
C~
it)
then there has been a steady stream of people coming to acrossthe border for medical
services," said Christopher Teal, U.S. Consul General in Nogales. "Dental services have become a huge industry here," Teal said. "It's high quality as long as people shop around and know what they' re getting
~
health care system, revealed
in 2012. That means rough-
for their money."
ly 31 million Americans who bought health insurance still
/ Ih Ski t.
have trouble affording treat-
cesDLll
ment under their policies, according to the study. "When Obamacare began, private insurance companies hiked up their premiums, making it difficult for middle-class Americans to get
Teal said that the number of folkscrossing the border for dental work and prescription drugs steadily increases as snowbirds make their way to Arizona and other border
states in the Southwest. "Americans come here for
pricediff erences, speed and access that they can't get back Alicia Clark/ Cronkite News
Dentists in Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, attract patients from the U.S. seeking lower prices for treatment.
Insurance Solutions, a brokerage companyinGlendale. The researchers at the Com- of the federal poverty level
monwealth Fund defined "un- ($22,980 for an individual and derinsured" people as having $47,100 for a family of four) out-of-pocket costs that total were underinsured in 2014. 10 percent or more of their an- Those people who fall in this nual income, or a deductible category are often among that is 5 percent or more of those who cross the border for their income. The study con- medical services. cluded that high-deductible A Gallup poll released in policies are likely the culprit December 2014 found that behind this massive influx of about 1 in 3 Americans say underinsured people. they have put off treatment Since 2010, there has been for themselves or a family s ome improvement in t h e member because of cost — the share of low-income people highest rate recorded in Galwho are underinsured, ac- lup's history. cording to the Commonwealth According to Gallup about Fund. Among adults who had 38 percent of middle-class health insurance for the full people with a household inyear, 42 percent of those with come of between $30,000 and incomes under 200 percent $75,000 per year have delayed
t h e l ate 1990s, Los Angeles
ous research,he's found that foodborne illnesses around
tourism increased and since
that about 23 percent of Americans with coverage are considered underinsured — up from 12 percent in 2003 since the inception of Obamacare
affordable health insurance," said David Blunier, owner at
tiative, Yelp at some level is
ing further into the world intertwined in policy issues," County began to require of public policy, behaving said Luca, who has been r estaurants to post their itself in a way that could conducting research on the h e a lth grades in the doorachieve some of the ends of company's data for several way, an old-school form of regulators. years. "It's always been clear transparency other cities "Yelp's job is to predict in to me that there's a deeper n o w f o llow, too. After that an online way the experi- linkbetween Yelp, consumer mandate went into effect, ence consumers can expect protection and policy than t h e C's and D's quickly bewill happen in the off line people might immediately came A's and B's. Research also later found one other world," said Luther Lowe, think." Yelp's head of public policy. In some of Luca's previ- effect: Hospitalizations for
creased a few years ago,
Continued fromA1 A new study from the
h e a lth violations implies that
co over the past week. The premise for even running Y elp couldbeusefultopolipages for a small fraction of such an experiment. Yelp's cymakers, Luca says. Those the city's restaurants on the power to do that will n o p o l icymakers, in turn, he site now bear a new consum- doubt rankle the restaurant a d d s, can either turn a blind er alert. industry. Luca acknowledg- eye to the site's intelligence "Following a recent in- es that demand for the poor o r embrace it. spection," the pop-up box performers may well g o In B o ston, Yelp ran a presays, "this facility received down. But what if, instead diction tournament for algoa food safety rating that is in ofnudgingthemtocleanup, r i thms that could forecast the bottom 5% locally, and is these notices push them out h e a lt h i n s p ection s c o res categorizedby inspectors as of business? using the site's ratings and 'poor.'" The National Restaurant r e v i ews. Using the winning The notice is modeled off Association says it s up - a l gorithm, Luca says, Boston warnings that Yelp virtually ports c o nsumer could catch the slaps on businesses it sus- t ransp a r e n c y , same number of pects of soliciting fraudulent but it points out It S BIWayS heal t h vi o lations reviews. But this one, tar- that Yelp itself is p e e n C iear with 4 o per cent geting all of the restaurants argely u n r egu- t f ewer i nsp e c th t in that b ottom 5 p e r cent lated. The lobbytions, simply by according to San Francis- ing group, which th e r e 'S a b etter t arg e ting co health inspectors, could was also skeptical d eeper iing city resources at have a more far-reaching when Yelp f i rst what appear to be d irty-kitchen h o t effect. rolled out health Harvard Business School's inspection scores Yelp, spots. The city of Michael Luca is tracking on restaurant pag COnSUmel' .oston is now con w hat w i l l ha p pe n n e x t . es on a l i m ited sidering ways to n With Yelp's cooperation, basis two years P use such a modeL he's looking for two effects: ago, is worried in an d P OliCy "There's no change in how consumers particular a bout t el gnpeOp/e doubt in my mind behave, and change in how t iming. W h a t i f that within three 4 restaurants do. Will diners a dinged restauyears," Luca says, "a bunch of citshy away from these places, rant promptly im- immediately even when their poor health proves, but it takes t el in' " ies will be using things like Yelp grades clash with tasty re- weeks or months views? Will the restaurants for its public score — Michael Luca, tex t to pr e d i ct themselves be shamed into to? Harvard Business where they should Yelp's e ff orts upping their scores'? The School be sending their latter result would be much raise fascinating inspectors." more significant. questions about Yelp wants the "Without restaurant be- what happens to obscure sitetobeatwo-wayplatform havior change," Luca says, government i n f o rmation f o r food-safety information: "it' ll be very hard to have when it becomes a lot more C i t ies could use it to push a big effect on foodborne public. out their inspection results "It's our strong belief that to consumers (as in San illness." That Yelp would even thisissomethingconsumers Francisco), while also pullwant to affect foodborne ill- have a right to see," Lowe ing in cues from consumer ness isn't intuitive. The de- says of the health scores. reviews to conduct more efcade-old company has built And this information, Yelp f i c i ent inspections in the fua business selling online ads points out, is already public. ture (as in Boston). against reviews generated Where Yelp becomes a playId e ally, Luca says, none of by its users. It won't make er in public health is when it t h i s means that any restauany money by preventing shows you that information, r ants have to go out of busifood poisoning, or e ven packaged in a red-framed ness. "The mark of success partnering with city regula- box, right at t h e m oment i n t h i s f o r m e ," h e s ays, tors to detect it. when consumers are mak- "would be ifbusinesses stop And yet this experiment ing a decision. getting poor scores." — along with another proj"Whether or n o t Y el p The r e's a ctually s ome ect Yelp is running in Boston works on this specific ini- p r ecedent for that hope. In
augment the consumer opin- the language contained in
with it."
Tourism promote a high-performing
b e a n alyzedtoautomatically
i d entify food-safety threats. The sheer fact that consumbody shops to yoga studios, Arguably, this online test ers are writing things on the quietly began running an will change what happens in site that can be predictive of
the charismatically cantan-
to tune in. Amid the scripted
ions and ratings that our us- Yelp reviews — words like ers rely on with government "dirty," "moldy," "pee" — can
home," Teal said. P harmacies i n
Mex i c o
also see a spike in sales as temperatures dip in the U.S.
medical carebecause ofcosts, and $15,833 per medical travel
"Many Americans come to us
up from 33 percent in 2013,
trip, with medical travel con-
in the winter," said Crihstian
and increasing each year. While most uninsured people are in low-income families, middle-class Americans are also struggling to pay their medical bills, especially those who are aging. "It's a common theme," Reed
tributing between $45 and $95 billion to global GDP. Latin America is one of the leading regions for medical travel with Mexico having the highest de-
Juarez Romero, an employee at Farmacias San Jorge in Nogales, Sonora.
L o s Angelesdropped.
Medicaltourism safety tips • Check for qualifications. • Check the credentials of the doctor/dentist and the facility. • Keep your doctor informed. • Make sure you' vedetermined that your doctor, dentist or pharmacist speaks English or has a translator. • Have your important documents in order and current. • Ask for copies before you return home. • Keep emergency contact information handy. • Make sure the doctor/ dentist has the information
on file. • Know your legal rights. • Determine what, if any, legal actions you cantake if anything goes wrong with the procedure.
"Prices are much cheaper
here," Juarez said. The savmand for medical tourism. ings can range between 30-50 Almost 76 percent of pa- percent on some drugs. "As tients with a future interest in long as they have a prescripsaid. "I see a lot of retired peo- medical travel are American, tion from America or Mexico, ple who just can't afford insur- according to the Medical Tour- they can get whatever they ance,period.Americans these ism Association. need and cross back into the days are lucky if they even Concerns about safety have U.S. with it." "Often peoplecome here have health insurance." kept many Americans from Nearly 80 percent of travel crossing the border into Mexi- to stock up on antibiotics,
cover the medicine so it's very expensive," Juarez said. "They
for medical services is driven
co in recent years but now that
back home," Jim Reed said.
by cost savings, according to a 2013 survey by the Medical
some cities are calmer, tour-
"
Tourism Association. Medical
touristsspend between $7,475
Juarez said. He's seen a lot more Ameri-
prefer to come here and not
spend as much." The Reed family plans to make more trips to pharmacies and dentists in Mexico in order to make ends meet.
"You can't get any medical care on a fixed income
"If I need to come here to get cans shopping at the pharma- cheaper medicine and dental Nogales, Sonora. cy in the last few years. work, then that's what I'm go"When the violence de"Their i n surance doesn' t ing to do." ists are returning to places like
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015•THE BULLETIN A5
Additional points ofnurses' contract • Short-term disability extended to 26 weekswith payment reductions for long-term employees. • Health insurance premium sharing will remain at 2015 levels throughout contract, as theOregonNurses Association had requested. St. Charles most recently wanted to raise dependents' health insurance premiums by 5percent in 2017 and all covered individuals' premiums by 5percent in 2018. • Most co-pay increases St. Charles proposed on things like physician visits, urgent care andmedications will take effect, but co-pays will count toward out-of-pocket maximums. Caveat: ER co-pays will increase by$50, not $75 and physical therapy visit limitation will decrease from 60 to 50.ONAwanted to leave copays unchanged. • New language regarding rest and mealperiods that ONA had requested, including no hospital retaliation if nurses report missed breaks, that staffing for breaks should be included in unit staffing plans andthat plans will be developed to ensure adequate rest and meal periods. • Domestic partners no longer eligible for benefits on July 1, 2016. St. Charles wanted to discontinue benefits; ONAwanted to retain. • No new language on nurses' rights to refuse to perform unsafe work, asONAhad requested. St. Charles said these rights are already ensured elsewhere. • No changes to requirement that nurses work more than 72 hours in pay period before qualifying for premium pay(time-anda-half) when working extra shifts; ONA had proposed removing requirement. No change to languagethat denies premium pay to nurses who requested extra hours; ONA had proposed removing language. •Holi daysunchanged.ONA wantedtomakeVeterans Daya holiday.
Nurses
1, 2017. On January I, 2018,
there will be a final increase of 1.75 percent. That's 6.75 per-
Continued from A1 On Tuesday, both sides said cent less than the nurses had they were mostly happy with requested. the final product.
Karen Reed, chief nursing officer for St. Charles Bend and St. C harles Redmond,
said contract negotiations aren't always an easy process. "I feel good about the dialogue and the partnership
W hen the m ediator w as called in, the ONA w anted
the hospital to raise wages 15 percent over the life of the contract: 5 percent on July 1,
2015, 5 percent on July 1, 2016 and 5 percent on July I, 2017. St. Charles at that point was
between the hospital and the
pushing to raise wages by 6.75
ONA, being able to come to that agreement," she said. "I
percent over the life of the contract: 2 percent upon its ratifi-
think that overall we were able
cation, 2.25 percent on July 1,
to always keep the best interest 2016 and 2.5 percent on July 1, of the patient at the forefront 2017. of our conversations, and that Originally, St. Charles had was very unifying." told the association it would John Nangle, chairman of not apply the wage increase St. Charles Bend's ONA bar- retroactively to July 1. Reed gaining unit and a nurse in the said that's because the hoshospital' s emergency depart- pital had hoped the contract ment, said the nurses' biggest would be approved before the concern throughout negotia- previous one expired. The final contract does not tions was being short-staffed. "We' re seeing a nursing contain the health insurance shortage in Central Oregon premium increases St. Charles and we see a town that's grow- wanted to place on nurses and ing very quickly," he said. "We their dependents: 5 percent inknow there is going to be a creases for dependents in 2017 need for attracting more nurs- and 5percentfor allcovered es, so we want that ONA con- individuals in 2018. "No premium increases at tract to be supportive in making sure that we get the nurses all for any nurse at St. Charles here." is fantastic," Nangle said. Nangle said having the Nangle said ultimately, it's a necessary amount of nurses victory for all St. Charles emis still a concern for the ONA, ployeesbecausebenefi tchangwhich represents more than es for one typeofem ployee af12,000 nurses statewide. fects others as well. Nurses will see a total wage T his isn't th e f i rs t t i m e increase of 8.25 percent over St. Charles and the nurses the life of the contract. In ad- brought in a federal mediadition to the 1 percent increase tor; they also did in 2012. That beginning July 1, they' ll see a year, more than 400 people 1.75 percent increase Jan. 1, picketed outside the hospital to 2016 and another 1 percent in- show their frustration over the crease July I, 2016. Wages will stalled agreement. increase another 1.75 percent
Jan. 1, 2017 and 1 percent July
— Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.corn
Move
Skjersaa's SportShop owner Jeremy Nelson
»
Continued from A1 T hat's down f rom t h e
-; It' fr
»
original asking price of $1.5 million set when the 6,240-square-foot building and one-third-acre lot were first listed in June, said
n
hot waxes
a snow-
»
i/sill Ile»
o
0
O
board in the downstairs
workshop Tuesday.
Brian Fratzke, whose firm, Fratzke Commercial Real
The store is relocating.
Estate, listed the property for sale.
Andy Tullie I The Bulletin
The original owners, Terry and Judy Skjersaa, sold the shop and retired
in 1996, according to The Bulletin archives. The shop was the last version of a ski
shop operated by a family whose name is synonymous with skiing in Central Oregon. ducing them to the sport. "Olaf was the expert," GibTerry Skjersaa's parents, Olaf and Grace Skjersaa, bons said. "He was bringing opened the first ski shop his expertise out of the field in Bend in the back of their home on 10th Street in
1939, Terry Skjersaa told
Bend assistant director of engineering. That project is still said. Curbs, sidewalks and drainage could be part of the
and into the shop and that' s what they were known for." In 1965, what would become
plan. To install a
Skjersaa's Sport Shop on SW early as 1938, Olaf was al- Century Drive was a vacant ready making and selling lot outside the city limits. Exwooden skis w ith m etal cept for a local tavern, the edges in the garage of the street was empty. "We had no running wafamily home on Florida Avenue, said Tim Gibbons, ter out there," Terry Skjersaa guest curator of a coming told The Bulletin in 2013. "The exhibit, "Winter Comes: water stopped at Albany (AvOregon's Nordic Ski Her- enue), so I had to bring the itage," at the Des Chutes water line in from there. You Historical Museum. wouldn't believe it." After th e 1 0t h S t reet On Tuesday, Fratzke said his shop, the Skjersaas opened firm has fielded several offers another on G reenwood for the ski-shop property since Avenue at about the same June. It once went into escrow time they ran the first ski before the prospective buyer shop at Bachelor Butte, lat- backed out, he said. Fratzke er Mt. Bachelor, Gibbons saidthe price came down besaid, citing his research for cause the building needs some the exhibit. improvements. Nels Skjersaa, Olaf's Nelson said the likelihood older brother and a found- that the shop could one day ing member of the Sky- lose some of its parking was liners mountain climbing one consideration for moving, and ski club, helped bring although that prospect is far outdoor recreation to the off, according to city officials. prominence it still enjoys Bend has some money left in Central Oregon, Gib- from the $30 million transbons said. And, he said, portation bond approved by thousands of skiers have voters in 2011 to spend on imOlaf and Grace Skjersaa provements to SW 14th Street The Bulletin in 2013. As
and their family to thank for fitting them for their
BE
in the discussion phase, he
and SW Century Drive be-
s idewalk
along SW Century at Skjersaa's could one day mean reducing some of the shop's parking space. In the meantime, putting
Skjersaa's
new store
that property to use for any-
thing other than retail would requireimprovements, such as bike parking and trash screening, said Colin Stephens, Bend city planning manager. The existing shop, which sells snowboards along with skis and other gear, currently shares space with the Bend Lax Shack, a lacrosse equipment retailer, that Nelson said
Pete Smith /The Bulletin
guess" Sims said The two-story warren of
Gear Fix shops, offices and retail space on SW Century Drive speaks to the need to
expand, he said. The Old Mill Marketplace, although renovated recently, dates to the
will stay put. Upstairs, residen- 1920s. Sims said the interior tial tenants occupy two apart- beams will preserve the feel of ments. Heat in the first floor is
Gear Fix as an outdoor-orient-
provided solely by a fireplace, he said. Nelson is moving the shop into a slightly smaller space than it occupies today, about 3,700 square feet.
ed enterprise built on the idea of maintaining and re-using outdoor equipment. "It's important to maintain the atmosphere of the shop,"
At Gear Fix, Sims said the he said. 7,000-square-foot space at Old The move brings Gear Fix Mill Marketplace is more than close to its roots. The shop he needs, but will afford space originally opened in August on one floor for his bike- and 2006 at 507 N W C o lorado gear-repair technicians, their Ave., a site now occupied by work stations and sewing ma- Cascade Rack and before that chines. Customers will be able by the Horned Hand night to see Gear Fix employees at club.
tween Galveston and Simpson work, he said. "Dinner and a show, I first pair of skis and intro- avenues, said Jeff England,
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbuIIetin.corn
L
A hfagazine Highlighting the Vari ety of Organizations That Connect Your Community.
Bacon Continued from A1 I t's no w o nder t hat t h e
Central Oregon communities continue to grow due to a nationally-recognized appreciation for the region's quality of life. From providing the mostbasic needs of food, shelter and security, to creating and maintaining positive social, educational, recreational and professional environments, Central Oregon's nonprofit community is a foundation for our area's success and sustainability. Hundreds of organizations and thousands of volunteers make up this nonprofit network.
cision is more of a guideline than an absolute rule and comes with the high probability of a
c ounterattack by
number of b a con-inspired the powerful red meat lobby, products released every year we' re not likely to see any imseems to follow the same mediate changes to America' s type of rapid growth curve bacon landscape. The bacon so beloved by technology en- coffee shops will still exist, as thusiasts. On any given day, will the restaurants serving you could wake up with a ba- bacon menu items and the con alarm clock, brush your bars serving bacon-infused teeth with bacon toothpaste, cocktails. put on bacon-themed apparWe will still see the bael, wrap your iPhone in a ba- con blog updates and bacon con-themed case and even car- tweets, but, slowly, over time, ry a bacon-inspired briefcase just as smokers were kicked to into your office. After work, the curb and turned into symyou could use a bacon-themed bols of a broader health mendating app for your iPhone to ace, the same kind of thing find a fellow bacon lover and could happen to America's bathen meet to have a bacon-in- con junkies. spired meal. Once a symbol of AmeriThat's just the tip of the can ingenuity and the classic bacon iceberg — America' s example ofhow any product entrepreneurs have launched could become even better, bacon cologne, bacon soda, bacon may have peaked. As bacon beer, bacon massage a result, America's bacon inoil, bacon lip balm and bacon n ovators may have to t u r n chocolate. It's hard to spend to another food product for a day on the Internet without inspiration. seeing a reference to bacon. The good news, of course, Thanks to Bacolicio.us, it' s is that the adoption of just possible to add a slab of ba- about any new food product con to the top of any page on as a symbol of creativity might the Internet as easily as you lead to another great wave of might share a story on social American innovation. That' s media. In fact, there are literal- because — you guessed itly more than 1,000 things you bacon innovators can make can do with bacon, all of them any product better, even sealegitimate. weed. This summer, in case However, now that bacon you missed it, Oregon State innovators are on the wrong researchers patented a new side of history — at least, ac- strain of red algae — dulsecording to the WHO — the that tastes like bacon when question b ecomes: W h at' s cooked and comes with twice next for the bacon-obsessed the nutritional content of kale. Internet' ? Bacon innovators may be Given that the WH O d e- down, but certainly not out.
ThrOugh the PubliCatiOn Of COnneCtiOnS, The Bulletin Will bOth define and PrOfile the
organizations that make up this network. Connections will provide readers with a thorough look at nonprofit organizations in Deschutes, Jefferson, and Crook Counties. SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 5th CALL 541.382.1811 TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY. I '
I
•
•
I
ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS The Bulletin is in theprocess ofverifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon.Pleasefill out this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail backto: The Bulletin, Attn: Kari Mattser, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. E-mail information to cofiitectiofis©bendbtilletin.corn or call 541-383-0379 Name of Nonprofit Group Contact Person
Organization Phone Number
Website
Nonprofit Mission Statement/Purpose
A6
THE BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015 PAID ADVERTISEMENT
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This is not a misprint. For the next 2 days residents who find their state on the Distribution List above in bold are getting individual StateSilver Bars atjustthe state minimum of $57 set by the Lincoln
Treasury. That's why nearly everyone is taking full Vault Bricks loaded with five U.S. State Silver Bars beforethey're allgone. FRONT ~ And here's the best part. Every OR, CA, WA, ID and NV resident who gets at least two Vault Bricks is also getting free shipping and free handling. That's a real steal because allother state residents must pay oversix hundred dollars CERTIFIEDSOLID for each State Vault Brick. SILVERPRECIOUS Just a few weeks ago, nobody METAL knew that the only U.S. State Silver Bars locked away in the private vaults of the Lincoln Treasury would be releasedto residents in 5 states. Every single one of the 50 U.S. State handed over at state minimum to SilverBars are date numbered in OR, CA, WA, ID and NV residents
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the order they ratified the Consti- who call the Toll Free Hotline betution and were admitted into the fore the deadline ends two days Union beginning in the late 1700s. from today's publication date", said " As Executive Advisor to t h e Timothy J. Shissler, Executive DiLincoln Treasury I get paid to de- rector of Vault Operations at the liverbreaking news. So, for any- private Lincoln Treasury. one who hasn't heard yet, never beforeseen U.S. State Silver Bars are now beinghanded over at just the state minimum to residents in 5 states who beatthe offer deadline, which is why I pushed for this announcement tobe widely advertised," said Mary Ellen Withrow, the emeritus 40th Tr easurer of the United States of America. "These heavy bars are solid .999 pure fine silver and will always be a valuable precious metal which is why everyone is snapping up as many as they can before they' re all gone," Withrow said. T here's one t h i n g W i t h r o w wants to make very clear.State residents only have two days to call the Toll Free Order Hotlines to get the U.S. State Silver Bars. "These valuable U.S. State SHver Bars are impossible to get at banks, credit unions or the U.S. Mint. In fact, they' re only being
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.corn/local
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
BRIEFING 7 arrested in violence sweep The DeschutesCounty Sheriff's Office andother Central Oregonlawenforcement departments joined nearly 500agencies nationwide lastweek in an effort focusedon arresting thoseaccused of domestic violence. The AnnualNational Family ViolenceApprehension detail dedicates five hours to serving domestic violence warrants andmaking arrests. In Deschutes County, lawenforcement agencies made seven arrests during thedetail and attempted toserve 140 warrants, according to the sheriff's office. The agencies involved included the sheriff's office, Bend PoliceDepartment, Sunriver PoliceDepartment, RedmondPolice Department, BlackButte Police Departmentand DeschutesCounty Adult Parole andProbation. The sheriff's office and departments assigned26 personnel to thedetail. About 2,329 law enforcement members were part of theconcerted effort in 38states. The overall detail resulted in1,654 arrests after attempting to serve8,223 warrants, according to the sheriff's office.
resident who'd purchased dog licenses in late 2013 reported
Redmond could see 40 new homes
that $46 was debited from his account rather than the $26
By Beau Eastes
documented in his receipt.
The Bulletin
reasurer oss oeson ria By Claire Withycombe
much of the rest of the day was tal counts alleging theft, forg-
The Bulletin
spent hearing the testimony of
ery and official misconduct.
contends, the county's total deposits for the day wouldn' t
Jefferson County Clerk Kathy Marston, who shared an office
The state, represented by senior Assistant Attorney
tice when a Jefferson County
with Goss and led the initial internal investigation into the
General Kristen Hoffmeyer,
MADRAS — The state
opened its case Tuesday against Deena Goss, the Jef-
ferson County treasurer accused of stealing money from
treasurer's alleged accounting
allegesGoss alteredchecks paid to various county depart-
county revenue.
missteps. Goss pleaded not
ments and then pocketed an
After opening statements by attorneys Tuesday morning,
guilty to the charges last year equivalent amount of cash. after she was indicted on 36 toIn this scheme, the state
change, but officials took no-
SeeTrial /B2
built near Ridgeview High School by June after the Redmond City Council on
OUR STUDENTS
'
a traffi violation and on
reasonablesuspicion that a crime hadoccurred. The officer foundthe ignition damagedanda rear window broken onthe pickup. After aninvestigation, the officer determinedthe vehicle hadbeenstolen by Troy Nielson,48, of Madras, andthat10 tires and six radiators in thepickup bed wereallegedly taken from GoodyearAuto Care, according to therelease. The tires andradiators, estimated at$600 in value, wereallegedly taken from a fencedareain the back of theproperty. A fence wascut in that area. Police tookthe items to Goodyearand impoundedthepickup. Around thesametime police stoppedNielson, an officer stoppeda separate suspected vehicle nearby, a1998 white Ford Ranger. Police found that the driver, DanielWebb,48, of Bend, had asledgehammer, wire cutters, wrenches, flashlights and other tools. Both Nielsonand Webb weretransported to DeschutesCounty jail and lodged onsuspicion of unauthorized use of amotor vehicle, second-degreetheft and second-degreecriminal mischief. Webbwasalso suspected ofdriving while suspendedanda parole violation. — Bulletin staff reports
Tuesday night approved the 33.82-acre Pavlicek Devel-
Educational newsandactivities, and local kids and their achievements. School notes andsubmissioninfo, B6
opment Master Plan. Chad Bettesworth, Pah-
er-sc oo ro ram es su ensexcie ororc esra
lisch Homes' director of land development, said with
the council's OK of the master plan and rezoning of the land, his company hopes to have Phase 1 of the Pavlicek Neighborhood, which would indude single-family homes and town homes, done by the start of summer 2016.
The neighborhood, which is expected to include 224 total units — 114single-family homes, 26 town homes and
84 apartments — will be done over four phases, according to Bettesworth.
SeeHousing/B2
Courthouse
halfway
2 men accused of vehicle theft Two menwere arrested onsuspicion of unlawful use of amotor vehicle early Mondayin south Bend. A Bend Policeofficer noticed two people loitering aroundclosed businesses, including the MooseLodgeand GoodyearAutoCareon the61000blockof S. U.S. Highway 97around midnight Sunday.Bend Police watchedthe area for the next threehours, according to arelease from the department. Awhite 1999Dodge Ram 2500left the Moose Lodge parking lot and headed toGoodyearAuto Care, policesaid. When the pickup left Goodyear, police said it hadtires in the bedthat were not there before. An officer stopped the vehicle inthe 20000 block of S.Highway97for
REDMOND — As many as 40 new homes could be
finished By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
MADRAS — Construction of the new Jefferson
County Courthouse is nearing the halfway mark. The building is expected to be ready for court staff to move in around Labor Day next year. On a tour
of the facility Tuesday, Jefferson County Commissioner Wayne Fording said although there's no hurry to move out of the current courthouse, court employRyanBrennecke/The Bull etin
Marriah Luis plucks the strings of her violin during the Awesome After School Orchestra class Monday at Silver Rail Elementary.
By Abby Spegman The Bulletin
Marriah Luis has been learning to play the violin for about a week. She knows the
names of the strings and how to position her chin just so.
"I'm excited to play, I just
don't know any songs," said Marriah, a fourth-grader at Ensworth Elementary School. Cascade School of Music
offers strings lessons — on violin, viola, cello and bassat three elementary schools in Bend. The Awesome After
ees are looking forward to settling into their new home.
"I'm sure the folks that work in that building will
School Orchestra started
really the ideal time to start,"
be in a rush to go once this
about 15 years ago when low participation left middle-school orchestra programs at risk of being cut, said Dillon Schneider, executive director
Schneider said. That's when children have enough fine
is finished," he said. The county plans to put
motor skills to handle such a
the current courthouse on
delicate instrument. "If you
the market but is prepared
start much earlier, then the
of the music school.
progress is much slower." See Orchestra /B6
to demolish it if there's little interest. Built in 1961, the
"Third and fourth grade is
building has two courtrooms, though one is no largerthananaverage living room. The building sits in a floodway, and en-
Rainy daysahead but total likely to be low
gineers have determined it's likely to collapse in the
By Dylan J. Darling
ative weather station, had seen pected rainfall figures for the
Related
The Bulletin
0.26 of an inch this month.
• What to R ain fa l l reexpect this cords for the winter,61 we a ther station
Williamson with Skanska construction company said
event of an earthquake.
Project manager John Bend is a nearly a half-inch below its average rainfall for October with only a few days left in the month.
And while gray clouds are in the forecast, they likely won't drop enough rain to hit
or exceed the average of 0.71 of an inch. As of Tuesday the city, as measured at a cooper-
Rain is likely today, according to the National Weather
rest of the month. The total: "About a quarter inch," he said,
0.22 of an inch to be exact.
Service. There is also a chance That would put Bend at 0.48 of of showers Thursday and a an inch for all of October. slight chance of showers FriSo far this month rainfall at day and Halloween. the Redmond Airport is also Rob Brooks, a hydro-metebelow average. As of Tuesday orological technician with the the airport had seen 0.46 of weather service in Pendleton, an inch of rain, 0.05 of an inch on 'Itresday added up the exbelow the monthly average of
0.5 1 of an inch.
in Bend go back
to 1902 and show
the driest Octobers only had a trace of rain, Brooks said. That
occurred in 1952 and 1986. The wettest October had 2.72 inchesin 1947. See Rain/B5
the new building, sitting on E Street just west of Madras City Hall, is a much more solid structure than the cur-
rent courthouse. The building is largely constructed of concrete panels cast on site, then tilted upward into position with a crane.
SeeCourthouse/B5
GARY NEWMAN • DEC. 5, 1946 — OCT.19, 2015
Spokesmanreporter, editor wasknownfor positive outlook By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Gary Newman, a reporter, photographer and editor for the Redmond Spokesman for close to 20 years, died last week. He was 68.
trict has organized a tribute to Newman to be held at this
Wood said Newman's importancetoRedmond high school sports was never more
apparent than during his abFriday's football sence, the nearly two years he Newman ga m e between spent in Washington before Redmond and returning to the Spokesman Ridgeview high schools. Cari sports desk at the start of the
Newman was editor of the weekly paper until last month, Wood, athletic trainer for
2014-15 school year.
when he was forced to step
the Redmond Panthers, said
down due to a recurrence of cancer first detected in early
the folding stool Newman
"We'dnever had acommitted sports reporter who was a
would perch on to take notes
true Panther fan," Wood said.
2014. He covered both sports
will be set up in its regular place along the sideline, and
and business for the Spokesman for several years. The Redmond School Dis-
child. After graduating from high school, he enrolled at the University of Oregon to study journalism. His education was interrupted twice, first by
Army, he took what opportunities he had to get away from the base and backpack across Europe.
a stint in Paraguay with the
man, was working as a special education teacher on the
Peace Corps, and later when he enlisted in the U.S. Army rather than wait for his low
draft number to come up. He earned his degree in 1975. In the early 1970s, Newman
"And Gary was that guy."
traveled extensively, visiting
a moment of silence will be
Born in California, Newman moved to Kelso, Wash-
observed before kickoff.
ington, with his family as a
Mexico and several countries in South America. While stationed in Berlin with the
Newman's wife, Judy NewOregon Coast when she met her future husband, then the
editor of The Sentinel, a small paper based in Coquille. The two crossed paths at school boardmeetings,shesaid,and soon began dating. In 1985, they were married. SeeNewman/B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
E VENT TODAY TCM PRESENTS:"DRACULA" DOUBLEFEATURE:Featuring a showing of the classic 1931 version and the Bela Lugosi version; 2 and 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents. corn or 844-462-7342. "SEARCHINGFORAZTLAN": Featuring a live performance, written and directed by Latino playwright Lakin Valdez and performed by Teatro Milagro's National Touring Productions; 5 p.m.; Hitchcock Auditorium, Pioneer Hall, Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWColl egeWay, Bend; 541-318-3726. THEN ANDNOW:EDWARD CURTIS, EARLY2OTH CENTURYPHOTOGRAPHY 8tCONTEMPORARY NATIVE AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHERS' RESPONSES:Dr. Dolan will discuss Edward Curtis' photography within the larger context of early 20th-
ENDA R a motorcycle has ever touched in this motocross action sports film; 7:30 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.
THURSDAY
ROALDDAHL'S"THEWITCHES": A performance of Roald Dahl's familyfriendly story"The Witches," adapted by David Wood; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; $1 0, $5 for kids and seniors; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.bend.k12.or.us/ shs or 541-355-4190. IGNITE BEND13: Featuring 10 local speakers, sharing their passion in five-minute talks; 7 to 10 p.m.; $5 suggested donation; The Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.ignitebend.corn/ or 541-317-0700. ASHER FULERO BAND:The funk-rock band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. century photographyandworks mcmenamins.c orn or541-382-5174. by contemporary Native American "EVIL DEAD,THEMUSICAL": A photographers that directly respond play about five college students to his work; 6:30 to 8 p.m.; High who visit an old abandoned cabin Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. in the woods and unleash anevil Highway 97, Bend; www.cocc.edu/ force; 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.; $22, foundation/vsp or 541-383-7257. $19 for students and seniors, $28 THE LIL' SMOKIES: The for the Splatter Zone; 2nd Street bluegrass band performs; 7 p.m.; Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.corn or 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. 541-312-9626. mcmenamins.c orn or541-382-5174. "BOBBY GOULDINHELL": "MOTO 7 THEMOVIE": Featuring Featuring the one-act play by David the biggest jumps, tracks and Mamet; 7:30 p.m.; $10; Volcanic some of the most remote locations Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive,
Trial Continued from B1 The discrepancies were regularly caughtby U.S. Bank, but the county was not notified of this under a little-known "allowances policy that permits
small discrepanciesin the accounts of commercial clients.
Hoffmeyer said G os s was aware of thisloophole, though Goss' attorney, Todd Grover,
disagreed. "This is a case where, I would argue, the defendant
found a weakness in the system and she exploited it," Hoffmeyer said during opening statements.
Grover asserted there was no way to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the treasurer took any cash when not all receipts of cash were "dou-
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn,541-383-0351.
Cascade View Photography / Submitted photo
Richard Steffenson stars as Dr. Frank N. Furter, a madsclentest, in "The Rocky Horror Show." With this production, opening 8 p.m. Friday at the Tower Theatre in Bend, Steffenson, 54, reprises a role he performed back in 2004. Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. AMBER PRESTON:Thecomedian performs; 8 to 10 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage, 125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www. bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111. BEATS ANTIQUE: Theeletro-dance group performs; 8 p.m., doors open at 7p.m.;$25 plusfees inadvance, $28 at the door; Midtown Bend, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.corn or 541-383-0800. RAINBOW GIRLS: TheAm eria cnafunk band performs; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70
Grover contended, it waspossi- account for the alteration of ble another employee in the of- checks or "ghost checks" in the fice the treasurer shared with same amounts missing from the county clerk could have cash deposited by individual taken cash before the trea- departments, as reflected in surer submitted the county's data Goss entereddaily using daily deposits to U.S. Bank. a numeric keypad that printed Gosswas responsible for sub- a log of checks received by the mitting those deposits, though county. And was it "conceivwhen she was out of the office ably possible"that those extra or unavailable Marston or an- entries were mistakes'? Yes, other official would carry out Hoffmeyer said, but then why the task. would the same amount of Over the course of several cashgo missing that very day'? hours, Hoffmeyergrilled MarGrover said his dient would ston on a host of exhibits that take the witness stand during compared the internal depos- the trial. Goss,who technically it slips submitted by county remains the county treasurer, departmentswith records of has not collected payment for cash and checks deposited at her duties, which were drastithe bank. cally reduced by the Jefferson Marston and her elections County Commission last year deputy, Carol Fuller, testified prior to Goss' indictment. separately that t h e y n ever Marston said in testimony saw Goss altering checks or that she and two other emslipping cash into her purse or ployees each receive a $1,000 pocket. monthly stipend for handling Hoffmeyer countered Gro- Goss' duties while she is not
ble-verified" by countyemployees,a policy that changed after the allegations against Goss ver's suggestion — that anoth- serving as treasurer. arose. Without extra protections in er employeecould have stolen — Reporter: 541-383-0376, place to verify cash deposits, petty amounts of cash — didn' t cwithycombe@bendbulletitt.corn
SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. THECLECTIKANDTHEDOPEST MATRIX:The DJs perform; 9 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; 541-388-0166.
