Bulletin Daily Paper 09-30-2014

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75

TUESDAY September30,2014

Stormsoccerwin SPORTS • C1

AT HOME• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

u

Worse than thoughtThe White Houseintruder got way past the front door. A2

• Opponents of a west-side campuscould take appealto the state

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

VOICanOSeaSOn? — Whlle it's nothing like predicting the weather, scientists are discovering patterns to erupting and, maybe, why somany mountains are doing it right now. A5

- aSCaeSSie

0 S

Council, with Councilor Scott Ramsay absent, heard Truth In

OSU-Cascades cleared another legal hurdle Monday as the Bend City Council unan-

imously rejected an appeal challenging the university's proposed west-side campus,

though opponents say they are considering further action. Monday's five-hour hearing is the latest step in what has become a lengthy land use approval process for a proposed

10-acre campus near the SW Century Drive and Chandler Avenue roundabout. On Sept.

2, an independent hearings officer ruled the proposal was consistent with city develop-

ment code despite arguments presented by a lawyer and traffic engineer hired by Truth In Site, a coalition of residents opposed to the application. On Monday, the City

Site's appeal of the Sept. 2 deci-

sion. Testimony was restricted

to issues raised during hearings and apublic input period before the initial decision.

See Campus /A4

NXI=: NOVEMBER

U111CBnC 1n Rodot food testersThis machine canverify the authenticity of Thai food. A3

r e ea a

en

CX1CO SC OO

Pius: pistachiosHarvesters of the "happy nut" have a lot to smile about. With these recipes, so will you. O3

By Megan Kehoe ngie Castillo and her family woke up Sept.

Oil trainS — An update.B2

And a WedexclusiveThe next battleground on gun control: packing pistols in public. bendbnlletln.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Statesmay net $800M

from legal

date MonicaWehby was

and busted roof tiles litt ered streets.Debris of all sorts, including wooden boards, fences and even children's art supplies from a nearby school rested on cars and clogged the sewer

charged with ducking a televised debate and being

system.

debates in

said Lucia Castillo, An-

four different venues.

was knocked down." But two weeks after home in Cabo San Lucas,

Mexico, some sense of normalcy has returned The family's three chil-

over the next fewyears

writing and arithmetic

alongside their friends.

a no-show at a candidate

interview, her campaign announced Monday she would welcome public

Submitted photo

A Colegio Amarantowasdecimated after HurricaneOdile ravaged Cabo SanLucas, Mexico, this month. Butthree children havebeen welcomed at their temporaryschool in the U.S.:Bend's SevenPeaks. < From left, Seve Castillo, 11, Liliana Castillo, 9, and Lucia Castillo, 7, stand with their

mom, Angie Castillo, 44, in the hallway of Seven Peaks School in Bend. The Castillos live in

Seve, the oldest child,

now is that instead of at-

tending Colegio Amaran-

show that the plant, now legal to purchase in both jurisdictions, could generate at least $811.2 million

to in Cabo San Lucas, the

Cabo San Lucas, which was hit by a hurricane two

kids are attending school

weeks ago. The

in Bend.

children's school was partially

"Seven Peaks (School) has accepted us with such open arms," said Angie

can expect $637 million by 2019, while Colorado

Castillo, who is friends

can expect $174.5 million

ent. "It's been such a positive experience for the

destroyed. Angie Cnstillo, originally from Portland, has

with a Seven Peaks par-

"Seven Peaks(School) has accepted us

course, difficult to make

weekend thinking about

as there is no precedence for what is being forecast:

it," Castillo said Monday.

With SuCh OPen armS. It'S been Such a

Marijuana for recreational

use has never before been sold legally. The Wash-

Angie Castillo, 44, and her family live in Cabo

ington forecast, released

among the thousands of locals and tourists there

Thursday by the state's Economic and Revenue

who were affected by Hurricane Odile. After

Forecast Council, was the state's first prediction to

surviving and escaping

be based on actual sales, which began in July.

storm, Castillo and her three children are in

the aftermath of the

— Angie Castillo

Bend staying with family, while her husband, Sergio Castillo, remains in Cabo San Lucas to help with cleanup efforts. The three

children are attending Seven Peaks School while they wait for conditions to

improve back home. See School /A4

CALIF.

co-hosts with The Orego-

nian newspaper. On Saturday, Wehby skipped a candidates interview with Willamette Week, which the

weekly said it had planned especially to accommodate

Hurricane Odile's path Ocean

Partly sunny High 61, Low33 Page B6

Ca San Landfall, Lucas Sept. 15

INDEX

400 miles O2014 TNS

last year, classified U.S. intelligence reports painted an increasingly ominous picture of a growing threat from Sunni extremists in Syria, according

morale among troops next door in Iraq.

House just didn't pay attention

to it," said a senior U.S. intelli-

of a few months has redrawn

to senior intelligence and mil-

multiplebrush fires and reluc-

White House consumed with

televised debate the station

TODAY'S WEATHER

failed to anticipate the rise of a militant force that in the space

But the reports, they said,

its deadline to commit to a

MEXICO

Baja Califo

the reporting, but the White

generated little attention in a

said Wehby had missed

fending his Senate seat. See Senate/A6

of deteriorating readiness and

warplanes pound the extremist group calling itself the Isgence official. "They were pre- lamic State in hopes of reversoccupied with other crises," ing its lightning-swift seizing the official added. "This just of territory in Iraq and Syria. wasn't a big priority." Still, even as bombs fall from

the City Club of Portland. On Friday, KGW, an NBC affiliate in Portland,

first-term Democrat de-

ARIZ.

the sky thousands of miles

has its attention now as U.S.

events hosted by Oregon Public Broadcasting and

is the Republican nominee to run against Merkley, a

tant to be drawn back into Iraq. The White House denies "Some of us were pushing that, but the threat certainly

WASHINGTON — By late

bates hosted by KOBI, an NBC affiliate in Medford, and KOIN, a CBS affiliate in Portland, as well as

rosurgeon from Portland,

ISIS debate turns sharply to U.S. intel, or lack Of By Peter Baker and Eric Schmitt itary officials. Just as worriNew York Times News Service some, they said, were reports

whether it could find time in his schedule. Wehby indicated she would participate in de-

Andy Tullie i ihe Bulletin

Source: NOAA

See Pot/A6

was noncommittal about

herschedule. Wehby, a pediatric neu-

positive experience for the kids — the other students have been so kind."