FRIDAY HAUNTEDHOUSE:A haunted house at Cascade Middle School, to benefit their Sparrow; 4-8 p.m.; $2 suggesteddonation;CascadeMiddle School, 20900 SW Mountaineer Way, Bend; 541-355-7022. BEND ZOMBIERUN: A fun Skrace,
choose to be azombie or survivor and race to see who makes it out alive; 6 p.m.; $30, $20 for children, $25 to $35 day of registration; downtownBend,Minnesota Avenue and Bond Street, Bend; www.bendzombierun.corn or 541-788-3628. ROALD DAHL'S"THEWITCHES": A performance of Roald Dahl's family-friendly story "The Witches," adaptedby DavidW ood;6:30 to 8:30 p.m.; $10, $5 for kids and seniors; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.bend. k12.or.us/shs or 541-355-4190. "EVIL DEAD,THEMUSICAL":A play about five college students who visit an old abandoned cabin in the woods and unleash an evil force; 7:30 to 10:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for students and seniors, $28 for the Splatter Zone; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.corn or 541-312-9626. "BOBBY GOULDINHELL": Featuring the one-act play by David Mamet; 7:30 p.m.; $10; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. NEW YEARSDAY:The band performs, with Get Scared, EyesSet to Kill, The Relapse Symphony, and Darksiders; 8 p.m.; $13 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. MONSTERBALL:A Halloween party with costume contests, live music and more; theme is "Star Wars"; 8 p.m.; $20 plusfees inadvance,
Housing
DRESS DASH:CHARITY WEDDING DRESS SALE: Used wedding dresses for sale, to benefit Brides for a Cause; 7-10 a.m.; FivePine Lodge 8 Conference Center, 1021 E. Desperado Trail, Sisters;
www.bridesforacause.cornor 503-282-4000.
work with NAI Cascade on sentation to cou n cilor s. a per-deal basis and gives "Affordableto high end.... Redmond the flexibility to They' re trying to represent work with another real esa broad region of the market tate company if it ch ooses and we think they' ve suc- so. In Oregon, real estate ceeded indoing that." companies can represent Councilors also ad ded both the seller and buyer. three properties to the city' s Presumably, if the city was historic landmark registry interested in a property in Tuesday. In addition to a which NAI Cascade reprecraftsman bungalow home sented the seller, Redmond at 349 SW 12th St., the City officials would work with Council agreed to designate anotherrealestate company. "Time to t i me, the ci t y Redmond's original freight and passenger train depots is involved in real estate as historically significant, deals," Burch said. "A real buildings that were built in estate company will make 1913 and 1911, respectively. sure we get maximum valIn other actions, the city ue forproperties we sell,for agreed to enter into a non- example, and in somecases exclusive agreement with help us keep our anonymity the Central Oregon real es- longer when we' re interested tate company NAI Cascade. in properties." Jodi Burch, thecity's deputy The new deal would not
The next step for the de-
velopment, a c ooperative project between landowner John Pavlicek and Pahlisch
Homes,is to have Redmond annex the land into its city
limits. The new neighborhood, the first to be built
ci t y's re cent
Southwest Area Plan, will
alsoinclude 4.38 acres of open space. "It's a great project," Mayor George Endicott said after the council approved the plan unanimously. "It' ll really serve the south end of Redmond." The development, which
will border the Central Oregon Irrigation District canal on its east side, adheres to
Redmond's great neighborhood planning principles, said Scott Woodford, an associateplanner with the city.
director of central services,
stop the city from negotiat-
explained that w o r king ing deals by itself when staff with a real estate company saw that as the most efficient could help expedite deals for option, Burch added. " There's a d i v ersity o f the city in some cases. The — Reporter: 541-617-7829, housing op tions th e re," agreement allows the city to beastesibendbulletin.corn
Find It All Online
NEWS OF RECORD Kilnwood Court. arrest made at2:42 p.m. Oct. 23, in the 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:10 p.m. Oct. 20, in the 300 block of NW Vehicle crash — Anaccident was The Bulletin will update items in the Oak TreeLane. reported at 5:04 p.m. Oct. 23, in the Police Log whensuch arequest 900 block of SWVeterans Way. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was is received. Anynewinformation, reported at 7:28 a.m.Oct. 21, in the Theft —A theft was reported at 6:10 such as the dismissal of charges or p.m. Oct. 23, in the 100block of NW 1600 block of SWLavaAvenue. acquittal, must be verifiable. For more GreenwoodAvenue. information, call 541-633-2117. Theft — A theft was reported andan DUII — Cody James Smoldt,22,was arrest made at10:45 a.m. Oct. 21, in arrested on suspicion of driving under the 1400 block of S.U.S.Highway 97. BEND POLICE the influence of intoxicants at10:24 Burglary —A burglary was reported DEPARTMENT p.m. Oct. 23, in the 2000 block of S. at 2:29 p.m. Oct. 21, in the200 block U.S. Highway97. of SW Ninth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of Burglary —A burglary was reported Theft —A theft was reported at 9:26 criminal mischief was reported andan at10:24 p.m. Oct. 23, in the area ofNE a.m. Oct. 22, in the 300 block of NW arrest made at2:43 p.m. Oct. 9, in the 17th Street and NEHemlock Avenue. Oak TreeLane. area of NEEighth Street and NEOlney Theft —A theft was reported at 8:06 Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at10:55 a.m. Oct. 24, in the3800 block of SW a.m. Oct. 22, in the 900 block of SW Burglary —A burglary was reported Airport Way. Veterans Way. at 3:28 p.m. Oct.16, in the 63200 Unlawful entry —Avehicle was block of Wishing Well Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:09 reported entered at 9:52 a.m.Oct. p.m. Oct. 22, in the 300 block of SW Theft —A theft was reported at1:36 24, in the 2800 block of SWJuniper REDMOND POLICE Rimrock Way. p.m. Oct. 20, in the 700 block of SE Avenue. Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported and DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of arrests were made at 3:56 p.m. Oct. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:06 criminal mischief was reported at 22, in the 300 block of NW Oak Tree a.m. Oct. 24, in the area ofLancaster Theft — A theft was reported andan 10:29a.m. Oct. 24, in the1400 block Lane. Street and Lysander Place. arrest made at5:14a.m. Oct. 19, in the of SW CanyonDrive. 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:12 Theft —A theft was reported at10:59 Unlawful entry —Avehicle was Burglary —A burglary was reported p.m. Oct. 22, in the1400 block of NW reported entered at11:33 a.m.Oct. 24, a.m. Oct. 24, in the area of NW Florida Eighth Street. Avenue and NW Broadway Street. at 8:46a.m. Oct. 19, in the 800block in the 900 block of NWRimrock Drive. of SW14th Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was Criminal mischief —Anact of Theft —Atheft was reported and an reported entered at 9:16a.m. Oct. criminal mischief was reported at 6:39 Burglary —A burglary was reported arrest made at11:51a.m. Oct. 24, in 23, in the 1000 block of NW Ri m rock at11:35 a.m. Oct. 19, in the 1600 block p.m. Oct. 24, in the 2000 block of NE the 700 block of NWFifth Street. Drive. of NW Ivy Avenue. Sixth Street. DUII —Linda AnnHeller, 62, was Theft —A theft was reported at10:05 Theft —A theft was reported and an Vehicle crash —Anaccident was arrested on suspicion of driving a.m. Oct. 23, in the 400 block of NW arrest made at4:25 p.m. Oct. 23, in the reported at1:04 p.m. Oct. 19, in the under the influence of intoxicants at 17th Street. 3100 block of N. U.S.Highway 97. 600blockofNW HemlockAvenue. 1:42 p.m. Oct. 24, in thearea ofSW Vehicle crash — Anaccident was Vehicle crash —Anaccident was Seventh Street and SWForest Avenue. reported at 7:30 p.m.Oct. 19, in the reported at1:22 p.m. Oct. 23, in the DUII —Douglas JamesGilbert, 50, DESCHUTES area of S. U.S.Highway 97andSW 1400 block of SW16th Street. was arrested on suspicion of driving COUNTY SHERIFF'S Theft —A theft was reported at 8:34 Odem MedoRoad. under the influence of intoxicants at OFFICE 3:56 p.m. Oct. 24, in the area of N.U.S. p.m. Oct.19, in the1700 block of SW Theft — A theft was reported andan Odem MedoRoad. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:43 Theft —Atheft was reported and an a.m. Oct. 23, in the51600 block of arrest made at9:08 p.m. Oct.19, in the Coach Road. 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:50 Burglary —A burglary was reported a.m. Oct. 23, in the 67200 block of I found Dad'SremOtein the fridge again. at 9:31 a.m. Oct. 20, in the300 block Bass Lane. of SW Sixth Street. ...I'm beginning toget WO rried. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:54 Criminal mischief —Anact of a.m. Oct. 23, in the 16300 block of criminal mischief was reported at1:34 e a First Street. p.m. Oct. 20, in the 2200 block of SW Theft —A theft was reported at10:54 First Street. a.m. Oct. 23, in the100 block of W. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was Main Avenue. reported at 2:47 p.m.Oct. 20, in Theft —A theft was reported at 4:26 the area of SW11th Street andSW p.m. Oct. 23, in the 54600 block of Highland Avenue. otOREGON Ps Husky Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:47 OREGONDEPARTMENT OFHUMAN SERVICES PROGRAM Theft —A theft was reported at10:19 p.m. Oct. 20, in the 2100 block of NW
POLICE LOG
SATURDAY
Woodford stated in his pre-
Continued from B1
within the
$35 for combo pack; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendradiogroup.corn or 541-388-3300. "THE ROCKYHORROR SHOW": A performance of the classic musical, by Lurking Squirrel Productions; 8 p.m.;$2to $36 plusfees; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. DAVID JACOBS-STRAINAND THE CRUNK MOUNTAINBOYS: Featuring a costume dance party; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.corn or 541-815-9122. NASHVILLEUNPLUGGED: Featuring Travis Howard, Aaron Benward and Earl Bud Lee; 9 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $30 for a table, $40 for VIP table; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-382-4270. STRIVE ROOTS:The reggae, hard rock and funk band performs for Halloween; 9 p.m.; $5; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331.
p.m. Oct. 23, in the 200 block of E. Black Crater Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at1:02 p.m. Oct. 24, in the 10000 block of NE Crooked River Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:09 p.m. Oct. 24, in the 16000 block of Sparks Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:06 p.m. Oct. 24, in the 1600 block of SW Obsidian Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at11:43 a.m. Oct. 25, in the area of N.Pine Street and W.CascadeAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at11:45 a.m. Oct. 25, in the 200block of N. Fir Street. Theft —A theft was reported at1:17 p.m. Oct. 25, in the 15000 block of River Loop Drive.
bendbulletin.corn Highway 97and NWOakTree Lane. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 7:42 p.m.Oct. 25, in the 300 block of NWFir Avenue. DUII —Zachary Edward Boysen, 35, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:15 p.m. Oct. 25, in the area ofSW 35th Street and SW Obsidian Avenue.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Burglary —A burglary and theft were reported at 4:40 p.m.Oct. 23, in the area of NW Second Street.
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015• THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
sunami-vu nel'a e owns I'a e wi i'0 e ion
COffee break arreStS —Forthe second time this month, an Oregon law enforcement officer nabbed asuspected thief while on acoffee break. OnTuesday, a Clackamas County sheriff's deputy wasgetting coffee at Starbucks whenshesaw 34-year-old David Allen Wilcox walk by. Authorities said thedeputy recognized Wilcox from surveillance footage showing apackagestolen from the front porch of a Milwaukie house Monday.Thesheriff's office said Wilcox admitted to stealing the packageand leddeputies to the stolen property — a pair of men's dress shoes.Earlier this month, anFBIagent stopped for coffee near the bureau's Portland office andrecognizedanother customer from surveillance footage oftwo recent bank robberies. Hecalled another agent, and themanwasarrested.
By Terrence Petty The Associated Press
PORTLAND — Bracing for a tsunami like the one that
Kidnapping —Police arrested a manand woman from Oregon accused of holding awoman captive for six weeks. Documents filed this week inPolkCounty show46-year-old Ronnie Leeand44-year-old Irish Boycechargedwith kidnapping and unlawful sexual penetration. Lee hasalso beenchargedwith rape. Thearresting officer said in court documents that the victim told investigators shewent with Leeto get heroin last month andwastaken to a Salem home. Thevictim said she took heroin andwasthen struck with a closet rod and held against her will until Sunday.The29-year-old victim said sheslept on the bathroom floornearthebedshared by LeeandBoyceandwasrepeatedlyabused. Lee pleadednot guilty Mondayand is dueback in court Thursday with a court-appointed attorney. Boycewasset to makeher first appearance Tuesday afternoon.
devastated Japanese communities during a 2011 mega-earthquake, coastal communities from British Columbia to California have been grappling with how to protect people from a similar catastrophe. One of those towns is constructing the nation's first structure built as a vertical tsunami
refuge. Two years ago, voters in Westport, Washington, and other communities in the school
district approved a $13.8 million bond to build a new elementary school that would be reinforced
to withstand a big earthquake and have a tsunami evacuation
area on the gym's rooftop. "We have no natural high ground," said Paula Akerlund, superintendent of the Ocosta School District, located on a peninsula, noting that they have 20 to 30 minutes be-
tween a quake and a tsunami to get to higher ground. That' s "impossible." The new school is being built on a small ridge, which will put thereinforced roof of the
gym above the highest tsunami surge expected by scientists. It
is expected to be completed in March. The devastating 2011 earth-
Joshua Bessex I The Daily Astorian via The Associated Press
People walk on the West Broadway Bridge in Seaside. Up and down the coast of the Pacific Northwest, communities have been intensifying their efforts to protect lives when the region is hit by a killer quake and tsunami, which seismologists say is inevitable.
evacuation area. "Safe Haven Hill," as its being called, will That goes down to 16,000 if have lighted walkways to the they walk quiddy. top so evacuees can find their Nearly 70 percent of the way at night. residents at highest risk are in Seaside, on Oregon's northWashington state communi- ern coast, has some natural ties, followed by Oregon with high ground for evacuees but 29 percent and California with it also has bridges likely to col4 percent. lapse during a big earthquake, The state of Washington has cutting off escape to thousands identified the need for 55 ver- of people. tical evacuation structures in Many coastal communities low-lying coastal areas in three are strappedforcash, a factor counties. The school gym in in planning. Westport will be the first to be Even though Seaside is one built. The next may be a man- of the most vulnerable commade berm in Long Beach, munities on the Oregon coast, Washington, capable of giving voters rejected a $129 million refuge to 800 people. bond to move three schools to Emergency planners in Cali- safer ground. fornia are looking into creating Federalmoney helped move not have time to reach higher ground if they walk slowly.
quake and tsunami in Japan was a reminder of a mirror-image threat lurking just off the Pacific Northwest coast: a 600-mile-long fault that has not produced a major quake since 1700 but could do so any time. some sort ofvertical evacuaThe fault is called the Cascadia tion structure on its northern Subduction Zone. coast — building a berm or Progress has been incremen- perhaps fortifying an existing tal in the region as communi- tall structure to withstand a big ties seek funding for expensive quake and serve as a tsunami projects, examine the most refuge. A building would have effective means of protecting
to be on soil that would not be
people and ponder how much in danger of liquefying during they are willing to spend to pre- a major earthquake. pare for a disaster. Up and down the coast, ofA study by the U.S. Geolog- ficials have been trying to enical Survey and university re- sure that residents and tourists searchers that was published know how to quickly get to this year shows that of t he high ground by using designat94,870 people living in tsunami ed tsunami evacuation routes. hazard zones in northern CalNewport, on Oregon's cenifornia, Oregon and Washing- tral coast, is turning a 90-footton state, about 21,500 would
DEQ PenaltieS —The OregonDepartment of Environmental Quality has announcedpenalties for threecompaniesaccused of violations. The agencysaidTuesday it fined Kettle Foodsmorethan $8,800 for failing to adequately analyzestormwater discharge at its Salem plant for pollutants. Meanwhile, CMH Manufacturing West was penalized $9,551 for failing to collect monitoring data asrequired under the company's stormwater-discharge permit. TheDEQsaid the violations occurred at thecompany's modular home-building facility in Albany. Finally, the agencyhit Pilot Travel Centers with a$9,000 fine, saying portable toilets at aRiceHill truck stop discharged waste to a storm sewer system that leads to aditch connected to Yoncalla Creek. The companies all havethe option to appeal.
tall forested hill into a tsunami
high school students out of the
tsunami zone in Waldport, on
put the lot outside the projected
tsunami zone. But newer maps show it could be swamped by a tsunami, depending on the severity and proximity of the offshore quake. State emergency managers were alarmed by the site
Historic windmill topples —It stoodin east Oregonfor more than a century, but Pendleton's iconic windmill has crasheddown after being hit by anSUV.Police said aman drove through a fence and smashedinto at least two of the windmill's four galvanizedsteel support beams. Police saidthe driver was not under theinfluence but may havefallen asleep at the wheel. Umatilla County Historical Society executive director Barbara Lund-Jonessaid the loss of the windmill is a blow to thevery identity of the organization's Heritage Station Museum. Thesociety uses the imageof the museumandwindmill on its letterheadandbusiness cards. Anengineer who lives in Pendleton said he thinks thewindmill would berepaired, though it would haveto be shorter.
choice. Jodi Fritts, city administrator
for Gold Beach, said alternative sites on high ground are prone to landslides and costs would
be prohibitive for putting in roads, sidewalks, and water
and sewer lines, especially in a county as poor as Curry. Fritts argued that with no
one able to predict with certainty when the big quake and
BabySitter Sex abuSe —A babysitter accused of sexually abusing multiple youngvictims has beensentenced to 35 years in prison. Benjamin Nelson, 27,pleadedguilty Monday to charges of attempted sex abuse, sodomy andencouragingchildsexabuse.Additionalcharges against him weredropped aspart of a pleadeal. Court documents say Nelson admitted sexually abusing twoboys underthe ageof 14 earlier this year. Athird child was victimized betweenJune 2014andMay2015.
tsunami will come and how far
the tsunami waters will reach, and with the community in desperate need of a modern
hospital, going ahead was the new school on high ground. right choice. The old school was "smack Chris Goldfinger, author of dab" in the tsunami zone and a study that concluded there "had some quake safety is- is a 37 percent chance of the sues," said Dennis Sigrist, Ore- C ascadia Subduction Z o ne gon's hazard mitigation officer. rupturing in the next 50 years, In Curry County, on Ore- said he wishes decision-makers gon's border with California, "would consider buying an airvoters two years ago approved plane ticket to Japan and take a a $10 million bond issue to re- walk around the tsunami zone." ''You have to go there ... to place an aging hospital that faced closure. The new hospital really capture what destructive is going up on the same lot as power means," said Goldfinthe old one, in the city of Gold ger, a professor of geology and Beach. geophysics at Oregon State Maps dating from the 1990s University. Oregon's central coast, into a
— From wire reports
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nima activists want voters to anivo sacs in re on By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press
SALEM — Animal welfare
advocates said they will push for a ballot measure asking Oregon voters to outlaw ivory sales after a bill seeking a ban stalled earlier this year in the Legislature.
All the proposed state and federal rules include exemptions for antiques, musical instruments, jewelry and furniture that havea limited amount of legally imported ivory. Old pianos, guitars and violin bows often have ivory,as do knives and firearms. Ivory products would remain legal to own but not to sell.
The ballot initiative would
endthesaleofproductsderived from a vari ety of endangered summer to put the question be- is enacted, he said. "If you' re going to try to proor heavily poached animals, in- fore voters in the 2016 election. duding elephants, rhinos, lions, Voters in Washington will tect elephants, focus the limited sea turtles and sharks. decide on a similar initiative resources where they' re going The move was announced next week. Earlier this month, to do the most good," Mitchell as thefederalgovernment and California Gov. Jerry Brown said. "Don't create a new class other states take aim on the le- signed a bill outlawing the sale of c~ (off e nses) because gal market for ivory. of elephant and rhinoceros you' re frustrated you c an' t Proponents hope to tamp horns, joining New York and reachthe poachers in some othdown demand for exotican- New Jersey in prohibiting near- er country." imal parts and discourage ly all ivory sales. All the proposed state and poaching in Africa and Asia. The Obama administration federal rules indude exempCritics countered that crimi- has also moved to tighten re- tions for antiques, musical innalizing the sales of parts from strictions on imports, exports struments, jewelry and furnianimals killed long ago will do and state-to-state sales of ivory. ture that have a limited amount nothing to stop the poachers Critics of ivory bans say of legally imported ivory. Old responsible for the killing of el- the overwhelming majority of pianos, guitars and violin bows ephants today. poached animals are destined often have ivory, as do knives Zimbabwe officials said cy- for markets in Asia. Banning and firearms. Ivory products anide poisoning has killed 62 ivory sales in the U.S. will erase would remain legal to own but elephants so far this month, in- the value of art and antiques not to sell. cluding22 Monday atHwange without addressing demand in However, critics complain National Park Asia or poachers in Africa, they that the exemption require"The notion of what's hap- say. ments are nearly impossible to pening to some of our most The U.S. saw vast imports of meet because few people can iconic species is just offensive, ivory long before the govern- prove their ivory was brought morally," said U.S. Rep. Earl ment began restricting imports to this country before there Blumenauer, an Oregon Dem- in the 1970s, said Robert Mitch- were any restrictions on it. ocrat who is one of three chief ell, founding member of the Supporters of a ban say state petitioners behind the proposed Elephant Protection Associa- laws are necessary because Oregon ballot initiative. tion, which opposes ivory bans. federal authorities don't have Advocates need to collect Some people have collections enough resources to investigate just over 88,000 signatures worth millions of dollars that and prosecute everybody who from registered voters by next will become worthless if a ban violates federal wildlife laws.
Be the • ggggi ~ e ~
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Take a Darkness to Light Training and belp save a child from abuse. Sign up at kidscenter.org
SKIDS Center a child abuse intervention center
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Bend, OR 977o3 54~-383-5958
B4
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named the state's Teacher of the Year for 2016. Only two other teachers in the region have received the honor. Anderson, who teaches fourth grade at Juniper, has taught in Marylandand Mexico and came to Bend-La Hne in 2007. After a stint at Three Rivers School in Sunriver, she moved tothe northeast Bend school in 2012. She grew up in Bend and is a 1996 graduate of Bend High School. She is one of only 313 Oregon teachers certified by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards, an honor that was "designed to develop, retain and recognize accomplished teachers and to generate ongoing improvement in schools nationwide." To achieve the certification she had to submit portfolios of her work and pass a rigorous exam. In other words, Anderson has gone out of her way to become not just a teacher, but an excellent teacher. Moreover, she's worked to help
those around her become better teachers as well. In that, she joins Jack Ensworth, the late Kenwood School sixthgrade teacher, and Mike Geisen, who taught science at Crook County Middle School in Prineville. Both men also were honored by the state, Ensworth in 1973 and Geisen in 2009. Both of them went on to become the national teacher of the year. Oregon's Teacher of the Year honor doesn't necessarily go to the faculty member with the most book learning or initials after his or her name. Instead, the teacher so honored must also be able to engage his or her students, demand the best of them and make learning something they want to do. Anderson clearly does that. Juniper's students and the district at large are lucky to have her.
Grant more localcontrol over marijuana regulation ounties and cities should have some say in controlling recreational marijuana in
Oregon. The Oregon Liquor Control Commission's temporary rules don't give them enough. The temporaryrules released by the OLCC last week are a decent startin many ways. There's a mandatory 30-day license suspension for selling to minors. There's a prohibition on using marijuana in pot stores. The rules also require that marijuana businesses be owned in the majorily by people who have lived in Oregon for more than two years. That's to comply with legislative intent, though some legislators are thinking that restriction should be softened. There have been safety concerns about marijuana delivery services to homes. The rules do allow for them. The problem with that rule is that the limits on how much marijuana can be in a vehicle — not more than $100 worth — may be too restrictive to make it worth anyone's while. If the state wants to allow it, it needs to be workable. If the state wants to prohibit it, prohibit it. One area where counties and cities do get some say under the rules is in the size of growing operations.
Counties and citiesalso requested to have a say in the denial of license
applications. Counties and CitieS already Play a rOle
in the approval of liquor licenses. Why are they out of the loop for marijuana? The rules limit the size to 10,000 square feet indoors and 40,000 square feetoutdoors. That was a guess that attempted to ensure there
is enough legal pot grown in the state, but not too much. It seems likelytobesquabbled over and revised. That' s why it's good that under the rules cities and counties have some additional controL They can request variances within their jurisdictions to allow for bigger canopy limits. Counties and cities also requested to have a say in the denial of license applications. Counties and cities already play a role in the approval of liquor licenses. Why are they out of the loop for marijuana? Regulating marijuana in Oregon is going to require continuous input and adjustments. The OLCC needs to make legalization work but not keep all the decision-making out of the hands of local governments.
po
I • • 'P
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g
M IVickel's Worth A trivial crusade against Miller
comes an obsession, even the triv-
information about St. Charles Can-
ialbecomes a crusade. We end up cer Center survivorship programs, pole vaulting over mouse drop- please visit stcharleshealthcare.org I am not as bright as the law- pings and in the end serve beneath or call 541-706-5800. Lizzi Katz, yer guys, but it is an enigma to me the rest of us. You be the judge. why we taxpayers and Judge RanMike Brock St. Charles Cancer Survivorship dy Miller had to shell out so much Bend coordinator money and take the time of the
Commission on Judicial Fitness Help for survivors and Disability to address an issue I'm writing in response to the that could have, in my opinion, been handled offline. Judge Miller article "'Never the same'. Life after wrote, "Trial Academy, Stanford beating cancer might be the hardLaw School" in his voter's pam-
est stage" in the recent health section. The article echoed what we
Bend
The price of 'Open
for Thanksgiving' Well it's that time of year again — holiday time. For a l most 50
years I have wanted to say something and this year I am going to that he was misleading and, there- that for many, the period after you say it. fore, unethical because he never finish treatment and no longer are But first, anymore, major holattended Stanford Law School. Re- regularly working with your medi- idays are treated like ordinary spected local judges and an expert cal team can be a time of increased days. Stores are open as well as were not concerned about it and did stress and anxiety. As survivors restaurants. People have to plan not consider the entry dishonest. (you area cancer survivor from the their celebrations around their We watched a video advertising moment of diagnosis) and family work hours with some missing "IADC International Association members get used to the "new nor- out on any family time. Because I of Defense Council, Trial Academy, mal" of life with and beyond can- was in the restaurant business, my Stanford Law School." The narra- cer, our survivorship program can youngest child (a girl) was 11 years tor did say in the introduction, "at help with support groups, physical old before I was home with her on Stanford Law School." However, activities, nutrition an d m e dita- a holiday. I'm not complaining, as it was during the rest of the video Stan- tion classes, practical and emoford Law School was displayed tional support, inspirational and the workIchose,and Im ade many numerous times and at the conclu- creative offerings. Thanks to gen- friends and also made good monsion the same logo appeared with- erous community support, these ey so I could take care of my chilout any reference to "at" Stanford programs are offered at no cost to dren. However, it always made me Law School. It seems to me that the anyone in Central Oregon facing annoyed when people would say, complainant should take IADC to cancer — no matter where they re- "I'm sorry you have to work on task for giving the impression they ceive treatment. Thanksgiving," or whatever holare affiliated with Stanford Law Regardless of what type of sup- iday it was. Don't you people realSchool. port or activity is right for you, the ize if you didn't want to shop or eat In life we can strive to elevate thriving cancer survivorship com- out I wouldn't need to work! Think ourselves to the highest level of munity in Central Oregon can help about it! moral and ethical standards and you and your loved ones realize Sally Prinzing rise above the norm. When it be- that you are not alone. For more Bend phlet, which caused an unidentified person to take umbrage and state often hear from local survivors-
Letters policy
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We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
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Su ort new Montessori sc oo in Re mon By Leanna West hoice, growth, opportunity:
fashioned to some educators. You
IN MY VIEW
might consider "why support openA letter t o t h e c o mmunity, ing this public charter school?" again to be inclusive and supportthe school district and fellow As an educator and administra- ive of our entire population, not just parents. tor,even a parent or community those already finding success. As a parent of four very unique, member, we all on occasion expeRedmond has grown from a small energetic boys, I have had the ex- rience the child that doesn't quite town to a small city in a mere deperience of s t ruggling through fit in, cannot keep the wiggles in, cade. The governing body has done the public school system with my struggles with each transition and a wonderful job of helping it grow 16-year-old son and again with my even perhaps has a learning disabil- in a healthy manner. Examples sur6-year-old kindergartener.Iam very ity. The Montessori method is prov- round us all and are enmeshed in thankful for our wonderful educa- en to bring success, esteem and the our local culture. We celebrate holtors, administrators and all those joy of intrinsic rewards to these chil- idays and the changing of seasons w ho wor k t i r elessly behind t h e dren — the children that all too of- with festivals and parades. We honscenes to educate our most vulnera- ten fall through the cracks or barely or our veterans and our country. We ble and impressionable populations. pass each year and are emotionally now have the largest all-inclusive I am thankful for your willingness impacted by the constant struggle playground in Oregon in the recent to work through the individual idio- and correction. These children may opening of Hope Playground in the syncrasies of each child — challeng- have previously had a joy and love heart of Redmond. The growth of ing, teaching, struggling and grow- for learning prior to the beginning our businesses and public areas is ing with each precious one. of their formal education in the stan- carefully managed. Opening a pubI am writing this letter today to dard method of public education. lic Montessori school would only implore you to support and give apThe Montessorimethod is suc- further the hopes and vision of our proval to the opening of Desert Sky cessful in educating a healthy "nor- community. Montessori School i n R e d mond. mal" child; it is also proven to bring I implore you to support and The Montessori method, which is so success to a child struggling to approve Desert Sky Monte ssori very different from the main stream learn. I can think of many examples School. The board and many volunmethods, might feel foreign or old- our small city has chosen time and teers have been working tirelessly
C
The Montessori method is provento bring success, eSteem and the jOy Of intrinSiC reWardStO theSe Children
— the children that all too often fall through the cracks or barely pass each year and are emotionally impacted by the constant struggle and correction. These children may have previously had a joy andlove for learning prior to the beginning of their formal education in the standard method of public education. for years, sacrificing time and per- arrange to purchase tickets at 541sonal resources to open this school. 213-8682. You may also make direct They are working diligently with donations, volunteer time or request the goal to open this public Montes- more information and address any sori school in the autumn of 2016. concerns by contacting Bobbie at The next community f u ndraiser to assist in funding the work of
the same number.
Thank you for hearing and conopening this wonderful school is the sidering my plea for your support First Annual Desert Sky Montessori in providing our precious children Harvest Dinner from 5 to 8 p.m Nov. with another choice and perhaps 12 at the Redmond Grange. The tick- opportunity to grow, learn and beets are $7 per child, $10 per adult, come successful contributors to our $30 for each family of four and chil- community. dren 3 and under are free. You may — Leanna C. West lives in Redmond.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015• THE BULLETIN
B5
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES Larry Dean Black, of Bend Nov. 3, 1962 - Oct. 22, 2015 Arrangements: Aftercare Cremation & Burial, (503) 670-3600 Services: Memorial service will be held on Saturday, October 31, 2015 at 11:00am at Victory Baptist Church. Contributions may bemade to:
Victory Baptist Church
Ernest "Ernie"
Jennings Lathrop,of Bend Sept. 12, 1918 - Oct. 24, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, Bend 541-382-0903, www.bairdfh.corn
Services: A private family ceremony to place the urn in Medford, OR, will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
The Lathrop family has requested that donations in Ernie's memory be made to a charity of one' s
choice.
James Lafayette Williams, of Bend Jan. 7, 1923 - Oct. 25, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorial chapel.corn Services:
A graveside service
will be held Thursday, Oct. 29, 2015, at 11:00 a.m., at Deschutes Memorial Gardens, 63875 N Hwy 97, Bend, OR.
Actor, folksingerandcivil rightsvoice was known for hisbeautiful baritone By William Grimes
and the Village Gate in New
friend from the American Ne-
New York Times News Service
York and the hungry i in San Francisco, he sang at the first
gro Theater, in the films "For
Leon Bibb, an actor turned
folk singer whose powerful, elegant baritone voice made him a prominent figure in the folk-music revival and a stirring performer at the landmark civil rights demonstra-
Love of Ivy" (1968) and "The Lost Man" (1969). "Of all of us, he was probaand reachedabroad television audiencethatsame year when bly the most talented, probahe sang "Sinner Man," one of bly because of that beautiful his signature songs, on "The baritone v o ice," B e l afonte Ed Sullivan Show." said, speaking of the actors Newport Folk Festival in 1959
tions of the 1960s, including Bibb became involved in the the third march from Selma civil rights movement early to Montgomery, Alabama, in on, taking part in voter-regis1965, died Friday in Vancou- tration drives in the South and ver, British Columbia. He was performing at the 1963 March 93. on Washington. In 1965 he The death was confirmed performed in front of the stateby his daughter Doric Bibb house in Montgomery with Clay. Joan Baez, Oscar Brand and Bibb made his Broadway H arry Belafonte, whom h e debut in 1946, one of three had known since their acting black singers in the chorus of days at the American Negro "Annie Get Your Gun," and Theater in Harlem. "He was really committed went on to earn a Tony Award nomination for best support- to the cause of civil rights, ing actor in the song-and-po- and he was hugely inspiring," etry revue "A Hand Is on the Belafonte said in a telephone Gate," whose cast also includ- interview. "Between him and ed Cicely Tyson and James Mahalia Jackson, we had all Earl Jones, in 1967. the music we needed for the The next year he appeared movement." as the love interest of Victoria Charles L eo n A u r t h ello Mallory, a white actress, in Bibb was born on Feb. 7, 1922, City Center's revival of "Car- in Louisville, where his father nival," a daring bit of casting was a postal worker and his at the time. "People may be mother was a homemaker. He attracted to the interracial love sang in church choirs as a boy in the play," Bibb told The New and in the glee club of LouisYork Times. "I don't knock it ville Municipal College, which — but it isn't the most import-
he attendedfortwo years. He trained briefly with the
three large courtrooms,
have limited landscaping. The entrance of the court-
each with windows high on
house will be built to accom-
first on record on "Hootenan-
the east wall to let in natural
ny Tonight," an anthology album assembled by the editor of Sing Out! magazine in 1954. Under the name Lee Charles, he recorded an album with the folk quartet the Skifflers
and a solo album of spirituals for Riverside Records, "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot," before
recording under his own name for Vanguard and other labels. In 1968 he helped create
"Someone New," a television show on WNBC in New York on which, as host, he intro-
duced unknown performers like the cellist Yo-Yo Ma, still in his early teens, and Bar-
ry Manilow, teamed with his singing partner at the time, Jeanne Lucas. While on tour with the revue "Jacques Brel Is Alive and Well
and Living in Paris," he became enchanted with Vancou-
the interior.
Canada and the United States.
county had initially set its
in divorce. In addition to his
March. The state has contributed $6.5 million to the cost
sights on a four-courtroom
ic heart.
ed Bibb to remold himself as a folk singer in the mid-1950s, drawing on the spirituals that one of his aunts had sung to him as a child in Louisville, Kentucky. Albums like "Leon Bibb Sings Folk Songs," releasedby the Vanguard label in 1959, and frequent perfor-
Bibb moved to New York to act in musicals and, while
daughter Doric and his son, Eric, a singer and musician, he is survived by his part-
of construction, while the
ers are happy with the new building. He said it took 100
automat, landed a role in "An- ner, Christine Anton; anothnie Get Your Gun." He ap- er daughter, Amy Bibb-Ford; peared in several more Broad- nine grandchildren; and six way productions, all of them great-grandchildren. short runs, and national tours. His last New York appearIn 1957 he played Jim in "Liv- ance was in 2007 at the B.B. mances on the television show in' the Life," a musical adap- King Blues Club & Grill in "Hootenanny" made him one tation of "The Adventures of Times Square with his fellow of the more prominent folk Huckleberry Finn." folk singer Odetta and his son. singers of the era. A regular He had supporting roles op- He performed last year in Vic-
county setting aside funds for years for the Jefferson Counseveral years in anticipation ty Circuit Court to grow to of the project. three judges, so it could still The new building has be some time until a fourth been designed to be expand- judge is added and a fourth ed to the south in the event courtroomconstruct ed. " When it comes — if i t a fourth judge is assigned to the court and a fourth court- comes — we' re planning room is needed. Williamson ahead for it," he said. said although the expansion — Reporter: 541-383-0387, is not anticipated for 20 years shammers@bendbullet in.corn
at clubs like the Bitter End
posite Sidney Poitier, another
or more, the south face of the
working at a Horn 8z Hardart
Bibb's two marriages ended
toria, British Columbia.
Newman to what he is now," Judy New-
Transportation Authority that
could bevery determined."
system's history, the retirement of the iconic token and
Connecticut for a short time,
Oct. 21 in the Southampton,
reporter for the Central Ore-
and thenback to Oregon. In a surge in ridership. Died on the late 1980s he worked as a
wettest October for Redmond was 1962, with 1.91
inches. Along with rain at lower r
p
With Zen an d
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
October is done, according to the weather service.
Z oi c s t ill
Submitted photo
Spokesman editor Gary Newman kayaks. Newman died lastweek at the age of 68.
young, Newman left journalism to work as a lift operator at Mt. Bachelor, a job that allowed him to share child care
duties with his wife. He spent close to 10 seasons working at the mountain, then signed on
to cover sportsfortheSpokesman in 1997.
Gary H usman, f o rmer publisher of the Spokesman, described Newman as more of an outdoorsman than the
would smile, write down some notes and carry on." Redmond High S c hool baseball coach Mare Horner said Newman would often park himself in the dugout alongside the team when covering games. They'd chat about their families, fishing and hiking during slow moments, Horner said, and when
sports-obsessedtype more of- Horner's children visited their ten seen in newspaper sports dad inthe dugout, Newman departments. Between his love would take pictures of the of skiing, hiking and climbing, interactions and share them "the Central Oregon lifestyle
was almost made for him," Husman said. "The thing that made him
unique as a reporter is he wasn't a jock — he saw the athletic and the entertainment
and the school side of it maybe a little differently than a jock did," Husman said. Kelly Bokn, the former ath-
letic director at Redmond High School, said though he found Newman's approach to team sports "a little unusual," it was also refreshing. Bokn wrote that Newman's positivity and genuine care for the people he interviewed forthe paper re-
minded him of his own father. "He was always very supportive and shed things in a positive light," Bokn wrote in an email. "I never heard Gary say anything negative about any individual or team. He might ask why a team looked upset or angry, and then he
graduated, Newman could still recall the details of his
high school career, she said. Newman turned the skills
he'd developed through work in a different direction offhours, Judy Newman said, writing poetry and s t riving to perfect his nature photography. "He enjoyed life, he enjoyed living, which is why it's so hard," Judy N ewman said.
"He should have lived longer because he just enjoyed evwith him. erything, he enjoyed his kids, H orner s a i d New m a n he enjoyed his family, just would egg him on from time everything." to time, encouraging the coach Trish Pinkerton, a former to share his thoughts about reporter at t h e S pokesman other teams. He said more who worked alongside Newthan once, he got a call from man for most of hi s y ears the athletic director asking if at the paper, said she met he'd actually said what he was Newman years earlier, when quoted as saying in a Spokes- their sons attended the same man story. preschool. "He always kind of added a Pinkerton said she' ll refew things just to make sure member their g ood-natured that rivalry was still in exis- back-and-forth each football tence, some locker room kind season — with Newman pullof stuff," Horner said. ing for the Oregon Ducks and Judy Newman said her hus- her for the Oregon State Uniband was a more committed versity Beavers — and the sports fan than others might small gourd of mate tea he' d have realized, closely follow- sip through a thin silver straw ing both college football and at his desk, a ritual he'd picked basketball. In his work for the up years earlier during his Spokesman, Newman t o ok pleasure in learning the intri-
time in South America.
"He's a genuine nice guy, cacies of the different sports, I'm going to miss him," she and getting to know student sard. athletes and their families. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, Long after a Redmond student shammers@bendbulleti n.corn
loween is expected to be 40
degrees. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.corn
elevations, there may be snow at higher elevations in CentralOregon before
mans' two children, Zen, now
27, and Zoic, now 26.
Fax: 541-322-7254
co m m ission-
make for a c hilly, windy Halloween. "... It is going to be pretty Continued from B1 Redmond records go gusty for the evening time," back to 1 948, h e s a id, Brooks said, looking at the with the driest also only a forecast for the holiday. Temtrace of rain in 1974. The perature around 5 p.m. Hal-
New York, hospital where he gonian in Prineville, and welwas born. comed the birth of the New-
Email: obits@bendbulletin.corn
courthouse,
Rain
presided over the first subway The Newmans moved to and bus fare abatement in the Judy Newman's home state of
Phone: 541-617-7825
remainder comes from the
Fording said although the
building will feature fewer
E. Virgil Conway, 85:Chair- man said. "Quiet, but when man of t h e M e tropolitan he had something in mind, he
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
modate a security screening light. Offices for judges and area where visitors would court staff and jury deliber- pass through metal detecation rooms are also housed tors, but Fording said the on the second story. state court system has not Downstairs, visitors to the yet approved funding for the courthouse will enter into a equipment. public area where they can The building will generpay traffic tickets or attend to ate some of its own power other low-level court matters. through a solar array on the The Jefferson County Dis- roof and will feature an adtrict Attorney's Office will be vanced heating and cooling on the first floor, and a rear system, Williamson said. "If you have a room full entrance will provide a place where sheriff's deputies can of people generating heat, bring inmates into the court- and some offices where peohouse through a secure ele- ple are freezing, the system vator to holding cells on the can kind of share that heat second floor. around the building," he said. Fording said security at the Williamson said crews current courthouse has been expect to have the roof coma concern for years. Defen- pleted by Thanksgiving. By dants, witnesses, court per- early next year, the building sonnel and others all use the will appear more-or-less same elevator and restrooms, complete from the outside, he said, and the building does he said, and crews will turn not have a place to house their attention to finishing The county broke ground on the $14.9 million project in
ill health.
541-61 7-7825.
other sides of the building,
inmates.
he performed frequently in
Continued from B1 "I found him quite handDied Tuesday after having a heart attack following years of some, attractive. Quite similar
Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact
Day next year.
envious." As a folk singer, Bibb was
Sunday edition, the Observer.
Obituary policy
building is expected to be ready to be moved into around Labor
and the land to the south will
May 14, 1935 - Oct. 13, 2015 Arrangements: Virgil Golden Mortuary, Salem, (503) 364-2257. Services: Memorial Service, November 7, 2015, 2:00 p.m., Capital Manor, 1955 Salem-Dallas Hwy., Salem, OR 97304.
— From wire reports
new Jeff erson County Courthouse on Tuesday in Madras.The
Continued from B1 The top floor contains
for black actors that motivat-
Philip French, 82:Longtime film critic for the Guardian's
Joe Klime/The Bulletin
A construction worker uses a grinder on a railing outside the
associated with the American Negro Theater. "We were all
Violet "Vi" Shepard, of Salem
Deaths of note from around the world:
I ~>! III'..~i'
d esign elements than t h e
ver and moved there in the early 1970s. For the next 40 years
ELSEWHERE
c ', I iI)I
Courtbo use
ant thing. To cast black actors in roles where they can bring Army Air Forces, hoping to an extra dimension to the sto- fly with the Tuskegee Airmen, ry is important." but was discharged from the It was the dearth of parts military because of a rheumat-
DEATHS
IIIIt
Brooks said the snow level
should be dropping later
ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications
this week to about 4,000 to 5,000 feet.
While October has been mild so far, the weather system moving in late this week should bring colder w eather and w i nd. T h e
change in weather could
EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.corn
Pastor Thomas Henry Shelton June 11, 1987M etober 19, 2015 Pastor Thomas Henry Shelton, a loving h usband, father, and f r iend wh o l e d many to a relationship with their Lord and Savior, went to be with his heavenly father on Monday, October 19, ao15, in Gresham, Oregon. H e was born on J un e 1 1 , 1 9 27 , i n Pontiac, Michigan, but spent most of his childhood near the North Ssntiam River. T om graduated from M il l C it y H i g h School in 1945 and immediately joined the U.S. Navy during WWII. Upon his return, he went to Northwest Christian College, where he met the love of his life, Ruby Pyle. They were ~ ed o n A u gust 31, 1947. Yam dedicated his life to Christum minislzy and empowered countless people to be a light of God's love. Aiter sexrdnary, he was called to the Bend First Christian Church, the first of many congregationsto be blessed by his leadership. For over four decadeshe passionately served at Allison Park Church, Faith Center, and Powell Butte Chrislisn Church. Tom baptized 832 into the family of God and manned 294 cou les. He is survived by his w ife of 68 years, Ruby, son Randy, daughter Joy T hompson, five grandchildren, and one grestgrandchild. A graveside service will be heldat 2:30 pm on Sunday, November 1, 2015, at Fsirview Cemetery. A fellowship reception will follow at F i rst C hristian Church in Mill City. The family requests that memorials be made to Powell Butte Chrislisn Church.
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
B6
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,lnc. ©2015
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ALMANAC
Low
PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.52" in 1999
CENTRAL:Mostly cloudy today with a
Today Thu. 7:36 a.m. 7: 3 7 a.m. 6:01 p.m. 6: 0 0 p.m. 7:20 p.m. 8: 0 9 p.m. B:51 a.m. 1 0:01 a.m. New F i r s t Full
g Nov 3 Nov 11 Nov 1B Nov 25 Tonight's atty:Cassiopeia is nearly over head before midnight.
today; periods of rain Yach 59/54
this morning, then isolated showers this Floren e 60/55 afternoon.
at The Bailee
Low: 1e' at Burns
UV INDEX TODAY I
51' 46'
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The highertheAccuWealher.rxrmIY Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protscgon.0-2 Low 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extreme.