San Lucas and were

unclear whether there is enough time to find mutually agreeable dates with incumbent Sen. Jeff Merkley, and his campaign

family here.

kids — the other students have been so kind. I've just been emotional all

Such esti mates are,of

Wehby

It remains

even headed to outdoor school Monday. The only difference

period. But together they

ends in 2017, according to stateestimates.

WASHINGTON — Days

dren, Lucia, Liliana and

thanks to marijuana sales. At the least.

through the fiscal year that

The Bulletin

gie Castillo's 7-year-old daughter. "Everything

would see more than $800 million in extra revenue

for the trailblazing states before2020.Washington

By Andrew Clevenger

"Everything changed,"

Seve, still wake up early every morning and attend school. Once again, they're learning reading,

differ greatly in what they predict and over what time

Wehbysays yes to more debates

roads. Shattered glass

for the Castillo family.

released in recent days,

Pressured,

after U.S. Senate candi-

By Niraj Chokshi

The estimates, both

bendbnllet>n com/elecnons

15 to what she

pot, at least If a pair of new government forecasts prove true, Washington and Colorado

ELE CTION

describes as something akin to Armageddon. Snapped and splintered palm trees blocked

Hurricane Odile hit their

The Washington Post

NI "I'~

The Bulletin

~

away, the question of how it

the map of the Middle East resonates both inside and outside the Obama administration. See ISIS /A5

At Home D1-6 Crosswords E4 Business C5-6 Local/State B1-6 Calendar B2 Obituaries B5 Classified Ef -6 SPOrts C1-4 Comics E3-4 TV/Movies D6 The Bulletin

An Independent Newspaper

vol. 112, No. 273, 30 pages, 5 sections

Q We use recyc/ed nemprint

:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

88 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

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NATION Ee ORLD CLIMATE CHANGE

us ra ia's ea Ie ire umans By Justin Gillis

virtually impossible without

California but could not con-

New York Times News Service

climate change," said David

clude unanimously on wheth-

The savage heat waves that Karoly, a climate scientist at struck Australia last year were the University of Melbourne almost certainly a direct con- who ledsome oftheresearch. sequence of greenhouse gases The findings relied on comreleased by human activity, puter analyses of what the cliresearchers said Monday. It mate would have been like in is perhaps the most defini- the absence of human-caused tive statement dimate scien- greenhouseemissions, a type tists have made tying a spe- of research widely acknowlcific weather event to global edged to be imperfect, and

er the odds had been increased

which often produces con-

WaBIllllg.

Five groups of researchers, flicting findings from differusing distinct methods, ana- ent groups. But scientists said lyzed the heat that baked Aus- the results in this case were tralia for much of 2013 and con- strengthened by the unanimtinued into 2014, briefly shut- ity of the papers, written by ting down the Australian Open veteran research teams scattennis tournament at one point tered around the world. "The evidence in t hose in January when the temperature climbed to 111 Fahrenheit. papers is very strong," said All five research groups Martin Hoerling, an Americame to the conclusion that can scientist with the Nation-

ADMINISTRATION

by human activity. Two dozen papers analyzing

Netanyahu: Hamas, ISIS 'the same' —In ablistering

were published Monday in the

speech to the United Nations, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned onMondaythat Hamas andthe Islamic State group are "branches of the samepoisonous tree," both bent on world domination through terror, just as theNaziswere. Heargued that Israel's fight against Hamasandthe U.S. military campaign against the Islamic State, or ISIS, arepart of the samecause — the defeat of Islamic extremism. Netanyahualso lashed back at Palestinian President MahmoudAbbas, whoaccused Israel last week of carrying out war crimes andwaging a"war of genocide" during the fighting in Gaza. Netanyahusaid Hamascommitted "the real war crimes" in Gaza by using Palestinian civilians as human shields.

Bulletin of the American Me-

teorological Society. This look back at the prior year has become anannualeventasscientists try to answer the question

many ordinary people are asking after every extreme weather event: Did climate change have anything to do with it'? For several events in 2013, they were able to rule out such

a link. Even though the overall global warming trend has been definitively linked to human

emissions in scores of papers, the new reports show the frequent rush to attribute specific

Administration who has of-

weather events to human activityis not always well grounded.

long-term climatic warming caused by human emissions.

ten been skeptical of claimed links between weather events

group found that the type of ex-

al Oceanic and Atmospheric

and global warming.

across the whole of Australia

In other results published

and the whole 12 months of 2013, we can say that this was

Monday, three groups analyzed the drought afflicting

For instance, one research treme ~ that s t ruck parts of Colorado last September had

become less likely, not more likely, in the warming climate.

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

MEGAeuCKS

The numbers drawnMonday nightare:

4> Qss Q4QsQaaQ asQ The estimated jackpot is now $10.4 million.

ClliCege eir treffiC —Amid efforts to rebuild an air-traffic control communications center nearChicagoafter anattack by acontractor's employee onFriday, the FederalAviation Administration said Monday a patchwork of equipmentandprocedures hadallowed it to increase flights at O'HareInternational Airport to about 80 percent of normal, and at Midway Airport to 90percent of normal. Themanaccused of causing the damage,Brian Howard —anemployeeof Harris Corp., whichoperates dataandvoice linesfor the FAA— madean initial appearance in U.S. District Court on Mondayandwasordered heldwithout bond. He faces a felonycharge of destruction of aircraft equipment. He isaccused of setting a fire Friday inthe basementtelecommunications room just outside of Chicago;employees hadto evacuatethe center, andfire, smoke andwater damagedvital telecommunications equipment.

Vincent Yu/The AssociatedPress

Wrapped in plastic to shield from pepperspray,a student protester standsbehind abarrier blocking main streets in HongKong's business district late Monday. Police defended their use of tear gasbut softened their tactics Mondayafter forceful attempts to quell pro-democracy protests drew tens of thousands more people into the streets in an unprecedented show of civil disobedience. Students andactivists

have beencamped out since late Friday, demanding that Beijing grant genuine democratic reforms to the former British colony; they setWednesday astheir deadline for a response. Beijing's increasingly hardline leadership, which has clampeddown on dissent, is unlikely to agree toanydiscussion about political reforms, but the protests are presenting China adilemma over howhard it can crack downthere.

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AriaS SelItehCihg —Roughly a third of 300 potential jurors were dismissed Monday in thepenalty retrial of convicted murderer Jodi Arias after telling a judgethey hadseentoo much mediacoverage of her first trial to be impartial or hadalready made uptheir minds about her punishment. Other jurors were let godueto work conflicts or language barriers, amongother reasons, as jury selection began inthe second attempt by prosecutors to secure a death sentence in theArizona casethat became atabloid TV sensation. Arias, 34, has acknowledged killing ex-boyfriend Travis Alexander in 2008 at his suburban Phoenix homebut claimed it was self-defense. Hesuffered nearly 30 knife wounds, hadhis throat slit and was shot in the head. Prosecutors argued it was premeditated murder carried out in a jealous rage when Alexander wanted to end their affair. Arias, a former waitress, was found guilty last year, andthe murder conviction will stand as lawyers spar again overwhether sheshould die for the crime.

Virginia COld CaSe —Thearrest last week of a suspect in the disappearance of aUniversity of Virginia student has led to a"significant break" in the investigation into the killing of another college student five years ago, officials said Monday.Thesuspect, Jesse Matthew Jr., 32, was arrested in Texas,andthe police said that he wasthe last personseenwiththestudent,HannahGraham,18,whohasbeen missing since Sept. 13. His arrest has provided a "newforensic link" for police investigating the death of Morgan Harrington, 20, who disappeared from the University of Virginia campusduring a concert in 2009, the Virginia State Police said.

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stan swore in Ashraf GhaniAhmadzai as its second elected president Monday, embarking on anew erawith a national unity government poised to confront a resilient Taliban insurgency by signing anagreement with the United States that would guarantee acontinuing U.S. military presence. AsHamid Karzai left the political stage, the new president was locked into an uneasypartnership with his defeated rival, Abdullah Abdullah, who becamethe country's first chief executive. With a hugfor the cameras, both sides appeared determined to reach across factions andavoid a descent into an abyss similar to whathashappenedinIraq.Thenew Afghangovernmentwasexpected today to sign asecurity agreement that provides a legal framework for the United States to keepabout 9,800 troops in the country to train, advise andassist Afghan national security forces after the current international combat mission endsDec. 31. Karzai, the outgoing president, had refused to approve thedeal, which is intended to help Afghan security forces combat the resilient Taliban insurgency.

weather extremes from 2013

last year's heat waves could not havebeen assevere without the "When we look at the heat

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

New Afghanpresident; security pact next? —Afghani-

Intruder gotdeepinto White House Bulletin wire reports A man who jumped the White House fence this month

The Department of Home-

Barack Obama had left about

land Security, which oversees 10 minutes earlier that Friday the agency, would not confirm night with his family for Camp

made itfar deeper intothepres- or deny the new account. David for the weekend. ident's home than previously Authorities said they found disclosed, overpowering a fe- a folding knife with a 3r/z-inch changingSmiles male Secret Service agent in- blade on Gonzalez. The Post Denturerr Implant Center side the North Portico entrance report said an alarm box near and running through the East the White House entrance, an Room before he was tackled, early alert of intruders, had Call 541-388-4444 according to congressional and been muted at the request for $100 OFF law enforcement officials. of building staff. President your new denture

10 yearS far COffee pOiSOning — Ajury onMondaysentenced a Texas cancer researcher to 10years in prison after shewas convicted of poisoning her colleague, whowas also her lover, by lacing his coffee with a sweet-tasting chemical found in antifreeze. Dr.Ana Maria Gonzalez-Angulo, 43, a breast cancer doctor based atHouston's famedTexasMedical Center, had been involved in asexual relationship with Dr. GeorgeBlumenschein. Prosecutors said the affair turned into a "fatal attraction" and shepoisoned him with ethylene glycol after Blumenschein spurned her in favor of Evette Toney,his longtime live-in girlfriend with whom hewastrying to start a family. Blumenschein survived the 2013poisoning. A jury convicted Gonzalez-Angulo, originally from Colombia, of aggravated assault. — From wire reports

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The man, Omar Gonzalez,

was finally stopped as he tried to enter the Green Room, ac-

cording to reports. Earlier, Secret Service officials had said

Gonzalez,42, had only made it steps inside the North Portico after running through the front door.

H,~ or e-+~~

director of the Secret Service, about whether a lax and un-

disciplined culture inside the long-heralded agency has badly eroded its ability to protect the president and his family, severalmembers ofCongress said Monday. The new details paint a strikingly different picture than Secret Service officials described on the day after Gonzalez breached the build-

ing. In a statement Sept. 20, the agency said Gonzalez "was physically apprehended after entering the White

House North Portico doors" — leaving the impression that

Secret Service officers tackled Gonzalez just steps after he opened the door.

egpe/'

Chogce Beef

aee •

The new development, first

reported by The Washington Post, will create an explosive hearing today when a bipartisan panel of lawmakers intends to grill Julia Pierson,

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Tuesday, Sept. 30, the 273rd day of 2014.Thereare 92 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS SeCret SerViCe — Director Julia Pierson faces aHouse oversight committee in the wake of security lapses at the agency that is chargedwith protecting the president.A2

AfghaniStan — Thenew government is expected tosign an agreementthat allows thousands of U.S.troops to stay past the withdrawal deadline. A2

CUTTING EDGE

c3I 00 IS I'0 0 WI e

DID YOU HEAR?

ou now

' 7 Scientists sneakDylan lyricsinto their work

Motivated by an epidemic of bad, bland Thai food overseas, the government-financed Thai Delicious Committee set out to create a machine capable of verifying the authenticity of Thai cuisine. E-delicious,