POLLEN COUNT Wee ds Ab s ent
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• Pa line Brothers 5338
'Be d Su iVere 53/35 51/
• La pine
Ham ton
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Yesterday Today Thursday
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57/40 Enterprise • 56/38
Joseph Grande • 57 41 union
Granitee 51/36
'Baker C 54/35
• John eu Day 3/38 58 / 4 5
tario 57 40
Valee 57/42
Nyssa sa/ 4 4
untura • Burns J56/38
•
Yesterday Today Thursday
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 63/46/0.00 62/51/r 62/54/c La Grande 61/28/0.00 57/41/sh56/38/sh 59/22/Tr 54/35/c 55/30/sh La Pine 59/21/0.00 50/37/sh 51/33/c Brookings 61/52/0.00 60/50/r 62/50/pc M e dford 57/4 3/0.00 66/45/r 6 6/41/pc Gums 58/16/0.00 56/30/sh 56/25/c N e wport 61/4 6 /0.00 59/51/r 5 9/52/c Eugene 62/37/0.00 64/49/r 64/47/sh NorthBend 63/48/0.00 63/52/r 62/51/c Klamath Fags 61/32/0.00 55/31/sh 57/28/pc Ontario 62/33/0.00 57/40/r 62/34/c Lakeview 64/21/0.00 50/30/sh53/24/pc Pendleton 61/35/Tr 57/48/sh 61/46/sh
City Astoria Baker City
Yesterday Today Thursday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 63/4 4/0.0061/51/r 63/53/sh Prinevige 58/ 28/0.0056/38/c 51/35/c Redmond 57/ 23/0.0056/34/c 57/31/c Roseburg 61 / 45/0.00 67/50/r 66/47/c Salem 58/40/0.00 64/51/r 64/51/sh Sisters 55/24/0.00 54/38/sh56/37/ c The Dages 6 4 /35/0.00 59/48/sh 64/49/c
Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday
Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
~ gs ~ t ee ~ 2 0 9 ~ 3 0 s ~ 4 0 s ~s e a ~ ec s ~ 70 9 ~ ag s e ggs ~100s ~ TTOs ~ 109 ~ g s As of 7 a.m.yesterday ; d d d 'd d d Calse * < 'd Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL d X N NNo x x NNN NNNN NNNNN Qlle c 45/31 ** * j 1e d 4 d d s xxx xxxxxx xg EXTREMES C rane Prairie 272 0 0 49% (for the Wickiup 41079 21% YESTERDAY alifax aisp~g i i i , > d dd ddt s~ Pok dd dd d ' " dddddd dd d 0/43 Crescent Lake 4 9 0 66 56% 4B contiguousstates) 43/6 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 4 4 4 1 d d , >Y/51 x x • Billings foe Ochoco Reservoir 10046 23vo National high: 94 d dd dds' a x 9 ts 1/30 Prineville 43135 29vo at Imperial, CA i i ' • 60/41 i z p x e x q d~ d dd d« d d 47/1 / dd Je River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low: 1G 4 e York Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 14B at SaranacLake, NY Che n oines /tff 56/37 ii d d 4 d d Deschutes R.below Wickiup 26 Precipitation: 2.ee" 56/ • SS/3 x x Deschutes R.below Bend 375 at Mary Esther, FL eo eeciico Se l t take ty Omah • Dee 62/44 as/54 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 452 43/3 55/4 LasV as Little Deschutes near LaPine 57 79/5 KansasCity Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 29 eo/ss Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 12 i i e i i Los Ae les e City Crooked R.below Prineville Res.
Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.
54 102 2
FIRE INDEX
Source: USDA Forest Service
City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 83/44/0.00 74/48/s 77/55/pc Akron 59/42/0.00 66/49/r 53/41/sh Albany 56/29/0.00 57/56/r 68/41/sh Albuquerque 73/44/0.00 64/43/s 62/45/pc Anchorage 43/33/0.00 46/37/c 45/33/r Atlanta 55/50/0.10 73/59/c 72/51/pc Atlantic City 61/48/0.00 66/64/r 71/50/pc Austin 85/53/0.00 80/48/s 79/59/pc Baltimore 59/35/0.00 69/56/r 73/42/pc Billings 51/42/0.22 51/30/s 55/38/pc Birmingham 63/57/0.15 74/59/c 75/48/pc Bismarck 52/41/0.31 43/26/c 45/25/pc Boise 62/38/0.00 60/41/c 57/37/c Boston 54/38/0.00 57/56/r 71/47/pc Bridgeport, CT 57/41/0.00 63/59/r 72/47/pc Buffalo 57/37/0.00 65/52/r 54/41/eh Burlington, YT 52/27/0.00 55/51/r 67/43/eh Caribou, ME 48/24/0.00 47/38/pc 61/38/r Charleston, SC 71/58/0.30 80/63/1 80/59/pc Charlotte 56/48/0.65 74/54/1 76/46/pc Chattanooga 60/56/0.46 72/57/t 72/44/pc Cheyenne 55/38/0.05 58/27/s 55/32/pc Chicago 56/50/0.11 57/37/r 52/37/c Cincinnati 54/49/0.92 67/45/ah 56/38/s Cleveland 59/44/0.00 66/45/r 53/42/c ColoradoSprings 67/39/0.01 60/35/s 52/35/pc Columbia, MO 58/51/0.51 62/36/pc 57/35/s Columbia, SC 62/53/1.02 80/59/1 79/53/pc Columbus,GA 60/55/0.18 77/57/c 77/52/pc Columbus,OH 54/45/0.10 66/46/r 55/40/pc Concord, NH 53/23/0.00 53/50/r 71/40/pc Corpus Christi 82/57/0.00 90/62/s 81/71/eh Dallas 79/58/0.00 76/51/s 77/56/pc Dayton 51/46/0.35 65/43/r 54/37/pc Denver 61/40/Tr 63/32/s 59/35/pc Des Moines 52/48/0.46 56/37/c 54/37/s Detroit 59/45/0.00 64/42/r 52/39/eh Duluth 49/43/0.05 45/34/r 46/30/c El Paso 81/53/0.00 76/55/s 76/54/pc Fairbanks 36/30/0.00 35/26/c 29/22/sn Fargo 59/46/0.02 45/35/c 48/32/pc Flagstaff 65/29/0.00 60/34/s 51/32/pc Grand Rapids 61/42/0.00 59/41/r 48/37/c Green Bay 59/45/0.00 55/38/r 50/32/c Greensboro 54/47/0.44 73/55/t 73/45/pc Harrisburg 57/35/0.00 66/59/r 68/43/pc Harfford, CT 58/30/0.00 58/56/r 73/40/pc Helena 49/38/0.01 53/33/s 53/36/c Honolulu 87/75/0.02 ssns/pc 89/75/pc Houston 80/64/0.00 86/57/s 80/60/pc Huntsville 63/56/0.30 74/59/c 75/44/pc Indianapolis 54/47/0.75 63/40/ah 55/38/pc Jackson, MS 73/67/0.38 79/59/pc 77/50/pc Jacksonville rrnolo.os 86/62/c 83/60/pc 63/45/0.00 68/57/0.00 61/55/0.00 80/70/0.49
Auckland Baghdad
59/48/c 65/56/s 66/54/c 79/64/t
"
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis
Tampa Tsns/0.44 Tucson 85/58/0.00 Tulsa 73/55/0.00 Washington, DC 59/44/Tr Yakima Yuma
"
5
p
55/33/s 75/66/t 55/44/pc 69/47/c 56/36/pc 73/58/t 84/67/s 77/60/s 54/32/pc 87/76/pc 55/47/c 56/42/r 57/42/pc 84/58/pc 83/75/pc 62/54/pc 62/53/t 79/54/s 75/65/pc 68/61/pc 60/53/r 64/48/pc
srng/pc
J
Imo ec ears. y ~~~ies
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Eddy Robinson shows his students the proper way to hold their instruments during the Awesome After School Orchestra class Monday at Silver Rail Elementary. Cascade School of Music offers strings
lessons — onviolin, viola, cello and bass — at three elementary schools in Bend.
Orchestra
learning to play the bass; even Not yet, Robinson told the the kid-size bass is heavy and class. Bows on strings comes Continued from B1 taller than she is. next week. "My eyes are supposed to go Beginner classes start— Reporter: 541-61 7-7837, ed this month at Silver Rail there, and they do," she said, aspegman@bendbullet in.corn and Elk Meadow elementary pointing toward the top of the schools and are open to stu- neck. "But your legs get tired." T oward the end of
Mon-
Creek Elementary School day's class, Robinson showed hosts an intermediate class. the students how to make a Dedicated students can learn "bow bunny" with the thumb enough in these classes to skip and two middle fingers, how beginnerlevel orchestra once to hold the bow with a loose they get to middle school. touch and anchor it with the Mition for the year is $390. pinkie. "I don't want squeezing. Eddy Robinson teaches the class at Silver RaiL Later in the Squeezing is bad news," he year his students will learn to said, adjusting their holds one read music and perform in two by one. concerts, but Robinson said
For the first time that day,
the first few months he will fo- the class was quiet, with evcus on posture — how to hold the instrument and the bow,
how to move your fingers to hit the right notes. But elementary schoolers
eryone
c o n centrating on
their fingers. Marriah, the fourth-grader from Ensworth, moved her bow
a cross an
imaginary violin on her shoularen't always so delicate, and der. Without warning, a boy posture isn't priority.
a l w ays t h eir
ran his bow across a violin
lying on the floor nearby. The Lily Peltier, a Miller Elemen- room filled with a creaky, tary School fifth-grader, is squeaky note.
SGHooL NoTEs COLLEGE NOTES Conrad Ryan Scheid,of Bend, has earned a $300 Dean's Award scholarship from the University of Montana School of Journalism. He is a 2010 graduate of Summit High School and the son of Randy and Teri Scheid, of Bend.
How to submit Teen feats:Kids recognIzed recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.) Contact: 541-633-2117,
youth©bendbulletin.corn Mail: P.O.Box6020,Bend,
•
OR 97708
Other schoolnotes: College announcements, mIIItary graduations or traIning completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-633-2117, bulletin@bendbulletin.corn
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Schoolnews:Itemsand announcements of general interest. Contact: 541-383-0354, news@be ndbulletin.corn Student profiles:Know of a kId with a compelling story? Contact: 541-383-0354, aspegman©bendbul letin.corn
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a
74/53/pc 72/44/s
86n4/sh 86n4/t 58/39/r 51/39/c 49/37/c 70/53/c 80/65/pc 66/64/r 66/64/r 76/65/1 69/45/s 57/35/c 85/69/1 89/65/pc 60/38/sh 70/62/r 86/67/s 66/53/r 54/51/r 61/57/r 74/60/1 47/18/pc 58/38/sh 71/58/1 63/55/r 72/52/sh 65/43/c 62/44/pc 84/55/s 77/66/pc 68/56/c 71/55/c 59/35/s 82/62/c 58/52/r 45/35/c 54/42/r 63/38/pc
84n2/t 84/59/s 68/44/pc
101/81/0.00 97/73/s 77/58/0.12 71/57/1 Montreal 50/28/0.00 52/48/r Moscow 43/38/0.18 38/24/c Nairobi 81/62/0.51 77/61/c Nassau 84/73/0.05 87/75/pc New Delhi 88/68/0.00 79/62/pc Osaka 76/52/0.23 69/50/pc Oslo 45/32/0.00 50/42/c Ottawa 52/27/0.00 49/47/r Paris 70/52/0.17 58/48/r Rio de Janeiro 84/73/0.02 80/71/r Rome 68/54/0.14 67/56/1 Santiago 77/54/0.00 74/51/pc Sao Paulo 82/66/0.14 72/64/1 Sap poro 57/36/0.54 54/41/r Seoul 61/53/0.00 60/34/s Shanghai 70/56/0.01 70/60/c Singapore 91/80/0.36 86n8/c Stockholm 48/41/0.00 46/30/s Sydney 65/63/0.06 71/58/pc Taipei 85/73/0.00 82/73/c Tel Aviv 76/66/0.38 75/67/1 Tokyo 78/55/0.03 74/60/pc Toronto 52/37/0.00 61/50/r Vancouver 57/39/0.00 55/50/r Vienna 57/48/0.00 54/47/pc Warsaw 50/30/0.00 50/36/pc
crete e
dents across the district; Bear
68/49/sh 62/41/s 54/37/r 50/35/c
50/36/c 68/40/s 81/63/pc 73/48/pc 74/47/pc 76/53/pc 66/45/pc 54/34/s 85/64/pc 86/67/pc 55/38/s 75/48/pc 80/61/pc 56/42/sh 68/41/r 72/45/pc 77/47/pc 50/29/s 60/35/pc 76/44/pc 55/39/sh 80/53/s 58/40/s
52/40/eh 81/65/pc 76/63/pc 71/57/s 74/54/s 60/37/c 81/60/pc 59/53/r 50/31/s 54/42/sh 59/35/s 83/67/pc 76/56/pc 64/40/s 74/48/pc 59/39/s 65/41/c 86/66/pc
I
Mecca Mexico City
CC .~ 4,
76/50/pc 73/45/s 82/63/c 81/62/pc
70/61/r 71/49/0.00 66/38/s 63/36/0.00 59/39/sh 92/64/0.00 90/65/pc
Wichita
59/49/s 64/57/pc 62/51/r 77/63/1
60/36/0.00 Beirut 75/65/0.79 Berlin 56/38/0.00 Bogota 66/50/0.03 Budapest 57/39/0.00 BuenosAires 79/57/0.02 Cabo San Laces 88/72/0.00 Cairo 81 /68/0.01 Calgary 45/30/0.04
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 45/28/0.00 46/42/sh 47/41/r 55/52/0.30 60/35/pc 55/35/s 61/39/Tr 60/38/r 48/36/eh 79/57/0.00 79/61/pc 75/57/pc 56/54/0.88 67/47/t 61/37/s 58/41/Tr 57/31/pc 55/31/s
65/59/0.54 82/61/0.00 59/55/1.27 58/42/0.18 66/60/0.51 Miami 85/77/0.01 Milwaukee 57/46/0.01 Minneapolis 55/49/0.07 Nashville 61/58/1.70 New Orleans 75/71/Tr New YorkCity 59/45/0.00 Newark, NJ 59/39/0.00 Norfolk, YA 65/58/0.03 OklahomaCity 74/50/0.00 Omaha 52/48/0.09 Orlando 81/71/0.03 Palm Springs 93/65/0.00 Peoria 57/47/0.52 Philadelphia 62/42/0.00 Phoenix 89/65/0.00 Pittsburgh 59/40/Tr Portland, ME 52/28/0.00 Providence 57/34/0.00 Raleigh 59/50/0.42 Rapid City 57/40/0.00 Reno 67/43/0.00 Richmond 55/44/0.16 Rochester, NY 55/32/0.00 Sacramento 72/56/0.00 St. Louis 61/55/0.79 Salt Lake City 59/43/0.00 San Antonio 85/56/0.00 San Diego 83/63/0.00 San Francisco 67/58/0.00 San Jose 69/57/0.00 Santa re 67/37/0.00 Savannah 71/59/0.08 Seattle 61/46/0.00 Sioux Fags 59/42/0.00 Spokane 55/42/0.10 Springfield, Mo 61/57/0.63
gong/o'.58 gong/t 93/79/pc
Bangkok Bailing
Yesterday Today Thursday
City
i
Amsterdam Athens
59/40/s 75/66/1 54/42/pc 69/46/pc 57/39/pc 78/64/pc 87/70/s • /45 • L iit l « dr 77/64/pc pheon v Anchorage Albuque ue 76/5 i it a 45/31/pc • Se/47 46(3 II 0 54/43 Cancun 88nr/0.65 85/73/t 7 /ee i i • Oeue ra Dublin 55/54/1.30 56/47/pc pa d Edinburgh 55/46/0.00 57/43/r d, dee 75/55 N WNN N x k v Geneva 54/48/0.00 60/44/r ','tfouptbte ~7 Harare 82/58/0.00 84/55/s 'se/rss,' d d c ttrlruros, 5 Hou on Hong Kong 86/75/0.00 84/77/s o~ A sv Chihuahua so/es Istanbul 64/55/0.01 60/54/s 82/50 aml Jerusalem 71/58/0.11 64/55/eh Monte y trs/59 Johannesburg 77/54/0.00 83/52/s N NN N ) ' i % i Lima 75/65/0.00 75/66/pc Lisbon 64/55/0.02 66/62/c Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 64/52/0.00 58/51/c T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 61/54/0.17 61/48/c gong/o'.oo 89/79/c Manila '
Bend/Sunriver Mod~erato ~ ~ Redmond/Madras ~M od ~erato ~ Sisters ~l L ow ~ Prineviue ~M o d~erato ~ La Pine/Gilchrist Not a vailable
Cooler; rain and drizzle in the morning
Yesterday Today Thursday
Mesc am Losti ne
dl N, 55/4
• 57/
upi
29'
TRAVEL WEATHER
lington 60/so l50
• W co
50/
Sale
64/49
he Oaa
t,
Breezy in themorning; mostly cloudy
Rather cloudy
• Fort Rock Riley 56/30 Greece t • 52/35 53/34 50/36 • Ch ristmas alley Jordan V Hey 61/55 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 67/50 55/39 Marsh Lake 55/38 50/35 52/35 Gra • Burns Jun tion • Paisley a • 56/39 Chile quin Goid ach • 7 MedfO d '54l34 Rome BT/ ,66/45 58/39 Klamath Fields • • Ashl nd Falls • Lakeview McDermi Bro ings 62/ 60/5 55/31 50/30 57/37
0'
G rasses T r ee s Long Lo~w
1
Grove Oakridge OREGON EXTREMES Co 6 5 YESTERDAY High: ed' Bandon Ro seburg
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
l47
portland sg/st
•
Source: JimTodd,OMSI
~ 1
5
WEST:Mostly cloudy
SUN ANDMOON
T g~ 1
Variable cloudiness
SUNDAY
57'
46'
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. umatiga Hood e0/49 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
Tigamo • e0/53 Mc innviu
few showersmoving Lincoln Month to date (normal) O . ee" (0.4e")through the area. 60/55 Year to date(normal) 7.78 " (7.65") Cloudy most of Newpo Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 2" tonight. 59/51
10 a.m. Noon
"'"
SATURDAY
OREGON WEATHER
EAST:Clouds and limited sunshine today Seasid TEMPERATURE with a couple ofshow- 62/56 Yesterday Normal Record ers around, especially Cannon 57 57 77' i n 2003 this afternoon. 61/56 26' 31' 12' in 1954
ria
Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.
High
Mostly cloudy with a shower in spots
FRIDAY
55' 36'
35'
t,
Mostly cloudy with a pass ing shower or two
I
"'"
LOW
53' i f' i
THURSDAY
• s • •
•
96nz/s 72/55/t 62/39/c
35/29/pc 76/61/c 87/73/pc 78/61/pc 67/48/pc 48/44/c 57/36/c 59/50/c
r morc
66/48/t 76/49/pc 73/62/c
49/38/pc 58/33/eh 66/58/c 87/78/pc 46/34/pc 72/58/s 87/73/pc 74/66/1 64/56/r 50/38/c 55/47/pc 52/43/c
50/36/pc
IN THE BACI4 BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N HL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4 NBA, C3 NFL, C4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
WCL BASEBALL
New divisions, playoff format Next summer will be quite different from previous West Coast League seasons. The summer collegiate baseball league released schedules for its 11 franchises Tuesday and announced a change in postseason format. Opening day for the league's 12th season is scheduled for June 3, highlighted by the league champion Bend Elks hosting their longtime rival Corvallis Knights. But the biggest news announced involved a league realignment.
O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports
PREP VOLLEYBALL
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
LavaBearswin play-in,make playoffs
He frich: Pac-12not given due for parity
Bulletin staff report Bend High made it a mission to take charge of its Class 5A volleyball play-in match from the outset, limit Liberty's
offensive output and win in
of Hillsboro 25-7, 25-16, 25-10 to advance to the first round
"We don't have just one goto player," Bend coach Kristin
belt. That, Cooper said, could
of the state playoffs. The
Cooper said of her team's
be beneficial for the Lava
Lava Bears expect to play at home for their first-round
depth. "That is something Bears as they eye a fourth that's different this year. We' re straight trip to the final site. "We were trying out some not the tall team anymore, but we' ve got pretty strong new things and really trying hitters." to hitourserves, "Cooper said, While many of the top eight "so it was good for us to play a teams in 5A have had a week match like this where everything's on the line.... For them off after automatically qualifying for the first round, Bend to kind of play under that presheads into the playoffs with a sure, I think that helps us."
totaled 10 kills, 13 digs and four aces, Bend, ranked No.
match, which is scheduled for Saturday. CambreeScotthadnine kills and four blocks for Bend, Kaci Cox added nine kills, and Katie Reed had with seven kills. Kaelyn Hanson finished
8 in 5A, cruised past Liberty
with 31 assists.
three sets against the visiting
Falcons. Check off all three tasks. Led by Tatiana Ensz, who
competitive match under its
being hurt with too many good teams beating each
PREP BOYS SOCCER
other. In short: Yes. "That is a natural result and whether it is the nine-
game (conference) schedule or everybody having the ability to beat everyone
else, unfortunately there are extra losses," Helfrich said. "From a perception
standpoint, in our conference we don't get the benefit of the doubt. In some con-
ferences, if two teams lose unexpectedly, that speaks to the depth of the confer-
ence. In our conference, it' s parity equals weakness. It is one of those things we are fighting and we need to keep grinding through." See Ducks /C4
Next up Oregon at Arizona St. When: 7:30 p.m. Thursday
from the first half the
season andthe two top teams from the second half each advancing to the WCL playoffs. The league's all-star game will be hosted by the Cowlitz Black Bears in Longview, Washington, and is scheduled for July19. The playoffs are slated to begin Aug. 9.
TV:ESPN Radio:KBND 1110-AM
NBA
Age only
— Bulletin staff report
a number
PREP VOLLEYBALL Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin
Summit's Casey Weaver, center, celebrates after scoring the game-winning goal in the 79th minute against Mountain View on Tuesday night. Summit defeated Mountain View 2-1.
the state tournament today when it hosts Days Creek, the No.3 team out of the Skyline League, in the first round of the playoffs. Start time is scheduled for 5 p.m. — Bulletin staff report
MLB Royals need 14 innings for win Alex Gordon hit a tying home run with one out in the ninth inning, and Eric Hosmer hit a run-scoring sacrifice fly in the 14th to lift Kansas City to a 5-4 win over the New YorkMets in the longest opener in World Series history, C3
for All-Stars By Cliff Brunt The Associated Press
For the third straight
a third straight trip to
EUGENE — In the weekly Pac-12 coaches conference call'Ittesday, Mark conference's reputation was
Klamath Falls both leaving the WCL,and with a new franchise added in Gresham, the West Coast League has departed from the three-division layout it had featured the past two seasons. Bendwill be joined by Gresham, Corvallis, Cowlitz, Kitsap andYakima Valley to form the South Division, while Kelowna, Victoria, Bellingham, Wenatchee andWalla Walla will make upthe North Division. The WCLboard of directors also announced a change in the league's playoff format. A split-season system will decide postseason qualifiers — with the best team from eachdivision
season, Trinity Lutheran makes will make anappearance in theClass1A volleyball state playoffs. The Saints of Bend, ranked No. 4 in1A, went undefeated in Mountain Valley Leagueplay during the regular season but lost to Hosanna Christian in the MVL tournament final. Trinity Lutheran will begin its quest toward
The (Eugene) Register-Guard
Helfrich was asked if the
With Medford and
Saints to host playoff match
By Steve Mims
• Mountain View would have won the IMCwith a win; Summit jumps upto finish 2nd A%
Bulletin staff report Ron Kidder knew a draw on
Tuesday night would do Summit no good.
ii'~~
The Storm coach sent extra
players up the field, pressing Mountain View and hoping for one final goal. In the 79th minute, Casey Weaver came through. The junior collected a cross from Ragnar Schmidt and buried a shot to lift Sum-
ii~ll
•s
yO
•0 aO
mit to a 2-1 Intermountain
Conference boys soccer home win — denying the Cougars the IMC title and earning the
Storm the league's No. 2 seed in the Class 5A postseason. "I knew we were creating re-
Inside • Bend High leapfrogs Mountain View to win conference. Prep roundup,C4
Summit
this season," Kidder said. "Put
goalkeper
togetheradecentgame, and
Garrett Jep-
we' ll take one step forward
son grabs the
or one step back or two steps back. It's just been a series of highs and lows this year. But that was definitely a great way to end the regular season and a big step for us heading into playoffs." Mountain View (5-2-1, 9-4-1)
ball to prevent Mountain View's Zach Emerson
from scoring during the first half.
day's play-in round and will be without senior midfielder Taylor Willman, who suffered O See morephotosfrom Tues- a likely season-ending injury day night's game onThe Tuesday, and Emerson, who Bulletin's website:hendhulletin. was ejected after receiving two corn/sports/highschool yellow cards and is required to
O
ally good goal-scoring opportunities," Kidder said. "But it' s soccer.Sometimes you can do in. I was hopeful that we could
tain View an early lead after scoring in the second minute. In the 35th minute, however, the Storm's Mac Van Der
get one." Zach Emerson gave Moun-
Velde scored off an Ivan Kufeldt corner kick to even the
that. Sometimes they don't go
will be on the road for Satur-
match l-l at halftime, setting
sit out the No. 8 Cougars' next contest.
up Weaver's goal and earning Summit (5-2-1 IMC, 6-5-3 overall) a home play-in match on Saturday. ' We' ve been so up and down
the road Saturday."
"These guys never quit," Cougars coach Jerry Jimenez said. "I think these guys will bounce back and get a win on
Kobe Bryant is still a Los Angeles Laker. NBA fans are anxiously waiting to see what he has left, wondering if this is his last year. Well, probably not wise to count him
• Warriors
out justyetor any of the
open title
seven former
defense A l l -Stars who with win.
a r e at least 37
NBA yea r s old and roundup, expected to C3 contribute on the court this
year as the NBA began its season Tuesday night. Bryant, the 13th pick in
the 1996 draft,isback after missing much of last season with a shoulder injury. He joins Tim Duncan, Dirk Nowitzki, Kevin Garnett, Manu Ginobili, Paul Pierce and Vince Carter — all drafted between 1995 and 1999.
See Aging /C3
YOUTH SPORTS
W hat happens when parentscall,and threatentofire,shots By Juliet Macur
NHL Canadiens lose their 1st game
New York Times News Service
Montreal has aninegame, season-opening winning streak snapped in a loss at Vancouver. NHL roundup,C3
as he had, again and again, for over two decades now, when
ORVELT, Pa. — Rick
N
Albright was headed to a youth football game
thing strange in the parking lot of Hurst Field here, home
JULIET
MACUR
one Tuesday this month, just
to the Mount Pleasant Area
Junior Football League. There, in the parking space normally reserved for his father, the league president for
his son, Rick Jr., called with
said. "You won't believe what I found."
the past 20 years, were four bullets.
disturbing news. "Dad, you better hurry and
Albright's son had already Each had the name of a called the police. He told them league official on it, written
come out to the field," Rick Jr.
that he had run over some-
in marker. One said, "Rick."
On the other end of the line, Rick Albright absorbed what his son had just told him and then whispered, "Whoa." The game that day was called off. It had been a m akeup of agame thathad been postponed earlier in theseason,aftertheleague's vicepresident had received
league. Better safe than sorry, everyone said. Now Albright, a 62-yearold retired machinist, did the only thing he could think of to keep everyone safe: He canceledthe season'sremaining four games. Two days after the bullets were found, he received a threatening letter
a threatening letter. The
at home.
vice president later quit the
See Youth /C4
C2
THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREB DARD
TODAY SOCCER U-17 World Cup,teams TBA U-17 World Cup,teams TBA U-17 World Cup,teams TBA
Time TV/Radio 12:55 p.m. FS1 12:55 p.m. FS2 12:55 p.m. FS2
BASEBALL
World Series, N.Y.Mets at Kansas City
5 p.m.
Fox
BASKETBALL
NBA, SanAntonio at Oklahoma City NBA, NewOrleans at Portland
5 p.m. E S PN 7 p.m. BlazerNet;
KBND 1110-AM;KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
NBA, Minnesota at L.A. Lakers HOCKEY NHL, Pittsburgh at Washington
NHL, Nashville at SanJose
7:30 p.m. ESPN 5 p.m. NBCSN 7:30 p.m. NBCSN
GOLF
PGA Tour,CIMBClassic
7:30 p.m. Golf
TENNIS WTA Finals
10 p.m. Tennis
GOLF
2 a.m. Golf 7:30 p.m. Golf 2 a.m. (Fri) Golf
Thursday Girls water polo:MountainViewat Madras,5p.m.; Summiat t Redmond,3;30p.m. Boys waterpolo:MountainViewat Madras,6p.m.; Summiat t Redmond,4:30p.m.
HOCKEY
IN THE BLEACHERS
NHL In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclrck 10/2u www.gocomrcs.corn/inthebleachers
Friday Football:Bendat MountainView,7 p.m.; Ridgeview at Redmo nd, 7 p,mcSummit at North Salem,7 p.m.; 4Aplay-in, Henleyat CrookCounty, 7 p.m.; PleasantHil at LaPine, 7p.mc Culverat Stanfield, 7 p.m. Girls water polo: RidgeviewatRedmond,3:30p.m.; Bendat Mountain View,6:30p.m. Boyswaterpolo:RidgeviewatRedmond,4:30p.m.; Bendat Mountain View,7:30p.m. Saturday Volleyball: 5A first round,TBOat Summit; 5Afirst round,TBDat Bend;4Afirst round,TBDat Sisters; 4A firstround,TBOat CrookCounty; 2Afirst round, TBOat Culver
BASEBALL MLB playoffs
n
«V< tt/
MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL
12:55 p.m. FS1 12:55 p.m. FS2 3:30 p.m. Pac-12 3 :55 p.m. F S 2 4 p.m. SEC 6 p.m. SEC 7 p.m. P a c-12 7 p.m. Roo t
FOOTBALL
College, North Carolina at Pittsburgh College, TexasSt. at Georgia Southern College, West Virginia at TCU NFL, Miami at NewEngland College, Oregon atArizona St.
Today Volleyball: 1A firstround,DaysCreekatTrinity Lutheran, 5p.m.
Crosscountry:StatechampionshipsatLaneCommunity Collegein Eugene: Class 5A, 1:15p.m.; Class4A,11:15a.m. Boys soccer: LaPineat Pleasant Hil, TBD Girls soccer: 4Aplay-in, TBOat Sisters
THURSDAY EuropeanTour, Turkish Airlines Open PGA Tour,CIMBClassic EuropeanTour, Turkish Airlines Open SOCCER U-17 World Cup,Croatia vs. Germany U-17 World Cup,Mali vs. North Korea Women's college, UCLA at California U-17 World Cup,Francevs. Costa Rica Women's college, Florida at Georgia Women's college, TexasA&M at Missouri Women's college, Southern Cal atStanford MLS playoffs, Sporting KansasCity at Portland
ON DECK
4 p.m. E S PN 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 4 :30 p.m. F S 1 5:25 p.m. CBS,NFL 7:30 p.m. ESPN; KBND 1110-AM
BASKETBALL
NBA, Atlanta at NewYork NBA, Dallas at L.A. Clippers
5 p.m. TNT 7:30 p.m. T NT
TENNIS WTA Finals
8:30 p.m. Tennis
Listingsarethemost accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL 100 internatiOnal PlayerS On NBArOSterS —All 30 NBA teams will have atleast one international player on the roster for the second consecutive year.Toronto leadsthe leaguewith seven while Clevel and,Minnesota,SanAntonioandUtahhavesixeach.Theleague says a record 10African and nine Brazilian players are on rosters. Canada leads with 12 players, followed byFrancewith 10. Thereare eight players from Australia. ThePortland Trail Blazers haveoneinternational player, rookie Luis Montero, who is from theDominican Republic.
FANTASY SPORTS Trade grOuP aimS to Stem regulatian dy fiXing Self —The trade group representing both daily and seasonlong fantasy sports companies is hoping to head-off outside regulation by regulating itself. The FantasySports TradeAssociation announcedTuesday it would form the Fantasy Sports Control Agency led byformer acting U.S. Labor Secretary Seth D.Harris. Nevadaregulators recently decided that daily fantasy sports is a form of gambling andcompanies would need to belicensed with the state in order to keep doing business there. Other states are considering legislation that would regulate and tax the industry.
GYMNASTICS U.S. WOmen Win WOrldtitle — TheU.S.women's gymnastics team won its third straight world title Tuesday night, going nearly mistake free in Glasgow, Scotland, to easily grab the gold andstate a case as the heavyfavorite to repeat next summer at the 2016 Olympics. The Americans put together a total of181.338, well clear of China and far ahead ofsurprising Great Britain during two hours that felt like little more than atwo-hour exhibition of U.S. dominance. The title is the fifth world crown for the U.S., all of them coming after Martha Karolyi took over asnational team coordinator in late 2000.
MIXED MARTIAL ARTS ROBSey,COaChdeCline to anSWer CritiCiSm —UFCchampion RondaRouseyisn't sharing her opinion of her mother's sharp criticism of her coach,EdmondTarverdyan. Tarverdyanalso declined to trade verbal shots with AnnMaria De Mars on Tuesday during a promotional appearancefor Rousey's next title defense,which comes Nov. 15 against Holly Holm in Melbourne,Australia. DeMars called Tarverdyan n a terrible coach" andna bad person" in avideo interview with LatiNation earlier this month. "Any reaction or responsehave I to my mother, she's going to hear it from me,andnot amedia outlet," Rousey said, declining to indicate whether shehadconfronted her mother about it. Rousey andTarverdyan havebeenworking together for five years.
MOTOR SPORTS HarVick I dan't need to defend mySelf' —Reigning NASCARchampion Kevin Harvick shrugged off his critics Tuesday and insisted he did not intentionally cause awreck nearthe end of the race atTalladegaSuperspeedway to preserve his spot in the playoffs and keephis bid for a repeat alive. Harvick was accused byat least four other drivers of triggering an 11-car accident at the endof Sunday's race. NASCAR said Tuesday areview of the incident failed to show Harvick did anything intentional, and healso dismissed the claims. "They can look at it100 different ways, but you can't quit. You can't roll over and bedone with it and say, 'Wetried our best,'" Harvick said. "I don't need to defend myself."
SOCCER U.S. Star WamdaCh to retire at end Of year — Abby Wambach, the leading scorer in international soccer history and the 2012 world Player of theYear, will retire after the United States women's national team endsits World Cupvictory tour in December. Wambach, 35, has made252 appearances for the U.S. in a15-year international career, playing in four World Cupsandscoring 184 goals — by far the most for any men's or women's player. — Fromwirereports
All TimesPacific
WORLDSERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Tuesday'sGame Kansas City 5, N.Y.Mete4, 14 innings, Kansas City leadsseries1-0 Today'sGame N.Y.Mets(deGrom14-8) atKansas City (Cueto4-7),
"Good arm, Dewey!"
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT
EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Montreal 10 9 1 0 18 3 6 1 7 Tampa Bay 1 0 5 3 2 12 2 7 2 6 Florida 9 5 3 1 11 3 0 1 8 Boston 8 4 3 1 9 33 29 Detroit 9 4 4 1 9 22 24 Ottawa 8 3 3 2 8 24 26 Buffalo 9 3 6 0 6 20 29 Toronto 8 1 5 2 4 19 28 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA N .Y. Rangers 10 6 2 2 14 2 8 2 0 N .Y.Islanders 9 6 2 1 13 3 1 2 2 W ashington 7 6 1 0 12 2 9 1 8 P hiladelphia 8 4 2 2 10 1 9 2 2 NewJersey 9 4 4 1 9 21 26 Pittsburgh 8 4 4 0 8 13 16 Carolina 9 3 6 0 6 17 26 Columbus 10 2 8 0 4 22 41 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Dallas 9 7 2 0 14 3 1 2 4 Nashville 8 6 1 1 13 2 5 1 6 St. Louis 9 6 2 1 13 2 5 2 0 Minnesota 9 6 2 1 13 2 8 2 5 Chicago 9 6 3 0 12 1 9 1 6 Winnipeg 9 5 3 1 11 2 9 2 5 Colorado 8 2 5 1 5 20 25 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA Los Angeles 9 6 3 0 12 2 0 1 8 Vancouver 9 4 2 3 11 2 5 1 8 Arizona 1 0 5 4 1 11 2 7 2 8 SanJose 8 5 3 0 10 2 3 1 8 Edmonton 10 3 7 0 6 24 31 Calgary 9 2 7 0 4 16 35 Anaheim 9 1 6 2 4 9 25
Tuesday'sGames Boston6,Arizona0 Columbus 3, NewJersey1 Buffalo 4,Philadelphia3, OT College WTA Tour Carolina3, Detroit1 AU TimesPDT WTAChampionships Florida 4,Colorado1 TuesdayetSingapore St. Louis2, TampaBay0 PAC-12 RoundRobin 4,Edmonton 3 North FlaviaPennetta (7), Italy,def.AgnieszkaRadwanska Minnesota Los Angele4, s Winnipeg 1 Conf Overall (5), Poland, 7-6(5), 6-4. 4,Anaheim3 W L W L PF PA MariaShara pova(3), Russia, def.SimonaHalep Dallas Vancouver 5, Montreal 1 Stanford 5 0 6 1 262 144 (1), Rom ania, 6-4,6-4. Today'sGames WashingtonSt 3 1 5 2 255 217 Califorma 2 2 5 2 265 187 Calgaryat Ottawa,4:30p.m. Oregon 2 2 4 3 275 252 RODEO PittsburghatWashington, 5 p.m. Tuesday'sboxscore Washington 1 3 3 4 168 132 NashvilleatSanJose, 7:30p.m. OregonSt. 0 4 2 5 143 218 Thursday'sGames Professional South Carolinaat N.Y.Islanders,4 p.m. Royals 5, Nets 4 (14 inn.) Cont Overall LEADERS NewJerseyat Philadelphia, 4p.m. W L W L PF PA (NationalFinalsRodeoqualifiers) BuffaloatPittsburgh, 4p.m. New York KansasCity Utah 3 1 6 1 243 159 BarebackRiding adoatTampaBay,4:30p.m. eb r hbi ab r hbi UCLA 2 2 5 2 249 190 1, Kaycee Feild, SpanishFork, Utah,$118,146.2, Color AnaheimatSt.Louis, 5 p.m. Grndrsrf 5 1 1 1 AEscorss 6 2 1 1 ArizonaSt. 2 2 4 3 204 191 AustinFoes,Terrebonne,Ore., $98,741.3, JakeBrown, ChicagoatWinnipeg, 5p.m. OWrght3b 7 0 2 0 Zobrist2b 6 1 3 0 SouthernCal 2 2 4 3 272 152 Hillsboro,Texas,$97,994. 4, EvanJayne, Marseile, ancouverat Dallas, 5:30p.m. OnMrp2b 7 1 2 0 Lcaincf 6 1 1 0 Arizona 2 3 5 3 334 259 Fran ce,$93,020.5,BobbyMote,Culver,Ore.r$88,486. V Cespdscf-If 6 1 1 0 Hosmer1b 3 0 0 2 Colorado 1 3 4 4 238 206 6,Gl intCannon,Wager,Texas,$86,686.7,Tim O'Con- Montrealat Edmonton,6 p.m. Ouda1b 6 0 2 0 KMorlsdh 3 0 0 0 nell, Zwinglelo,we,S86,565.8,TannerAus,Granite Falls, TdArndc 6 0 1 1 JDysonpr-dh 2 0 0 0 Thursday'sGame Minn. ,$85,660.9,WillLowe,Canyon,Texas,$82,982. confer(If 2 0 0 1 Mostks3b 6 0 2 1 OregonatArizonaSt., 7:30 p.m. 10, GrinLarsen,Inglis, Manitoba, $81,627. SOCCER Lagarscf 3 1 2 0 S.Perezc 6 0 2 0 Saturday'sGames 11, CalebBennet, Tremonton, Utah,$81,302. 12, SouthernCalat California, noon WFlorsss 4 0 0 0 AGordnlf 5 1 1 1 S eth Hardw i c k, Lara m i e , W yo. , 38 0 , 6 39. 13, Gl i n t La y e, MLS playoffs K Jhnsndh 1 0 0 0 Riosrf 3 0 0 0 ColoradoatUCLA, noon Cadogan ,Alberta,$80,307.14,StevenPeebles,RedOregonSt.atUtah,4 p.m. Cuddyrph-dh3 0 0 0 Orlandrf 3 0 1 0 mond,Ore.,$80,085. 15, WinnRatliff, Leesvige,La., MAJORLEAGUESOCCER S tanford at W a shi n gton S t., 7;30 p. m . Niwnhsph-dh1 0 0 0 All TimesPDT S75,754. Arizona at W a shi n gton, 8 p. m . Totals 5 1 4 113 Totals 4 9 5 115 Steer Wrestling New York 000 111 010 000 00 — 4 1, ClaytonHase, Terrell, Texas,$95,181.2, Hunter KNOCKOU TROUND KansasCity 100 002 001 000 01 — 6 Today'sGames NFL Cure,Hogiday,Texas, $92,393. 3,TyErickson, Helena, Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. Mont. , 3 8 9 , 7 8 0 . 4 , N i c k Gu y , S p a r t a , Wi s . , $ 8 3 , 2 8 8 . 5 , New En g l a n d a t D . C. U n i t e d ,4:30p.m. NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE E—O.Wright (1), Hosmer(1). LOB—NewYork11, KyleIrwin,Roberlsdale, Ala., $76,586.6, LukeBranquin- Los Angeleat s Seattle, 7 p.m. All Times Pacific KansasCity 13.2B—Zobrfst 2(2). HR —Granderson ho, LosAlamos, Calif., $76,191.7, TylerWaguespack, Thursday'sGames (1), A.Escobar (1), A.Gordon(1). SB—Lagares(1), L. Gonzales,La., S75,245. 8, SethBrockman, Wheatland, Torontoat Montreal, 4p.m. AMERICAN CONFERENCE Cain(1). CS—D.Wright (1). S—W.Flores,A.Escobar. Wyo., S71,559. 9, Bayl o r Roche, Trem on ton, Utah, SportingKansasCity atPortland, 7 p.m. East SF — Conforto, Hosmer2. W L T Pct PF PA S71,555.10, Trevor Knowles, MountVernon, Ore., IP H R E R BBSO 60 0 1 .000213 126 S71,128. NewYork 42 0 . 667 152 105 11, K.C.Jones,Decatur, Texas, $70,985.12, Dakota Harvey 6 5 3 3 2 2 v., $67,553.13,Tanner Milan, CoDEALS 33 0 . 500 147 137 Eldridge,Elko,Ne A.Reed 1 0 0 0 0 0 Alberta,$66,327. 14,CaseyMartin, Sulphur,ta., 34 0 . 429 176 173 chrane, ClippardH,1 2 3- 1 0 0 1 2 S65,156.15,BlakeKnowles, Heppner, Ore., $64,747. South Transactions FamiliaBS,1-1 1 1 - 3 1 1 1 0 0 W L T P ct PF PA TeamRoping(header) BASEBALL Niese 2 1 0 0 0 3 Indianapolis 34 0 . 429 147 174 1, ClayTryan,Bilings, Mont.,$130,497.2, Derrick AmencenLeague B.colonLg-1 2 1 - 3 3 1 0 3 0 Houston 25 0 . 286 154 199 Begay ,SebaDalkai,Ariz.,$94,868.3,ChadMasters,CeKANSAS CITYROYALS— Selected the contract KansasCity Jacksonvile 25 0 . 286 147 207 dar Hill,Tenn.,$92,658.4,Trevor Brazile, Decatur,Texas, Volquez 6 6 3 3 1 3 Tennesse e 15 0 . 167 119 139 S92,268. 5, AaronTsinigine, TubaCity, Ariz., $83,768. of INF RautMondesi Jr. fromNorthwestArkansas 2 -3 0 0 0 0 1 (TL). Desi g natedRH PJoba Chamberlain for assignO.Duffy North 6,JakeCooper,Monument,N.M.,$80,933.7,Colby W L T Pcf PF PA Loveg, K.Herrera 11-3 3 1 0 0 2 Madisonvige,Texas,$78,830.8,ErichRogers, ment. 60 0 1.000182 122 Round National League Hochevar 1 1 0 0 0 0 Rock,Ariz., $78,669.9,NickSartain, Dover,Okla., 43 0 . 571 158 131 374,079.10,LukeBrown,Stephenvile, Texas,$72,410. NEW YORKMETS— AddedINFJuanUribeto W.Davis 1 0 0 0 0 3 2 5 0 . 286147 182 Madson 1 1 0 0 1 2 11, JakeBarnes,Scottsdale,Ariz., $71,911. 12, their WorldSeriesroster. 16 0 . 143 161 188 ClaySmith,BrokenBow, Okla., $71,228.13,Coleman PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES — Agreedto terms C.YoungW,1-0 3 0 0 0 1 4 West HBP—byVotquez(K.Johnson). WP —Clippard. Proctor, Pryor,Okla., $70,130.14, RileyMinor,Ellens- with benchcoachLarry Bowaand third basecoach W L T Pcf PF PA 7—5:09.A—40,320 (37,903). burg,Wah s., $67,592.15, MattSherwood, Pima,Ariz., JuanSamuel. Denver 60 0 1.000139 102 S67,436. PITTSBURGHPIRATES — ClaimedRHP Jorge Oakland 33 0 . 500 144 153 TeamRoping(heeler) Rondon off waiversfromBaltimore. Announceda KansasCity 25 0 . 286 150 172 1, JadeCorkill, Fagon,Nev., $130,497.2, Clay four-yearplayerdevelopment contract extensionwith SanDiego 25 0 . 286 165 198 O' BrieCo FOOTBALL n oper, Gardnervige, Nev., $95,988. 3, Patrick Indianapolis(IL). NATIONAL CONFERENCE Smith,Lipan,Texas$92,2684 TravisGraves JayOkla., BASKETB ALL East merica's Line 65.5,RyanMotes,Weatherford,Texas,$82,637. National Basketball Association W L T Pcf PF PA S85,2 ATLANTA HAWKS—Exercised their fourth-year N.Y.Giants 43 0 . 571 166 156 6, KollinVonAhn,Blanchard, Okla., $79,024.7, Travis NFL 34 0 . 429 148 168 Woodard,Stockton, Calif., S78,519.8, KoryKoonlz, optionsonGsTimHardawayJr. andDennis Schroder Favorite OpenCurrent 0/U Underdog Washington S teph e n v i l l e , T e x a s , $ 7 8 , 4 6 8 . 9 , P a u l E a ves, Lone d e l , for the 2016-17 season. Philadelphia 34 0 . 429 160 137 Thursday $77,430.10,CaryPetska,Marana,Ariz.,$74,827. 24 0 . 333 121 158 Mo., LOSANGELESCLIPPERS— Exercised their opPATRIOT S 8 8 51t / t Dol phins Dallas 11, RichSkelton, Llano,Texas, $74,079. 12,Junior tion on GC.J. Wilcoxforthe2016-17 season. South Sunday W L T Pcf PF PA Nogueira,Scotlsdale,Ariz., $71,333.13,JakeLong, MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES— Exercised their third4 5 451 / 2 Chiefs C offeyvi le,Kan.,$68,344.14, BradyMinor, Egensburg, year option on GJordan Adamsfor the2016-17 Carolina 6 0 0 1.000162 110 Vikings 2N 1 42 ' /~ W ash., $66, 2 63. 15, R u ss el l Ca r do za , T e rre bo nne , O r e., Atlanta 6 1 0 . 857193 150 season. FALCO NS 7 7 48t/ t NewOrleans 34 0 . 429 161 185 S66,080. FOOTBALL SAINTS 3 1/2 3 491 /2 TampaBay 2 4 0 . 333140 179 SaddleBroncRiding Nabonal Football League 7yt 8' /t 3 9 ' /t RAMS North 1, Cody DeM oss, Hef t i n , La., 3119, 3 97. 2, Rus t y ATLANTAFALCONS — SignedS CharlesGodCards 4 1/2 41/2 4 6 W L T Pct PF PA Wright,Milford,Utah,$115,987. 3,JacobsCrawley,Bo- frey .SignedRBGusJohnsonandWRDevonWylie Bengals 48t/t 60 0 1.000164 101 erne,Texas,$108,862.4, IsaacDiaz, Oesdemona,Texas, to the practicesquad.ReleasedRBAlen Bradford, RAVEN S 3 3 50'/ 2 42 0 . 667 124 102 S103,566. 5, TaosMuncy, Corona, N.M., $98,654.6, LB DerekAkunneand RBJuhwan Edwardsfrom the TEXANS 24 0 . 333 120 179 WadeSundel, Colem an,Okla., $94,680.7,Cort Scheer, 1 2 44'/ t Jets 16 0 . 143 139 200 Elsmere,Neb., $88,737.8,JakeWright, Milford,Utah, practicesquad. BALTIMORERAVENS — Waived RB Terrence Seahawk s 6 6 40' / t Weel S85,4 24.9,ChuckSchmidt,Keldron,S.O.,$84,910.10, Magee. SignedWRJeremy Butler fromthepractice Packers 2 'A 3 45 ' / t W L T P ct PF PA Spencer Wright, Milford, Utah,$74,338. squad. Arizona 52 0 . 714 229 133 11, Zeke Monday T h urs t o n, Bi g Va l e y, Al b erta, $72, 2 78. 12, HOUSTON TEXANS— ReleasedQBRyanMaff ett. St. Louis 33 0 . 500 108 119 BradleyHarter, Loranger, La., $71,310.13,Heith OeMPANTHE RS Bt/t Bt/ t 46 PlacedRBArianFoster on injured reserve. Seattle 34 0 . 429 154 128 oss, Hef t i n , La., $68, 3 54. 14, Co B urn B r a dsh aw , B ea SanFrancisco 2 5 0 .2 86 103 180ver, Utah,$66,146.15, Tyrel Larsen,Inglis, Manitoba, INDIANAPOLI SCOLTS— SignedWRQuanBray COLLEGE from thepracticesquad. WaivedSDeweyMcDonald. Thursday 361,172. Thursday' s Game MINNES OTA VIKINGS — Signed LB Brando RGH NCarolina 2N 2N 54'/z PITTSBU Tie-downRoping 5:25 p.m. from thepracticesquad. PlacedCBJabari WMichigan 2 0 2 0 67t/t E MICHIGAN Miami atNewEngland, 1, TufCooper,Decatur, Texas, $130,803.2, Timber Watts Sunday' s Games P rice on inj ured reserve.SignedFBBlake Renaud Buffalo 8 7t / t 50'/t MIAMI-OHIO Moore,Aubrey,Texas, $112,799. 3, Marly Yates,Steetroitvs.KansasCity at London,6:30a.m. T exas StD GA SOU THERN 20 21 68'/t phenvile,Texas,$99,281. 4, HunterHerrin, Apache, and LBTerrancePlummer onthe practice squad. SanFranciscoatSt. Louis,10a.m. TCU 14 14 74t/t W Virginia N.Y.GiantsatNewOrleans, 10a.m. Okla.,S93813.5,TrevorBrazile, Decatur Texas,$91,978. ReleasedWRDonteFoster fromthepractice squad. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS— Waived DBSammy ARIZONA ST 1 2 N 66'/~ O regonMinnesota 6, Caleb Smidt, Begvige,Texas, $87,450.7,RyanJarret, at Chicago, 10a.m. Friday Comanche ,Okla.,$85,967.8,MattShiozawa,Chub- Seamster. Tennessee at Houston, 10a.m. NEW YOR K G IAN TS—Agreedto termswith DE 1 1 1 1'/t 41'/t WAKE FOREST TampaBayatAtlanta, 10a.m. Louisville buck, Idaho,S84,989.9,MarcosCosta,Childress,Texas, JasonPierre-Paul. tCONNECTICUT Arizona ECarolina 7 t/t 7 53'/ $84,3 43.10,MontyLewis,Hereford,Texas,$82,903. atCleveland, 10a.m. SAN DIEGOCHARGERS — Waived CB Chris La Tech tg'It 12'It 64t/t RICE SanDiegoat Baltimore, 10a.m. 11, GorySolomon, Prairie View,Texas, $82,483. UTAH ST 24 28 50t/t Wy omingCincinnatiat Pittsburgh,10a.m. 12, Cade Swor, Winnie,Texas, $77,873.13, Sterling Davis. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS— Released WRB.J. DanN.Y.Jetsat Oakland, 1:05p.m. Smith,Stephenvige, Texas, $72,297.14, TysonDurfey, Saturday RBBryce Brown. Savannah,Mo.,$72,060.15,ShaneHanchey, Sulphur, iels. Signed NAVY 9 7 51 SFlorida Seattleat Dallas,1:25p.m. ST. LOUIS RAMS— PlacedLBAlee Ogletreeon yat Denver,5:30 p.m. La., 370,4'57. Marshall 20t/t tg t/t 50'/t CHARLOTTE GreenBa injuredreserve-return.SignedOEGerald Riversand Monday'sGame Steer Roping APP'CHIAN ST 23 23'/t 53/t Troy s Carolina, 5:30p.m. 1, Vin Fisher Jr., Andrews,Texas, $67,189. 2, Mike LB-DEZackHodgestothepracticesquad. 3 2t / t 64t/t UM ass Indianapoliat BALLST Chase,McAlester, Okla., S61,ig. 3, JessTierney,HerTAMPA BAYBUCCANEERS— PlacedWR Louis Ru tgers WISCON SIN 19 20'/t 48t/t mosa,S.D., $58,784.4, Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas, Murphyoninjured reserve. Released7 Martin WalNebraska 10 t gt/t 57t/t PU RDUE TENNIS l a ce andCBsKeon Lynand Daxton Swansonfrom S 58,7 22 . 5 , R o c k y P a t t e r s o n , P r a t t , K a n . , $ 5 3 , 4 4 8 . 6 , Clemson 10 10 51'/t NC STATE ScottSnedecor, Fredericksburg,Texas, $52,576.7, Neat the practicesquad. 53t/t M aryland IOWA 17 17 ATP World Tour Wood, Needville,Texas,$51,506.8,CodyLee,GatesTENNESSEE TITANS— Re-signedWRRicoRichMississippi 6 7 577t AUBURN ville, Texas,$47,820.9, TroyTilard, Douglas,Wyo., ardsonto thepractice squad. ARKANSA SST 19'/i 18 62t/t Ge orgia St Swiss IndoorsBeset $ 43,950.10, Chet H er ren, P aw hu sk a, O k la., $43, 7 0 9 . HOCKEY Tuesday etBeset, Switzerland CMichigan 31/2 3 46t/t AK R ON 11, JoJoLeMond, Andrews, Texas, S40,355. 12, First Round National HockeyLeague WASHINGTON Arizona DavidGoffin(8),Belgium, def.AndreasSeppi, Italy, ShayGood,Midland,Texas,$40,348.13,BrentLewis, CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS — ReassignedFVince tCOLORADO ST SanDiegoSt 4 3 1 /2 49'/ Pinon ,N.M.,S38,710.14,J.TomFisher,Andrews,Texas, Hinostozato Rockford(AHL). Stanford 13 12 66'/t WASH ST 3-6, 6-4,6-4. Grigor Dimitrov,Bulgaria, def. SergiyStakhovsky, S38,256.15,BrodiePoppino,BigCabin, Okla.,$37,911. NEWJERSE Y DEVILS— PlacedFTuomoRuutu Florida 3 2 N 45'I~ G eorgia Ukraine,6-3,6-4. Bull Riding on injuredreserve,retroactive to Oct. 16. Usc 5Y2 5Y2 6PIt CALIFORNIA Philipp Kohl s chrei b er, Germ a ny, def. Jerzy Jano1, Sage K im z e y , S tr ong C ity, O k la. , S 17 4,601. 2, P a rk SOCCER 50t/t T E MPLE NotreDam e 10 10 wicz, Poland, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. U.S.WOMENS ' NATIONALTEAM—AbbyWamGa Tech 4 51 / 2 54'/t V IRGINIA Roger Federer (1), Switzerland, def. Mikhail er Breding,Edgar, Mont., $122,247.3, BrennonEldred, Sulphur,Okla.,$110,041.4, WesleySilcox, Santaqutn, bachannouncedher retirement. Oklahoma St 3 3 79'/t TEXASTECH Kukushkin,Kazakhstan,6-1, 6-2. Utah, $105,778.5, Chandler Bownds, Lubbock, TexCOLLEGE K ANSAS John Isner(6), UnitedStates, def. Ernests Gulbis, Oklahoma a lt 3 9 64'/t as, $88,441.6, JoeFrost, Randlett, Utah,$83,812.7, MONTANA STATE— NamedJohnStocktonwom7 6 ' /~ 53t/t I O WA STLatvia,6-3,6-4. Texas Cody Te e l , Ko untze, T e x as , 38 3,018. 8, Sh an e P ro c tor, en's assi s tant basket b all coach. PENNST 61/t 51/t 43t/t Rlin ois OusanLajovic, Serbia,def. AlexandrDolgopolov, GrandCoulee,Wash., $79,014.9, Brett Stag,Detroit HOUSTO N 14 11 48t/ V anderbilt Ukraine,6-4,2-0, retired. L akes , Mi n n . , $ 7 6 , 0 8 9 . 1 0 , D u s t i n B o we n , Wa g e r , T e x a s , 54t/t S Carolina TEXAS ASM 15 16 RichardGasquet(5), France,def.Jiri Vesely, Czech $65,250. 7 8 ' A 55'/t KENTUCKY Republic,6-3, 6-7(2), 6-4. Tennesse e 11, ClaytonFoltyn, Winnie, Texas,$65,227.12, Caleb FISH COUNT UTAH 23'I~ 23'I~ 54'I~ Oregon St Sanderson, Hagettsvile, Texas,$65,114.13,TyWagarl, Valencia Open600 CINCINN ATI 23t/t 26t/t 60 CFlorida Upstream ly movement of adult chinook,jack Collbran,Colo.,$63,905.14, ReidBarker,Comfort, Tex- chinook,steeldai Tuesdayet Valencia, Spain FLORIDA ST 2 0 2 0 51t/t S yracuse headandwild steelheadat selectedCoas, $63,847.15,KodyDeShon, Helena, Mont., $62,633. First Round UL-LAFA YETTE 1 1 1 1'/t 57t/t UL-Monroe lumbia Riverdamslast updated Monday. Barrel Racing Aljaz Bedene,Britain, def. JeremyChardy (8), WKentucky 23 23'/t 67PtOLDDOMINION Chnk Jchnk SRhd Wstlhd 1, CagieDuperier, Boerne,Texas, $166,632.2, Lisa SO MISS 21 24 5 9'I~ Ute p France,3-6,6-2, 6-1. B onnevi lle 767 88 102 33 Lockhart,Oelrichs,S.D.,$151,520.3, SarahRoseMcJoao Sousa, Port u gal , def. Gi g es Mul l e r, Luxem Fla Int'I 3 3 51t/t FLAATLANTIC 2 4 8 109 Donald, Brunswick,Ga.,$134,599. 4, MaryWalker, TheDaffes 1,352 200 bourg, 7-6 (9), 6-3. 10 9 t/t Utsa NTEXAS John Day 1,528 15 5 200 63 Ennis,Texas, $110,105. 5, Sherry Cervi, Marana,Ariz., MischaZverev, Germanv, def. ThomazBelucci, DUKE Miami-Fla Brazil,7-6(4), 6-7(2), 7-6(5). 3 4 6 4 9 0 206 3104, 744.6,NancyHunter,Neol a,Utah,396,686.7,Fal- McNary 1,486 Tulsa 3 '/t 3 ' /t 76'/t SMU Upstream y e ar-to-date m o ve m e nt of adul t chi n ook, r,ollinsvile, Texas,$86,828.8,Cassidy Kruse, TaroDaniel,Japan,def. Michal Przysiezny, Poland, lon TayloC Va Tech 3 2t / t alt BOSTON COLL 4-6, Gillette,Wyo.,$81,346.9,TaylorJacob,Carmine,Texas, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected 7-6(2),6-3. MEXICOST Idaho 4Y2 4Y2 63'It NEW S 80,426. 10, CarleyRichardson,Pampa,Texas,$77,820. ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedMonday. BenoitPa ire (5),France,def. Norbert Gombos,SloMEMPHIS 29 30t/t 67t/t Tu la ne vakia,3-6, 6-3,6-4. Chnk Jchnk SRhd Wstlhd 11, MicheleMcLeod, Whitesboro, Texas, $70,397. Michigan 13 13'/t 39'/t MINNESOTA DanielBrands,Germany, def. NickKyrgios, Austra- 12, JackieGanter, Abilene,Texas, $69,414. 13,Vickie Bonneville 1,329,109 112,782 264,071 95,907 5 4'/t U NL V BoiseSt 20 20 lia, 6-4,2-6,7-6(3). Carter,Richfield,Utah,$62,768.14, JanaBean, Ft. Han- TheDaffes 949,132 114,715 215,523 75,382 19'/t 21 63t/t C olorado GuillermoGarcia-Lopez(6), Spain,def. Fernando cock,Texas, $60,162. 15,DebGuelly, Okotoks,Alberta, John Day 804,070 82,295 178,024 63,760 UCLA Air Force 77t 7 5ubt H AWAIIVerdasco, Spain,6-4, 3-6, 6-3. S59,931. McNary 745,357 70,125 175,414 59,183 5:07 p.m.
Friday's Game KansasCity(Ventura13-8) atN.Y.Mets(Syndergaard 9-7), 5:07 p.m. Saturday,Oct. 31 KansasCity (Young11-6) at N.Y.Mets(Malz4-0), 5:07 p.m. Sunday,Nov.1 x-KansasCityat NY. Mets,515 p m. Tuesday,Nov.3 x-N.Y .MetsatKansasCity,5:07p.m. Wednesday,Nov.4 x-N.Y .MetsatKansasCity,5:07p.m.
'
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015• THE BULLETIN
WORLD SERIES
C3
NBA ROUNDUP
Curry,Warriorsbegintitle defensebybeating Pelicans The Associated Press OAKLAND, Calif. — NBA MVP Stephen Curry showed
Next up
New Orleans at Portland in a hurry he hasn't lost a step or his swagger, scoring 40 When:7 tonight points to lead the Golden State TV:BlazerNet Warriors to a 111-95 victory
Radio:KBND 1110-AM;
with four 3-pointers for 24
scored 41 on Oct. 13, 1972,
over the New Orleans Pelicans KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM on Tuesday night to open their title defense. Curry had the second-most Curry put on a f amiliar points by a reigning MVP in shooting clinic from all over an opener since 1963-64, acthe court, knocking down cording to STATS. Milwauseven of his first nine shots kee's Kareem Abdul-Jabbar first-quarter points. He fin- against Phoenix. ished 14 for 26 w ith seven Also on Tuesday: assists and six rebounds in a Bulls97, Cavaliers 95: CHIrematch ofthe first round of CAGO — Ni k o l a M i r o t ic the playoffs that Golden State scored 19 points and Derrick swept 4-0. It was his 10th ca-
Rose added 18 to lead Chi-
reer 40-point game.
cago. LeBron James scored 25 points and grabbed 10 re-
The team raised the championship banner and received its
ringsin a pregame ceremony. Golden State built a 10-point
bounds for
C l eveland, but
Pau Gasol blocked his potential tying layup in the closing
halftime lead and was never seconds. threatened the rest of the way Pistons 106, Hawks 94: ATto win its 19th straight home
LANTA — Kentavious Cald-
game dating to Jan. 31 and well-Pope scored 21 points to match the franchise record set lead all five Detroit starters in last season. double figures.
Aging Matt Slocum/The Associated Press
Kansas City Royals players celebrate winning Game 1 ofthe World Series after Alcides Escobar scored on asacrifice fly by Eric Hosmer during the 14th inning on Wednesday night in Kansas City, Missouri. The Royals beat the New York Mets 5-4.
o aswin on es eries 0 ener In WorldSeries
In n l n Zobrist's single put runners at
We' ve got to do a better job." Known more for his glove
C I TY , M o .
the corners and an intentional
than his bat, Gordon got a
— Alcides Escobar start-
walk to Lorenzo Cain loaded
huge hug in the dugout from
ed the World Series with
the bases. Hosmer atoned for a key error by lifting a flyball to medium-deep right field, and Escobar barely beat Curtis
Eric Hosmer. A two-time Gold Glove first b aseman, Hos-
By Ben Walker The Associated Press
K ANSAS
a jolt. Five hours later, he ended the longest opener ever with a jump — into the
ROYALS 1, NETS 0 arms of his joyous Kansas Game 1: KansasCity 5, N.Y. Mets 4 City Royals teammates. Today atKansasCity 5:07 p.m. Saved by Alex Gordon's Oct. 30 at N.Y. Mets 5:07 p.m. t ying home run in t h e ninth inning off New York Oct. 31 at N.Y.Mets 5:07 p.m. Mets closer Jeurys Familia, x-Nov.1at N.Y. Mets 5:15:07p.m. the Royals won in the 14th x-Nov.3atKansasCity5:07p.m. when Eric Hosmer's sacri- x-Nov.4atKansasCity 5:07p.m. ficefl y scored Escobar for x-if necessary a 5-4 win over the Mets late
Tuesday night. This tied for the longest
Series game in history, and in 5 hours, 9 minutes, it had
a little bit of everything packed in. A lot of everything, actually. "Tonight wa s h u ge," R oyals p i tcher C h r i s Young said. "Home run by Alex Gordon and the character and fight, find a way to win late, great team effort."
bounced. In the 11th, Salvador Perez
grounded a single that hit the third-base bag and caromed high in the air. In the 12th,
Daniel Murphy struck out on a pitch that got past Perez — it
ricocheted off the backstop to the Royals catcher, who threw out Murphy at first.
About the only thing missing? A home run by Murphy, who had connected in a re-
baseman David Wright. Ben
games. The MVP of the NL
Escobar provided the ear-
ly excitement. A mix-up by "I wanted to redeem my- Mets outfielders Yoenis Cesself for what happened earli- pedes and rookie Michael er," Hosmer said. "That's the Conforto helped E scobar beauty of this game. Always wind up with just the second get a chance to redeem your- inside-the-parker to lead off a self and can't thank my team- Series game. Ol' Patsy Doughmates enough." erty of the Boston Americans Escobar streaked home did it in 1903 — his came in standing up, and the Royals the second game ever of what rushed from the dugout to became known as the Fall meet him. It was 12:18 a.m. Classic. Central tim e a t K a u f fman Harvey brushed aside the Stadium. misplay and quickly settled Young pitched three in- in. The Mets, meanwhile, soon nings for the win. caught up with Royals starter Gordon shook the ball- Edinson Volquez, who did his park when he tagged Famil- best on the day his father died ia, hitting a solo drive with in the Dominican Republic. one out over the center field Granderson homered and walL The star closer had not the Mets came back for a 3-1 blown a save since July 30 and lead. Mike Moustakas lined a had been nearly perfect this tying single off Harvey tied it Granderson's throw home.
Escobar hit an inside- cord six straight postseason postseason. t he-park homer o n t h e very first pitch from Matt
mer's error gave the Mets a 4-3 lead in the eighth.
Continued from C1 That matches the most for-
mer All-Stars at least 37-years KEVIN GARNETT, old to secure roster spots to MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES start the season since the Garnett's focus is to set the tone 2004-2005 campaign, accord- and help No. 1 overall draft pick ing to STATS. Karl-Anthony Townsdevelop. The Between them,they have 39-year-old Garnett can still play 80 All-Star appearances, 17 — his rebounds per 48 minutes NBA titles, five MVP awards last season were similar to those and seven finals MVP awards. he posted in his prime. Hestarted They enter this season with all 47 games heplayed last seavarying roles: son and averaged 20 minutes a contest. KOBE BRYANT,
LOS ANGELES LAKERS This could be Bryant's final season, depending on how it unfolds. Part of his role will be to mentor D'Angelo Russell, Julius Randle and Jordan Clarkson. Passing the torch and passing up shots are two different things, though. Bryant is the No. 3scorer in NBAhistory for a reason. In the 35games he played last season, his shot attempts per 48 minutes werethe third-highest of his career. VINCE CARTER, MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES The days of Vinsanity and the routine high-flying dunks have passed, and the38-year-old Carter has settled into a role as aperimeter-shooting reserve. Hecomes into this season healthy, but newly acquired Matt Barnes, a slightly younger perimeter shooter, could cut into his minutes.
the
Championship Series did con- things we know about them is they' re never down and out," Harvey. The nearer it got tribute a pair of singles. to midnight — and beyond Then in the 14th, Escobar Mets manager Terry Collins. — the more oddly the ball reached on an error by third "We' ve got to put them away.
V ANCOUVER,
Suter's second goal tied the
game for the Wild. Panthers 4, Avalanche 1:
I,"
Bri t i s h
e
Columbia — Jared McCann
rtr.cHE
scored twice and Ryan Miller
made 25 saves as the Vancouver Canucks beatMontreal 5-1 on 'Ibesday night to hand
SUNRISE, Fla. — Vincent (t
the Canadiens their first loss
of the season. Montreal (9-1-0) had set an
Trocheck had two goals and an assist to help Roberto Luongo win his 404th game and pass GrantFuhr forsole possession of ninth all-time on the wins list. Kings 4, Jets 1: WINNIPEG, Manitoba — M i l an Lucic scored th e e ventual game-winner with 4:41 left in
NHL record with nine straight
regulation wins to start the year, and was one victory from tying the best start in league history set by the 1993-
regulation to give Los Angeles
94 Toronto Maple Leafs and
its sixth straight win.
the2006-07 BuffaloSabres. Darryl Dy ck / The Canadian Press viaAP Vancouver snapped a four- Vancouver's Jared McCann, center, celebrates his goal against game losing streak and won Montreal goalie Carey Price, left, in front of Alex Galchenyuk for the first time on home ice during the first period Tuesday in Vanouver, British Columbia.
Blues 2, Lightning 0: ST. LOUIS — Jake Allen stopped
in six tries this season.
The Canucks won to hand the Canadiens their first loss.
Also on Tuesday: Blue Jackets 3, Devils 1: NEWARK, N.J.— Boone Jen- winning streak snapped. ner and Cam Atkinson scored Sabres 4, Flyers 3:PHILA35 seconds apart in the third DELPHIA — Zemgus Girgenperiod, and Columbus won its sons scored on a breakaway second straight game under with 2:31 left in overtime to lift new coach John Tortorella. BuffaloafterBrayden Schenn New Jersey had a four-game scored his second goal with
26 shotsfor his sixth career shutout.
Bruins 6, Coyotes 0: BOSTON — Tuukka Rask made 24
53.2 seconds left to tie the game for Philadelphia.
saves for his first shutout, and David Krejci scored two goals
to lead Boston. Wild 4, Oilers 3: ST. PAUL, Hurricanes 3, Red Wings 1: Minn. — Charlie Coyle scored Cam Ward stopped 24 shots to give Minnesota the lead to lead Carolina, which is 2-1
midway through the third pe- against Detroit but 1-5 against riod, 43 seconds after Ryan the rest of the league.
DALLASMAVERICKS
Nowitzki was theMavs' No. 2scorer last year. TheMavericks added Deron Williams andWesley Matthews in the offseason to helpwith the scoring, andChandler Parsons' role will expand in his secondyear with the team. Nowitzki, 37, av-
eraged just under 30 minutes per game last season.
PAUL PIERCE, LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS
Box scores
AllTimesPDT
EasternConference
The Associated Press
DIRK NOWITZKI,
Standing s
home with the go-ahead run.
In 10th gameof the season, Canadiensfinally lose
SAN ANTONIOSPURS Ginobili benefits from having been a sixth man for so manyyears. The 38-year-old has only started 10 regular-season gamesthe past four seasons andhas not played more than 24minutes acontest since the 2010-11campaign
NBA SCOREBOARD
Hosmer let Wilmer Flores' two-out, two-hopper get past him in the eighth, allowing Juan Lagares to scamper
NHL ROUNDUP
MANU GINOBILI,
Pierce, who just turned 38, brings his usual air of confidence to a TIM DUNCAN, team that hasn't quite gotten over SAN ANTONIO SPURS the hump. Hestarted 73 games Duncan will turn 40 in April. Old for Washington last season, but he Man River Walk is still a starter, but came off the bench in all but one his minutes will likely be limited preseason game this season with again. TheSpurs addedAll-Star the Clippers.
in the sixth.
" Their team, one o f
LaMarcus Aldridge and35-yearold former All-Star DavidWest, which should help preserve Duncan for another championship run.
Chicago Detroit Boston Brooklyn Charlotte Indiana Miami Milwaukee NewYork Orlando Philadelphia Toronto Washington Atlanta Cleveland
W 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
L Pet GB 0 1.000 0 1.000 0 .OQO V2 0 .000 '/z 0 .000 '/z 0 .OQO '/2 0 .OQO '/2 0 .OQO V2 0 .OQO V2 0 .000 '/z 0 .000 '/z 0 .OQO '/2 0 .OQO '/2 1 .000 t 1 .000 t
WesternConference
Golden State Dallas Denver Houston LA. Clippers LA. Lakers Memphis Minnesota Oklahoma City Phoenix Portland Sacrame nto SanAntonio utah NewOrleans
w L 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Pct GB 0 1.000 0 .OQO '/2 0 .OQO V2 0 .OQO V2 0 .000 '/z 0 .000 '/z 0 .OQO '/2 0 .OQO '/2 0 .OQO V2 0 .OQO V2 0 .000 '/z 0 .000 '/z 0 .OQO '/2 0 .OQO '/2 1 .000 t
Nesday's Games Chicago97, Cleveland95 Detroit106,Atlanta94 Goldenstateu1, Neworleans 95 Today'sGames WashingtonatOrlando, 4p.m. Indiana atToronto, 4:30p.m. Chicagoat Brooklyn, 4:30p.m. Utah atDetroit, 4:30p.m. PhiladelphiaaI Boston, 4:30p.m. CharlotteatMiami, 4:30p.m. NewYorkatMilwaukee,5p.m. ClevelandatMemphis, 5 p.m. Denverat Houston, 5p.m. SanAntonioatOklahomaCity, 5p.m. LA. Clippers atSacramento, 7p.m. Dallas atPhoenix, 7p.m. NewOrleansatPortland, 7 p.m. Minnes otaatLA.takers,7:30p.m. Thursday'sGames MemphisatIndiana,4p.m. AtlantaatNewYork,5p.m. DallasatLA.Clippers,7:30p.m.
Warriors 111, Pelicans 95 NEWORLEANS(95) Cunningham 5-8 1-1 t3, Davis 4-20 10-15 18,
perkins5-50-010, Robinson 0-1e-00,Gordon5-1t 2-214, Smith7-132-4 17,Aiirtca3-70-06, Gee4-5 e 0 8,Anderson2-74 59. Totals35-8319-27 95. G0LDENSTATE(111) Barnes3-121-28, Green3-122-2 10,Bogut 6-6 0012, Curry14-267-740, KThompsoi3-83-39, t Iguodala1-300 2, Barbosaed 00 0, Ezeli 6101-2 13,McAdoo00222,Speights2-7449,Livingston 3-6 ee 6, Rushee 0-00. Totals 41-9620-22111. Nettr Orleans 35 1 4 26 20 — 95 Golden state 39 2 0 3517 —111
Bulls 97, Cavaliers 95 CLEVEL AND(95)
James12-22 0-325,Love6-173-318, Mozgov 2-6 1-2 5,Wiliams7-152-3 19, Smith 3-10 2-4 8,
Jeff erson4-70-010,Thompson1-40-e2,Dellavedovas-ee-06,Jonese-2 0-e 0, Cunningham0-2 000, varelao0122zTotals 3894101795. CHICAGO (97) Snell 4-91-21t, Mirotic 6-0 4-419,Gasolt-7 e-0 2, Rose 8-222-418, Butler 6-145-5 17,Brooks 3-90-06,Mccermott3-4 t-28,Noah0-00-20, Moore 5 80-0t1, Gibson1-33-4 5. Totals 37-87 16-23 97.
Cleveland Chicago
17 23 28 27 — 95 26 20 25 26 — 97
Pisions106, Hawks 94 DETROIT (106) Morris 6-195-688, lyasova6-12t-216, Drummond 6-166-10 t8, Jackson4-10 5-5 15,Caldwell-Pope7-143-3 21,Johnson3-100-0 7, Baynes 3-50-06,Blake1-60-03,Meeks1-40-02.Totals 37-96 20-26106. ATLANTA (94) Bazemore 03 00 0, Milsap715 34 t9, Horford 6-11 2-315,Teague7-16 3-418, Korver3-9 0-0 7, Sefolosha 1-3 0-02,Splitter 2-50-04, Paterson 1-1
2-25, schroder 8-142-220, Muscala0-1ee 0,scott
2-4 0-0 4.Totals 37-8212-15 94. Detroit 25 23 34 24 — 106 Atlanta 25 18 23 28 — 94
Where Buyers
And Sellers Meet
Classifieds
C4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
PREP ROUNDUP
Lava Bears lank Panthers, win IMC oys soccertitle PREP SCOREBOARD
Bulletin staff report
next Wednesday in the Class As the league's No. 2 seed, 5A state playoffs. Mountain Sisters will host a play-in View (3-4-1, 4-8-2) will be on match Saturday against an the road for a play-in match opponent to be determined. Saturday. La Pine 3, Central Linn 2:
REDMOND — Five differ-
ent players scored as Bend concluded it s I n t ermountain Conference boys soccer
schedule with a 6-0 victory at Redmond High on Tuesday afternoon. The win, combined with Mountain View's loss at Summit, secured the conference title for the Lava Bears.
Marco Vera opened scoring for the Lava Bears (5-1-2 IMC, 9-2-3 overall) when he headed a blocked shot from
Boys soccer
Girls soccer
Standings IntermountainConference Team Conference Overall Bend 5-1-2 9-2-3 Summit 5-2-1 9-4-1 MountaiVi ne w 5 - 2-1 6-5-3 Ridgeview 2-4-2 5-5-4 Redmond 0-8 0-13
Standings IntermountainConference Team Conference Overall Summit 8-0 13-0-1 Bend 6-2 11-2-1 MountaiVi ne w 3 - 4-1 4-8-2 Ridgeview 2-5-1 6-7-1 Redmond 0-8 0-13-1
son game, which coach Nils Eriksson said will likely be held next Tuesday in the first
pass from Lacey Adye to lead trailed 2-1 at the half despite Bend to a road Intermountain a goal from Sami Byers, but Conference win. W heeler Riley Mikel twice scored on Crook County ends the sea- also had three assists, Sierrah breakaways in the second son 3-4-2 in the TVC and 6-5- Bettin had three goals, Adye half as La Pine finished 4-6 in 2 overall. had five assists, and Iris Call- league play and 4-9 overall. Creswell 7, La Pine 0: LA fas, Kylee Roath and Brooke
round of the 5A state playoffs. "We' ve got a few injuries; PINE — The Hawks fell in a net. Calvan Berteau, a fresh- we got pretty beaten up in Class 3A/2A/1A Special Disman who began the season on our last game," Eriks son trict 3 match. La Pine (3-7 the JV team, scored the next said, referring to a 3-2 loss SD3, 3-9-1 overall) will play two goals, the first assisted at Mountain View on Thurs- at Pleasant Hill in a Saturday by Bryant Jolma and the next day. "We' re hoping to nurse play-in game for third place in by ChanceFlammang, as the those and get the guys back their league. Lava Bears went into the half healthy." Girls soccer with a 3-0 lead. Also Tuesday: Gustavo Loza scored the Summit 3, Mountain View 0: first goal of the second half Boys soccer Megan Cornett scored once off a corner kick taken by Madras 6, Crook County 0: and dished out two assists Colin Brown, and Flammang MADRAS — Miguel Alon- to lead the No. 1 Storm to a stretched the lead to five with so scored two goals to lead season-ending I n termouna goal assisted by Jolma. Madras to a Tri-Valley Con- tain Conference win over the Jolma scored the final goal ference win. The White Buf- visiting Cougars. Christina unassisted. faloes scored four second Edwards assisted on CorThe Panthers finished the half goals to secure the win. nett's goal and later scored season 0-8 in league play and Jonathon Reynoso, Sean Le- off a Cornett assist. Late in 0-13 overall. riche, Omar Dominguez, and the contest, Sofia EllingThe Lava B e ars, m ean- Giovanni Aguilar each scored ton scored for Summit (8-0 while, will have several days a goal for the White Buffaloes IMC, 13-0-1 overall), which off before their first postsea- (7-2-1 TVC, 10-2-2 overall). will host a first-round match
Jolma each scored once for
goal for the Cougars. Summit 18, Bend 4: Nate Coleman scored five times, Koal Robson added t h r ee
Volleyball
and Jesse Bandy each scored twice for Summit (8-0). Bend's Quinton Wiest had two goals, while Luke Peters and Kurt Felder each finished with one.
Girls water polo Mountain View 9, Ridgeview
the Lava Bears (6-2 IMC, 11-2Sandy 3, Ridgeview 0:SAN1 overall). Cassidy Flammang DY — Ridgeview lost its Class was credited with a c l e an 5A play-in game 25-17, 25-15, sheet for Bend. Redmond (0-8, 25-5, eliminating the Ravens 0-13-1) played its final game of from state playoff contention.
6: REDMOND — Behind four
Zamora-Heath scored mi d-
Catherine B owen
goals by Cassidy Evans and three by Chelsea Evans, the
Cougars squeaked past their hosts for a Central Valley the season. Sisters 3, Marist1: EUGENE League victory. Alyssa CanMadras 1, Crook County — In a nonconference show- non had two goals and five 0: PRINEVILLE — J a ckie down between top teams, the steals for Mountain View, and 4A Outlaws overcame a first-
f i n i shed
way through the second half set loss to defeat the 5A Spar- w ith t h ree assists and 1 2 to propel the White Buffa- tans 13-25, 25-21, 25-23, 25-15. blocks. loes to their first Tri-Valley
Conference win. Madras and Crook County both finish the year 1-9 in league play and 3-11 overall. Cottage Grove 4, Sisters 0: SWEET HOME — The Outlaws were shut out in a tie-
breaker match to determine the Sky-Em League's top seed in the Class 4A postseason.
Summit 3, Bend 2: In a de-
Boys water polo
fensive battle, it was Paige Mountain View12, Ridgeview Miller's two goals that pro-
6: REDMOND — Alex Pitcher
pelled the Storm to a Central
had six goals and two steals to lead the Cougars to a Central Valley League win. Taiton Fox scored twice and had four steals for Mountain View, while Ted George, Tarren Black and Preston Carey each
Valley League win. Jenna Wimmer scored once for S ummit.
C a r o line O f f e n-
hauser and Carly Moore each scored for Bend, while Liz Simpson was credited with 10
saves in goal.
NFL NOTEBOOK
Youth Continued from C1 "Why would someone
49ers trying to keep even keelamidstruggles
do that?" he said last week of the threat. "How could they do that, take their an-
ger to another level? I have no idea, I really don' t. This league is for the kids. Always has been. But someone did something crazy
The Associated Press
everybody." Nothing ruins y outh
10
has supplemented the young players, the Raiders (3-3) have already matched last season' s
win total and have showed signs of being able to compete
dining room table." in the AFC. Tomsula told San FrancisIt has been a long pro-
sports like adults acting
crazy. But, sadly, it's nothing new: Somebody did
co-based radio station KNBR Tuesday that he held an ani-
not like the league's rules
or the officiating or the fact that his or her child was not a star, and so out came the threats, or the fists, or, in t hi s extreme case, an entirely different
level of crazy. And now, in this rural
area of rolling hills and farmland about 45 miles
Andrew Spear /The New York Times
P i t t sburgh The Mount Pleasant Area Vikings practice in Norvelt, Pennsylvania, last week. A discovery of four bul-
— a hunting community where camouflage counts
SANTA CLARA, Calif. San Francisco 49ers coach Jim Tomsula likened a recent team meeting to an "Italian -
to ruin it. It's devastated
lets in a youth football parking lot, each bearing a league official's name, has led to canceled games and soul-searching here.
as casualwear and a bar-
bershop keeps copies of magazines like Bowhunt- t he 200-pound weight l i m - ing lot and what the state er and North A m erican it, claiming that the league police are calling terroristic Whitetail in t h e w a iting was not enforcing it and that threats, they were. "This league is a big, big area — you have people smaller players were being running for cover. injured by oversize ones. deal around here," said Bob The football community That came after a longtime Gumbita, who played in the here is embarrassed about league official was voted out league and is now an assisall this. The families, the of office this season, inflam- tant principal of the Mount players and the residents ing opinions and dividing the Pleasant Area Junior High I spoke with last week organization. School and a coach of the are still asking how this A few weeks ago, that ten- high school team. "When could happen in a place sion became physical. After I played as a kid, I'd walk where everybody knows a game, one father slugged through towns around here everybody and where the another in the parking lot, and people would know me, league — run and coached knocking him to the ground tell me my stats, tell me their by volunteers, and draw- and starting a brawl. That team's stats. They'd know the ing boys and girls ages 6 was the first time this year spreads of the games, too, beto 14 from five area towns that the state police sped to cause some people even bet — has thrived since 1965. the stadium, where a sign on the games." This year's 50th anniver- warns, "No Harassing," and Gumbita, w h os e f a t h er sary program is nearly 130 also lists who is not to be ha- coached in the league for 35 pages, for goodness' sake, rassed, including officials, years, said he and his family and much of the league's league officers, players and had seen players' parents lose history can be read on cheerleaders. more and more perspecti ve a giant sign surrounded The need to be that specific each year. They have grown by a white picket fence hints that maybe the specta- too intense, he said, too obin the stadium. On it are tors here had to be reined in sessed with success. "You'd figure that people the names of past league long before this season. champions and the names Some history: Across the would realize how importof every coach of every street from Hurst Field is a ant this league is to the kids team that has been part of building with a glass case around here, and just let the the program. displaying a newspaper ar- kids play without getting into Yet just as in countless ticle from Oct. 3, 1953, when the middle of everything," other A m e rican t o w n s, Hurst High School's football Gumbita said. "Maybe what overzealous parents have team beat n earby G reens- happened now will f inally spoiled everything. Here burg High. The win incited bring some of these parents in former coal country, a a riot. Fans tore down goal back to earth." bad feeling has simmered posts and set a fire behind the But are the parents in this throughout the league all scoreboard. One woman was league really that different season. knocked unconscious. from parents elsewhere? I A number of families The good old days? Com- couldn't find proof of it. Just have been upset over pared with bullets in a park- signs of the typical unrealistic
Ducks
was credited with 14 blocks in
Bend 9, Redmond 0: RED- LA PINE — The Hawks endMOND — T a y l a W h e e ler ed their season on a high goals, and the Storm powered scored thefirstof her three note with a comeback Class their way to a Central Valley goals in the first minute on a 3 A/2A/1A victory. L a P i n e League victory. Matt Barry
the Panthers keeper into the
southeast o f
had agoal.Micah Rodriguez
defense. "You have to stay in attack mode," he said. "Do what you
expectations for young athletes common in any town. One league player's grandfather, who did not want his
name to be used for fear of retribution, said parents here
were out of control because they "all expect their kid to get a scholarship." That was just before he told me to keep an eye on his grandson because, "mark my words," he' ll make the pros someday. To keep fans in check, some youth leagues have resorted to videotaping the crowds at games. That's something the Mount Pleasant league will consider — if it returns to the
field. "I don't know if we' ll play next season," Albright, the
league president, said, choking up. "But quitting because of this would be a shame." At least one team is ending the season on its own terms.