By Rachel Feltman The Washington Post

HISTORY Highlight:In1954, the first nuclear-powered submarine, the USS Nautilus, was commissioned by the U.S.Navy. In1399, England's KingRichard II was deposed byParliament; he was succeededby his cousin, Henry of Bolingbroke,who was crowned asKing Henry IV. In1777, the Continental Congress, forced to flee in the face of advancing British forces, moved to York, Pennsylvania. In1791, Mozart's opera "The Magic Flute" premiered in Vienna, Austria. In1846, Boston dentist William Morton usedether as an anesthetic for the first time as he extracted an ulcerated tooth from merchant EbenFrost. In1938, after co-signing the Munich Agreement allowing Nazi annexation of Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain said, "I believe it is peace for our time." In1939, the first college football game to betelevised was shown onexperimental station W2XBS inNewYork as Fordham University defeated Waynesburg College, 34-7. In1949, the Berlin Airlift came

to an end. In1955,actor James Dean,24, was killed in a two-car collision near Cholame,California. In1962, The National Farm Workers Association, founded by Cesar Chavezand aforerunner of the United Farm Workers, held its first meeting in Fresno, California. In1984,the mystery series "Murder, SheWrote," starring Angela Lansbury, premiered on CBS. In1986, the U.S. released accusedSovietspyGennadiy Zakharov, onedayafter the Soviets releasedAmerican journalist Nicholas Daniloff. In1997,France's RomanCatholic Church apologized for its silence during the persecution and deportation of Jews bythe pro-Nazi Vichy regime. Tea years ago:President George W.BushandSen. John Kerry met at the University of Miami for their first presidential debate, with Kerry accusing Bush of a "colossal error in judgment" in ordering the invasion of Iraq and the president noting that Kerry hadvoted to authorize the military action. Five years ago: A powerful earthquake rockedwestern Indonesia, killing 1,115people. A Soyuz spacecraft carrying Canadian circus tycoon Guy Laliberte and two crewmates lifted off from Kazakhstan, headed for the International Space Station. Oeeyear ago:PopeFrancis announced during ameeting with cardinals that hewould canonize two of his most influential predecessors, JohnPaul II and John XXIII, the following spring. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu implored President Barack Obamaduring a White Housemeetingtokeeppunishing sanctions in placeagainst Iran over its nuclear programs.

BIRTHDAYS Actress Angie Dickinson is 83. Singer Cissy Houstonis 81. Singer Johnny Mathis is 79. Actor Len Cariou is 75. Singer Marilyn McCoo is 71. Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is 69. Actress Victoria Tennant is 64. Actor JohnFinnis62.Rockmusician John Lombardo is 62. Actress Fran Drescher is 57.Actor Eric Stoltz is 53. Actress Lisa Thornhill is 48. Actor TonyHale is 44. Actor Kieran Culkin is 32. Singer-rapper T-Pain is 30. — From wire reports

a boxy contraption filled with sensors and microchips, scans food samples to produce a chemical

While writing an article

about intestinal gasses 17 years ago, Karolinska Institute researchers John Lundberg andEddie Weitzberg

signature it measures against a standard deemed to be authentic. By Thomas Fuller New York Times News Service

couldn't resist a punny title: "Nitric Oxide and inflammation: The answer is blow-

BANGKOK — Hopscotch-

ing the globe as Thailand's prime minister, Yingluck Shinawatra repeatedly encountered a distressing problem: bad Thai food. Too often, she found, the meals she sampled at Thai

ing in the wind." Thus began their descent down the slippery slope of Bob Dylan call-outs. While

the two men never put lyrics into their peer-reviewed

restaurants abroad were un-

studies, The Local Sweden

worthy of the name, too bland to be called genuine Thai cooking. The problem bothered her enough to raise it at a Cabinet meeting. Her political party has since been thrown out of office, in a May military coup, but her initiative in culinary diplomacy lives on.

reports, they started a personal tradition of getting as many Dylan quotes as possible into everything else

At a gala dinner at a ritzy

two researchers (also at Karolinska, where Dylan

they wrote — artides about other peoples' work, editori-

als, book introductions and so on.

Soon, the pun ring doubled in size. After another

Bangkok hotel today, the government will unveil its project

is apparently a big thing) published an article called

to standardize the art of Thai food — with a robot.

Diplomats and dignitaries have been invited to witness the debut of a machine that

its promoters say can scientif-

"Blood on the Tracks: a Simple Twist of Fate," a librarian connected the f o ursome. A fifth scientist joined the

PhotosbyGiorgio Taraschi/The New York Times

A plate of Thai green curry in the Nanotec lab after being analyzed, in Bangkok, earlier this month. Diplomats and dignitaries have been invited to witness the debut of a machine that its promoters

say can scientifically evaluate Thai cuisine, scanning food samples to produce a chemical signature,

group whenhis article"Tangled Up in Blue: Molecular Cardiology in the Postmolecular Era" hit the stands.

which it measures against a standard deemed to be that of authentic Thai food.

ically evaluate Thai cuisine,

telling the difference, for instance, between a properly charge of the Thai Delicious prepared green curry with program. He added, almost just the right mix of Thai basil, apologetically, "They are curry paste and fresh coconut owned by Vietnam or Myancream, and a lame imitation mar, or maybe even Italian or thereof. French." A boxy contraption filled

leaves and coriander, for instance, researchers posted

has otherflavor defects,Sirapat said.

notices at the prestigious Ch-

A reporter who visited the

Now, the researchers say,

they have a running bet: Whoever can sneak in the

u lalongkorn University i n Bangkok, requesting 120 tast-

laboratorywhere themachine is being developed brought ers. The tasters — students, green curry prepared in the university staff an d a r ea kitchens of the Foreign Correwith sensors and microchips, Costly project workers — were paid a few spondents' Club of Thailand. the so-called e-delicious maThe agency has spent dollars each for their trouble. A sample was placed in the chine scans food samples to around one-third of its bud- They were served 10 differ- stainless-steel tray, the maproduce a chemical signature, geted 30 million baht (around ently prepared soups and rat- chine made a whirring sound, which it measures against a $1 million) on Thai Delicious, ed each one. and moments later issued a standard deemed to be the au- including around $100,000 to The winning soup was score of 78 out of 100. "Normally we say that anythentic version. develop the e-delicious ma- declared the standard, and The government-financed chine, according to Sura-at its c h e mical co o r dinates thing lower than 80 is not up Thai Delicious Committee, Supachatturat, a manager at programmed into the ma- to standard," Nakah said. He which oversaw t h e d e vel- the agency. The Thai Deli- chine. As a greater number hypothesized that th e c l ub opment of the machine, de- cious Committee, which in- of tasters' opinions are pro- might be catering to foreign scribes it as "an intelligent cludes government officials, grammed into the machine, it tastes. "Maybe because forrobot that m easures smell scholars, a chef and a food will be able to judge whether eigners eat there they prepare and taste in food ingredients critic, also receives financing a dish is too salty or spicy or it differently," he said. through sensor technology in from private companies that order to measure taste like a are partners in the project. food critic." O ne element of th e p r ogram is a direct result of The badThai food problem Yingluck's travels. On a visit In a country of 67 million

to New York she noticed the

people, there are somewhere near the same number of strongly held opinions about Thai cooking. A heated debate here on the merits of a particular nam prik kapi, a spicy chili dip of fermented shrimp paste, lime juice and palm sugar, could easily go on for an hour without coming close to resolution.

sanitation inspection system

Consider this a reminder

that scientists arepeople, too, and that many of them really, really want to make you laugh. Of course, they hope you'll get past their chuckle-worthy headlines and pay attentiontothe science, too. "I would much rather become famous for my scien-

tific work than for my Bob Dylan quotes," Weitzberg told The Local, "but yes, I am enjoyingthis!"