With the gates on the league's field padlocked, the team continued to practice on another
field. Far away from the stadi-
um's game-day noise. A world away from bullets in a parking lot. Their workout showed their
cess as Oakland won just 11 games in M c K enzie's first
mated meeting two days after three years in charge, extenda 17-3 home loss to the Green ing a run for the organization Bay Packers, which put his of 12 straight years without a team at 1-3. winning record or a playoff The first-year head coach berth. said it began as his meeting The foundation began to with the players, before he left get set in 2014 when McKthe locker room and let play- enzie hit on picks throughers speak among themselves. out the draft, led by Mack, "I did have a heated meet- Carr, guard Gabe Jackson ing. That happens in this busi- and defensive back T.J. Carness," Tomsula told the sta- rie. While those players went tion. "When you' re 2-5, that through growing pains as starts to become headlines. It rookies, they have all made was a very productive meet- big steps forward this season, ing. It was a meeting where led by Carr, who has shown it was truthful and dealt with significant improvement in all facts and reality. categories as his passer rating "The biggest thing I said to has jumped from 76.6 to 101.0. "He's r ight where w e them, 'Guys, it's like an Italian dining room table.' Ev- thought," McKenzie said. "I'm erybody's sitting around the never surprised with that guy. table, things get heated, dish- He wants it bad. He's a comes get broke and people leave. petitor. He's smart. He's going But everybody's got to come to find a way to get it done. back to the table to eat." Even if he slips and has a bad The 49ers travel to St. Louis game, bad plays, or whatever, to take on the surging Rams he' ll bounce back. That's just on Sunday and will be trying him. He's doing exactly what to avoid falling to 2-6 for the we felt like he could." first time since2010. "I don't want to overreact,"
Pierre-Paul agrees to
third-year safety Eric Reid 1-year contract with Giants said. "Our record, yeah we' re Jason Pierre-Paul and the 2-5, but we don't have to re- New York Giants have agreed invent the wheel here. I don' t
think anybody needs to start a yelling fest, pointing fingers at anybody. That's what we don't need."
Raiders GM gratified by improvement
to a one-year contract more than three months after the
defensive end's right index finger was amputated following a fireworks accident in Florida. P ierre-Paul met w it h
the
team over the past two days and was given the OK to play
After enduring three years of losing as he tore down and by team doctors. then tried to build back up The new deal is believed to the Oakland Raiders, general be loaded with incentives. manager Reggie McKenzie is A t w o-time Pr o B o wler, finally seeing the payoff of his Pierre-Paul's right index finwork in year four. ger was amputated followWith a pair of strong drafts
ing the accident, and he also
resilience, but also the joy of playing youth sports. Chil-
that have provided founda- damaged histhumb and had tion pieces to the organiza- burns on his hand.
dren start out knowing it. It' s
tion with quarterback Derek
only adults who can crush it.
Carr, receiver Amari Cooper and pass rusher Khalil Mack
been working out and rehabbing in his home state of
and a free-agent class that
Florida.
"We haven't really gone away from our core way of how we go about things, but certainly the use of the bye
— Juliet Macur isa columnist with The New York Times.
little different. We tried to get after returning from a twoeveryone a few more reps. week absence in a 26-20 win There is a ton of learning over Washington on Oct. 17. "He has a really good playstill taking place. We are not hitting as much with the vet- g round-type angle to h i s eran guys, but we tried to get game, but then trust in the a bunch of work in and teach- progression a little more of ing for guys in key roles." getting his eyes in the right Helfrich said that quarter- spot to begin with and then back Vernon Adams Jr. has let your natural abilities take benefited from getting more over," Helfrich said. "It is alcomfortable in the offense ways a fine line with a quar-
Continued from C1 Oregon and Arizona State do and trust what you do and both started th e s eason know they will blitz everyone week was different than last ranked in the top 15, but have from everywhere. You have year," Helfrich said. "We had two conference losses each to be aggressive and patient more veteran players, whethheading into their Thursday and trust in our deal." er it was on the back end of night meeting in Tempe. Oregon is coming off a bye the defense or some key posiHelfrich said the Ducks week when it gave its vet- tions on offense. Those weeks will not change their mind- erans more work than usu- we used last year for a ton of set on offense as they face al during a week without a rest and a ton of player develan aggressive Arizona State game. opment. This year we did it a during th e e x tr a p r actices terback like him. You want to
The six-year veteran has
harness in and get focused on something, but also let them do what they do best." The Ducks haven't played Arizona State since Oct. 18,
2012, when they cruised to a 43-21 victory at Sun Devil Stadium. To put that in con-
text, Ducks running back Royce Freeman was a junior in high school, and Adams was a redshirt freshman at Eastern Washington.
C5 O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.corn/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
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DOW 17,501.43 -41.62
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S&P 500 2,065 . 00 -5.29
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NASDAQ 5,030.15 -4.55
Tod8p Rate hike hints?
2 020.
The Fed's latest meeting of policymakers could shed insight into the central bank's next move on interest rates. Federal Reserve officials are due to wrap up a two-day meeting today. The expectation is that the Fed will decide to leave rates unchanged at a record low near zero. That's where they have been since late 2008.
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............ Close: 2,065.89 Change: -5.29 (-0.3%)
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StocksRecap NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 4,071 1,882 Pvs. Volume 3,306 1,715 Advanced 8 16 8 1 5 Declined 2319 1998 New Highs 45 59 New Lows 1 17 1 1 5
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Close: 17,581.43 Change 41 62 ( 0 27')
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HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. 17635.18 17540.57 17581.43 -41.62 OOWTrans. 8256.42 8031.04 8063.56 -21 8.74 OOW Util. 592.94 588.60 590.53 -1.52 NYSE Comp. 10427.75 10364.92 10400.18 -64.44 NASDAQ 5040.08 5009.07 5030.15 -4.55 S&P 500 2070.37 2058.84 2065.89 -5.29 S&P 400 1433.92 1417.66 1424.65 -1 2.49 Wilshire 5000 21566.96 21395.83 21475.37 -91.59 Russell 2000 1158.52 1139.92 1145.29 -1 4.21
OOW
A
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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD -0.24% L -1.36% -2.64% -11.78% L -0. 26% L L -4.46% -0. 62% -4.05% L -0.09% L +6.21% -0. 26% L +0.34% -0.87% -1.91% L -0.42% L -0.90% -1.23% -4.93% L
North westStocks
EURO $1.1040 -.0005
StoryStocks Stocks slipped Tuesday after investors got a bad dose of quarterly results from U.S. companies. Energy companies fell more than the rest of the market as the price of oil hit a two-month low, while health care stocks were among the few gainers after some of the world' s largest drug companies announced strong results. Investors continue to monitor the Federal Reserve, which began a two-day policy meeting on Tuesday. Stocks have rallied this month and have recovered most of the losses they sustained this summer. But investors remain concerned about health of the U.S. economy and are not sure what effect higher interest rates will have when they arrive. F
Close: $14.89V-0.79 or -5.0% The automaker's third-quarter profit more than doubled on North American sales, but the results still fell short of expectations. $16
Pfizer
PFE
Close:$34.99 L0.83 or 2.4% The drug developer reported better-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue and raised its 2015 earnings forecast. $40 35
14
30
A S 52-week range $10.44~
0 $16.74
A S 52-week range $28.47~
0 $3 6.46
Vol.:63.8m (2.0x avg.) P E : 16.1 Vol.:39.1m (1.5x avg.) P E : 24.8 Mkt. Cap:$58.03b Yie l d: 4.0% Mkt. Cap:$215.8b Yie l d: 3.2%
Rite Aid
Alaska Air Group A LK 50.10 ~ 82.78 77. 9 5 - 1 .21 -1.5 V V V +30. 4 +5 9 .1 1 359 13 0 . 8 0 - 3.5 + 3 . 2 2 5 3 1 9 1 . 3 2 Avista Corp A VA 29.77 ~ 38.34 3 4. 1 1 -.18 -0.5 V L L Bank of America B AC 14 . 60 ~ 18.48 1 6. 4 0 -.11 -0.7 V L L -8.3 -0.1 54532 12 0 .20 Barrett Business BBS I 1 8 .25 r-r 49. 7 9 44 . 70 -.32 -0.7 V L L +63. 1 +4. 7 18 4 d d 0. 8 8 Boeing Co BA 115.14 ~ 158. 8 3 14 8.46 +1.76 +1.2 L L L +14. 2 +2 2 .8 3 247 19 3 . 6 4 Prescription for growth CA CB 4 .14— o 5.84 5 .7 3 +. 0 3 + 0.5 L L L +10. 4 +1 5 .2 3 1 20 Walgreens Boots Alliance reports CascadeBancorp L L +18. 4 +3 4 .2 1 9 3 2 1 0 . 72a ColumbiaBnkg COL B 24.60 ~ 3 3.7 0 32.68 - .56 -1.7 V fiscal fourth-quarter earnings V V +13. 3 +4 3 .4 3 0 7 2 5 0. 6 0 Columbia Sportswear COLM 35A1 ~ 7 4.72 50. 4 5 -.52 -1.0 L today. The drugstore company giant L +11. 3 +2 5 .1 1 613 29 1 . 6 0 CostcoWholesale CO ST 117.03— e 15 8 .80157.76 +1.03 +0.7 L L has benefited this year from Craft BrewAlliance BREW 7.00 e — 17.2 1 7 .62 -.36 -4.5 V V V -42.9 -52.8 3 6 95 strong revenue growth from V V -16.4 -13.0 1659 17 O A4 FLIR Systems FLIR 26.34 e — 34.4 6 27 . 0 0 -.46 -1.7 V established U.S. stores, especially Intel Corp INTO 24.87 ~ 37.90 3 4. 4 7 -.12 -0.3 V L L -5.0 +7 . 1 21 757 15 0 .96 in the pharmacy. That's an Keycorp K EY 1204 ~ 1570 13 32 -.12 -09 V L L -42 + 73 72 2 4 1 2 030 important performance measureKroger Co K R 2 7 .09 ~ 39.43 3 6. 9 9 -.56 -1.5 V L L +15.2 +40 .0 7 7 74 1 9 0 . 42f ment for retailers because it Laffice Semi LSCC 3.25 ~ 7.66 4.40 -.09 -2.0 V L L -36.1 -30.8 1571 dd excludes the impact from stores LA Pacific L PX 1292 ~ 18 64 17 26 -.50 -28 V L L +4 2 +19 7 180 4 dd that have opened or closed. L L -21.5 -29.5 704 dd 0 . 7 3 MDU Resources MDU 16 . 15 ~ 28.51 1 8. 4 5 -.36 -1.9 V WBA $95.16 $100 L L +19.8 +33 . 5 693 20 0 .22 Mentor Graphics M ENT 19.70 ~ 27. 38 26.25 -.49 -1.8 V $65.65 L L +15.6 +20 .3 48165 36 1.44f Microsoft Corp MSFT 39.72 — 0 54.32 53 .69 -.56 -1.0 L — 0 13 3 .52 130.82 -.56 -0.4 L L L +36.1 +45 . 8 3030 33 1 .12 Nike Inc 8 NKE 90.43 80 NordstromInc JWN 63.73 o — 83.1 6 64 . 5 8 -.65 -1.0 V V V -18.7 + 0 . 4 2 123 1 8 1.48a '15 -3.1 + 9 . 7 1 9 8 2 6 1 . 87f Nwst Nat Gas NWN 42.00 ~ 52.57 4 8. 3 3 -.01 . . . L L L 60 P CAR 50.00 0 — 71.1 5 51. 2 0 - 3 .69 - 6 .7 V V V -24.7 -7.5 6928 11 0 . 96 Paccar Inc Operating Planar Systms PLNR 3.50 ty— 9.17 6.18 -.03 -0.5 T L L - 26.2 +54.9 1 0 0 2 1 EPS ty L L -5.7 + 3 . 2 1 3 19 3 0 1. 7 6 Plum Creek PCL 36.95 45.26 40 .37 -.42 -1.0 T 4Q '14 4 Q ' 15 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 245. 0 5 23 0.76 + . 54 +0.2 L L L -4.2 + 3 . 1 94 1 2 0 0. 1 2 Price-earnings ratio: 26 Schnitzer Steel SCH N 1 2.64 ~ 24.75 16 . 3 6 + . 1 6 +1.0 V L L -27.5 - 25.0 279 d d 0 . 75 based on past 12-month results Sherwin Wms SHW 218.27 ~ 294. 3 5 24 1.91 -5.33 -2.2 V L L - 8.0 + 9 . 1 9 6 8 2 5 2 . 6 8 Dividend: $1.44 Div. yield: 1.5% L +64.6 +7 1 .6 22 3 2 1 1 . 40f StancorpFncl SFG 61.56 — o 11 5.43114.97 + .05 . .. L L Source: Facteet StarbucksCp SBUX 37.46 — 0 63.84 62 .71 -.72 -1.1 L L L +52.9 +69 .0 8 8 09 2 9 0. 6 4 -3.2 + 6 . 4 1 439 1 7 0 .64f UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 14.70 ~ 1 8.92 16.46 -.24 -1.4 V L L Better quarter? US Bancorp U SB 38.81 ~ 46.26 4 2. 1 0 -.42 -1.0 V L L -6.3 + 6 . 4 5 698 1 3 1 . 02 Financial analysts predict that WashingtonPedi WAF O 19.72 — o 25.15 24 .81 -.15 -0.6 V L L +12.0 +22 .9 7 7 3 1 5 0. 5 2 Amgen's third-quarter earnings WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 7.75 ~ 5 8.7 7 54.12 -.17 -0.3 V L L -1.3 + 8 .9 12013 13 1 .50 and revenue improved from a year Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.73 ~ 37.04 2 9. 0 3 -.25 -0.9 V L L -19.1 -10.1 3369 28 1 . 24 earlier. Footnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 8 -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last t 2 months. f - Current The world's largest biotech drug- Dividend annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, rs regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent maker is coming off a strong quar- dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m —Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend
r
CRUDEOIL $43.20 -.78
Ford Motor
52-WK RANGE e CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
NAME
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SILVER $15.86 -.04
16,880 ' ""' 10 DAYS "
18,400":"
M
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Dow jones Industrials "
2,160
1 840
GOLD $1,166.80 -.20
17,680 "
SstP 500
Wednesday, October 2S, 2015
r
10-YR T-NOTE 2.04% -.02
RAD Close:$8.67%2.59 or 42.6% The Wall Street Journal reported Walgreens Boots Alliance is in advanced talks to buy the drugstore chain. $10
B ristol-Myers Squibb
BMY
Close:$66.80 L2.25 or 3.5% The drug developer reported better-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue and provided an upbeat outlook for the year. $70 65 60
A S 52-week range $4.79~
0 $9 .4 7
Vol.:173.4m (6.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$9.07 b
PE: 4.5 Yield: ...
A S 52-week range $51.82 ~
0 $ 76.54
Vol.:9.1m (1.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$111.39b
PE:6 2 . 5 Yi e ld:2.2%
Coach
COH IBM IBM Close:$31.65L1.33 or 4.4% Close:$1 37.86 V-5.80 or -4.0% The luxury handbag maker reported The technology giant said regulabetter-than-expected fiscal tors are investigating its accounting first-quarter profit and revenue and of some of its transactions in the reaffirmed its outlook. U.S., the U.K. and Ireland. $35 $180 160
30
140
A S 52-week range $27.22~
0 $43.87
A S 52-week range $137.33 ~
0 $176 .30
Vol.:11.3m (2.6x avg.) PE: 21.8 Vol.:15.0m (3.3x avg.) P E: 9. 2 Mkt. Cap:$8.78 b Yie l d: 4.3% Mkt. Cap:$135.04 b Yi e ld: 3.8%
4
ter propelled by growing sales of blockbuster drugs such as Enbrel, which is used to treat rheumatoid arthritis. Amgen reports its latest financial results today. Investors will be listening for an update on the status of the company's next slate of new drugs. AMGN $161.98 $200 , $147.26
I50 '14 '
100
Operating EPS
announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.
Merck's third-quarter profit more than doubled as CemPany drugs that fight cancer by harnessing the heavy cost-cutting more than offset lower sales Spotlight immune system. and the negative effects of a strong dollar. As it transitions, Merck has been slashing The drug maker on Tuesday also jobs and other costs. The company says it increased its profit forecast for 2015. has exceeded its goal to reduce annual Merck has struggled with tough spending by $2.5 billion from its 2012 level. competition recently. It was a pioneer in Merck earned 96 cents per share on an hepatitis C treatments, but rival drugs adjusted basis for the quarter, beating have wiped out sales of Merck's older, I market forecasts of 91 cents per share. Its less-effective treatments. It also is battling revenue of $10.07 billion was just shy of the for a dominant position in a new class of $10.09 billion forecast by analysts.
I
Merok(MRK)
Tuesday's close:$53.47
Price-earnings ratio: 22 based on past 12-month results
Marhetsummary Most Active Gen Elec FordM Apple Inc BkofAm Microsoft MarvellT If Pfizer Vale SA Alibaba
VOL (00s) 1727407 634216 608178 560409 545315 481649 455300 379052 345530 332665
LAST CHG 8.67 +2.59 29.46 -.09 14.89 -.79 114.55 -.73 16.40 -.11 53.69 -.56 8.05 -1.40 34.99 +.83 4.30 -.30 79.44 +3.09
Gainers NAME
*annualized
Morningstar says this fund "believes in winning by not losing" and targets firms with healthy balance sheets, stable managementand earnings power over a two- or three-year period.
SeleCtedMutualptgndS FAMILY
American Funds
Invesco Diversified Dividend (LCEAX) VALUE
B L EN D GR OWTH
43-
Ce Cs
BlackRock Dodge &Cox
4363 CI
1-y r -2.2%
( B ased on past 12-mongt results) Div. y ield: 3.4% D
&md Foctgs
63
Total return MRK
Fidelity
Rent-A-Center RCII Close: $18.06V-7.72 or -29.9% The furniture and appliance leasing company reported a third-quarter loss on lower revenue and cut its financial outlook. $30 25
55 50
20
A S 52-week range $44.61 ~
Vol.:2.5m (3.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.43 b
0 $58 .86
A S 52-week range $18.66~
5-yr 12.1
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 24 . 96 -.06+2.5 +6.1 +11.4+10.9 A A A CaplncBuA m 57.91 -.34 -0.3 +1.1 +7.5 +7.4 8 A A CpWldGrlA m 45.71 -.25 +0.8 +2.0 +10.9 +8.2 O C C EurPacGrA m 48.39 -.22 +2.7 +3.2 +8.3 +5.0 C 8 C FnlnvA m 52. 9 1 - .21 +3.7 +8.6 +15.3+12.7 A 0 C GrthAmA m 44.85 -.10 +5.1 +9.1 +16.8+13.4 C C C IncAmerA m 21.05 -.06 -0.1 +2.3 +9.1 +9.2 C B 8 InvCoAmA m 36.56 -.24 +0.5 +3.5 +15.0+12.3 O C C NewPerspA m38.58 -.09 +6.3 +9.9 +13.3+10.4 A A A WAMutlnvA m40.70 -.10 +0.8 +5.5 +14.4+13.5 A 0 A Strlnclns 9.97 - . 0 1 +0.4 + 1 .2 + 3.0 +3.3 A A A Income 13.5 7 ... +0 . 6 + 0 .6 + 2.3 +3.8 O 0 8 IntlStk 3 9.84 - . 3 6 -5.4 - 5.8 +8.7 +4.8 E A 8 Stock 173.4 4 -1.00 -2.3 +2 .7 +16.1+13.7 C A A
0
$3 7.49 P E: 9 . 5 Yi eld: 5.3%
PE:2 2 . 6 Vol.:12.2m (16.1x avg.) Yie l d : 1. 6%
Mkt. Cap:$958.17 m
SOURCE: Sungard
IU HS
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
. 0 1 ... . 1 7 .15 .27 .24
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.04 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
2-year T-note . 6 3 .6 4 5-year T-note 1.36 1.40 10-year T-note 2.04 2.06 30-year T-bond 2.86 2.87
Commodities
FUELS
Crude oil fell 78 cents, or 1.8 percent, to $43.20 per barrel, remaining at a two-month low. The price of gold dipped, its fourth decline in the last five days.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
BONDS
+0 . 01 L + 0 .02 L L +0 . 0 3 L T
V L T
.01 .04 .09
-0.01
T
T
.38
-0.04 w
T
T 1.49
-0.02 V -0.01 V
T L
V 2.26 V 3.04
NET 1YR TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.64 2.67 -0.03 V V Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.33 4.34 -0.01 V V Barclays USAggregate 2.28 2.30 -0.02 L V PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 7.45 7.45 ... V V ivi d end: $1.80 RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.90 3.93 -0.03 V V Source: FactSet TEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.30 1.34 -0.04 V V 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.32 3.34 -0.02 V V 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
3-yr* 8.6
Contra 103.8 4 - . 14 + 7.0 +11.5 +17.1+14.0 8 8 8 ContraK 103 . 84 -.15+7.1 +11.6 +17.2+14.1 8 B 8 LowPriStk d 48.95 -.34 + 1.1 + 5 .4 +15.2+13.2 A 0 8
%C H G + 4 6 .1 Fideli Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg72.89 -.18 +2.0 + 7.5 +15.9+14.2 8 0 A +4 2 .6 +3 8 .9 63 FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeA m 2.22 -.02-3.4 -4.2 +5.2 +6.7 E 0 A +2 4 .8 FrankTemp-TempletonGIBondAdv 11 .71 -.04 -3.1 -4.3 +1.3 +3.1 C 0 A +2 0 .6 473 Oakmark Intl I 23.48 -.13 +0.6 + 4.2 +11.2 +7.6 A A A +1 9 .4 MorningstarOwnershipZone™ Oppenheimer RisaivA m 19 .75 +.01-0.6 +6.3 +12.7+11.5 C O O +1 7 . 3 RisaivB m 1 7 .44 . . . -1.2 +5.5 +11.8+10.6 C E E +1 6 . 0 OeFund target represents weighted +1 3 .6 RisOivC m 17 . 32 +.01 -1.2 +5.5 +11.9+10.7 C E E average of stock holdings +1 2 .6 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings SmMidValA m45.99 -.18 -5.3 +2.4 +14.6 +9.8 C C E SmMidValB m38.57 -.15 -5.9 +1.6 +13.7 +8.9 C C E Losers T Rowe Price BIChpGr 74.2 6 + .26+10.4 +15.0 +20.6+16.7 A A A CATEGORY:LARGE VALUE NAME L AST C H G %C H G GrowStk 57.4 6 + .13+10.6 +14.9 +19.9+15.8 A A A HealthSci 74.3 6 +1.80+9.4 +17.1 +30.7+28.1 A A A -8.33 -47.1 IBORNINGSTAR RoadrnTrn 9.34 Endologix 8.77 -4.96 -36.1 RATING~ ***** Newlncome 9. 5 1 +.01+1.3 + 1.6 + 1.6 +3.1 C C O -7.72 -29.9 RentACt 18.06 ASSETS $4,455 million Vanguard 500Adml 190.79 -.49 +2.0 +7.5 +15.9+14.2 8 8 A MagHR pfC 2.87 -.92 -24.3 500lnv 190.78 -.48 +1.9 +7.4 +15.8+14.0 8 0 A EXPRATIO .83% -7.60 -23.7 GrubHub 24.49 CapOp 53.36 +.14 +1.2 +8.3 +22.2+15.4 O A A Iglg.INIT.INVES T. $1,000 Eqlnc 30.93 -.15 +1.2 +6.0 +13.9+14.3 A B A PERCEN T L O A D 5.50 Foreign Markets IntlStkldxAdm 25.41 -.21 -0.4 - 1.5 +5.3 NA O D HISTORICALRETURNS StratgcEq 32.25 -.29 +0.2 +7.1 +19.2+16.1 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2020 28.71 -.08 +0.9 +3.4 +8.5 +8.1 A A A Return/Rank -50.06 -1.02 Paris 4,847.07 TgtRe2025 16.66 -.06 +0.8 +3.5 +9.3 +8.6 A A B London 6,365.27 -51.75 -.81 YEAR-TO-DATE +3.6 TotBdAdml 10.82 +.01 +1.6 +2.1 +1.8 +3.1 A C O Frankfurt 10,692.19 -1 09.15 -1.01 1-YEAR +9.4/A Totlntl 15.19 -.13 -0.5 -1.6 +5.2 +2.9 O D E Hong Kong23,142.73 + 26.48 + . 11 3-YEAR +15.1/A -.75 TotStlAdm 51.44 -.19 +1.1 +6.7 +15.8+14.0 8 8 A Mexico 44,698.02 -338.51 5-YEAR +13.2/A Milan 22,369.92 -259.72 -1.15 TotStldx 51.42 -.19 +1.0 +6.6 +15.6+13.8 C 0 8 -.90 3and5-yearretstss aressnsaltzed. Tokyo 18,777.04 -1 70.08 USGro 32.34 +.02 +8.1 +14.2 +19.7+15.9 A A A Stockholm 1,487.03 -19.13 -1.27 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -1.71 -.03 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in Sydney 5,384.57 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Zurich 8,849.92 -57.94 -.65 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Morninastar.
RivrVlly RiteAid TriVasc Tc AgiosPhm HeidrkStr PaciraPhm FrankElec NovoCure n ArdmoreSh RockwllM
L AST CHG 32.69 + 10.31 8 .67 +2 . 5 9 7 .00 +1 . 9 6 8 0.94 + 1 6.09 2 6.44 + 4 .51 4 9.12 + 7 .99 3 2.54 +4 . 8 1 2 3.87 +3 . 2 9 1 3.97 + 1 .67 1 2.21 + 1 .3 7
$64
AP
Source: Factaet
NAME RiteAid
Price-earnings ratio:16
$46
AP
Close:$49.60 V-2.39 or -4.6% The restaurant chain reported weaker third-quarter revenue than Wall Street expected, though earnings topped estimates. $60
Profits surge for slimmed4own MerckInterestRates
3Q '14 3 Q '15
Dividend: $3.16 Div. yield: 2.0%
Cheesecake Factory C A KE
Foreign Exchange The dollar rose slightly against the euro, British pound and other currencies ahead of this week's Federal Reserve policy meeting. However the dollar fell aaainst the
h58 88
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
V V V L V V V
2.85 4.36 2.18 5.87 3.9 7 1.7 7 2.9 5
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 43.20 43.98 -1.77 -1 8.9 -3.0 1.58 1.59 -0.06 1.42 1.43 -0.11 -22.9 2.09 2.06 +1.45 -27.6 1.29 1.29 -0.05 -10.3
CLOSE PVS. 1166.80 1167.00 15.86 15.90 988.40 995.80 2.36 2.36 678.25 683.40
%CH. %YTD -0.02 -1.4 - 0.26 + 1 . 9 -0.74 -18.2 +0.06 -16.9 -0.75 -15.1
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.37 1.40 -2.06 -17.5 Coffee (Ib) 1.17 1.17 -29.6 -4.3 Corn (bu) 3.80 3.85 -1.17 Cotton (Ib) 0.62 0.62 + 0.34 + 3 . 4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 255.00 257.00 -0.78 -23.0 -1.4 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.38 1.35 +2.30 Soybeans (bu) 8.91 8.85 +0.71 -1 2.6 Wheat(bu) 5.09 5.09 +0.05 -1 3.7 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USO per British Pound 1.5300 -.0048 -.31% 1.6129 Canadian Dollar 1.3 269 +.0108 +.81% 1.1237 USO per Euro 1.1040 -.0005 -.05% 1.2708 -.71 -.59% 107.70 JapaneseYen 120.33 Mexican Peso 16. 5335 -.0128 -.08% 13.5662 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8769 +.0041 +.11% 3.7662 Norwegian Krone 8 . 4677 +.1335 +1.58% 6.5998 SouthAfrican Rand 13.6847 +.0350 +.26% 10.9388 Swedish Krona 8.5 0 18 -.0141 -.17% 7.3004 Swiss Franc .9863 +.0029 +.29% . 9 486 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.3903 +.0108 +.78% 1.1355 Chinese Yuan 6 3525 +.0007 +.01% 6,1165 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7499 -.0001 -.00% 7.7573 Indian Rupee 65.066 +.227 +.35% 61.310 Singapore Dollar 1.3960 +.0044 +.32% 1,2746 South KoreanWon 1136.40 +5.25 +.46% 1052,50 Taiwan Dollar 3 2.45 + . 1 1 +.34% 30.44
© www.bendbulletin.corn/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
BRIEFING
iciascee rae aaceners
Five Guysis coming toBend Five GuysBurgers and Fries, a restaurant chain based inVirginia, plansto open a location inBend near NEThird Street and NE FranklinAvenue. The Bendrestaurant will open at222 NEEmerson Ave.,next to Chipotle Mexican Grill andJersey Mike's Subs,said Mel Garges, FiveGuysfranchisee owner.Thebuilding is immediately south of Walgreens. He said hewould like to have therestaurant open aroundthe endof December,but if not, it should openearly in 2016.
Five Guys,which offers a menuof eight different burgers, four hot dogs, fries andfour sandwiches, hasmorethan 1,200 outlets in 47states, along with restaurants in six Canadianprovinces, according to its website.
Farm offers jobs to miltworkers A farm in Alfalfa that grows berries, tomatoes and marijuanainvited Woodgrain Millwork employees toapply for jobs there, a farmmanager said Tuesday. Ruby Farmsneeds employeesimmediately with the skills millworkers are likely to have,said Ralf Dilzer, thefarm's chief operating officer. The 20-acreoperation needs workerscapableof building, excavating, trimming plants andbuilding and maintaining water distribution systems, among othertasks, he said. Thefarm needstwo or three handsright away and another eight to10 by year's end,Dilzersaid. Woodgrain Millwork lastweekannounced its Prineville plant would close bythe end of January,andwith it would go the 55jobs that remain after thecompany reduced its operations early this year. Aheavy snowfall in November collapsed aportion of the Prineville plant's main roof, prompting the Idaho-basedfirm to shutter most of theplant andla yoffmorethan200 employees. The remainderworked in a pellet plant, making interior trim molding. Any Woodgrain employeesinterested in working at RubyFarms may contact Dilzer at541213-4347, hesaid. — Bulletin staff report
BEST OF THE
BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Best In Business Showcase:Featuring awards, exhibitors and networking opportunities; free to attend; $195for exhibitors who areBend Chamber of Commerce members; $295 for nonmember exhibitors; 4 p.m.; The RiverhouseHotel & Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway97, Bend, 541-382-3221; http: I/ bendchamber.org. FRIDAY • ContractorsCCBTest Prep Course:Atwo-day class to preparefor the state-mandatedOregon construction contractor licensing test; $359;8 a.m.; COCCRedmond Campus — Technology Education Center, SECollege Loop, Redmond, 541-383-7290, www.cocc.edu/ccb.
SATURDAY • Mt. BachelorJobExpo: Apply for seasonal jobs and speakwith hiring managers; free; 9a.m.; Mt. Bachelor Ski Area —West Village Lodge,13000 SW Century Drive, Bend, 541-693-0942, www. mtbachelor.corn/jobs. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.corn/bizcal
• Passage of SB611 means more centers andjobs in Prinevile By Stephen Hamway
began on the first of two
here," McLane said.
The Bulletin
334,000-square-foot Facebook
Ken Patchett, director of Data Center Operations
PRINEVILLE — His-
torically, city officials said,
data centers in 2010. However, additional construction of
Prineville's economy was centered around two "T's:" timber
data centers was in jeopardy after a ruling by the Oregon
from the mills, and tires, due
Supreme Court threatened to
to the presence of Les Schwab Tire Centers.
change the way data centers were taxed, potentially adding millions of dollars in property tax for Apple and Facebook's properties in Prineville.
a third Facebook data center. The company plans to begin
SB 611 amends an existing
largest yet, at 487,700 square feet.
The passage of Senate Bill 611, which removed a property tax provision for Internet
providers, will allow the community to continue expanding its third "T:" technology, in the form of data centers from Apple and Facebook. State and local officials gatheredTuesday tocelebratethe bill's passage and to tour one of Facebook's two data centers on the outskirts of Prineville. After the tour, several elected
officials spoke at Prineville
law, granting a property tax exemption for businesses that install infrastructure that al-
lows thebusinesstoofferspecific communication services. State Rep. Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte, said the pas-
sage of SB 611, which was signed into law by Gov. Kate Brown in April, will spur more development going forward,
City Hall about the impacts that data centers from the two
in the form of additional data
companies have had on Crook County's economy.
business investment.
centers and other types of "I think the technology sec-
Data centers have been
tor's investment in Prineville is
a part of Prineville's econ-
going to lead the way toward more and more jobs coming
omy since construction
for Facebook in the Pacific Northwest, said the passage of the bill was a big reason that Prineville was able to secure construction on the new data
center after the first of the year, and it will be the city' s "Because of the work you
guys have been doing, this place is open for business,"
Andy Tullie/The Bulletin file photo
The exterior of the Facebook facility in Prineville in 2013. Because SB 611 passed, a third Facebook data center is coming to Prineville.
Patchett said during the tour of
the Facebook data center. McLane, who referred to the ing off the remaining 55 workregion's economy as a "three- ers in the next few months. legged stool," added that first Additionally, Prineville lost two legs were damaged in jobs when Les Schwab moved recent years. The logging its corporate headquarters to industry in Crook County suf- JuniperRidge in Bend in 2008. feredafteraroofcollapseat Because of those losses, the Woodgrain Millworks' factory impact of the data centers on forced the lumber company to the local economy has been lay off 218 people. Steve Foreven more important. Patchett rester, Prineville city manager, said the two Facebook data said the company will be laycenters employ 147 people full
time, with 73 percent of the
workers coming from Crook County. Crook County Judge Mike M cCabe added thattheaveragesalaryforem ployeesat Apple and Facebook data cen-
ters is around $55,000 per year. "So they' ve been good for our community," McCabe said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulleti n.corn
Google eeI meI eI officially onriSea I i ean Ii n eISembraces
By Danica Kirka
podcasts
The Associated Press
LONDON — Charles Kwara
and his friends sit around an earthenware pot, sipping a frothy gray drink through long straws as laughter fills
By Hayley Tsukayama The Washington Post
Google on Tuesday
the Charismatic Club in the
slums of Kampala, Uganda's capital.
announced that it will offi-
cially support podcasts for
The men joke that the crude
Android, through its Goo-
brew of fermented millet
gle Play store. According to an official post from Google, the company is launching an official podcast portal on its Google Play store and will soon launch a consumer service to let you listen
known as "malwa" makes
them feel both high and as if they'd just eaten. It's also what they can afford:they can drink malwa all evening for the cost of a single bottle of branded beer. "This is cheap," says Kwara, a 47-year-old marketing manager who heads a drinking
to them.
club. While they'd like bottled
beer, home brew istheonly option if they want a full night StephenWandera/The Associated Press out. "Drinking is also a way of Ugandans drink a local brew known as "malwa" at the Charismatic Club in the Kitintale district of socializing for us," Kwara says. Kampala, Uganda. Anheuser-Busch InBev has agreed to buy SABMiller as it targets Africa. The Charismatic Club, and
your non-iPhone smart-
phone. But they are most closely associated with Apple; the name itself ref-
brewers like it from Uganda to Ghana to South Africa, have something the makers of Budweiser want: potential
That's kind of a big deaL Podcasts aren't exactly locked to Apple — services such as Overcast let you get them pretty easily on
has stretched its tentacles
seeking to cash in on the new-
across the continent, betting that Africans will shift to
ing economies last year were in sub-Saharan Africa, and the region as a whole grew 4.6
erences the iPod, blended
percent, compared with 2.4 percent in the United States
however, the term itself is generic. The U.S. Patent
pean Union,theWorld Bank
and Trademark Office has rejected a past attempt
reported.
to trademark the word
customers. With beer sales slowing in
higher quality beers as eco-
est growth frontier. "Everyone is looking for the next big golden egg: It comes
nomic development increases
down to Africa," said Robert
North America and Europe,
disposable income. It now has operations in 17 countries on
Besseling, a principal analyst on Africa at IHS, a global research firm. "Everyone is anticipating a boom — even though it hasn't happened yet."
and 1.3 percent in the EuroAB InBev's bid for SABMiller comes at a time when the
"podcast," though specific podcasts have been able to
The continent, with its 1.1
growth of big brands such as
register their names.
Bud Lite and Stella Artois has stalled in the U.S. and Western
Podcasts have had a renaissance of sorts over
Anheuser-Busch InBev has agreed to pay more than $100
the continent, with another 21
billion for rival SABMiller, in
covered by Castel Group, in
large part to tap burgeoning growth in Africa, where many people still buy their beer from small neighborhood brewers.
which it has a stake. That foresight made SABMiller attractive to AB InBev,
already the world's biggest
be dismissed as an economic
SABMiller, the descendant
beer-maker, as it joins the list
backwater. Europe. Craft beers, wine and Four of the five fastest-grow- spirits are eating into profits.
of South African Breweries,
of international companies
billion people, can no longer
with the word broadcast.
For those wondering,
the past year, and the Pew
Research Center's latest State of the News Medha report indicates that nearly
Drugstoregiant: Walgreensbuying RiteAid The Associated Press
ceutical buyers even bigger at a time when other key health is buying rival Rite Aid for careplayerslikeinsurersand about $9.41 billion in cash, drugmakers also are expandcreating a drugstore giant with ing through multi-billion dollar nearly 18,000 stores around the deals. world. Walgreens said it will pay $9 The deal combines the for each share of Rite Aid Corp. That's a 48 percent premium to largest and third-largest U.S. drugstore chains, based on Rite Aid's dosing price of $6.08 storecounts.Anditm akesone Monday.Shares ofboth comof the world's largest pharma- panies jumped Tuesday after NEW YORK — Walgreens
The Wall Street Journal first
reported the deal. The companies said the deal is worth $17.2 billion, when
debt is included. Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. has more than 13,100
stores around the world. Rite Aid has more than 4,600 stores in the U.S.
The companies expect the deal to close in the second half
of next year, although given that it is combining the No. 1 and No. 3 players in its industry, it could draw dose scrutiny from anti-trust regulators. It comes less than year after
Walgreens bought European health and beauty retailer
one-third of Americans have listened to at least one podcast. Severalbreakout stars — think "Serial" or "99 Percent Invisible"have cultivated their own
dedicatedaudiences.Some have even managed to turn a profit.
For its own effort, Google has already confirmed that several popular podcasters and broadcasters including the Nerdist,
Alliance Boots. Besides its
Slate, Public Radio Interna-
namesake stores, Walgreens also owns Duane Reade stores
tional and HowStuffWorks are already working with Google on the effort.
in the U.S.
BANKRUPTCIES Chapter7 Filed Oct. 19 •Thomas E.DelkSr.,3048 SW High Desert Road, Prineville Filed Oct. 20 • Dan W. andShawnaR.Miler, 5063 S. U.S.Highway 97, Space55, Redmond •MatthewJ.Johnston,2420NW
Dogwood Ave., Bend • Tyson L. Grayson, 1977 SW42nd St., Redmond • William J. Samples, 69213 Lariat, Sisters Filed Oct. 21 • Tony M. Langdon, 63318 Lavacrest St., Bend • Shannon N. andGammyH. Enete,
20644 Redwing Lane,Bend • Jennifer R. Lopez, 423 NE Irving Ave. No.1, Bend Filed Oct. 22 • Sarah E. Hays, 1675NELotus Drive No. 2, Bend Filed Oct. 23 • Linda F. Rodriguez, 2265 SW Timber Ave., Redmond
• Clinton S. Kiingbeil, 1343 SW 33rd St., Redmond Filed Oct. 26 • Lori A. White, PO. Box1221, Redmond • Frederick B. andMargaret M. Warenskjold, 20737 Liberty Lane, Bend • Kasondra C. Nelson, 16393 SW
Dove Road,Terrebonne • Stephanie A. McNeil, 2625 NW Fawn RunLane, Bend • Dylan T. and Abigail L. Smith, 163 SE Williamson Drive, Prineville Chapter 13 Filed Oct. 22 • William M. Gannon, 64144Tyler Road, Bend
IN THE BACI4 ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT W Reader photos, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D3 Fishing Report, D4 O< www.bendbulletin.corn/outdoors
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
Fall a
WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6
great time for trout
BRIEFING Bend hiker gets Art Walk feature
fishing in
Bend's Mary Moynihan will be thefeatured author at thePatagonia store in downtownBend during the ArtWalkon Nov. 6, from 5p.m. to 8 p.m. Moynihan wrote "Married to theTrail," which
Montana By Ben Pierce The Bozernan (Mont.) Daily Chronicle
BOZEMAN, Mont. Ah, fall. Just the mention of the word brings excite-
tells the story of her th-
ru-hike of theContinental Divide Trail in 2011.The long-distanceNational Scenic Trail stretches from Mexico toCanada, and winds throughNew Mexico, Colorado,Wyoming, IdahoandMontana. Moynihancovered the 2,700-mile trail in four months. According to anews release, "Married to the Trail" intertwines the scenic nature ofthe Continental DivideTrail and the emotional honesty of a womanout there on her own. Moynihan, anemployee at PatagoniaBend since 2012,has also hiked theAppalachian and Pacific Crest trails, as well as the Te Araroa Trail in New Zealand.Shewil do readings andsignings during the Art Walk. Patagonia is located
ment to anglers. After the manic hustle and bustle of the summer season, au-
*
tumn bringsasense ofrelief. The crisp air, the clear skies, the promise of great things. October could last forever. For anglers across Montana, fall is the season for big brown trout. It's a just paradox that the throngs of tourists that travel to
the Treasure State each year in search of magazine-cover trout fish
july g
through the heat of summer and clear out just as
things are getting good. Through the summer months, pullouts along some of the region's popularrivers are mobbed. But
come fall, once the kids are back in school and the Winnebagos have made their exodus, the rivers
are left to the locals. And
at1000 NW Wall St. in
the fish are on the move. "The brown trout are starting to spawn," said Jake McGlothlin, a Boze-
downtown Bend. For more information, visit www.marriedtothetrail.corn. — Bulletin staff report
man fly fisherman and contributor to the fishing website chiwulff.corn.