We suppovt Centval Oregon nonprofits.

dows, according to a former aide, and wondered wheth-

er Thailand could develop a similar system to shame Thai

HIGH DEsERT NQN P R Q FIT LEADERs CQNFERENcE

restaurants into making tast-

ier food. So Thai Delicious offers a logo that restaurants can af-

fix to their menus as long as some agreement on one point chefs use officially sanctioned at least: Bad Thai food is a recipes. more acuteproblem overseas. Thai Delicious has also Thais, who can establish an produced a free app that inimmediate bond discussing cludes recipes approved by a where they will get their next government committee. So meal or the merits of particu- far, the committee has approved about 10 recipes, three

of which have been published on the Thai Delicious app.

cater to non-Thai palates by pulling punches on spice and But the t asting machine not respecting the delicate is the real novelty. Nakah balance between sweet, sour, Thawichawatt, a businesssalty and four-alarm spicy. man who is trying to comIngredients like fresh tama- mercialize it, hopes to sell rind, Thai limes and galangal, it for $18,000 apiece to Thai an aromatic root similar to

embassies in countries with

ginger, are not readily available overseas and the substi-

many Thai restaurants.

tution of inferior ingredients

lunch.

in which letter grades are p asted on r e staurant w i n -

But there does seem to be

lar food stalls, complain that Thai r e staurants o v erseas

most referencesbefore retirement will get treated to

How it works

frequently yields a dish that a The m a chine e v a luates Bangkok gourmandmightde- food by measuring its conscribe in the Thai vernacular ductivity at different voltagas "food even a dog would not es. Readings from 10 sensors swallow." are combinedto produce the Add to that a soupgon of chemical signature. "We wanted the cheapest culinary chauvinism, which h olds that a u thentic T h a i and easiest approach to meafood can be prepared only sure food," said Sirapat Praby Thais, usually, Thai cooks tontep, a British-trained exsay, those who absorbed their pert in nanotechnology who cooking acumen tugging led the development of the on the apron strings of their machine. "You just put in the grandmothers. food and you get a rating." "There are many T h ai Because even computers restaurants all around the cannot judge taste, the food world that ar e n o t o w n ed is compared to a standard by Thai p eople," warned derived from a database of Supachai Lorlowhakarn, an popular preferences for each adviser to the National Innodish. For tom yam, the spicy vation Agency, which is in soup infused with Kaffir lime

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

Campus

Landforfour-yearOSU-Cascadescampus

Site's attorney Jeffrey Klein-

man saying, "Don't a llow

Continued from A1 The issues of

In Site has argued the univer- not be allowed to end or begin sity's plan provides too little

p a rking, worry about planning later." OSU-Cascades employed sity's planning process have a number of defenses, in part

transportation and the univerdominated Truth In Site's cri-

noting that although it had not

tique, and Monday's hearing in a packed council chambers allowed lawyers from both sides to elaborate at length on how code should be applied in

completed what qualifies as a master plan, it had thoroughly planned for the campus, submitting numerous design doc-

gQ •

(5

4gt ~

uments and studies to the re-

cord. Furthermore, OSU-CasThe issue given the most at- cades attorney Steve Janik tention by both the opposition argued that any reading of the and the university is wheth- code that implied the need for er OSU-Cascades should be such a plan relied upon a "torcompelled to complete a mas- tured twisting." terplan, a requirement under As they have done throughvarious circumstances but out the process, city staff not, according to city plan- members agreed with the uniners, those of the 10-acre de- versity on this issue. "Under our code, a master velopment. Truth In Site had earlierargued that because plan is not required," said Colthe university hopes to devel- in Stephens, Bend's current op an adjacent 46-acre site, a planning manager. "Practicalproject which would trigger ly speaking, this would not be a master plan, the university a good way to do things." shouldbe required to complete Stephens elaborated that such a plan at the outset. requiring a master plan for That argument was repeat- any aspirational developthose areas.

e d Monday, with T r uth

In

Phase 1: 10Aacres

Site of old pumice mi 46acres

'tng,,

the city's transportation goals. "Why not let them go for it?"

o

The Bulletin

enforce.

City councilors upheld this finding, but Mayor Jim Clinton said he had "sympathy" for the feeling that the campus was being "shoehorned" into place. Councilor Doug Knight

city should require OSU-Cascadesto create a master plan justfor its 10-acre site.A ssistant City Attorney Gary Fires-

tone said the council could not do that per code. The council also supported

the staff's findings regarding ter planning occur," but that the university's parking-mancode did not allow for it in this agement plan. City code concase. cerning college parking is For the first time in the pro- vague, simply requiring a unistated he'd "like to have mas-

ments would prove difficult to

cess, Truth In Site argued the

School

ing of their school, which was near their house, lay about the Continued from A1 streets in twisted and broken "We just felt like from a hu- heaps. The kids even found manitarian point of view, the some of the art supplies from right thing to do was to accept one of the school's decimated

versity to have a plan. Truth

there have been so good to us

Seve Castillo, 11, throws his bag into a

and our family. It wasn't even an option for him not to help."

satd.

R eports a bout

t h e ap -

it hit, said Angie Castillo.

"We just kept watching the news for more about the storm and kept thinking, 'It's going to turn,'" she said. "But after a while, we realized it wasn't

van Monday morning before heading

JP I

so.

I

to outdoor schoolat

Camp Tamarack with the rest of

Seven Peaks School's fifth-graders. Andy Tullis The Bulletin

know, it's not summer vaca-

tion,'" Angie Castillo said. "I just wanted to have life continue as normal for them. I felt

golfcourses in theresortarea. The area was without cell Their children, all younger service for two days followthan 12, have spent almost ing the storm. When cell retheir entire lives in Mexico. ception returned, the family They attend a bilingual school learned that flights were once in Cabo and are fluent in En- again leaving from the nearglish and Spanish. by airport. The morning of proaching storm first started coming in about a week before

from blocking out 15 minutes

beforeorafterschoolsstarting said Councilor Mark Capell, to instead making the univernoting the city would be able sity coordinate start and end to require a new parking plan times with the schools. if neighborhood streets beThe council expects to officame inundated with student cially sign off on a written vercars. sion of this decision during its Knight, who is a civil engi- Oct. 15 meeting. "We'll see what the findings neer, attempted to persuade the rest of the council to de- look like and presumably apmand the university to supply peal," said Kleinman, Truth In more parking spaces but even- Site's attorney. tually relented after failing to The group will have 21 days gain traction. to file an appeal with the state He was able to initiate a Land Use Board of Appeals change to a condition on the once it receives the official application's approval con- decision. cerning traffic. City staff had — Reporter: 541-633-2160, recommended the university tleeds@bendbullettn.com

Sergio Castillo is currently buying and delivering food to people in neighborhoods them," said Annie Winter, who bungalows. Ar t n o t ebooks, where many people lost what is a Seven Peaks parent and Play-Doh containers and even little they had in the storm. works in the admissions office rocks painted by students In th e m eantime, A ngie of the private school. "The kids washed up near their home. Castillo and the children are have been through so much." Much of the school was staying with her brothers here Angie Castillo, originally flattened and destroyed in the in Bend. After having gone from Portland, has lived in hurricane. through such an ordeal, she "I think it was the first time was set on restoring at least Cabo San Lucas for the past 10 years. She moved there with reality really set in for them a little bit of th e normalcy her husband, who grew up in (the kids)," Angie Castillo said. the hurricane took from her New Orleans and is of Cuban "It was very upsetting." family. "It made me sad," Liliana, 9, "I told them (the kids), 'You descent, after he was offered a job as director of several

classes within 15 minutes of

parking, relying on an opti- nearby public schools starting mistic image of students who or ending classes. would rather walk and bike to The clause was meant to school than drive. prevent traffic congestion, A majority of the council and Knight asked about the seemed to be fine with the uni- possibility of including Seven versity offering an ambitious- Peaks School, a nearby prily low number of spots, seeing vate school, something the an initiative to discourage au- council agreed to. The council tomobile traffic as in line with also changed the requirement

them to site the campus and

boarded a van to go to Camp said Winter, so they don't have Tamarack for two days as part to pay for tuition. The kids of outdoor school. Angie Castillo said their it was important with every- started school Thursday. thing so interrupted in their Winter said the rest of the school in Mexico doesn't have lives to have some consistency students at the school are any program like outdoor again." gaining plenty by h aving school, and that she's glad he Sept. 18, Angie and her three C astillo decided to s ee the Castillo children as their gets a chance to participate children boarded a plane for whether her children would classmates. here. "They geta chance to meet Dallas. Her husband insisted be able to attend the school Seve said his favorite part on staying behind to help with for the duration of their stay in students from a d i fferent about Seven Peaks so far are cleanup. Central Oregon. Winter said country who are bilingual," all of th e new f r iends he's "It wasn't ever a consider- once school officials heard Winter said. "It's a great op- made. Liliana echoed that. ation for him to leave," Ang- about their story, they couldn't portunity for our kids." On "I really like my friends here ie Castillo said. "The people turn them away. They're con- Monday, 11-year-old Seve sidered visitors at the school,

and my teacher," Liliana said. Angie Castillo doesn't know exactly how long the family will be in Bend; it could be as long as a month. But while her family's waiting to reunite, she says she's appreciative of the support the Seven Peaks community has shown her and her

children.

"I couldn't imagine that it

would be this good here," Angie Castillo said. — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com

and that it was going to be a direct hit. We started preparing for it." First, Sergio Castillo a t -

tempted to book his family on a flight out of the area on Sept. 14, before the h u rri-

cane reached the Baja peninsula, but the flights out of Cabo were booked solid with

tourists and locals trying to escape. "It's not so much the wor-

ry of surviving the storm as it's the worry about the after-

5

S

math and devastation," Angie

Castillo said. "You know that you'll lose power and a lot of resources will be gone." But with no other option than to ride it out, the Castillo

family hunkered down in one room of their stucco-and-concrete home the night of Sept. 14 as the hurricane slammed

into the area. The power was cut at 6 p.m. The family played Yahtzee to pass the time as the

s s i

wind railed against the window panes. Angie was able to

s s s

keep in touch with her broth-

ers, who live in Bend, throughout the duration of the storm. At around 8:30 p.m., the Cas-

tillos put their kids to bed. But nobody got much sleep that night.

"We heard this big noise, and me and my sister got really scared," Lucia said. "We were scared when the satellite fell down. We heard anoth-

t

y •

I

I

g

r

I

I

er loud noise, and I thought it was a big thunder. But it was the window in the bathroom

breaking." "You could hear the tiles popping off the roof," Angie Castillo said. "Coming from Portland, I'd never been

through anything like that before. We just don't get those kinds o f here."

n a t ural d i sasters

The storm continued howling until about 3 a.m. Just after sunrise, the fam-

ily emerged from the home. Luckily, it had only received minimal damage. But as they walked the streets of their neighborhood, they realized not everyone had been as lucky. "It was the weirdest sensation," Angie Castillo said. "It

really looked like a bomb had gone off." In addition to the downed

palm trees and broken glass, the kids found other things amid the debris that hit closer

to home. The walls and roof-

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TODAY'S READ: VOLCANOES, IN JAPAN AND BEYOND

ISIS Continued from A1

oun ainsareeru in

President Barack Obama fueled the debate in an inter-

viewbroadcast over the weekend when he said intelligence agencies had underestimated the peril posed by the Islamic

3 OVB eWOI , W

State, also known as ISIS or

ISIL. Obama accurately quoted JamesClapper Jr.,the di-

COSt Of ij.S. airStrikeS —The United States haslikely spent between $780million and$930 million in its military campaign against the Islamic State militant group sofar, and itwill likely cost between$200 million and$320 million per month going forward if conductedwith about 2,000 U.S. service members on the ground, according to areport published Monday. Meanwhile, House Minority LeaderNancy Pelosi called onSpeakerJohn Boehner to initiate adebate in Congress over granting a newauthorization to usemilitary force to defeatthe militants. "Everybody in the country's talking about it exceptfor us," shesaid. Boehner said Sunday he waswilling to call Congress backfor avote.

rector of national intelligence,

By Robin Wylie

acknowledging that he and his analysts did not foresee the

Special to The Washington Post

stunning success of Islamic

State forces or the catastrophic collapse of the Iraqi army. But by pointing to the agencies without mentioning any misjudgments of his own, Obama left intelligence officials bristling about being

The Earth seems to have

been smoking a lot recently. Volcanoes are erupting in Japan, Iceland, Hawaii, Indonesia, Ecuador and Mexico right now. Others, in th e Philip-

pines and Papua New Guinea, erupted recently but seem to have calmeddown. Many of thesehave threatened homes and forced evacuations. But

made into scapegoats and crit-

among their spectators, these

eruptions raise question: Is there such a thing as a season for volcanic eruptions'?