"The browns are moving out of the lakes and reservoirs. With them getting aggressive, it is a good time of year to throw big
TRAIL UPDATE With ChrisSaba A dusting of snow in the higher elevations was a promising sign this week. Winter is on the horizon so bealert for announcementsof road closures. Common closures whenthe snow hits are Highway242 (McKenziePass), Highway 46(Cascade Lakes Highway),Paulina Peak RoadandRoad21 into Newberry Caldera. Sno-park seasonstarts Sunday andsno-park permits will be required once there issnowaccumulation. Daily andannual permits areavailable. Summer trails are in good condition. Days will be evenshorter after the daylight savings time switch Sunday. Beextra prepared whenventuring outdoors in caseof an emergency. Prescribed burning is ongoing this time ofyear so expect to seeburning in different areas.Winter volunteers aregearing up to start maintenanceon snowmobile andsnowshoe trails andwinter shelters. Tumalo Fallsand its viewpoint remains closed to all public accessuntil further notice. Phil's Trailhead is open,but bealert to construction equipment andwork crews.
streamers."
McGlothlin said anglers need to change the way they fish with the onset of
• A strong El Ninocould wreck the ski andsnowboard season yet again in CentralOregonand acrossthe Northwest Andy Tuiiie i The Bulletin file photo
to describe the strong El Nino weather pattern that is
currently affecting the western United States and that is
predicted to continue through the winter. Here in the Northwest,
an El Nino typically brings above-average temperatures and below-average precipitation. Translation: not much snow.
"The El Nino is big, it' s here," says Kathie Dello, the deputy director of Oregon Climate Service at Oregon
Reader photos
• We want to see your photos to run in our Well Shot! section. Submit your best work at beadbulletin.cern /readerphetesand we' ll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include ae much detail ae possible — when and where you took it, end any special technique used — ee well ee your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) andcannot be altered.
three days away, perhaps these terms are allowing forsome trendy costume themes.
Here's one:A Godzilla on skis trying to turn down a
snowless slope of rocks and
State University in Corvallis. "And there's also the blob."
dirt. The "blob" is what wrecked last winter for skiers and
As if snowriders needed
snowboarders — and it might
another monsterlike word to
pale in comparison to Bruce
— beetles, grasshoppers and ants — may still be
That means subsurmore important.
Lee, or Godzilla, or (insert fierce nickname here). An area of warm water off the Washington and Oregon coasts, the blob is what has
sparked abnormally high temperatures over the past year, according to Dello. But the El Nino, she adds, is much bigger than the blob. The El Nino is driven by warm water across the entire North Pacif-
ic Ocean. SeeEl Nino/D3
Streamers are large flies that are often designed to mimic small fish. Ahead of and during the spawning season brown trout defend their
territ ory and may be more likely to take a streamer than during the sum-
mer months. The cooler temperatures of fall give the fish a bit more vigor, and combined with the
spawn, can make for great fishing. SeeFall fishing/D4
anc serves u ir meat wit a twist was surprised how
t world is. We had people
commute) in a black chef's
small the bird-hunting
Well shot!
But with Halloween just
slowed. A few terrestrials
face flies — nymphs and streamers — become
significantly mitigated by terms such as "Bruce Lee" and "Godzilla." ruin their dreams of powder.
through the summer has
frosts.
the eternal optimism they display each fall, that optimism has been
MARK MORICAL
ety of insect hatches seen
around, but those bugs will die off with the first
s skiers and snowboarders look to the upcoming winter season with
Those are names being used by some meteorologists
fall. By this time of year the abundance and vari-
who were from Fortune 10
companies, and we had a guy and his son who had saved
GARY LEWIS
for five years to come on the
hunt of a lifetime. They were all sitting around the same table. They were all part of the
family." When Cookie was hired at Ruggs Ranch in 2011, he had never bird hunted. He wasn' t
even sure what a chukar was, but he guessed it must
be a bird. And Hungarian partridge? He had to research
adopted a southwest flair. If you want to sample the fare he
calls "basic camp food," you have to go bird hunting. When he moved to Eastern
Oregon, one of the first things he saw was a sign: "Welcome to Heppner, Gateway to the Blues." The next town he
came to was Ruggs, and when he moved in, you could still that one too. number the population on one Cookie's name is John Ku- hand. lon. A chef, trained in the clasThese days Cookie shows sic French tradition, he has up to work (he has a half-mile
jacket with a Realtree Xtra Brown camo collar, pockets
and cuffs. "My hobby is cooking," Cookie said. His other hobby is photography. "There aren't too many places where you can work and do the things you like." My friend Brian Smith, from Alabama, brought Ted Winglass, from Maryland.
0™-.
Neither one had hunted chukar. They couldn't have
picked a better year. We' ve had tough conditions across Eastern Oregon, but it has
been good for birds. Quail, pheasant, Huns and chukar
numbers are up. SeeChukar /D4
Gary Lewis /For The Bulletin
Chef John "Cookie" Kulon in the kitchenwith a pan full of chukar.
"Basic camp food," he calls it.
D2
THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
AnnaJacobs
SAHALIE FALLS
William Brandt
SMITH ROCK
Julien Havac
LOOKING UP AT FALL
v
Nate Wyeth
BLUE HOUR AT SPARKS LAKE
Marita Sutherlin
DESCHUTES RIVER Submit your best work at Q bentlbnlletin.corn/reatlerpbotos. Your entries will appear online, and we' ll choose thebest for publication in the Outdoors section. Also contribute to our other categories, including good photos of the great Central Oregon outdoors. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Byron Dudley
BROKEN TOP FROM FOX RIDGE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015• THE BULLETIN
UTDOORS CLIMBING BEA WEDNESDAYCLIMBING INDOORS:Wednesdays in November and December; for ages 9 to 12; this program introduces young climbers to the basics of climbing at the Bend Rock Gym. This program is for Miller and High Lakes Elementary students only; 1 p.m.; $140; Bend Endurance Academy, 500 SW Bond St., Suite 142, Bend; www.bendenduranceacademy.org or 541-419-5071. BEND BOULDER BASH: Nov. 14, Dec. 19 and Jan. 23; A climbing competition series; climbers throughout the Northwest are invited to compete for cash prizes at the final event; 5 p.m.; $20 in advance, $40 for January final; Bend Rock Gym, 1182 SECentennial Court, Bend; bendrockgym.corn or 541-388-6764.
CYCLING HALLOWEEN THUNDERCROSS: Saturday; 1,000 cyclocross racers donningcostumes andcompeting for Cross Crusade points; 8 a.m.; free for spectators; Deschutes Brewery, 901 SW Simpson Ave., Bend; www.crosscrusade.corn or
E ND
503-806-6943.
FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond;
www.cobe.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeach m onth at6 p.m.; 50 SW Bond St., Bend, Suite 4; 541306-4509, deschutestu@hotmail. corn; www.deschutes.tu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:Agroup
of fly-anglers fromaround Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541306-4509 or bendcastingclub©
gmail.corn. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www. sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m .;meets on the third Wednesday of each
D3
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click 'Add Event" 10 days before publication.
Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn,541-383-0318.
month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.
HIKING DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Ledby skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds and take in spring wildf lowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.
HUNTING CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION:Meetings are scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on select W ednesdays, including Nov.18 and Dec. 2; meetings are held at the VFW Hall in Redmond; contact DaveFuller at 541-447-2804. THE BENDCHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION:
7p.m. ;meetsthesecondWednesday of each month; King Buffet, Bend; ohabend.webs.corn. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029.
THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.
RUNNING NOON TACORUN: Wednesdays; order a Taco Stand burrito when you leave and we will have it when you return. Meet at FootZone a few minutes before noon; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www. footzonebend.corn/happenings or 541-317-3568. WEDNESDAYGROUPRUN: W ednesdays; a 3-to 5-milegroup run; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalvestonAve.,Bend; fleetfeetbend.corn or 541-389-1601. MONS RUNNINGGROUP: Thursdays; all moms welcome with or without strollers; 3- to 4.5-mile run at 8- to 12-minute mile paces; meet at FootZone at 9:15 a.m., rain or shine; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.corn or 541-317-3568. LAST THURSDAYGROWLERRUN: Thursday;featuring live music, local artwork and a 3- to 5-mile group run with beer from Growler Phils/Primal Cuts, music at 5:30 p.m., run starts
at 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www. fleetfeetbend.corn or 541-389-1601. CENTRAL OREGON RUNNING KLUB MONTHLY RUN: Nov.2; Join the Central Oregon Running Klub for a free monthly run beginning and ending at Crow's Feet Commons every first Monday of the Month; 5:30 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; 214-763-9985.
SHOOTING COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear
HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass.
corn.
SNOW SPORTS MBSEF WINTERNORDIC SKI RACE TRAININGPROGRAMS: Nov. 10; one- through six-day-a-week training programs for ages 7 and
up. Seasonbegins Nov. 10and
runs through March; 3 p.m.; $195$1,750; Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center, 13000 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.mbsef.org or 541-388-0002. MBSEF FREERIDESKI AND SNOWBOARD DEVELOPMENT AND COMPETITIONPROGRAMS: begins Nov. 25; one- to fiveday-a-week training for freeride skiers ages 8 and up. Full time program begins Nov. 25, while second Sundayof each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports competition team starts Dec. 5 and Association range, milepost 24, U.S. development program begins Dec. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318- 9 $650-$3 270 MBSEF Junior 8199,www.pinemountainposse. Race Center, Bend; www.mbsef.org corn. or 541-388-0002.
and eyeprotection are provided;
parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy action shooting club;
oz insi ea asca e oo out,watc in astormcamein By Zach Urness The (Salem) Statesman Journal
DETROIT — The arrival of
a storm is a glorious sight from insidea mountaintop lookout. Snugwithin glass windows, you watch dark clouds crawl upthe mountains, seep into the valleysand knock on your door with a rattle of wind and rain.
There's a feeling closeto guilt asyou sit cozy and warm while the rainpours down,just imagining anyone outside trying to set up a tent or sprint back to their car.
fire-finder and a wood stove. Nothingmore. There's no electricity, and you have to pack in your own
Lookout." Allen and a group of others
ly, though somewhat envious, that I wasstaying thenight. opposed that plan. EventualThe only problemwith stayly, they got a hold of the Sand ing at afire lookout is that once Mountain Society, a group of yousetup and explore the area,
water, stove, lantern and food,
along with packing out your garbage. "The mainthing people need to rememberto bring is extra
volunteers who do their utmost
to save any U.S.Forest Service fire lookout that's left, and be-
ganwork restoring GoldButte. "It was takenapart, piece by piece,all the way to ground lev-
water — there's none at the lookout, and it's a fairly steep
hike," said Josh Weathers,developed sites recreation manager for Willamette National Forest. zach Urness/ The (salem) statesman Journal
Suckers.
The trip
Over the past few years, I' ve
The drive requires navigat- Willamette National Forest north of Detroit. Built in 1934 as a staing one of the roughest gravel tion for spotting Japanese air attacks, Gold Butte was refurbished
been making an attempt to spend a night in all 20 of Oregon's lookouts. Last week, I
finally got the chance toenjoy
roads in Willamette National Forest, Forest Service Road 4697.
"The last three miles is the trip) with around 400 feet of Gold Butte Lookout north of Detroit. worst road many people are galI1. Built in 19 34 a nd a c tive ever going to drive," WeathThe hikefollows the road beduring World War II as a sta- ers said. "We recommend a fore turning onto a proper trail, tion for spotting Japaneseair high-dearance vehide with which svvitchbacks uphill to the attacks,Gold Butte was refur- something better than stan- lookout's perch —its own little bished for public use in 2007 dardstreettires. islandin the sky. "Also, make sure you have by the Sand Mountain Society. The lookout is so beloved that the ability to put on a spare Restoration it's almost impossible to rent tire." GoldButte Lookout looks so unless you start working at it sixmonths inadvance. The views from Gold Butte
Some people come just to
cadepeak from Mount Hood to main attraction.
encounter and follows the road and a trail 1.6miles to the look-
out (3.2 miles round-trip) with 800 feet of dimb.
If you' re staying overnight, you' llhave acode to unlock the in 1934 and qu ite spartan. first green gate and drive to a There'sa twin bed and cotsto secondgate.From here,it's0.75 sleep upto four, a desk, cabinet, milesto the lookout (1.5roundThe cabin is an exact replica of what you'd have found
ing was cataloged soit could go back in the sameprecise order."
asafternoon became evening. I made asmall fire in the wood
bird to cloudy to threatening
The lookout was fi nished stove, filling the cabin with a
and opened to the public in 2007.
toasty heat, and madedinner as the storm clouds wrapped themselves around the sur-
At thelookout
rounding mountains and beAfter thebumpy ride up For- gan blowing across GoldButte. As I ate pasta with pesto gon, dropping two incendiary est ServiceRoad 4697, Iparked bombsnear Brookings on Sept. at the green gate trailhead and, with a few cold brews — and 9, 1942, with thegoal ofigniting carrying a pack overloaded Mater enjoyed his kibble —we a forest fire. This being Oregon, with items including a lantern soaked in the glory of being and the forest damp, thebombs and extra water, headed to the high anddry and warm in the did little but smolder before be- lookout. middleof a storm. ing doused.You can hike this I wasjoined by mydog Mater spot today on t he Japanese — dogs are allowed at the look-
BombingSite Trail No. 1118). While Gold Butte Lookout
out — and we trekked up the roadfor half a mile to where a
never saw assault from the Jap-
trail shoots into the forest. The
anese,it was viciously attacked trail dimbs a final 0.25 mile by an infestation of carpenter to the lookout, showcasing inunchanged sincethe 1930s. ants. creasingly beautiful views until That's not quite true. "They turnedthe framing in the lookout appears on a crest The lookout was staffed the west, south and east walls overhead. for fire watching until around 1972. That included a st int
a book, looking out at the view
every fewmoments. The sky moved from blue-
hike to the lookout, without a it would be easy to imaginethat reservation to stay overnight. it's been sitting atop this peak
arespectacular even by lookout If that's the case, the trek bestandards. Every major Cas- gins at the first green gate you the Three Sisters is visible, and nearby Mount Jefferson isthe
much like a classic fire lookout,
smell every smell, and pee on every tree, I placed a chair on the lookout deck and dug into
el," said Allen, now a volunteer with the Sand Mountain Society. "Each piece of interior sid-
Fall leaves color the surroundings of the Gold Butte Lookout in the for public use in 2007.
there isn't much to do. While Mater attempted to
into Swiss cheese," said Don
9 ILSONSo f Redmond 541-548-2066
As I entered my abode for
Allen, a former Forest Service the night and gotsupplies orgaemployee. "In the late 1970s nized,two different groups of
during WorldWar II when people —often a married coupleand early 1980s,there was talk hikers showed up to check out watchedfor invading Japanese of 'disposing of' Gold Butte the view.Everyone was friendairplanes. (The Japanese did make an i ~'W i, offensiveattempt against Ore-
slNCl
ItNTREss
G allery-Be n d 541-330-5084
4"
R
r
El Nino
tions," Dello says. "We have another snow drought, and our to think about our mountains drought is expectedto persist Continued from D1 and the elevation. Lower ele- through the winter. We need While the weather pattern vation is the part we're most snow. We'll take rain — we makes the Northwest warmer concerned about, that 4,000- needsnow." and drier, California and the to 5,000-foot band, where we Dello and other climatoloSouthwest tend to be cooler didn't see the snow last year. gists are already comparing and wetterduring an El Nino. But we certainly got snow the current El Nino to those of "This El N i no i s M U C H above 6,000 feet." 1997-98 and 1982-83, thestronbigger than the one we were It is hard to imagine a win- gest El Ninos on record. talking about last year that ter muchworse for skiing and The last El Nino was 2009never came into play," Dello snowboarding than the l ast 10. The winters of 2010-11 and explains. "And we don't have one. Mt. Bachelor ski area, 2011-12brought La Ninas to the too many strong events to whose baseelevationis 6,300 Northwest; La ¹ nas have the compare it to. In someways feet, received just 212 inches inverse effect of El Ninos and that's good news. But we don' t of snowfall during the 2014-15 make forabove-averagesnownecessarily know how it will season, the lowest on record fall in the mountains. In winter playout. However,we do seea in the last 10years. The moun- 2010-11, Mt. Bachelor set a restronger signalin temperature tain averages 462 inches of cord with 665 inches of snow... warmer-than-normal tem- snowfall each winter. Bachelor fall, more than 55 feet. In 2011peratures in ElNino winters." closed onMay 10 this year, the 12, themountain was pounded If thereis any good news for earliest the resort has closed with 528 inchesof snow. snow sports enthusiasts in the since 1976-77,according to reBut the trend since then has long-term winter forecast, it is cordskept by the ski area. been for much warmer and that the most recent forecast Hoodoo Ski Area near Sis- drier wi n ters w i th me a ger from the National Oceanic ters, with a base elevation of snowfall. Dello, alsothe assoand Atmospheric Administra- 4,668 feet,opened Dec. 31 and ciate director of the Oregon tion noted an equal chance of stayed open for the first two Climate Change Research Inbelow normal, abovenormal, weekends in 2015 only to close stitute,says the trend is due to or normal pr ecipitation fo r Jan. 12 because of a skimpy global warming.Sheadds that Oregon. amount of snow. On April 20, Oregon is on pacefor its warm"And that's just because Hoodoo a nnounced it w a s est yearin recorded history. "Our winters are warming, where the line between wet closingfor the season. and dry sets up on the West Willamette Pass, located with or without El Nino," she Coast ... it'ssomewhere in Or- southwest of Bend off state says."Even our La Ninas are egon," Dello says. Highway 58, opened in ear- gettingwarmer. We areseeing Buthighertemperatures are ly January but soon closed. this warming trend. That's not likely, meaning less precipita- By the start of March, the ski to say there won't be big snow tion falling as snow. area had amessage on its web- years in the fu ture, but we "With those warm tempera- site saying it was donefor the are really stacking the deck turesit could look a lot like last season. with more of these low snow"It's pretty hard to getworse pack years, mostly becauseof winter, where our precipitation was near normal, but it just than last year (for snowfall), temperature." wasn't falling as snow, except but it could be just as bad," — Reporter: 541-383-0318, for at the very highest eleva- Dello laments. "We could see mmorical@bendbulletirLcom
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D4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
FISHING REPORT ANTELOPEFLAT RESERVOIR: The water remains dirty and low. Recent sampling indicated many trout available in the 10to 13-inch range. BEND PINE NURSERY:Open to fishing all year. Limit two fish
FLY-TYING CORNER
per day. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: Closes to fishing after Saturday. Trout daily catch limit may include one rainbow trout
over 16 inchesand onenonfinclipped (unmarked) rainbow Ben Pierce /The Bozeman (Mont.) Daily Chronicle
Erin McCleary fishes a small stream south of Butte, Montana. Cooler temperatures during fall prompt brown trout to begin their annual spawning run.
Fall fishing
havebeen polished bythefi sh," trout, but it is not a way to fish McGlothlin said. "This time ethically or sustainably. The Continued from D1 of year the river bottoms are bottom line is don't fish over L arge brown t r ou t t h a t pretty mossy. When you see a redds. spend the majority of the year patch that is deaned off, it realFor anglers less interested in still waters move into rivers ly stands out." in targeting big trout and more and tributary streams in the As th e s p awn p r oceeds excited about catching trout on fall to find spawning habitat. through October and into No- dry flies, the fall can be a good Rivers such as the Madison vember, browns lay eggs on time as well. Baetis mayflies and Missouri, that have a series redds. Rainbow trout may fol- hatch in good numbers during of reservoirs, are good plac- low the browns and position the fall and can bring trout to es to seek these fish. Anglers, themselvesbelow redds to feed the surface. at least the ones who can pull on nutrient-rich eggs swept The Baetis hatch is temperathemselves away from hunting down by the current of the ture and weather dependent. for a day or two, can capitalize river. The eggs incubate in the The tinymayflies prefer overon this seasonal migration. shallow gravel before hatching cast days with highs around "If you are willing to do a out as fry, which develop into 45-50 degrees. During last week's cold snap, a good numlittle research, there are really the next generation of trout. good fishing opportunities evMcGlothlin said a nglers ber of Baetis hatched on the erywhere," McGlothlin said. who want to pursue fish during Yellowstone River. "Baetis are the biggest hatch Brown trout prefer to build spawning season should avoid their nests — called redds — in fishing for actively spawn- we have each fall," said Jake shallow areas of the river with ing trout and be careful not to Adelman, manager of Monpea-sized gravel. The fish dear wade over redds. tana Troutfitters. "Next week' s "People are becoming more weather is calling for highs in the river bottom of algae and weeds in preparation for the aware of it, but there are still the 50s and 60s with clouds spawn. those people that want to get and rain, but I'd plan on the end e(Redds) look like bright- their big fish picture," McGloth- of November to start seeing er areas ofthe river bed that lin said. "You can get some big more consistent hatches."
Chukar Continued from D1 Ted wasn't even sure what a
chukar looked like. They look like a blur of gray feathers and they sound like little rockets. We started away
from the truck in the morning. G ene Barnhart turned t w o
English cocker spaniels loose and they ran past the birds first then doubled back. I had chukar aroundmy feetbeforethey got motivated. I had one going straight away and missed it with the first barrel, let it get
out quite a ways further, then crumpled it with the second shot.
Soon Brian had his first chukar. It took Ted a few more tries
Cookie calls it all "basic camp food." It's not so basic. Pheasant of hisfresh elderberry jam on with a redeye gravy made from homemade bread for tricking leftover morning coffee and me. served on jalapeno cheddar "I like to incorporate wild grits. Chukar picata with toastgame into almost every aspect ed garlic angel hair pasta. Panof the meal. I can make any- seared Hungarian partridge thing taste good. My philoso- served on a green chili toasted phy is that I'm taking dishes corn soft polenta with a garlic that are familiar to people, in- ancho chili glaze. corporated with game." Then there's the green shtuff. This isn't a chef afraid to try Cookie will give you that recisomething new. pe, if you' reapart of the family. "At some point we' re going — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV" and to get us a badger. With the porcupine, I was looking for a author of "John Nosier — Going brand-new flavor profile and Ballistic," "Fishing Mount Hood it was disappointing. And the Country," "Hunting Oregon" and rattlesnakes out here aren't big other titles. Contact Lewis at enough to eat." ttrWW.GaryLeWiSOutdOOrS.COI.
Portobell o mushrooms and
shredded raccoon. It was good, but I made him serve me some
trout. CRESCENTLAKE:Open to fishing all year. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMAN DAM:Anglersare reporting very low water levels, but fishing has continued to be good. Fish that are being released should not be removed from the water. CULTUS LAKE:Open to fishing all year. DAVIS LAKE:Open to fishing all year. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. EAST LAKE:Closes to fishing after Saturday. Unmarked rainbow trout must be released. FALL RIVER:Fall River below the falls is closed to fishing. Fishing above the falls is open all year. Anglers report good fishing for trout. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. HOOD RIVER:Steelhead fishing on the Hood will be slow through the summer and early fall. Anglers can expect a few fish in November and
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
DeschutesOctober Caddis, courtesy Deschutes Canyon Fly
Shop, Maupin. Here's a steelhead fly that's a good choice whenthe water is low, the afternoons arewarm andthe bugs skitter over the surface. Created byJohn Hazel, this Deschutes October Caddis, aka the Low WaterCaddis, is effective from late September through early November. Caddis make abig buzz inOctober andthe steelheadare watching. Summer-runs maynot be active feeders, but they do eat, and a big caddis fly is a mouthful. This oneworks skated, chugged, floated dead-drift or swung on flaoating line. Tie this October Caddis on anup-eye No. 6steelhead hook. Start with rusty thread and light orange hackle fibers for the tail. Wrap the body with dubbed ginger angora goat or asparkling golden stone blend. Rib with white or tan ostrich herl. For the wing, use India henbackfeathers. An option is to tie in two strands of pearl Flashabou. Tofinish, spin golden brown deer hair for the headandtrim as shown. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin
December.
HOSMER LAKE:Open to fishing all year. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK: Fishing for kokanee has been excellent. LAVA LAKE(BIG): Closes to fishing after Saturday. LAVA LAKE(SMALL): Open to fishing all year. LOST LAKE:Lost Lake offers great fishing at one of Oregon's most scenic lakes. METOLIUS RIVER:Mainstem upstream of Allingham Bridge closes to fishing after Saturday. Allingham Bridge downstream to the mouth is open to fishing
all year aswell as catch-
and-release for all species, including bull trout. Special fishing regulations apply to the Metolius River. NORTH TWIN LAKE: Temporary regulations are in effect for North Twin Lake. Until Nov. 9, there is no bag limit or possession limit, and no size limits. Starting Nov. 9, North Twin Lake will be closed
to fishing until at least Dec. 31. Contact Erik Moberly at 541-3886145 if you have any questions. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day with an 8-inch minimum length. OCHOCO RESERVOIR:Recent sampling indicated good numbers of trout up to 16 inches long. Excellent numbers of smallmouth
bass are present, especially along
opportunities are excellent. PRINEVILLE YOUTHFISHING POND:The pond will be stocked this week with rainbow trout. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Open to fishing all year. Limit is two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to anglers 17 years old and younger. SOUTH TWIN LAKE:Closes to fishing after Saturday. SUTTLE LAKE:Open to fishing all
the rocky shorelines near the dam. ODELL LAKE:Closes to fishing after Saturday. Closed to fishing for bull trout and any incidental caught bull trout must be released unharmed. All tributaries to Odell Lake are closed to fishing. PAULINA LAKE:Closed to fishing after Saturday. Unmarked rainbow trout must be released. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR:The water level is low. All boat ramps at the reservoir are now closed. Crappie and smallmouth bass
THREE CREEK LAKE: Opento fishing all year. WALTON LAKE:Recentsam plin g indicated good numbers of healthy trout. Most trout average 10 to 12 inches long but there are good numbers of trout up to 16 inches long. WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Closes to fishing after Saturday. Closed upstream of ODFW markers located near West South Twin boat ramp.
year.
and then he got a close-up look at a bird brought to hand by a cocker spaniel. This bird would find his destiny in Cookie's kitchen. What the virtuoso of the
fame-fi l red saucepan doesn't always let on is that he is a fine bass player. "I was working at The Point at Squaw Peak in Phoenix, Arizona, in the Cantina. I think it
was 1985 and Rush had played in Phoenix and they came in our little place for breakfast."
Alex Lifeson, Rush's guitarist and Geddy Lee had plates in hand, coming through the line. "And I said, 'Hello, fellow bass player.'" That landedhim a one-hour
impromptu jam session with Rush and a lesson with the master. Chukar are the bird that
Get checked. Learn about regular, preventive women's health screenings.
bring this family together. And Ruggs Ranch often has hunters from all over the country, many for their first chukar hunt. Whatever a chukar is.
"My personal favorite is the
chukar. I think it's the best tast-
ing bird we have," Cookie says now. Cookie found himself in an Asian fusion restaurant south
of Denver three years ago thinking about chukar sushi. As soon as he got back to camp the next season, he put his plan
It's a fact - screeningsaveslives. But life is busyand time is short. If it's beenawhile sinceyou'veseen an OB/GYN provider, giveusacall for a regular check-up.
into action. "It's almost like a chukar sal-
ad with the (cooked) wild game leg meat mixed with red bell pepper, poblano and avocado." The finished product is a
Peace of mind is definitely worth taking the time.
sum of the parts: half ranch
dressing, half barbecue sauce, a little bit of onion and a sweet
Schedule anappointment with oneof ourproviderstoday.
mesquite seasoning in Botan
Calrose rice, wrapped in nori paper. "Moving to a rural commu-
nity from the big city was a shock," Cookie said."There is a different culture, a different mindset and ethic. Out here
people are all about killing their own animals and bringing in the meat." Cookie had hunted as a kid, but he became a hunter at
Ruggs Ranch. His enthusiasm keeps the menu interesting. We sat down to a lunch stew
made with beef stock, potatoes,
St. Charles Center for
Women's Health
HOIF OPEH IH BEHDI 2600 NE NEFF RD. I 541-706-5920 REDMOND andPRINEVILLE I 541426-6635
SCharlesHealthCare.org/womenshealth 08
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015• THE BULLETIN
D5
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
Jo n Ben amin Hic e oesn'trea reviews TV SPOTLIGHT
a good waiter. I did telemarketing, legal proofing. I did everything. My family did not have a lot of money, so I was on my own. When I got out of school I had to work double shifts every single day to get myself through the next year of school."
"Manhattan" 9 p.m. Tuesdays, WGN America
By Luaine Lee Tribune News Service
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. When actor John Benjamin -
want to come home.' She said, 'Well, you' re not. You' re going to have to just toughen up and maybe stop reading those
John Benjamin Hickey stars as a brilliant physicist in WGN Amer-
a ctors read r e auditioned and they accept 15,
and I never in a million years thought I would get in. And I got in," he says.
S till, H i ckey w a sn't t h e
"In that moment I thought,
was too good for harsh criticism. In fact, he thought the
it's been decided for me. It's no
kind of actor who thought he 'Oh, I'm going to do this. Now longer in my hands to decide.' Because I don't know if I ever
opposite. "I loved acting kind of rec- would've had the courage to reationally in college and high decide to do it." school just 'cause I loved theWhile his parents — his ater people. I felt at home with them, and they were like my
family. But that seemed very recreational and extra-curricular. Then when I was in col-
mom a teacher and his dad a
banker — were pleased, they were also extremely upset. Because he was so positive
he would never be accepted at lege in New York, I auditioned the prestigious acting school, for Juilliard. And 1,500 kids
because you' re c onstantly
combating its ability to kick you squarely in the pants." Kicked in the pants or not,
lifestyle. And I love that."
forthbetween coasts for parts Greg Peters I WGN America via Tribune News Service
another review since then," he ica's intriguing series, "Manhattan," about the Manhattan Project recalls. that devised the first atomic bomb. views only to find the one that doesn't like them. Because a good review is never good enough, and a bad review you never ever forget."
"I think when you have a
great job, that's your hardest
he describes acting asa form of "body snatching." "You get gional theater about six months to give yourself to a completeafter graduation and hasn' t l y different world than t h e quit since. Though he's most- world you are from, or you live ly been a theater actor, Hickey in. It makes for a very intrepid has been bouncing back and and crazy kind ofnomadic
mance in New York he called his mom in Texas. "I said, 'I
" I think
and place. So I have a greater understanding of it.
It was all worth it for Hickey, 52. He nabbed his first job in re-
Hickey read the first crushing review of his stage perfor-
things.' And I' ve never read
and the physics of that time
Hickey failed to check the box
indicating he would need a scholarship or financial aid. "My parents didn't have the money to send me to Juilliard
in "The Good Wife," "The Big C," "Transformers: Revenge of
He and his longtime partner (a writer on TV's "Modern the Fallen" and his current hit, Family" ) live in New York. "Manhattan," airing its second And while Hickey has the disseason on WGN America. tinction of being one of the few Hickey plays the brilliant actors who has costarred on physicist, Frank Miller, the every single version of "Law guiding hand behind the de- ft. Order," he says there are sign of our first atomic bomb, times he feels overwhelmed. "It's not easy. It t akes a
who is isolated with his team
so we had to scrape the mon- in Los Alamos, New Mexico, ey together for that first year and suddenly finds himself a and then I got on financial aid prisoner. and scholarship after that," he Today, dressed in a gray suit says. and checked shirt with blue The boy who'd spent part vertical stripes, Hickey says of his childhood on a cotton his most challenging job is alfarm executed all k i nds of ways the one he's doing now. jobs while he was studying. "If the jobs are as wonderful "I walked dogs. In New York and demanding as'Manhatthey call you a 'dog walker.' tan' is. The material is so intelWhat you' re really doing is ligent and so brilliant and so picking up dog poop. I wait- outside my realm of thinking ed tables in just about every that I'm constantly immersing restaurant in the world. I was myself in that time and place
Bo rien ta es istrusttoextremes
lot of discipline. You have to take stock of where you are. You try y our best not
to spend money. Actors will hearthey've gota callback on a good job and they' ll go out and spend the money they' re going to make on that job. And then they may not get the
job. You' ve got to try your best to live in the moment ... and that's the secret to good acting
is being alive to the possibility of the moment that's in front
of you."
MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-O and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
Dear Abby:I'm madly in love with your friendships with your male other, more important issues to put a man I' ve been dating for almost friends. That he comes over with no the money toward. a year, but I don't think he's in love notice hoping to catch you cheating This is a hot topic, and it always with me. He daims he's been hurt
is more than a little sick, and what
leads to fights. I don't know if our re-
twice from two failed marriages. he pulled during his midnight prowl He keeps giving me mixed sig- is off the charts.
lationship will last much longer if it isn't resolved. Advice, Abby?
nals. He questions me about my
It is important that you under-
— Anguished in Austin
male friends constantly. He shows stand the only way he will ever overDear Anguished:Put that vasecup at my apartment without calling come his insecurities and inability to tomy reversal on hold. What you in hopes that he will catch me with anoth-
er man. During his l a st drive-by, he saw me in my car at midnight l istening t o
trust will be with pro-
DEAR
mu s i c
and your wife need far more is to re-
fessional help. He is solve the problems in what is clearso messed up that you ly a very troubled marriage. Do not could enter a convent
consider surgery until these matters
and he would mount have been put to rest because whata security camera at ever is going on, another baby is the back door to make
NOT the answer.
while surfing the Web on my phone. sure you weren't going out on him. Dear Abby:One person handles Of course, he thought I was on the Not only should you abandon the money for our family reunion way out to a boyfriend's house be- ship, you should run like heck once every year. Only that one person cause I had my gym bag and a gro- you reach dry land. Hasn't it oc- knows how much comes in and how cery bag in the front seat with me. curred to you that this may be the much is spent. We all would like He ordered me to open my bags so reason two wives left him? copies of the treasurer's report, but he could see if I had any overnight Dear Abby:I am older than my he refuses. Is this right for a treasurclothes inside. After he saw there wife by 10 years. We have been mar- er of any organization? were no clothes, he calmed down. ried six years, and we have six chil— Puzzled Penny in North I don't know if I should keep this dren between us. We tried for anothCarolina relationship going or if I should er, but my wife miscarried. Dear Penny:No, it isn' t. If abandon ship. Could you please let I decided to have a vasectomy you think this relative may be beme know how Ishould handle my because my wife was determined having dishonestly, the rest of the situation? to have a baby without regard for family should agree that another — Mixed Signals in Virginia
my wishes or the extreme stress
individual will receive the monies
happening in our lives at the time. for the next reunion and provide an Begrudgingly, I am going to have accounting when the family is all tounless you have agreed that your it reversed, even though the cost of gether again. relationship with him is exdusive, the procedure is more than we can — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.corn he should not be grilling you about afford right now. I believe we have or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 Dear MixedSignals:You may be
madly in love with this man, but
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) 12:10, 3:20, 6:30, 9:40 • CRIMSONPEAK(R) 12:20, 3:10, 6:20, 9:10 • CRIMSONPEAKIMAX (R) 1:05, 4, 6:55, 9:45 • DRACULA (No MPAArating) 2, 7 • EVEREST(PG-I3) 1:25, 7:15 • GOOSEBUMPS(PG)1:10,3: 40,6:40,9:30 • GOOSEBUMPS3-0(PG)1:40,4:20,7:20,10:20 • HOTELTRANSYLVANIA 2 (PG)1250,3:I5,6,9 • THE INTERN(PG-13) 7:40, 10:30 • JEM ANDTHEHOLOGRAMS(PG) 12:15, 3:30, 7:10, 10 • THELAST WITCH HUNTER (PG-13) l2:30,3:25,6:50, 9:35 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 12:40, 3:50, 7:05, 10:15 • THEMARTIAN3-D(PG-13) I,4:10,7:25,IO:35 • MAZERUNNER:THE SCORCH TRIALS (PG-13)3:45, 10:40 • PAN(PG)1:20, 4:05 • ROCK THE KASBAH(Rj noon, 2:40, 6:10, 9:20 • SICARIO(R) 4:15, 10:05 • STEVE JOBS (R) 12:05, 2:55, 7:20, 10:10 • WOODLAWN(PG)12:45,7:45 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
TV TOOAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 5:45p.m.on TCM, Movie:"The Adventures of IchabodandMr. Toad" — This animated 1949 Walt Disney double bill may seem oddly paired, but its second half, a beautifully rendered andvery spooky retelling of Washington Irving's "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," should be amandatory part of any family Halloween viewing party. While Bing Crosby narrates the saga of Ichabod Crane and the Headless Horseman, it's Basil Rathbone who narrates the high-spirited opener, an adaptation of Kenneth Grahame's "The Wind in the Willows." 8 p.m.on2,9,"The Middle"Isthis show borrowing a Halloween format gimmick from Fox's "The Simpsons?" Submitted
for your approval: Anewepisode called "Halloween Vl: Tick Tock Death" finds the various members of the Heckfamily unexpectedly trapped in their own "Twilight Zone"-like stories, with Brick (Atticus Shaffer) providing an introduction to each, a laRod Serling. Patricia Heaton, Neal Flynn and EderSher also star; Brooke Shields guest stars. 8 p.m. on 5, "TheMysteries of Laura" — If you can't stand the heat, get out of the steamroom. Laura (Debra Messing) and her team of detectives dive into the world of people who areunhealthily obsessed with fitness as they investigate the ghastly death of a
gym ownerwhowascookedalive in hisownsaunainanew episode called "The Mystery of the Dead Heat." Josh Lucas, Laz Alonso, Janina Gavankar,MaxJenkins and Gallic Thorne also star. 8 p.m. on CW,"Arrow" — In the new episode "Beyond Redemp-
tion," Laurel (KatieCassidy) is forced to facetheconsequences of her actions in NandaParbat. Elsewhere, Oliver (Stephen Amell) isn't entirely shocked by the response hegets when he
asks Capt.Lance(Paul Blackthorne) for a favor, but what he discovers afterward catches him off guard. Caity Lotz guest stars. 9 p.m.onSYFY,"GhostHunters" —In a special new Halloween-themed episode called
"Darker Learning,"JasonHawes and the TAPSteam are on location at Southern Vermont College in Bennington, Vermont, where they try to determine whetheras local legend would have it — a mysterious, doomed love triangle and suicides could be responsible for paranormal activity in the
area. ct zap2it
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • BEETLE JUICE (PG) 6 • INSIDE OUT(PG)2:30 • A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET (R)9 • Younger than 21 may attend aiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegal guaidi'an.
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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, OCT. 28, 2015:This yearyou often face opposition to your ideas and actions. Tap into different perspectives in order to enhance projects and ideas. You might experience an internal conflict about whether to listen to your intellect or your emotions. Try both. See what works best for you. If you are single, you will learn to accept others and their views more completely. 8tars showthe ging You could meet of tlsy you'll hsvs someone exciting ** * * * D ynamic who challenges ** * * Positive yo u . If you are ** * Average atta ched, try to
** So-so
respect whereyour
* Difficult
significant other is coming from. This attitude will produce more good feelings and acceptance. TAURUSlives the good life!
ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Your effectiveness seems to depend on your ability to multitask. Today you will demonstrate this trait, and it is likely to affect your finances. Curb a tendency to flare up quickly. Your desire to indulge a loved one emerges to this person's delight. Tonight: Midweek break.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
others. Gather information, and you will gain strength and knowledge as aresult. Tonight: Getas much R and R aspossible.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * * You know whereyou aregoing
any challenges to your ideas the most. Attempt to view others' feedback as ways about their willingness to pitch in, even if you dislike others interfering. Tonight: Go along with a loved one's ideas.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * Let others express their sense of direction before you decide to assume
more responsibility. In asense,you are
a star in your community or at work. You blend luck, energy and caring together when you take the lead. Others might wonder why they can't manifest similar traits; remind them of their uniqueness. Tonight: Where the gang is.
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
CAPRICORN (Dsc. 22-Jan. 19)
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
** * * * Y our down-to-earth attitude might help a friend more than you realize. You will help this person see the bigger picture. You also might stimulate his or her mental and emotional growth. That is why this person will seek you out today and in the future. Tonight: Respond to emails.
* *** Readallyou canaboutadeveloping situation or interest. Knowledge is power. You might be unusually driven, which is likely to distract several people around you. Don't worry — you havethe energy needed TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * O thers look to you for feedback to complete the task at handandmore. Tonight: Relax to great music. or support. Your creativity keeps emerging in waves. You won't want to plug up LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * * O ne-on-one relating could this well of imaginative thoughts. A new friend might be unusually difficult. Could be triggering youmorethan you choose this person be jealous of your popularity? to let on. Anger appears to be bubbling up from out of nowhere. To root out the Tonight: You choose. cause and handle it directly would emGEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * Your chatty ways and charming na- power you. Share your ideas on this issue. ture could backfire on you. You won't want Tonight: Opt for togetherness. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) to assume a low profile, but you might ** * * * Of all the signs, you resent need to. This is not the time to impress
I
of strengtheningyour plans. Begracious
and why. Some friends might surprise you with their willingness to pitch in. Be careful, as your high energy is likely to overwhelm them. If you don't have an outlet, your interactions could be challenging. Tonight: Only where the action is. ** * * Take charge and know what you want. Understand your goals, and be willing to take the lead to manifest them. Use caution with your spending, as you easily could go overboard. The damage could be substantial if you allow your impulses to get the best of you. Tonight: Out.
• GRANDMA(R) 5:30 • PEOPLEPLACESTHINGS (R) 7:30
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * Deal with a problem that might not be of your making. A close associate seems to need you to listen to his or her news and concerns. Work on your listening skills. Spend some time and/or thought on your domestic life. Tonight: Make your home your castle.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * Keep communication flowing between you and a loved one. This person recently might have expressed a lot of anger or frustration. One-on-one conversations will be essential to relating with him or her and resolving any issues. Tonight: Defer to this person more often. © King Features Syndicate
I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CRIMSONPEAK(R) 5:30, 8 • GOOSEBUMPS (PG)5:45,8 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 5:15, 8:15 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEGHOST DIMENSION (R) 5:30, 7:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • BRIDGE OF SPIES (PG-13) 4, 6:45 • HOTELTRANSYLVANIA2 (PG)4:30 • THE MARTIAN(PG-13) 4, 6:45 • ROCK THEKASBAH(Rj 4:30, 7 • SICARIO (R)6:30 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CRIMSONPEAK(R) 4:15, 7:20 • GOOSEBUMPS(PG)4:45,7:05 • JEMAND THE HOLOGRAMS (PG)4:10,6:50 • THE LASTWITCHHUNTER(PG-13) 4:50, 7:15 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEGHOST DIMENSION (R) 5, 7:10 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • GOOSEBUMPS (Upstairs — PG) 6:30 • THE INTERN (PG-13) 6:15 • THE UPSTAIRS SCREENING ROOM HAS LIMITED ACCESSIBILITY.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015
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Pets & Supplies
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Deposit c a n s/bottles G ENERATE SOM E needed for local all EXCITEMENT in your volunteer, non-profit neighborhood! Plan a cat rescue. Donate: garage sale and don' t Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 forget to advertise in Bend; Petco, Red- classified! mond; Smith S ign, 541-385-5809. 202 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; Love seat, leather, med. CRAFT in T u malo. brown, 6' wide, $175. Want to Buy or Rent C an pick u p Ig . 541-788-4229. Cash for wood dress- amounts. 389-8420. www.craftcats.org ers: wanted dead washers. 541-420-5640 German Shepherds Wanted: $Cash paid for www.sherman-ranch.us Quality. 541-281-6829 vintage fake & fine jewelry. Top dollar paid for Jack Chi-Weenie Mini Gold/Silver. I buy in P~PPy, $250 obo. bulk. Honest Artist 360-932-4054 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Lab Pups AKC,black 8 203 yellow, Master Hunter sired, performance pedi- Stanley dining set. Holiday Bazaar Hutch, pecan top gree, OFA cert hips & el& Craft Shows table — 6 chairs. bows, 541-771-2330 Bamboo design. www.kinnamanretrievere.corn A BIG Deal, benefiting $1200 OBO. 4-H, Desc h utesLabrador pups AKC, 541-382-0782 County Fairgrounds yellow, $ 3 00-$400. 541-954-1727. December 5 8 6, 2015 white glassVENDORS WANTED, Maremma guard dog Whirlpool top convection stove, Booths, $60 Commer- pup, purebred, $350 $375 541-548-6678 cial / $40 Craft. 541-546-6171 ACCEPTING D O NAThe Bulletin TIONS for Rummage POODLE pups, recommends extra Sale. We sell your toy or mini, I ceuu t e pu T ACK & EQU I P 541-475-3889 chasing products or, MENT for a 15% conservices from out of I signment. For info call Queens/and Heelers the area. Sending II Standard & Mini, $150 541.548.6088 cash, checks, ore & up. 541-280-1537 205 www.rightwayranch.wor i credit i n f ormation may be subjected to dpress.corn Items for Free i FRAUD. For more AKC Yellow information about an s FREE Virginia Creeper Registered Labs, born 9/1 5/1 5, advertiser, you may I starts. Call ready 11/1. 4 females, I call t h e Ore g onI 541-548-2879 Atto r ney ' 3 m a l es , mi c ro-' State chipped 8 vaccinated, i General's O f fi ce Find exactly what parents on site, dog Consumer Protec- • you are looking for in the trial & hunting back- tion h o t line at I grounds. $500. i 1-877-877-9392. CLASSIFIEDS 541-523-3782
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Shih Tzu Poo teacup puppies, first shots, dewormed, gorgeous. $450. 541-771-2606 Yorkie AKC pups, 1F, 3M, tiny, cute, UDT shots, health guar., pics, $850/up. 541-777-7743
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Antiques Wanted: Wood furniture, old signs, pocket knives, Yorkie pup, 12 wks. old, fishing gear, marbles, female, AKC, $850. tools, weathervanes, 541-241-0518 toys. 541-389-1578 The Bulletin reserves 210 right to publish all Furniture & Appliances the ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.
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Pets & Supplies
The Bulletin recom- Dinette,seats 6, good mends extra caution Coffee when purc h as- cond., $400; nic e w o od, ing products or ser- table, $400; Queen b e d, vices from out of the Serta mattress, headarea. Sending cash, Unique scalloped checks, or credit in- board, v ery clean, table top: 35t/ew di$1200. 805-720-3515 f ormation may be KRMore ameter, has sailing Pix at Bendbulletin.ot subjected to fraud. ship design on the For more informatop. Base is an old tion about an adveroak dock capstan. tiser, you may call Very unique piece, the O regon State could sell separately. Attorney General' s $329. Also Vintage Office C o n sumer wash bowl & pitcher Protection hotline at Estate Saleset, white & light blue 1-877-877-9392. Cash only! with gold trim.$65. Bedroom set: double See more pix at The Bulletin bed w/headboard 8 SecuioeCeetml Om poesince tpltp bendbulletin.corn mattress, 3 drawer 541-419%408 dresser w / m irror, Adopt a great cat or WANTED: Old Fishing nightstand, SOLD. two! Altered, vacci- Breakfast table: 4' Lures and/or Tackle nated, ID chip, tested, round oak, seats 4+ Boxes. Call local ¹ more! CRAFT, 65480 leaf seats 6, 4 up209-623-7174 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, holstered c h a irs, 215 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 SOLD. www.craftcats.org Coins & Stamps Dining room: AKC white G e rman 76 wx18w dark wood $'I50.72 wx42w Private collector buying Shepard pups, 8 wks. buffet, stamp albums & beautiful glass din- postage $700. 530-838-0516 collections, world-wide ing room table, 8 and U.S. 573-286-4343 Chihuahua pups, AKC. upholstered chairs, (local, cell phone). $350. Parents on site. $400. 541-504%228 541-420-9474
reAll Kohler completed Ponderosa pine quires computer adjetted tub, 2 s i nks, firewood split, vertisers with multiple faucets & commode; $160 or trade. ad schedules or those c ondition A+. P i cs 541-41 9-1 871 selling multiple sysavailable, $ 4 8 5/all. tems/ software, to dis541-788-1226 The Bulletin's close the name of the Copper Fire Pit Colt .44-40 Frontier business or the term 316 "Call A Service La Pine Habitat Cover Six Shooter 1892, "dealer" in their ads. RESTORE Professional" Directory Irrigation Equipment $3,400 4eAw barrel. Private party advertisRestored & Patinaed Building Supply Resale is all about meeting 541-233-3156. ers are defined as Quality at Steve's Pipe Straight66" dia. 20" high your needs. those who sell one LOW PRICES ening 3" a l uminum computer. New Smaller Cover 52684 Hwy 97 ipe straightened to Call on one of the 541-536-3234 a y flat, e asier t o ION NI%RI$ For Owner - $3000 257 professionals today! Open to the public . m ove. Rebates f o r $1800 Musical Instruments pipe str a ightening 541-480-7823 avail. 541-786-1128 DO YOU HAVE 269 266 BASS GUITAR SOMETHING TO Richard Gardening Supplies Heating 8, Stoves SOUNDG EAR by Need help fixing stuff? SELL FOR $5pp & Equipment Ibanez 4-string, black Call A Service Professional OR LESS? NOTICE TO exc cond with pre find the help you need. ADVERTISER mium padded case Non-commercial www.bendbulletin.corn BarkTurfsoil.corn Since September 29, strap and amphfier advertisers may 1991, advertising for $285. Fender electric 325 place an ad used woodstoves has PROMPT DELIVERY guitar, Squire Strat & with our Hay, Grain & Feed 543-389-9663 case, SOLD. Vintage Costume Clearance! been limited to mod"QUICK CASH els which have been banjo, 5-string, new SPECIAL" 100's of adult cos- certified by the OrFirst Quality green grass keys & strings, SOLD. tumes 1 week3!ines 13 for sale or rent hay, no rain, barn stored, egon Department of 541-385-4790. oi' at THE BEND FUN For newspaper $250/ton. Environmental Qual~kweeke pot delivery, call the Call 541-549-3831 VOGUE BANJO with FARM! 541-408-1210 ity (DEQ) and the fed- Circulation Ad must Patterson Ranch, Sisters Dept. at stand, exc e llent eral E n v ironmental 541-385-5800 include price of c ondition, $32 5 . Protection A g e n cy Quality orchard/grass ~in le kern of $50O W place an ad, call 541-385-4790 (EPA) as having met To541-385-5809 mix $225-$245 ton, or less, or multiple smoke emission stansmall bales, between items whosetotal 260 or email dards. A cer t ified classtfted@bendbulletin.corn Bend Redmond, del. does not exceed Misc. Items woodstove be avai. 541-280-7781 may $500. identified by its certifi- The Bulletin Serving Central Ocettoe sincefpttp 2 pairs of ladies Dan- Golden West pool cation label, which is Call Classified at Have an item to sko shoes, sz. 39, $60 table ex c . c o nd, permanently attached 541-385-5809 sell quick? ea. 541-280-891 3 dark cherry finish, to the stove. The Bulbendbulletin.corn 270 black felt, has racks, letin will not knowIf it's under 31 bags pack saddle and balls and cues. ingly accept advertisLost & Found p ellets, $3/b a g . $1000 professional '500 you can place it in ing for the sale of 541-280-8913 move or $700 you KAHR pistols; P9 uncertified The Bulletin move. 541-588-0508 9mm, $ 495 o b o . woodstoves. Classifieds for: Need to get an P45 .45ACP, $475 ad in ASAP? obo, with case, exTokon K a rate Gi, 267 '13 -3 lines, 7 days cellent co n dition. You can place it Kodomo sze 2, new. Fuel & Wood 541-389-9836 '20 - 3 lines, 14 days $30. 541-312-1150 online at: Pet Skunk Viowww.bendbulletin.corn let Lost at 14th and (Private Party ads only) 263 WHEN BUYING Albany. Black with Waffen Bennewitz Tools FIREWOOD... Wheat Straw for Sale. white stripes with 541-385-5809 classic mauser weaner pigs. more pr o minent Also, To avoid fraud, mountain rifle, as 2000 watt Briggs & 541-546-6171 The Bulletin w hite than a w i ld new, $600. S tratton gen., l i k e Bernina 820 in exskunk. She cannot payIthacasingle barrel new, in box, w/war- recommends cellent condition. spray. Hides in dark ment for Firewood Looking for your trap shotgun, very ranty, only used 6 hrs. Price includes lot of areas, attracted to only upon delivery next employee? nice, $650. $750. 541-771-7101. bobbins, carrying easily a c cessible Place a Bulletin and inspection. 541-548-3408 food. Please do not case, all sewing feet, C hicago pheumatic is 128 cu. ft. help wanted ad 4.5w • A cord attempt to catch her, Barbie case and all x 4' x 8' today and angle ai r g r i nder, • 4' instruction books. please call Receipts should 249 C P9110 12,00 0 reach over 563-357-7503 or $4700 cash. include name, RPM, used very little. 60,000 readers Art, Jewelry 319-493-1361 with 541-205-8525. phone, price and $260. 503-936-1778 each week. any information. & Furs kind of wood Your classified ad purchased. BuyPng Diamonds will also Beautiful 1.50 c a rat • Firewood ads /Gold for Cash appear on r ing, r ecently a p - Saxon's Fine Jewelers MUST include bendbulletin.corn praised at $ 15,400. species & cost per 541-389-6655 REIIIIEllllBER:If you which currently Asking $10,400 obo. cord to better serve 541-617-0846 have lost an animal, receives over BUYING our customers. don't forget to check Lionel/American Flyer 1.5 million page MARK V SHOPThe Humane Society trains, accessories. views every Desperately Seeking SMITH Model 510 541-408-2191. Bend Illissing 1940s diabandsaw, scrollsaw, month at no 541-382-3537 m ond ring sold a t BUYING & S E LLIHG strip sander, t hickextra cost. Redmond Bend Pawn approx. All gold jewelry, silver ness planer, dust colBulletin Aff year Dependable 541-923-0882 Sept.13-17, 2014 has and gold coins, bars, lector, support table, Ciassifieds Madras central diamond and 2 rounds, wedding sets, lathe chisel set, ring- Firewood: dry Get Results! little side stones, one class rings, sterling sil- master, wall mount- Lodgepole,split, del, 541-475-6889 Call 541-385-5809 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . Prineville is missing. Sz. 7.5. ing brackets for storor place your ad 541-213-1221 Please ver, coin collect, vin- a ge, s e t-up an d Multi-cord discountsl 541-447-71 78 watches, dental on-line at cash, check, Visa, MC or Craft Cats keep trying! Will pay tage operation m a nuals. qold. Bill Fl e ming, bendbulletin.corn 541-420-3484, Bend any reasonable price. 541-389-8420 $2000. 541-383-7124 541-382-9419. T HE B U LLETIN
CASH!I For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.
The Bulletin
Use one of these
8 Saving Specials!
241
Bicycles & Accessories
260
Estate Sales
Living Estate Sale Jean Schroeder Antiques, dining table 8 chairs, hutch, more furn. items, tools, collectibles and more. Fri. and Sat. 9-4 521 SW 15th St., Redmond. Park at Sam Johnson Park. The Crowley's Estate Sale 9-3pm Fri. 50% off Sat. $1 ea. Furn. exc. 19950 Driftwood Ct. 286
Sales Northeast Bend
Christmas in October! Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-3 1262 NE Burnside. Holiday decor, crafts, fabric, handcrafted gifts, antique cedar chest, vibrating recliner
G iant Talon 1 2 9 e r hardtail, small, excellent condition, $475. 541-408-1676 Jamis Dakar mtn bike 7 005 a l um . T- 6 , blue/silver, exc. cond 286 tires, great ChristSales Northeast Bend & m as g i f t , $45 0 541-593-8394
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit
Place an ad in The B ulletin fo r yo u r sale and receive a G arage Sale K i t FREE! KIT INCLUDES: • 6 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
terwog Central Ocegoo ounce C903
Exercise Equipment Precor Multi-sta tion strength and fitness unit,high quality always inside, exc. cond., paid over $1500, sell for $600. Must see! You move 541-330-0733. 245
• G olf Equipment CHECK YOURAD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. wSpellcheckw and
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to that unused Sales Southeast Bend item by placing it in Shop machines, tools, The Bulletin Classifieds accessories, m i sc. See craigslist. 60196 Vancouver Ln., Fri541 -385-5809 day & Saturday, 9-2
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human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The BulletinClassified
UPRIGHT PIANO Oak piano in great shape. Just tuned, has a few scratches on Iid. Bench not included.
Moving forces sale! $850 OBO 54~-000-000
*Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks
(whichever comes first!) Item Priced at:
• $499 and under • $500 to $999 • $1000 to $2499 • $2500 and over
Your Total Ad Cost oni
$39 $49 $59 $69
Includes up to 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline, and price. 3 items per ad maximum. • The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace
•The Central Oregon Nickel Ads • bendbulletirhcom
541-385-5809 *Private party merchandiseonly - excludes pets &livestock, autos, RVs,motorcycles, boats, airplanes, andgaragesale categories.
E2 WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 28 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 616
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Want To Rent
Houses for Rent General
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Employment Opportunities
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Independent Positions
Lady sr. citizen w/small Sales Help dog looking for room Add your web address Wanted: E n erto rent. 541-848-7165 to your ad and readgetic kiosk sales ers on The Buiietin's ne e ded web site, www.bend- person Tick, Tock immediately for the bulletin.corn, will be Central Or e g on Tick, Tock... able to click through 421 automatically to your area. Secured locations, high com...don't let time get Schools 8 Training website. missions paid away. Hire a weekly! For more HTR Truck School Assistant Professor professional out information, please REDMOND CAMPUS Oregon State Uniof The Bulletin's Our Grads Get Jobs! versity E x t ension c all H o ward a t 1-88$438-2235 541-279-0982. You Service and the 4-H "Call A Service WWW.HTR.EDU can a ls o e m a il Youth Development Professional" Program is recruittcoles @ yourneiBULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS ing for a f ull-time, ghbo rhood pubDirectory today! Search the area's most tenure-track, Assistions.corn for more 630 comprehensive listing of t ant Professor i n information. classified advertising... Deschutes, Oregon. Rooms for Rent real estate to automotive, Salary is commenmerchandise to sporting surate with educaFurnished room, no goods. Bulletin Classifieds tion and experience. smoking/drugs. $550/mo RmjjjCI appear every day in the To review posting + dep. 541-408-0846 ® l3zdlzce© Room print or on line. and a p ply, v i s it rental/Bend. Nice http: //oregonstate.ed Call 541-385-5809 master bdrm, private www.bendbulletin.corn u /jobs. Apply t o full bath, $500 mo. + posting ¹ t 6 0 8 6. sec. dep/references. Closing: 11/1 0/2015. The Bulletin 541-350-1281 SererngCencrelOregon sinceSgsg OSU is an
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Loans & Mortgages Correctional Officer WARNING Alison's Resort House T he Oregon D e - The Bulletin recompartment of Keeping Service mends you use cauOffering resort, residen- C orrections' D e e r tion when you proRidge Correctional tial, and commercial vide personal Institution in Madras, cleaning. information to compaOregon is seeking 541-213-5288 nies offering loans or qualified applicants credit, especially for Correctional Of476 those asking for adficer positions. SalEmployment vance loan fees or ary: $40,116.00 companies from out of Opportunities $57,432.00 annually, state. If you have with excellent benconcerns or quesefits. To view the CAUTION: tions, we suggest you full job announceAds published in consult your attorney "Employment O p - m ent and how t o or call CONSUMER visit our webportunities" include apply, HOTLINE, site at w ww.odocemployee and inde- jobs.corn. 1-877-877-9392. For quespendent positions. ions, call Eric at Ads fo r p o sitions t877-888-5234, BANK TURNED YOU that require a fee or DOWN? Private party X41059. upfront investment will loan on real esmust be stated. With tate equity. Credit, no any independent job problem, good equity The Bulletin opportunity, please is all you need. Call i nvestigate tho r Oregon Land Mortoughly. Use extra gage 541-388-4200. chasing products or ~ c aution when a pservices from out of • LOCAL MONEY: We buy plying for jobs on- f the area. Sending secured trust deeds & line and never proc ash, checks, o r note, some hard money vide personal infor- f credit i n formation loans. Call Pat Kellev mation to any source • may be subjected to 541-382-3099 ext.13. you may not have I FRAUD. researched and more informadeemed to be repu- For tion about an adver- ~ table. Use extreme you may call Bsjjainlh c aution when r e - f tiser, the Oregon State s ponding to A N Y I Attorney General's online employment Office C o n sumer g ad from out-of-state. Protection hotline at I We suggest you call I 1-877-877-9392. the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline LThe Bulletin at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Looking for your next • St o rage Rentals• Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Placeemployee? 27'x13.5', 14' overhead a Bulletin help Civil Rights Division, door, thermostat wanted ad today and 971-673- 0764. heated, rec. & rest reach over 60,000 room. GarajMahal on readers each week. The Bulletin Crusher Ave. in Bend. Your classified ad Annual rent neg. 541-385-5809 will also appear on Tenant pays utilities. ben dbulletin.corn 541-389-4111 which currently receives over 1.5 8' x 16' container for million page views rent in secure facility. every month at Dry, clean and only no extra cost. Daniel: on 10/4 O $100/mo. Call 9th St. Bulletin Classifieds St Francis Service RV Storage Center Get Results! you sat behind me. 541-389-6740 Call 385-5809 Please call for or place lunch.thanx R. your ad on-line at 503.305.5191 Roommate Wanted bendbulletin.corn
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human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Little Deschutes Lodge Income Limits Apply/Los Limites de Ingreso Establecidos Elderly/Ancianos Waitlist/Lista de espera 51725 Little Deschutes Ln., La Pine, OR 97739 (541 ) 536-5400
oppoRTUselN
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily 1 & 2 Bedrooms Avail. NOW at StoneLodge. Call 541-460-5323
Z~neagua r' /iy Za~<0a ~r,.
541-389-2486.
MANAGING
541-385-5809
LANDSCAPES Since 2006
Fall Clean Up
Don't track it in all Winter
•Leaves •Cones • Needles • Debris Hauling
Winter Prep •Pruning .Aerating •Fertilizing
Compost Applications Use Less Water
$$$ SAVE $$$ Improve Plant Health
2015 Maintenance Package Available EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential Senior Discounts 541-390-1466 Same Day Response
~**** * * * * * *
/ * Great Supplemental Income!!
start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and
Personal Services
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Af Your Service Errands & Notary I stand in line so you don't need to. errandsandnotary @ gmail.corn 541-815-1371
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attention Kevin Eldred.
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* No resumes will be accepted *
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Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
The Bulletin
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The successful candidate can expect to write a weekly front-page centerpiece for the paper, as well as report on local prep and community sports and recreation.
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aks, rafts and motor Ized personal waterc rafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
Look at: Bendhomes.corn for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale 880
Motorhomes Moto Guzzi Breva B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , 1 100 2007, o n l y one slide, low mileage, very clean, lots 11,600 miles. of storage, $28,500. $5,500. 541-639-9411 206-679-4745 Itasca 2003 31' Class C SUZUKI 2006 SV650S MH. Great cond., 31K tinted win d shield, miles, slider, $32,000. H ELI-Bars, fra m e 541-508-9700 guards, almost new Stowmaster 5000 vetires, red color, 10k hicle/motorhome tow miles, extras, exc. hitch, cables, wiring cond. only $3 100. and some brackets. 541-548-3443 $250. 541-410-5959
The Bulletin a
PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT
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V-Max 2009 Yamaha Lots of factory extras: windshield, saddlebags, back rest, rear cargo rack, bike cover, motorcycle hoist, alarm system, also set of new tires. $1 1,000
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The Bulletin, Central Oregon's leading media company, is seeking a resourceful and performance driven person to sell print and online advertising to local businesses on behalf of The Bulletin daily newspaper, bendbulletin.corn website, and our suite of successful niche magazines.
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All hiring contingent upon passing a drug test. EOE
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Candidates should have a proven track record of presenting solution sales strategies to local business prospects, as well as the ability to build and maintain strong relationships with clients.
To apply, respond with a resume and letter of interest to the attention of Jay Brandt, Advertising Director at jbrandt©bendbulletin.corn, or mail to: Advertising Director, The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708-6020.
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Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, traiier hitch, driver door w/power window, cruise, exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Reduced price: $64,950. 503-781-8812
14' 2006 Tracker fishing boat, 15hp motor, nice trailer. Like new. $4999. 541-719-0050 rI es 14' aluminum boat w/ trailer Trailer has 2 brand new tires & wheels Trailer in exc Beaver Contessa 40'cond., guaranteed no 2008, four slide diesel pusher. Loaded, leaks. 2 upholstered swivel seats, no mo- great condition. Warranty. Pictureshnfo at tor. $2,900. www.fourstarbend.corn 541-410-4066 541-647-1236 Columbus by Thor 30' m otorhome, 1 9 94, Chevy 454, B anks p ower w / new e r transmission, w a lkaround queen bed, 16' Seaswirl Tahoe 41K miles, full gas with trailer, 50 HP t ank! $ 9,500 o b o . Evinrude, bimini top, 541-598-6978 excellent condition. $3,500 541-647-1918
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This full-time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting sales. Generous sales incentives can be earned by those who are able to move the revenue needle.
Aerbus 2001 35', very good cond., 32,870 mi, Ford V-10, new tires, 2 slides, couch 8 recliner, L-Shapekitchen, queen walk around bed $35,000. 541-480-3632
541-508-1554
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Qualified applicants will have print/online advertising experience. College degree preferred.
No phone calls please.
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Western Communications seeks a reporter to cover community news and local sports for the Redmond Spokesman, its 4,000 circulation weekly newspaper in Redmond, Oregon.
The Bulletin
Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1 777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred O bendbulletin.corn).
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H arley Road K i n g Classic 2003, 100th Anniversary Edition, 16,360 mi., reduced $9,999. 541-647-7078 K awaskai Vul c a n Drifter 2005, 800cc, 1,150 mi., 1 owner, i n new cond., n o chips or scratches, always stored ins ide, $3,4 0 0 . 541-350-3886
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Please send your cover letter, resume, and a work sample attention: sportsassistant@bendbuffetin.corn
disability, 401 (k), paid vacation and sick time.
541-815-4458
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If you are a sports-minded journalist and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!
I~ Please submit a completed application . I
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Watercraft
TolOuattg • Proven interpersonal skills • Professional-level writing ability and sports background a must • Working knowledge of traditional high school sports • Proven computer and proofreading skills • Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadlineoriented environment • Must be able to successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen
I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI • are short (t t:30 - t:30). The work consists of• Serving Central / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackOregon Since 2003 ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and Residental/Commercial / other tasks. Sprinkler Blow-Outs IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl I including life insurance, short-term & long-term/ Fall Clean up
Bonded & Insured
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Serorng Central Oregon since S903
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The successful candidate will work weeknight and Saturday shifts.
/ Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts/
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List Your Home JandNIHomes.corn We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available.
Si OKESMAN rhea,BU-jjetttt
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~Lendeoe in •Landscape Construction eWater Feature Installation/M aint. •Pave rs •Renovations •Irrigation Installation
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Boats & Accessories
All real estate adver=I tising in this newspaper is subject to the 18' F air H o using A c t 541-548-5511 2 003 S u n 745 which makes it illegal I Cruiser - pontoon Homes for Sale to a d vertise "any boat, fully equipped. I Has only been used I preference, limitation or disc r imination a handful of times 8 NOTICE based on race, color, All real estate adverhas been in covered religion, sex, handi- tised here in is subI storage. A s k i ng cap, familial status, ject to the Federal marital status or na- F air Housing A c t , tional origin, or an in- which makes it illegal tention to make any to advertise any prefsuch pre f erence, erence, limitation or 850 limitation or discrimi- discrimination based nation." Familial sta- on race, color, reliSnowmobiles tus includes children ion, sex, handicap, under the age of 18 Iamilial status or naliving with parents or tional origin, or inten755 19' C lassic 1 9 90 legal cus t odians, tion to make any such I' pregnant women, and preferences, l i mita- SunriverRa Pine Homes Mastercraft ski boat. Pro-star 190 convenpeople securing cus- tions or discrimination. tody of children under We will not knowingly L a Pine 1 a cre / tional in-board, cus4-place enclosed Intertom trailer, exc. cond. 18. This newspaper accept any advertis- older s i n gle-wide state snowmobile trailer $8,995. will not knowingly ac- ing for real estate mobile home, 541-389-6562 decept any advertising which is in violation of tached garage, un- w/ RockyMountain pkg, $7500. 541-379-3530 for real estate which is this law. All persons derground FUN & FISH! well in violation of the law. are hereby informed house. 1 mile from 860 O ur r e aders a r e that all dwellings ad- state park. $89,900 Motorcycles & Accessories hereby informed that vertised are available 541-420-3611 all dwellings adver- on an equal opportuSport 1 5 0 Ta o T ao tised in this newspa- nity basis. The BulleS cooter, 2014 Al per are available on tin Classified most New , $ 9 9 5. 771 an equal opportunity 2006 Smokercraft 541-548-0345 Good classified ads tell basis. To complain of Lots Sunchaser 820 d iscrimination ca l l the essential facts in an model pontoon boat, HUD t o l l-free at interesting Manner.Write 8 Acre in Bend city 75HP Mercury and 1-800-877-0246. The from the readers view - not limits Flag lot in NE electric trolling motoll f ree t e lephone the seller' s. Convert the area of newer homes. tor, full canvas and number for the hear- facts into benefits. Show All underground utilimany extras. ing i m p aired is the reader howthe item will ties at street, view from Stored inside 1-800-927-9275. building site. DownBARON 2003 cushelp them in someway. $1 9,900 town, outdoor recretom built on '03 Vul541-350-5425 This Call The Bulletin At ation, all necessities in advertising tip can chassis, 1600 541-385-5809 minutes. $13 5 ,000 V-twin, 4600 miles, brought to you by Ads published in the Owner terms avail- custom paint, fendPlace Your Ad Or E-Mail "Boats" classification able 541-385-4790 The Bulletin ers, wheels, etc., At: www.bendbulletin.corn include: Speed, fishnerving eencrer oregon sinceigni comes with helmet, ing, drift, canoe, windshield and house and sail boats. more! Discounted for For all other types of off-season. $8,495. watercraft, please go 541-280-9404 to Class 875.
In this position you will play a vital role on our Sports Staff!
Sell them in I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I The Bulletin Classifieds • day night shift and other shifts as needed. We• • currently have openings all nights of the week.•
Central Oregon
PUBLISHER' S NOTICE
As a lead reporting position, it also entails a modest amount of editing of the Copper Leaf Village paper's copy, and is responsible for New C o n struction, coordinating coverage. Photography t ownhouse style 2 experience and skills a plus. m aster suites or 3 This is a full time position. bdrm, 2.5 bath, garage, some fireplaces please email resume and any and some was hers/ To apply, dryers, spacious relevant writing samples to: kitchen, extra storage, spokesmaneditorObendbulletin.corn gas heat, patio, no pets. Call Plus Property Man agement
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Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
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The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult Building/Contracting L a ndscaping/Yard Care carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land- perform strategic plans to meet department law requires anyone scape Contractors Law objectives such as increasing market share who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a construction work to businesses that ad- self-starter who can work both in the office be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form and in their assigned territory with minimal Construction Contrac- Landscape ConstrucEarly a.m. hours are necessary tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: supervision. with company vehicle provided. Strong active license p lanting, deck s , customer service skills and management skills means the contractor fences, arbors, necessary. Computer experience is is bonded & insured. water-features, and in- are You must pass a drug screening Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir- required. be able to be insured by company to drive COB l i c ense at rigation systems to be and www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we contractor.corn Landscape Contrac- b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o within company is available to or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit advancement The Bulletin recom- number is to be in- the right person. If you enjoy dealing with mends checking with cluded in all adver- people from diverse backgrounds and you are the CCB prior to con- tisements which indi- energetic, have great organizational skills and tracting with anyone. cate the business has interpersonal communication skills, please Some other t rades a bond, insurance and send your resume to: also req u ire addi- workers c ompensaThe Bulletin tional licenses and tion for their employc/o Kurt Muller cert ifications. ees. For your protecPO Box 6020 tion call 503-378-5909 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or use our website: or e-mail resume to: Handyman www.lcb.state. or.us to kmuffer@bendbuffet in.corn check license status No phone calls, please. I DO THAT! before contracting with The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace. EOE Home/Rental repairs the business. Persons Pre-empioyment drugscreen required. Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape Honest, guaranteed maintenance do not work. CCB¹151573 r equire an LC B l i - General Dennis 541-317-9768 cense. Landscaping/Yard Care
IRF ©Rll19
•
Home Delivery Advisor
Call 54 I -385-5809 to r o m ot e o u r service
• Redmond Homes
Community/Sports Reporter
EQUAL HOUSING
Only a few left! Two & Three Bdrms with Washer/Dryer and Patio or Deck. Bdrms also avail.) 780 sq. ft. downstairs (One Glen Apts unit for rent in home in Mountain 541.383.931 3 Awbrey Butte. Professionally Wifi. $675/mo. managed by 408-694-7045 Norris 8 Stevens, Inc.
•
Bsdl leaves
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Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, 16' Smoker Craft satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, fishing boat, 50 HP etc., 34,000 m iles. Yamaha ou t board Wintered in h e ated motor w/electric tilt 8 shop. $78,995 obo. electric trolling motor 541-447-8664 w/remote control mounted on bow, walk through w i ndshield, exc. cond. $8,500. 541-233-6223
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Fleetwood South-
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w ind, F ord, 32 ' , 1994, 82,000 miles, •
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17' SunCraft, 2 motors. $1,000. 541-593-7257
People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through
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queen bed & sleeper sofa, TV, cooktop, oven, m i c rowave, refrigerator & freezer, trailer hitch equipped, new tires, serviced. just $9,800. 503-459-1580.
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, OCT 28, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, OCT 28, 2015
E4
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD willi'sbortz
C L U B w edn~day,october 28,2015
Winning and losing
1 Engrossed
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Wendy, my club's feminist, had d iamonds, y o u r a i s e t o thr e e broken off a r elationship and was diamonds and he bids five diamonds. disconsolate — acting as lifeless as a What do you say? collapsed balloon. ANSWER: If partner can bid to an "Cheer up," Cy the Cynic told her. 11-trick contract when he has no side "It's better to have loved and lost than ace, you must be cold for at least 12 to have loved and won." tricks. True, your trump support is The two were partners in a penny minimal, but there is nothing for game, and Wendy gave Cy a sour partner to have except good trumps. look. When C y w a s d eclarer at Bid six diamonds. I would rather bid today's four hearts, West led a trump. seven diamonds than pass. The Cynic won in dummy and led the North dealer ace and a low diamond. East took the Both sides vidnerable king, Ied a second trump, won the next diamond and led a third trump. NORTH Cy's fourth diamond was a loser, and 43 10852 he also lost a spade. Down one. QQJ5
S Composer Bartok 9These, in San Jose 14The "A" of San Francisco'5 BART
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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Findfive gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
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Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.corn/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.corn/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.corn/studentcrosswords.
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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME Oy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
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54 1492 caravel 55 "Peace out, Pablo!" 56 Likeham in some omelets 58 Little one 59 Future flower 60 Shindig by the shore, and a hint to the starts of 17-, 25-, 35- and 49-Across 62 Run out of steam 63 Smallest of the litter 64 Derisive look 65 Rose support 66 Rich rocks 67 Root beer brand DOWN 1 ''Whatever you want"
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By AI Hollmer and C.C. Burtdkel O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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10/28/I 5
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 28 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
881
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
o 00
932
935
975
975
Antique & Classic Autos
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
'70
I mpala E 4 0 0 , $2,500. '76 Nova, $1,800. '03 Honda 700cc MC, $ 2 000.
09 Lexington 2006 283TS class B+motor coach, full GTS pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 burner range, half time oven, 3 slides w/awnings, Onan gen., King Dome satellite system, Ford V10 Triton, auto-leveling system, new tires, Falcon tow bar. Non-smoker, maintained in dry storage. Can email additional pictures.$55,000. 541-520-3407
Desert Fox 21SW 2014 toy hauler in excellent condition, has al l f e a tures shown on N o rthwood website, 4 season trailer, fuel s tation fo r AT V , non-smoker owned, n ever ha d A T V inside, u p g raded memory foam mattress, wheel bearings re- p acked. $31,000 406-396-1043
Forest River ( Rockwood) 2015 A122S, Loaded; fridge, micro., stove, shower, grill, sleeps 4, lots of storage. $11,600 obo.
f
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
541-410-5349
Mercedes 450 SL 1979 Roadster, soft & hard tops, always garaged, 122k mi., new tires, shocks and brakes, $7900. 541-548-5648
1/3 interest in
Columbia 400,
Financing available.