While volcanoes may not have "seasons" as we know

F 4~4~

them, scientists have started to

discern intriguing patterns in their activity.

Eruptions causedby a shortened day The four seasons are caused by the Earth's axis of rotation

tilting toward and away from the sun. But our planet under-

goes another, less well-known change, which affects it in a more subtle way, perhaps even volcanically. Due to factors including

Kyodo News/TheAssociated Press

— The Washington Post

"I'm not suggesting anyone

k Read an in-depth reconstruction of events at essarily, but the organization bendbulletin.cem/extras definitely achieved strategic

was asleep at the switch nec-

Iraq," said Frederic Hof, who Obama was c o nsidering previously handled Syria pol- strikes last year in retaliation icy for the State Department for Assad's chemical weapons under Obama and is now at use — a plan he ultimately re-

ics complaining that he was the Atlantic Council. trying to avoid responsibility. In interviews, administra"This was not an intelli- tion officials privately agreed gence community failure, but they had not focused enough a failure by policymakers to on ISIS' territorial ambitions confront the threat," said Rep. but said they were hamstrung Mike Rogers, R-Mich., chair- in responding by an Iraqi govman of the House Intelligence ernment that was fanning the Committee. sectarian divide that helped A spokesman denied Mon- give rise to the Sunni extremday that Obama was blaming ists in the first place. intelligence agencies in his While Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki asked for U.S. interview on e60 Minutes." "That is not what the presi- weaponry and a i rstrikes, dent's intent was," said press both Obama and Congress secretary Josh Earnest."What reacted negatively. "To anyone watching dethe president was trying to make dear" was "how diffi- velopments in Iraq from midcult it is to predict the will of 2010 and Syria from early securityforcesthatare based 2011, the recovery and rise of in another country to fight." ISIS should have been starkA reconstruction of the past ly clear," said Charles Lister, year suggests a number of piv- a visiting fellow at the Brookotal moments when both the ings Doha Center in Qatar. "The organization itself was

Dense, white plumes of gases andash spewfrom the summit of

White House and the intelli-

sun and moon, the speed at

Japan'sMount Ontake on Monday.

gence community misjudged also carrying out an explicthe Islamic State. Even after itly clear step-by-step stratethe group's fighters stormed gy aimed at engendering the across the border into Iraq at conditions that would feed its the start of the year, the White accelerated rise." Houseconsidered itaproblem

stantly changes. Accordingly, the length of a day actually variesfrom year to year.The difference is only in the order of milliseconds. But new research suggests that this seemingly small perturbation could bring about significant changes on our planet — or more accurately, within it.

A study published in the journal Terra Nova in February showed that, since the

early 19th century, changes in the Earth's rotation rate

tended to be followed by increases in global volcanic activity. It found that, between 1830 and 2013, the longest

period for which a reliable record was available, relatively

large changes in rotation rate were immediately followed by an increase in the number

of large volcanic eruptions. And, more than merely being correlated, the authors be-

lieve that the rotation changes might actually have triggered these large eruptions. Altering the spin of a planet, even by a small amount, requires a huge amount of energy. It has been estimated that changes in the Earth's rotation

On Japanesepeak, moredodies; searchcalled off KISO, Japan —Toxic gasesandash from erupting Mount Ontake forced Japaneserescue workers to call off the search for more victims Monday asdozens of relatives awaited news of their family members. Rescuers found five more bodies nearthe summit of the volcano, bringing the death toll to 36. Theyhavemanaged toairlift only12 bodies off the mountain since the start of the eruption on Saturday because ofdangerous conditions. How the victims died remains unclear, though experts say it was probably from suffocating ash, falling rocks, toxic gases or some combination of them. Some ofthe bodies hadsevere contusions. Survivors told Japanesemediathat they were pelted by rocks from the eruption. Onemansaid he fled with others to the basement of a lodge, fearing that the rocks would penetrate the roof. The eruption caught seismologists by surprise. Although somewhat increasedseismic activity had beenrecorded for about two weeks, there were noindications of a major eruption, said Satoshi Deguchi, a JapanMeteorological Agency official in Naganoprefecture. Typical signs, such asincreased seismic rattling or underground structural movement, werenot detected. Theeruption was the first fatal one in modern times atthe10,062-foot mountain, a popular climbing destination 130 miles west of Tokyo. Aneruption occurred in 1979, but noone died. Themountain began erupting at perhaps theworst possible time, with at least 250 peopletaking advantage of abeautiful fall Saturday to go for a hike. More than 200 soldiers and firefighters, including units with gas detection equipment, were part of the search mission near the peak, said Katsunori Morimoto, an official in the village of Otaki.

What about Assad?

that could be contained.

O

surprise when it rolled into

t he gravitational pull of t h e which the Earth rotates con-

A5

jected — officials made dear

that regime change was not their goal. "There's a more immediate

concern that has to be dealt with," Obama said of Assad in the interview Sunday. On Monday, the Islamic State posted on the Internet a

third video featuring imprisoned British journalist John Cantlie, this one mocking Obama's Sept. 10 speech in which he laid out his strategy for confronting the group. Cantlie, who has been a

prisoner of the Islamic State for nearly two years, appears pale and thin, and he sounds more stressed than in the previous two videos. In the 5'/2-minute video, he wore an

orange shirt that mimics the uniformsofprisonersheld by the United States at the detention center at Guantanamo

Bay, Cuba. His presentation seemed less polished than in the previous videos. He described

the American-European-Arab intervention against the

Intelligence agencies were As for Syrian President Islamic State as unpopular caughtoffguardby thespeed B ashar Assad, w h il e t h e and unlikely to succeed and of the extremists' subsequent White House continues to call said that it was not supported advance across northern Iraq. for his departure and has con- by the American people, but And the government as a sistently condemned his ac- then noted that direct action whole was largely focused on tions in a three-year civil war, against the Islamic State was the group as a source of for- diplomatic negotiations to supported by 70 percent of eign fighters who might pose oust him have largely stalled Americans. a terrorism threat when they and Obama has shown no ap— The Associated Press returned home, not as a force petite for usingmilitary power and Tribune News Service intent on seizingterritory. to force him out. Even when contributed to this report.