$125,000
Sunbeam Tiger 1966 Very clean car. Always garaged since repaint 30 y e a rs ago. Original 260 V-8 engine totally rebuilt 9,400 miles ago. Factory hard top, good condition 1/5 share in very nice soft top, many LAT 150 HP Cessna 150; dealer sold options 1973 Cessna 150 with so car is considered "stock" at car shows. Lycoming 0-320 150 hp engine conversion, I have owned the car 18 year s . 4000 hours. TT air- f or frame. Approx. 400 $ 70,000. Tel 5 4 1 hours o n 0- t i med 548 3458 0-320. Hanga red in nice (electric door) 933 city-owned hangar at Pickups the Bend Airport. One of very few C-150's that has never been a GALL t rainer. $4500 w i l l TODAY' consider trades f or ChevyPickup 1978, whatever. Call Jim long bed, 4x4, frame Frazee, 541-410-6007 up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see 1947 Stinson 108-2, engine has been gone itl $25,000 invested. through, the m a gs $12,000 OBO. or h ave b ee n g o n e 541-536-3889 through, new carb, 541-420-6215. brakes rebuilt, new ins trument panel & gauges, new ELT, & much more. Fresh annual.Signed offby Bend Ace mechanics, Bend airport. $24,000. 541-385-5662 Chevy Silverado 2500HD 2002, 4x4 Crew cab, canopy, Need to get an ad 86K original miles, LOADED! in ASAP' ? $1 5,500 OBO. 541-647-0565 Fax it to 541-322-7253
(located © Bend) 541-288-3333
Mercedes Benz 560-SL Toyota Avalon F ord Explorer X LT 1988, white, 74K mi., Lmtd 2007 1991 r eliable w e l l $10,100 541-350-6057 V-6 4dr. only 54k mi, cared for, clean, nonNew Everything: smoking, incl. 4 studbrakes, battery, Call a Pre ded winter tires, new Michelin tires/rims, H D b attery, 1 9 0 k Whether you need a show room condimiles, 20k towed be- fence fixed, hedges tion, local car, all hind mot o rhome trimmed or a house services, too! Noth$1500 obo Message mg to do to car. Just built, you' ll find 541-241-4896. drive! GPS/AC and professional help in heated seats, etc. Too much to list! The Bulletin's "Call a Was $17,459, Service Professional" reduced again! Directory $14,975. In Bend 541-385-5809 (928) 210-8323 Ford Freestyle Limited AWD 2005, Advertise your car! 7 seats, leather, Add A Prcture! heated front seats, Reach thousands of readers! radio/CD in-dash Call 541-385-5809 player, moonroof, roof The Bulletin Classlfieds rack, Has been garaged, no smoke or Chevy EI Camino REDUCED! dogs, Good cond. 1987, Classic! $3,300. 541-390-1602 Small Block 327 Modified engine. Large duration roller Nissan Ro ue Cam. Edlebrock I 2011 VERY cean I Toyota Camry Hybrid Alum Heads and I 30+ mpg hwy (25+ 2007, 1 51 k m i l es, more.$8,000 in town). Runs great! one owner, garaged, Runs Great! ( AWD, white w/black cruise, non-smoker, 541-977-2830 interior, air, cruise, fully l o a ded, all ( tilt, single CD, rear records, Now $7900. defrost, factory win541-350-9806 ( dowtint, powerlocks & windows. N e w
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LEGAL NOTICE Bank of A merica, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Darleen Dillon; U nites States o f America; State of Oregon; Occupants of th e P r emises; and the Real Property located at 4040 W Antler Ave, Redm ond, Ore g o n 97756, Defendant/s. Case No.: 15CV0219FC. NO-
minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier' s checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: http: //oregonsheriffssale.org/
T ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION jgeist©stoneacq.corn USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Mirada CLASS A REAL PROPERTY. 2014 Silver Edition, Notice is h e reby Door-to-door selling with 2 slides, 6K MILES, RV given that the Desexc. cond. CONSIGNMENTS c hutes Cou n t y fast results! It's the easiest Just Reduced! WANTED way in the world to sell. Sheriff's Office will, We Do The Work ... Now $77,777! on Thursday, De503-438-6060 You Keep The Cash! The Bulletin Classified cember 3, 2015 at On-site credit 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e 541-385-5809 approval team, main lobby of the web site presence. Deschutes County We Take Trade-Ins! LEGAL NOTICE S heriff's Offi c e, Federal N a t ional 63333 W. Highway BIG COUNTRY RV Mortgage Associa20, Bend, Oregon, Bend: 541-330-2495 tion, its successors sell, at public oral Monaco Monarch 31 ' Redmond: in interest and/or auction to the high2006, Ford V 10 , 541-548-5254 assigns, Plaintiff/s, est bidder, for cash 28,900 miles, I Toyo AT tires (less I v. Brian D. Stevens; or cashier's check, than 6k miles and auto-level, 2 slides, the real p roperty Joseph P. Tennant; ~ siped). New AGM ~ queen b ed & John J. T e nnant; commonly known as b attery. Alw a y s hide-a-bed sofa, 4k Thomas A. Tennant; Ford LTD 1985 4040 W Antler Av~ maintained. G r eat ~ gen, convection miCountry Squire F. enue, R e d mond, Mary [ commuter - winter crowave, 2 TVs, tow Wagon Exc. shape. O regon 977 5 6 . Tennant-Laier; Toyota Corolla S driver. $13 , 500 106,300 miles. Michael J. Tennant; package. 2007, 93 k m i l es, Conditions of Sale: I OBO Call or text I Small V-8 Engine. M. PRICE REDUCTION! automatic, s i l ver. Potential b i d ders Anne Unique R-Pod 2013 $2700 541-548-1821 Tennant-Buell; $59,000. New brakes a nd must arrive 15 mintrailer-tent combo, Robert E. Tennant 541-815-6319 u tes prior to t h e battery. Super clean, fully loaded, exand Nora Brady dba no smoking. Cruise auction to allow the Check out the tended service conTenn ant Investors, Deschutes County RV control, CD player, tract and bike rack. classifieds online an Oregon PartnerCONSIGNMENTS c loth seats, A C . Sheriff's Office to $14,500. www.bendb ff u e l i r L co r n review bid d er's ship; Robert TenWANTED Price: $6500. Call 541-595-3972 or Updated daily nant; Tillicum VilWe Do The Work ... 541-480-2700 to f unds. Only U . S. 503-780-4487 an d / or lage Homeowners You Keep The Cash! view. NO T E XTS currency Toyota FJ Cruiser On-site credit cashier's c h e cks A ssociation, I n c . ; PLEASE! 2012, 64K miles. all Kevin D. P adrick, made payable to approval team, pattym51@q.corn Looking for your hwy, original owner, Chapter 11 Trustee; web site presence. Deschutes County next employee? never been off road U nited Stated o f Sheriff's Office will We Take Trade-Ins! Place a Bulletin help or accidents, tow America; and Occube accepted. Paywanted ad today and pkg, brand new tires, Garage Sales pants of the prement must be made BIG COUNTRY RV reach over 60,000 very clean. $26,000. Ford Taurus 2007 80k mises, Defendant/s. Bend: 541-330-2495 in full immediately readers each week. Call or text Jeff at miles, 4 studded tires Garage Sales Case No.: Redmond: upon the close of Your classified ad 541-729-4552 i ncluded w/ri m s. 14CV0210FC. NO541-548-5254 the sale. For more will also appear on $4800. 541-416-9566 Garage Sales T ICE O F SAL E information on this bendbulletin.corn UNDER WRIT OF sale go to: http: //orFind them which currently reEXECUTION egonsheriffssales.or ceives over 1.5 milin REAL PROPERTY. g/ lion page views evNotice is h e reby The Bulletin ery month at no LEGAL NOTICE given that the Desextra cost. Bulletin Bank of A merica, The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classifieds c hutes Cou n t y Classifieds Get ReN.A., its successors Toyota Highlander Ltd To Subscribe call Sheriff's Office will, Southwind 33 ft. 1989 sults! Call 385-5809 Honda Accord 2005, in interest and/or 541-385-5809 2003, V-6, all wheel, on Tuesday, De541-385-5800 or go to on Chevy c hassis, or place your ad assigns, Plaintiff/s, garaged, A/C, leather, V6, fully l o aded, cember 8, 2015 at 64k mi., 454 motor, www.bendbulletin.corn on-line at Nav, Moon roof, CD, v. Scott Peery aka DVD, hitch, sunroof, 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e new front brake pads, ben dbulletin.corn perfect leather inteScott Brian Perry; extra se t w h eeled main lobby of the 6.5k Onan generator. rior, one owner, full JPMorgan C h ase B lizzak tires, n e w Deschutes County $9000. 541-389-7669 Bank successor in 882 timing belt, 187,700 maintained, always S heriff's Of fi c e , never interest to W a sh- 63333 W. Highway m i., 2 2 -2 3 mp g , garaged, Fifth Wheels Superhawk N7745G ington Mutual Bank; $7,500. 541-549-6896 wrecked, 143K road 20, Bend, Oregon, Owners' Group LLC miles, $7,999. Great He i g hts sell, at public oral VW Bug 2002, 117k Fairway Cessna 172/1 80 hp, car ready to drive. Homeowners Asso940 mi., 5 speed, sun roof, auction to the highDodge Big Horn full IFR, new avionics, Mike 541-499-5970 Uppe r heated leather seats, c iation; est bidder, for cash Ram 2500, 2005, 6 GTN 750, touchVans River's Edge Ownincludes studded tires. or cashier's check, speed manual. Exscreen center stack, ers Ass o ciation; Sunseeker 2500 T S OBO. the real p roperty tra tires and rims, $3,600 exceptionally clean. Discover Bank; FIA 541-410-1685 2015 by Forest River commonly known as Healthy engine canopy goes with. Card Services NA; triple slide Class C. 30' Alpenlite 1990 5th 20434 Ahha Lane, reserve fund. Excellent condition, Capital One Bank Purchased Jun e wheel i n e x cellent Hangared at KBDN. well mai n tained, B end, Oreg o n U SA NA ; O c c u2015, used twice (wife cond., $4,800 obo. 97702. Conditions One share runs great. 160K pants of the prebecame ill) F ULLY 541-41 0-6945 available. of Sale: P o tential miles. $2 8,500 mises; and the Real Loaded with Platinum Call 541-815-2144 Ford Windstar 2001, Infinity G35 c o upe bidders must arrive 541-620-1212 Property located at 2006. Mint! 44K mi. Full Body paint, auto Cameo 32' LXI, '01, wheel chair ramp plus 15 minutes prior to 555 Northwest Divot level system, Arctic 3 slides, rear lounge, Jazzy chair, 6 c yl., Must see! $15,950. the auction to allow 918 GMC 2500 1990 VW Jetta 1999, 187K D rive, Bend, O r 23K mi., g a raged. 541-389-9836. Pkg, rear c amera, island kitchen, new the Desc h utes 4x4,long bed, mi., 1 7 " whe e ls, egon 97701, DefenTrucks & $11K. 541-548-3172 B luetooth. Also i n - tires, wheel pack, County Sheriff's OfR aceland Ult i m o overloads, overdant/s. Case No.: cludes NEW Adco allHeavy Equipment f ice to revi e w coilovers, K enwood 13CV0849. NOsized wheels/ tires, 975 weather coach cover. new batteries, Onan bidder's funds. Only rear generator, stereo. New radiator T ICE O F SA L E $74,900. Call Jim cell cargo carry hitch, 1997 Utility 53'x1 02" dry $1990 or best offer. U.S. currency Automobiles •P hoses, motor mount 8 UNDER WRIT OF and/or ca s h ier' s 209.401.7449 (can $16,500 freight van. S liding 541-548-71 37 new CV axle. $2200 EXECUTION email addt'I photos) axles, leaf s prings, checks made pay541-923-2595. obo. 541-420-2016 or REAL PROPERTY. able to Deschutes good tires, body & GMC Pickup 1983 w/ Lexus ES350 2010, 541-279-8013 topper, 4 wheel drive, Notice is h e reby swing doors in exc. County Sheriff's OfWhat are you Excellent Condition go o d given that the Desf ice will b e a c cond., has no dings, r uns good, 32,000 miles, $20,000 looking for? Get your c hutes Cou n t y cepted. P a yment road ready! $ 7500 winter truck. $1,500 Looking for your 214-549-3627 (in obo. 907-310-1877 Sheriff's Office will, must be made in full business o bo. Sisters, O R . You' ll find it in next employee? on Thursday, DeBMW Z3 R o adster Bend) 541-719-1217 i mmediately u p on Place a Bulletin help cember 17, 2015 at 1 997, $4500. C a l l The Bulletin Classifieds t he close o f t h e wanted ad today and 541-548-0345 to see. 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e 925 sale. For more inreach over 60,000 main lobby of the f ormation on t h is Utility Trailers readers each week. Deschutes County 541-385-5809 sale go to: http: //orwith an ad in Your classified ad S heriff's Offi c e, egonsheriffssales.or will also appear on The Bulletin's Tow Dolly Roadmaster, 63333 W. Highway g/ Toyota Tacoma 2006, bendbulletin.corn m odel 3 4 77 , li k e 20, Bend, Oregon, "Call A Service reg. cab, 4x4, 5 spd which currently renew-never Mercedes-Benz used, sell, at public oral LEGAL NOTICE Professional" standard 4 cyl engine, ceives over 1.5 milSLK230 2003, electric breaks, magauction to the high2 2+ mpg, one s e - Buick Lucerne 2008 Green Tree Serviclion page views Directory exc. cond., auto, netic lights w/wiring est bidder, for cash ing LLC, its succesnior owner, Very clean 6 cylinder, every month at convertible retractharness, professionor cashier's check, non-smoker, well auto., leather interior, sors i n in t e rest 2 013 7 f t . X18 f t . no extra cost. Bulleally wired. $1450. able hard top. CHECK YOUR AD the real p roperty and/or ass i gns, Carry-On open car maintained, n e a r ly 87k mi. $6950 Will tin Classifieds 541-419-5151 54,250 miles, carfax commonly known as new tires, o r iginal consider part trade. Plaintiff/s, v. Garry hauler trailer. Used Get Results! Call available. $1 3,000. 555 NW Divot Drive, William Todd S R . spare near new, runs Call or text Ron at only three times to 385-5809 or place 541-389-7571 B end, Oreg o n excellent. $ 1 4,750. aka Bill Todd; Yashaul my 1967 Ca541-419-5060 your ad on-line at 97701. Conditions 541-633-9895 M. Todd aka maro, and looks like bendbulletin.corn of Sale: P o tential min ., • I II I Y asmin Mir i a m new. I had the front svv.— ~ j1 bidders must arrive on the first day it runs barrier made and inTodd; Wo o dside 15 minutes prior to to make sure it is cor- stalled and added Ranch Home-OwnI The Bulletin recoml the auction to allow rect. "Spellcheck" and the tool box. It also ers Association; OcWinnebago 22' the Desc h utes mends extra caution l human errors do oc- has a mounted new cupants of the pre2002 - $26,900 when p u r chasing I County Sheriff's Ofcur. If this happens to spare tire. $3995 mises; and the Real Chevy 360, Porsche Bo x ster f products or services f ice to revi e w your ad, please conProperty located at heavy duty chassis, obo . 541-876-5375 Cadillac CTS 2010, 2008, exc. cond., from out of the area. bidder's funds. Only T OYOTA T A C O M A V 6 I n j ection, 6 tact us ASAP so that 60235 R i d geview or cell: cab & roof A/C, less than 18K mi., U.S. currency 4x4 1999 4 cyl., non f S ending c ash , corrections and any Drive East, Bend, 503-701-2256. tow hitch w/brake, Speed A u tomatic. black/black, s p o rt checks, or credit ing and/or c a s hier' s smoker, snow tires, Oregon adjustments can be 22k mi., more! pkg., stored in wincanopy, extra cab, Luxury series. Exteformation may be I checks made paymade to your ad. 97702-9741, Defen541-280-3251 rior: Black Raven, ter. $25,0 0 0. L ots of e x tras, 2 able to Deschutes 931 [ subject to FRAUD. 541-385-5809 dant/s. Case No.: Interior: Light Tita224-558-1 887, County Sheriff's Ofsafes, 332,000 miles. For more informaTheBulletin Classified Automotive Parts, NOnium/Ebony. 22,555 Bend. $8000.541-389-9115. f ice will b e a c - T14CV0683FC. l tion about an adverICE O F SAL E miles. 4 door. ExService & Accessories cepted. P a yment UNDER tiser, you may call Winnebago WRIT OF 935 cellent condition all Laredo 31' 2006, must be made in full Journey C3 2014 I the Oregon State/ EXECUTION a round. Has A r i- PRIUS 4.2L 6 cyl. engine from 5th wheel, fully S/C Sport Utility Vehicles immediately u pon Attorney General's l 2001 36' 2nd owner, w/12,000 miles, as- Office REAL PROPERTY. zona plates. This is 2001 Chevy T r ailone slide-out. C o nsumer I t he close o f t h e 300 Cummins Turbo sume lease with 20 Notice i s h e r eby car is a great mix of blazer, complete with sale. For more inAwning. Like new, f Protection hotline at diesel, Allison 5 spd, given that the Desluxury, com f o rt, months remaining at computer, starter & 1-877-877-9392. f ormation on t h is hardly used. 80k miles. D r iver c hutes Coun t y alternator. A p p rox. style, and workman- $240 mo., 50+ mpg. sale go to: http: //orMust sell $20,000 s ide s l ide, g a s $3000. Call L a r ry Sheriff's Office will, ship. $24,000 15K mi., stored inside egonsheriffssales.or stove, oven, 2 flat or refinance. Call 541.728.1775 e m a il on Tuesday, DeServingCendal Oregon since1903 Call 541-408-3051 for many years, $800 g/ screen TVs, refer, 541-410-5649 Imbatstar© aol.corn cember 8, 2015 at obo. 541-617-0211 generator, inverter, LEGAL NOTICE 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e Toyota FJ40 King Dome, tow bar. Goodyear t o p-of-theCitiFinancial Servic- main lobby of the Landcruiser 1977 Non-smoker, no line all weather tires ing, LLC, its succes- Deschutes County RV with winch, pets, no c hildren. T 255/60R'I 9 1 0 8 H sors in interest and/or Sheriff's Off i c e, CONSIGNIIIIENTS $18,000 C lean, an d w e l l assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. 63333 W. Highway E agle RS-A $ 4 0 0 WANTED 541-389-7113, maintained, $43,000 541-382-0421 Larry E . Nel s on; 20, Bend, Oregon, We Do the Work, Michelle 541-390-1472. Joanne Nelson; Ray sell, at public oral You Keep the Cash! J eep Wrangler JK 4 Klein Inc.; Occupants auction to the highOn-site credit d oor M o par s i d e FIND YOUR FUTURE of the premises; and est bidder, for cash approval team, 881 step/running board the Real Property lo- or cashier's check, web site presence. HOME INTHE BULLETIN Travel Trailers $150. 541-480-0008 c ated at 5273 8 the real p roperty We Take Trade-Ins! G olden A stor, L a commonly known as Your future is just apage 932 Pine, Oregon 97739, 60235 R i d geview away. Whetheryou're looking BIG COUNTRY RV Antique & D efendant/s. C a s e Drive East, Bend, Bend: 541-330-2495 for a hat or aplace to hangit, No.: 13CV0756. NO- Oregon Classic Autos 4PE X, Redmond: The Bulletin Classified is TICE OF SALE UN- 97702-9741. CondiADb g. 541-548-5254 your best source. DER WRIT OF EX- tions of Sale: Po~g \ Every daythousandsof DIeijg ECUTION - REAL tential bidders must 19' Ampex. 2011. Slide 885 buyers andsellers of goods kEgyfgg Og PROPERTY. Notice is arrive 15 m inutes out and other extras. Canopies & Campers and services dobusinessin e S880 hereby given that the prior to the auction Tows well $12,500. these pages.They know SOON Deschutes C o u nty to allow the Des541.316.1367 you can't beatThe Bulletin Sheriff's Office will, on c hutes Cou n t y Classified Section for Jeep CJ5 4x41967, Tuesday, December Sheriff's Office to selection andconvenience first year of the orig. 15, 2015 at 10:00 AM, review bi d der's - every item isjust a phone Dauntless V-6, last in the main lobby of f unds. Only U . S. call away. year of the "All metal" the Deschutes County currency an d / or body! Engine overSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 cashier's c h e cks The Classified Section is g • hauled: new brakes, W. Highway 20, Bend, made payable to Northlander 1993 easy to use.Everyitem fuel pump, steering Oregon, sell, at public Deschutes County 17' camper,Polar is categorizedandevery gear box, battery, al- cartegoIy is indexed on o ral auction to t h e Sheriff's Office will 34' Winnebago One 990, good shape, the ternator, emergency h ighest bidder, f o r be accepted. Pay2013 30RE. new fridge, A/C, section's front page. brake pads, gauges, cash o r ca s hier' s ment must be made queen bed, bath$23,000. Two slides. warn hubs, dual ex- Whether youarelooking for check, the real prop- in full immediately Fully loaded. room, indoor/outhaust, 5 wide traction a home orneeda service, erty commonly known upon the close of •8• Full photos and info door shower, lots of 5 8 • tires, 5 new spoke, your future is inthe pagesof as 52738 Golden As- the sale. For more sent upon request. storage, customThe Bulletin Classified. chrome wheels. NO tor, La Pine, Oregon information on this Family illness ized to fit newer 97739. Conditions of sale go to: http: //orrust, garage stored. requires sale. pickups,$4500 obo. Sale: P otential bid- egonsheriffssales.or $7,495 OBO! The Bulletin 541-923-2593 541-419-9859. ServingCa t at Oregon srnce1903 (775) 513-0822 ders must arrive 15 g/
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
E6 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015 •THE BULLETIN
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persons having claims against the trust estate are required to present them, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned This summons is pub- C o-Trustees at 7 4 7 lished pursuant to the SW MILL VIEW WAY, order of th e c ircuit BEND, ORE G ON c ourt judge of t h e 9 7702, w ithin f o u r above-entitled court, months after the date d ated O ctober 5 , of first publication of 2015. The order di- t his notice, o r t h e rects that this sum- claims may be barred. 1 4CV0557FC. N O - mons be p ublished All persons whose TICE OF SALE UN- once each week for rights may be afcon s ecutive fected by th e p roDER WRIT OF EX- three ECUTION - REAL weeks, making three ceedings may obtain PROPERTY. Notice is publications in all, in a additional information hereby given that the published newspaper from the records of cou r t , the Deschutes C o u nty of general circulation the Co-Trustees, or the Sheriff's Office will, on in Deschutes County. lawyers f or the Tuesday, January 5, 2016 at 10:00 AM, in Date of first publication: Co-Trustees, Daniel October 14, 2015 C. Re. DATED AND the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Date of last publication: FIRST P UBLISHED October 28, 2015 on October 14, 2015. Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 JILL CURR ENT, W. Highway 20, Bend, Co-Trustee, AMY NOTICE Oregon, sell, at public READ THESE HERD, Co-Trustee, o ral auction to t h e ENGROGER h ighest bidder, f o r PAPERS CAREFULLY cash o r ca s hier' s IF YOU DO NOT AP- STROM, Co-Trustee. check, the real prop- PEAR PERSONALLY THE erty commonly known BEFORE LEGAL NOTICE as 2991 SW Glacier COURT OR DO NOT JP Morgan Chase A PPEAR AT A N Y Bank, National AsAve, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Condi- SUBSEQUENT sociation, succestions of Sale: Poten- COURT-ORDERED sor in interest by t ial b i dders m u s t HEARING, the court purchase from the arrive 15 minutes prior may proceed in your Federal Deposit Into the auction to allow absence without fur- surance Corporathe Deschutes County ther notice and TER- tion as receiver of Sheriff's Office to re- MINATE YOUR PAMutual view bidder's funds. RENTAL RIGHTS to Washington A ssociation, abo v e-named Bank Only U.S. currency the its successors in and/or cashier' s c hildren either O N interest and/or aschecks made payable THE DATE SPECI- signs, Plaintiff/s, v. to Deschutes County FIED IN THIS SUM- Kae A. Meier aka Sheriff's Office will be MONS OR ON A FU- Kae An n M e ier; accepted. P ayment T URE DATE, a n d Carol Osgood; Eqmust be made in full may make such or- uable Ascent Finanimmediately upon the ders and take such cial LLC; and Occuclose of the sale. For action as authorized pants of the more information on by law. premises, D e fenthis s al e go to: dant/s. Case No.: RIGHTS AND http: //oregonsheriff13CV1083FC. NOOBLIGATIONS ssale.org/ ICE O F SA L E YOU HAVE A RIGHT T UNDER WRIT OF LEGAL NOTICE T O BE REP R E IN T H E CI R CUIT SENTED BY AN AT- EXECUTION COURT O F THE ORNEY IN T H I S REAL PROPERTY. STATE OF OREGON T is h e reby MATTER. If you are Notice FOR THE COUNTY currently represented given that the DesOF DESCHUTES. In by an attorney, CON- c hutes Coun t y the Matter of the Trust T ACT YOUR A T - Sheriff's Office will, Administration of TORNEY Thursday, DeI M M E D I- on cember 3, 2015 at F RANK E . ENG - ATELY UPON STROM REVO - R ECEIVING T H I S 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e lobby of the C ABLE LIVIN G Your previ- main TRUST, DATED MAY NOTICE. Deschutes County ous attorney may not Sheriff's Off i c e, 11, 19 8 9 AND be representing you in AMENDED BY T HE 63333 W. Highway this matter. 20, Bend, Oregon, FOURTH A M E NDMENT, DATED JUNE IF YO U C A N NOT sell, at public oral 1, 2011, Deceased. A FFORD TO H I R E auction to the highCase No. 15PB04762. AN ATTORNEY and est bidder, for cash NOTICE TO INTER- you meet the state' s or cashier's check, ESTED P ERSONS. financial guidelines, the real p roperty commonly known as NOTICE IS HEREBY you are entitled to GIVEN that the un- have an attorney ap- 3430 SW Reindeer d ersigned are t h e p ointed for you a t Avenue, Redmond, C o-Trustees of t h e state expense. TO O regon 977 5 6 . Conditions of Sale: Frank E. E ngstrom REQUEST APR evocable Liv i n g POINTMENT OF AN Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minTrust, dated May 11, ATTORNEY 1989 and amended by R EPRESENT Y OTO u tes prior to the U to allow the the Fourth Amend- AT S T A T E EX- auction ment, dated June 1, PENSE, YOU MUST Deschutes County 2011 of which Frank IMMEDIATELY CON- Sheriff's Office to E. Engstrom was the TACT the Deschutes review bi d der's Trustor. All persons Juvenile Department funds. Only U .S. having claims against at 63360 Britta Street, currency a n d/or the trust estate are Bldg. 1, Bend, OR, cashier's c h e cks required to p resent 97701, phone num- made payable to them, with vouchers ber (541) 317-3115, Deschutes County attached, to the un- between the hours of Sheriff's Office will dersigned Co-Trust- 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 be accepted. Payees at 747 SW MILL p.m. for further infor- ment must be made in full immediately VIEW WAY, BEND, mation. O REGON 977 0 2 , upon the close of the sale. For more within four m o nths IF YOU WISH TO after the date of first HIRE A N on this A T T OR- information publication of this no- NEY, please retain sale go to: http: //ortice, or the claims may one as soon as pos- egon sheriffssales.or be barred. All per- sible and have the sons whose r i ghts attorney present at may be affected by above hearing. If the proceedings may the Take care of you need help finding obtain additional in- an attorney, you may your investments f ormation from t h e call the Oregon State records of the court, Bar's Lawyer Referral with the help from the Co-Trustees, or S ervice a t (503) The Bulletin's the lawyers for the 684-3763 or toll free "Call A Service Co-Trustees, Daniel in Oregon at (800) C. Re. DATED AND 452-7636. Professional" Directory FIRST P UBLISHED on October 14, 2015. IF YOU ARE REPLEGAL NOTICE Green Tree Servicing L LC, P laintiff/s, v . A aron Guess; J ohanna Robinson aka Johanna Oris; One West Bank, FSB; and Persons or P arties unknown claimingany right, title, lien or interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o .:
JILL
CURR E NT, Co-Trustee, AMY HERD, C o-Trustee, ENGROGER STROM, Co-Trustee. LEGAL NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR DESCHUTES COUNTY Juvenile Department
P LACE. THE R E FORE, YOU MUST A PPEAR EVEN I F YOUR A T TORNEY ALSO APPEARS.
RESENTED BY A N A TTORNEY, IT I S YOUR R ESPONSIB ILITY T O M A I NTAIN CONT A CT W ITH Y OU R A T T ORNEY AND T O K EEP YOUR A T TORNEY A DVISED OF YOUR WHEREABOUTS.
LEGAL NOTICE JP Morgan C h ase Bank, National Association, its s uccessors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Michael P. Sullivan; Colleen C. Sullivan; Association of Unit Owners o f M o u ntain View Lodges; OcPETITIONER'S cupants of the preIn the Matter of ATTORNEY mises, Defendant/s. CARSTON ADAMS Case No.: TWIGGER 8 Ryan W. Phillips 13CV0778. NOAssistant Attorney CARTER JAMES T ICE O F SAL E TWIGGER General UNDER WRIT OF Department of Justice Children. EXECUTION 1162 Court Street NE REAL PROPERTY. Salem, OR 97301-4096 Notice is h e reby Case Nos. HEICAR13/14JV0270 Phone: given that the DesHEICAR14/14JV0269 (503) 934-4400 c hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, ISSUED this 9th day on Thursday, DePUBLISHED SUMMONS of October, 2015. cember 10, 2015 at 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e TO:Holly Revae Heidt Issued by: main lobby of the Ryan W. Phillips Deschutes County IN THE NAME OF ¹086700 Sheriff's Off i c e, Assistant Attorney THE STATE OF OR63333 W. Highway EGON: General 20, Bend, Oregon, Petitions have been sell, at public oral filed asking the court LEGAL NOTICE auction to the highto terminate your pa- IN T H E CI R CUIT est bidder, for cash r ental rights to t h e COURT O F T HE or cashier's check, a bove-named c h i l - STATE OF OREGON the real p roperty dren for the purpose FOR THE COUNTY commonly known as of placing the chil- OF DESCHUTES. In 57303 Ove r look dren for a d option. the Matter of the Trust Road, Sunriver, OrYOU A RE RE- Administration of egon 97707. CondiQUIRED TO P E R- JEAN E N GSTROM tions of Sale: PoSONALLY APPEAR REVOCABLE LIVING tential bidders must before the Deschutes TRUST, DATED MAY arrive 15 m inutes County Court at 1100 11, 19 8 9 AND prior to the auction NW Bond, Bend, Or- AMENDED BY THE to allow the Desegon, 97701, on the FOURTH A M E N D- c hutes Coun t y 3rd day of December, MENT, DATED JUNE Sheriff's Office to 2015 at 9:00 a.m. for 1, 2011, Deceased. review bi d der's a hearing on the alle- Case No. 15PB04761. funds. Only U . S. gations of the peti- NOTICE TO INTER- currency a n d/or tions and to person- ESTED P ERSONS. cashier's c h e cks a lly appear at a ny NOTICE IS HEREBY made payable to subsequent court-or- GIVEN that the un- Deschutes County dered hearing. YOU d ersigned are t h e Sheriff's Office will M UST APPE A R C o-Trustees of t h e be accepted. PayPERSONALLY IN Jean Engstrom Revo- ment must be made THE C O U RTROOM cable Living Trust, in full immediately ON THE DATE AND dated May 11, 1989 upon the close of AT THE TIME and amended by the the sale. For more LISTED ABOVE. AN Fourth Amendment, information on this ATTORNEY MAY dated June 1, 2011 of sale go to: http: //orNOT ATTEND THE which Jean Engstrom e onsheriffssales.or HEARING IN YOUR was the Trustor. All
LEGAL NOTICE
N ation star Mortgage L LC, P laintiff/s, v .
Daniel W. Pew; Ray Klein, Inc. d/b/a Professional Credit Serv ice; C apital O n e Bank (USA), N.A. dba Capital One B a nk; State of Oregon; Parties i n p o ssession, D efendant/s. C a s e No.:
licitation to v i olate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled su b stances (ORS Chapter 475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in committing or facilitating the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution or
1 4 C V1004FC. NOTICE OF S A LE U NDER WRIT O F EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, December 10, 2015 at 10:00 AM, possession of consu b stances in the main lobby of trolled the Deschutes County (ORS Chapter 475). IN THE MATTER OF: Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, (1) $2,104.00 in US Oregon, sell, at public Currency, Case No. oral auction to t he 15-311868, s e i zed October 1, 2015 from h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier' s Cody Gardner. check, the real property commonly known as 17015 West Drive, LEGAL NOTICE La P i ne, O r egon O ne West Bank 97739. Conditions of N.A., fka OneWest Sale: Potential bid- Bank, FSB, its sucders must arrive 15 cessors in interest minutes prior to the and/or ass i gns, auction to allow the P laintiff/s, v . U n Deschutes C o unty k nown Heirs o f Sheriff's Office to re- Frank V . Ol i ver; view bidder's funds. Tammy L. O liver; Only U.S. currency Robert K. O l iver; and/or cashier' s Victor F . Ol i ver; checks made payable Cayonna O l i ver; to Deschutes County U nited States o f Sheriff's Office will be America; State of accepted. Payment Oregon; Occupants must be made in full of th e P r emises; immediately upon the and the Real Propclose of the sale. For erty located at 4575 more information on Southwest Wickiup this s al e go to: Avenue, Redmond, http: //oregonsheriffOregon 97756, Dessale.org/ fendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0463FC. NOLEGAL NOTICE T ICE O F SAL E N ationstar Mor t UNDER WRIT OF gage LLC, its sucEXECUTION cessors in interest PROPERTY. and/or as s igns, REAL h e r eby P laintiff/s, v . W i l - Notice i s that the Desliam F. S i mpson; given c hutes Coun ty Amy M. Simpson; Sheriff's Office will, CitiBank, N.A.; State on Tuesday, Deof Oregon; Porffolio cember 22, 2015 at Recovery Associ1 0:00 AM, i n t h e ates, LLC; and Ocmain lobby of the cupants of the preDeschutes County mises, Defendant/s. S heriff's Offi c e , Case No.: 63333 W. Highway 14CV0642FC. NO20, Bend, Oregon, T ICE O F SAL E sell, at public oral UNDER WRIT OF auction to the highEXECUTION est bidder, for cash REAL PROPERTY. cashier's check, Notice is h e reby or the real p roperty given that the Descommonly as c hutes Cou n t y 4575 SW known Wickiup Sheriff's Office will, Avenue, Redmond, on Tuesday, DeO regon 977 5 6 . cember 15, 2015 at Conditions of Sale: 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e Potential b i d ders main lobby of the must arrive 15 minDeschutes County u tes prior t o t h e S heriff's Of fi c e , auction to allow the 63333 W. Highway Deschutes County 20, Bend, Oregon, Sheriff's Office to sell, at public oral review bi d d er's auction to the highfunds. Only U . S. est bidder, for cash c urrency an d / or or cashier's check, cashier's c h e cks the real p roperty made payable to commonly known as County 61760 Har mony Deschutes Sheriff's Office will L ane, Bend, O r be accepted. Payegon 97701. Condiment must be made tions of Sale: Poin full immediately tential bidders must the close of arrive 15 m inutes upon the sale. For more prior to the auction information on this to allow the Desgo to: http: //orc hutes Cou n t y sale egonsheriffssales.or Sheriff's Office to review bid d er's g/ f unds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks Find It in made payable to The Bulletin Classifieds! Deschutes County 541-385-5809 Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately LEGAL NOTICE upon the close of PennyMac Holdings, the sale. For more LLC, its successors information on this in interest and/or sale go to: http: //orassigns, Plaintiff/s, egonsheriffssales.or v. M ar k S t a nley g/ Troutman aka Mark LEGAL NOTICE S. Troutman; NunNOTICE OF SEIZURE zia Troutman; Kent FOR CIVIL FORFEI- Cramer; Bob TURE TO ALL PO- W ellen; Kath y T ENTIAL CLA I M - Wellen; Occupants ANTS AND TO ALL of the premises; and U NKNOWN PE R - the Real Property SONS READ T HIS located a t 102 CAREFULLY. If you N orthwest J e f f e have any interest in rso Place, Bend, the seized property Oregon 97701, Dedescribed below, you fendant/s. Case No.: must claim that inter- 14CV0775FC. NOest or you will auto- T ICE O F SAL E matically lose that in- UNDER WRIT OF terest. If you do not EXECUTION file a claim for the REAL PROPERTY. property, the property Notice is h e reby may be forfeited even given that the Desif you are not con- c hutes Cou n t y victed of any crime. Sheriff's Office will, To claim an interest, on Tuesday, Deyou must file a written cember 8, 2015 at claim with the forfei- 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e ture counsel named main lobby of the below, Th e w r itten Deschutes County claim must be signed S heriff's Of fi c e , by you, sworn to un- 63333 W. Highway der penalty of perjury 20, Bend, Oregon, before a notary public, sell, at public oral and state: (a) Your auction to the hightrue name; (b) The est bidder, for cash address at which you or cashier's check, will a c cept f u t ure the real p roperty m ailings from t h e commonly known as court and f orfeiture 102 NW Jefferson P lace, Bend, O r counsel; and (3) A s tatement that y o u egon 97701. Condihave an interest in the tions of Sale: Poseized property. Your tential bidders must deadline for filing the arrive 15 m inutes claim document with prior to the auction forfeiture cou n sel to allow the Desnamed below is 21 c hutes Cou n t y days from the last day S heriff's Office t o of publication of this review bi d der's notice. Where to file a f unds. Only U . S. claim and for more currency an d / or i nformation: D a i na cashier's c h e cks Vitolins, Crook County made payable to District Attorney Of- Deschutes County fice, 300 N E T h ird Sheriff's Office will Street, Prineville, OR be accepted. Pay97754. Notice of rea- ment must be made sons for Forfeiture: in full immediately T he p roperty d e - upon the close of scribed below was the sale. For more seized for forfeiture information on this because it: (1) Con- sale go to: http: //orstitutes the proceeds egonsheriffssales.or of the violation of, so- g/
LEGAL NOTICE OREGON H U MAN DEVELOPMENT C ORPORATION i s a ccepting bid s t o perform weatherization work in Klamath and Lake Counties. Bids will be accepted until 5pm November 23, 2015. Contractors interested in bidding must be ; l i censed, bonded and insured. To obtain a bid pack-
a ge
p l ease c a l l
5 41-883-7186
ext . 1029 or Email jim.minix@ohdc.org O REGO N HUM A N DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION Prog rama d e Me j o ramiento de h ogar esta aceptando presupuestos para mejorar residencias familia res e n los Con dados de K l amath y Lake. Presupuestos se aceptaran hasta las 5pm Novie mbre 2 3 , 201 5 . Contratistas interesados deben poseer; li-
cencia y estar asegurado. Para obtener un paquete de inform acidn h a blar a 5 41-883-7186 ex t . 1 028 or Emai l : jim.minix©ohdc.org LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. successor by merger to W e l ls Fargo Home Mortgage, Inc., its successors in interest and/or as s igns, P laintiff/s, v . U n known S uccessor Trustee of the Pollock Revocable Living Trust dated April 15, 2008; Unknown Beneficiaries of the Pollock Revocable Living Trust dated A pril 1 5 , 20 0 8 ; Shelby R. Shaffer; Kelly Spencer; Ray Klein, DBA Professional Credit Services; The Ponderosa Pines Property Owners Association; State of O r egon; O ccupants of t h e Premises; and the Real Property loc ated a t 148 7 0 Springwood Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739-9546, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0336FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.
Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, December 17, 2015 at 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 14870 Springwood Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739-9546. Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior to t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to
review
bi d der's
f unds. Only U . S . currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: http: //ore onsheriffssales.or
LEGAL NOTICE Oregon H o using and Com munity Services D e p artment, State of Oregon, a g o v ernmental agency of the State of Oregon, Plaintiff/s, v. Vicente A. Vargas, an i ndividual; El e n a V argas, a n in d i vidual; Oregon Affordable H o using Assistance Corporation, a n onprofit public benefit corporation; M o r tgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as a nominee for U.S. Bank National Association, its successors and assigns; and all Occupants of the Real P roperty as d e scribed in the complaint herein, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0540FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby
given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 at 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check,
the real p roperty commonly known as 2756 N.E. Rainier D rive, Bend, O r egon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to review bi d der's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: http: //oregonsheriffssales.or g/
tice, the masculine gender includes the f eminine and t he neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other persons in favor of WELLS owing an obligation, the performance of FARGO BANK, N.A. which is secured by as Beneficiary, resaid Trust Deed, the corded December words "Trustee" and 24, 2007 as Instru"Beneficiary" in ment No. 2007-65518 of officludes their respective successors in cial records in the O ffice of th e R e - i nterest, i f any . Dated: 09-18-2015 c order o f Des First American Title chutes, O r e gon, I nsurance C o m covering the following described real pany By: Laurie P. Estrada Authorized property situated in Firs t the ab o ve-men- S ignatory American Title Intioned county and state, to wit: LOT 58 surance Company OF D E SCHUTES c/o Special Default RIVER CROSSING, Services, Inc. 17100 Gillette Ave Irvine, PHASE I, CITY OF LEGAL NOTICE DESCA 92614 ( 844) Senior H omeowner BEND, 706-4182 SALE INCOUNTY, Assistance Program CHUTES FORMATION CAN REGON. C o m 2 012-1, Series 1 , O BE OBTAINED ON only known a s : Plaintiff/s, v. M i lton m 61020 H O NKERS LINE AT w w w.inLaFranchi, an i ndi- LANE, BEND, OR sourcelogic.corn vidual; and all other 97702 APN: FOR AUTOMATED Persons, Parties, or SALES INFORMA81218ACO Occupants unknown 206901/1 0106 Both the BenT ION PLEA S E claiming any legal or e ficiary an d th e CALL: In S o urce equitable right, title, Trustee have Logic at estate, lien, or inter- elected to sell the 702-659-7766, Orest in the real prop- said real property to der no. erty described in the satisfy the obligaOR15-000100-1, complaint herein, ad- tions secured by pub dates: verse to Plaintiff's title, said Trust Deed and 1 0/07/2015, or cloud on Plaintiff's notice has been re10/1 4/2015, title to the Property, corded pursuant to 10/21/2015, D efendant/s. C a s e Section 86.735(3) of 'I 0/28/2015 No.: 1 5 CV0038FC. Oregon R e v ised N OTICE OF S A L E Statutes. The deU NDER WRIT O F fault for which the LEGAL NOTICE EXECUTION - REAL foreclosure is made Wells Fargo B ank, PROPERTY. Notice is is the Grantor's failN A, P l aintiff/s, v . hereby given that the ure to pay: THE INHope Galan a / k/a Deschutes C o u nty S TALLMENT O F Hope A. Galan; and Sheriff's Office will, on P RINCIPAL A N D O ccupants o f th e Thursday, December INTEREST WHICH premises, 10, 2015 at 10:00 AM, BECAME DUE ON D efendant/s. C a s e in the main lobby of 20, 2009 No.: 12CV0129. NOthe Deschutes County December AND ALL SUBSETICE OF SALE UNSheriff's Office, 63333 QUENT INSTALLDER WRIT OF EXW. Highway 20, Bend, MENTS, A L O NG ECUTION - REAL Oregon, sell, at public WITH LATE PROPERTY. Notice is o ral auction to t h e CHARGES, PLUS hereby given that the h ighest bidder, f or Deschutes C o u nty cash o r ca s hier' s FORECLOSURE COSTS AND L ESheriff's Office will, on check, the real prop- GAL FEES, IN ADThursday, December erty commonly known DITION TO ALL OF 3, 2015 at 10:00 AM, as 20650 S walley THE TERMS AND in the main lobby of Road, Bend, Oregon CONDITIONS AS the Deschutes County 97701. Conditions of THE DEED OF Sheriff's Office, 63333 Sale: P otential bid- PER TRUST, PROMISW. Highway 20, Bend, ders must arrive 15 SORY NOTE AND Oregon, sell, at public minutes pnor to the ALL REL A T ED o ral auction to t h auction to allow the DOCU Deschutes C o u nty LOAN MENTS. M o nthly Sheriff's Office to re- Payment $ 3 31.64 view bidder's funds. Monthly Late Only U.S. currency Charge $16.58 By and/or cashier' s this reason of said checks made payable default the Benefito Deschutes County ciary has declared Sheriff's Office will be all obligations seaccepted. P ayment cured by said Trust must be made in full Deed immediately immediately upon the due and payable, close of the sale. For said sums being the more information on following, to-wit: The this s al e g o to: sum of $50,000.00 http: //oregonsheriffstogether with intersales.org/ est thereon at the rate of 4 . 49000% per annum from NoLEGAL NOTICE T he Bank o f N e w vember 20, 2 0 09 York Mellon, FKA The until paid; plus all late Bank of New York, as accrued charges t h e reon; Successor-in-Interest to JPMorgan Chase and all T rustee's f o r eclosure Bank, N.A., FKA JP- fees, Morgan Chase Bank costs and any sums a dvanced by t h e as Trustee for Bear Stearns Asset Backed Beneficiary pursuSecurities Trus t ant to the terms of said Trust Deed. 2003-AC5, Asset-Backed Certifi- Wherefore, notice is cates, Series hereby given that, un d ersigned 2003-AC5, it's s u c- the on cessors in i n terest Trustee w il l January 25, 2016 at and/or assigns, Plaint iff/s, v . A r den E . the hour of 11:00 Spain NKA Arden E. A M, Standard o f e s t abThornburg; Steve D. Time, a s S pain AK A S t e ve lished by S e ction Spain; State of Or- 187.110, O r e gon egon; and Occupants Revised Statues, at of the premises, De- the Bond Street enfendant/s. Case No.: trance steps to the 12CV1329. NOTICE Deschutes County OF SALE U N DER Courthouse, 1 164 WRIT O F E X ECU- NW Bond St, Bend, TION - REAL PROP- OR 97701 County of ERTY. N o tice is Deschutes, sell at hereby given that the public auction to the Deschutes C o unty highest bidder for Sheriff's Office will, on cash the interest in Thursday, December the said described 17, 2015 at 10:00 AM, real property which in the main lobby of the Grantor had or the Deschutes County had power to conSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 vey at the time of W. Highway 20, Bend, t he execution by Oregon, sell, at public him of the said Trust Deed, together with o ral auction to t h e any interest which h ighest bidder, f or cash o r ca s hier' s the Grantor or his check, the real prop- successors in intererty commonly known est acquired after as 206 SW Hayes t he execution o f Avenue, Bend, O r- said Trust Deed, to egon 97702. Condi- satisfy the foregoobli g ations tions of Sale: Poten- ing t ial b i dders m u s t thereby secured and arrive 15 minutes prior the costs and exto the auction to allow penses of sale, inthe Deschutes County cluding a r easonSheriff's Office to re- able charge by the view bidder's funds. Trustee. Notice is Only U.S. currency further given that and/or cashier' s any person named checks made payable in Section 86.753 of R e v ised to Deschutes County Oregon Sheriff's Office will be S tatutes has t h e accepted. P ayment r ight to h ave t he pr o must be made in full f oreclosure immediately upon the ceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed close of the sale. For more information on reinstated by paythis s al e g o to: ment to the Beneficiary of the entire http: //oregonsheriffsamount then due sales.org/ (other than s u ch portion of said prinLEGAL NOTICE cipal as would not TS No. then be due had no OR01000023-15 default o c curred), APN t ogether with t h e 206901/1 81218ACO costs, Trustee's or attorney's fees and 0106 TO No 8571775 curing any o t her T RUSTEE'S N O default complained T ICE O F SAL E of in the Notice of Reference is made Default by tenderto that certain Trust ing t h e per f orD eed made b y , mance required unROBERT P. der the obligation or HELFER, A M A RTrust Deed, at any RIED MAN, AS TO time prior to f i ve AN UNDIVIDED 1/2 days before the date INTEREST A ND last set for sale. In J OHN A . L A N D- construing this noF ORCE, A M A R RIED MAN, AS TO AN UNDIVIDED 1/2 INTEREST as Grantor to WELLS F ARGO FIN A NCIAL N A T IONAL B ANK, C/0 S P E C IALIZED SER VICES as Trustee,