— The Associated Press

rate dissipate around 120,000

petajoules ofenergy each year — enough to power the United States for the same length

of time. This energy is transferred into the Earth's atmosphere and subsurface. And

it is this second consequence

/ W'

that the Terra Nova authors

Jh

believe could affect volcanoes. The vast quantities of energy delivered to the subsurface by rotation changes are likely to perturb its stress field. And, since the magma that feeds

volcanic eruptions resides in the Earth's crust, stress variations there may make it easier for the liquid rock to rise to the

A

Japan GroundSelf-Defense Force/The Associated Press

surface and thereby increase Firefighters and military search-and-rescue crews headfor the the rate of volcanic eruptions.

summit of Mount Ontake on Sunday, before the rescue effort was

The Terra Nova study is far called off. Japanese TV showedsoldiers carrying a series of body from conclusive. Nevertheless, bags Monday morning to amilitary helicopter that had landed in a the idea that minute changes

to the Earth's spin could affect volcanic motions deep within the planet is intriguing.

relatively open area of the now bleak landscape. Rescuers reported a strong smell of sulfur.

;~S'ATU.RDAY, OCT;-'.4TH!'"-

its mass is removed, the crust springs back. This upward climatechange times. Around the same peri- flexing can lead to a drop in There's another natural od, the rate of volcanic activity stress in the underlying rocks, phenomenon thathas a much in Iceland soared to at least 30 which, the theory goes, makes stronger claim to affecting vol- times today's level. it easier for magma to reach canic activity. There is supporting evi- the surface and feed volcanic

Eruptionscausedby

In recent decades, it has be-

ago, the global level of volcanic activity rose by up to six

dence from continental Eu-

come apparent that the consequences of planetary ice loss might not end with rising sea levels. Evidence has been building that in the past, periods ofsevere loss of glaciers were followed by a significant spike in volcanic activity. Around 19,000 years ago, glaciation was at a peak. Much of Europe and North America

rope, North America and Ant-

was under ice. Then the cli-

this strange effect might come

mate warmed, andthe glaciers

downto stress. Ice sheets are heavy. Each

began to recede. The effect on

eruptions.

The link between climate change and volcanism is still also increased after earlier de- poorly understood. Many volglaciation cycles. canoes do not seem to have arctica that volcanic activity

Eruptionscausedby the melting of ice

been affected by it. Nor is it a

particularly pressing concern today, even though we face

Bizarrely, then, volcanic ac- an ice-free future. It can take tivity seems — at least sometimes — to rise and fall with

thousands of years after the

ice levels. But why? Again,

tivity to rise. Y et while it m a y no t b e an immediate hazard, this strange effect is a reminder

glaciers melt for volcanic ac-

the planet was generally quite year, Antarctica loses around that our planet can respond favorable for humankind. But, 40 billion metric tons of ice. to change in unforeseen ways. since the mid-1970s, a number The sheets are so heavy, in Contrary to their brutish repof studies have suggested that, fact, that as they grow, they utation, volcanoes are helping as the ice vanished, volcanic c ause the Earth's crust t o scientists understand just how eruptions became much more bend — like a plank of wood sensitive our planet can be. frequent. A 2009 study, for when placed under weight. — RobinWylie isaPh.D.researcher example, concluded that be- The corollary of this is that, in volcanology at University tween 12,000 and 7,000 years when an ice sheet melts, and College London.

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

Senate

With the election five weeks

Continued from A1 Wehby campaignmanager Dean Petrone said the cam-

ing. Freedom Partners Action

time to change the dynamics

Fund, a super political action committee associated with the

of the race, he said. She also has less money

paign was in the midst of dis- than Merkley t o s pend on cussions with KGW when the advertising. station pulled the plug. According to the most re"We hadasked them to con- cent campaign finance reports tinue negotiations, and they filed with the Federal Election put an arbitrary deadline on Commission, as of June 30 Wethe table," he said. "We never hby has raised $2.05 million told them we didn't want to do and spent $1.4 million, leaving

Pot

been buoyed by outside spend-

away, Wehby is running out of

the price and consumption of regulated marijuana," they Continued from A1 law. As a result, lawmakers wrote. "Specifically, more loIn Colorado, sales began will have an extra $186 mil- cal jurisdictions have allowed in January, so the state's Leg- lion to manage as they please. adult-use marijuana stores islative Council had slightly C olorado's forecast w a s and adult-use marijuana busimore data to work with for calculated differently. Unlike nesses are no longer required its latestestimate, released Washington's forecast, state to be vertically integrated." today. economists in Colorado exThere were few changThe new Washington fore- pect sales to remain roughly es made between the June cast through 2019 is a slight flat from year to year, steadi- and September reports, they upward revision from the ly yielding just under $50 wrote, b ecause i n coming February and June forecasts, million annually. The authors taxes were "generally conthanks in part to sales begin- were careful to note that their s istent" between th e t w o ning sooner than forecasters estimate is only based on "a forecasts. As in Washingpredicted, raising near-term few months of data for a ma- ton, some of the revenue in estimates. Just under 30 per- turing market" and condi- Colorado will be flagged for cent of the total expected tions are still changing. particular uses, such as edu"The marijuana market is cation funding and addiction revenues will go to the state's general fund, while the re- maturing which will impact programs.

conservative billionaire Koch brothers, has spent more than

$1 million attacking Merkley. Freedom Partners had

announced $3.6 million in ad buys against Merkley but also has given indications that it

would discontinue its spending in October if Wehby's camthat debate." her with less than $647,000 in paign, which has consistently Similarly, Petrone main- cash on hand. Merkley has trailed Merkley in polls, hadn't tained the interview at Wilraised almost $9.2 million and closed the gap by then. Freelamette Week was under dis- spent more than $5.4 million. dom Partners did not respond cussion but had never been As of June 30, he still had more to a request for comment. confirmed. than $3.5 million available. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, "We were working to conWehby's campaign has aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

maining portion has been flaggedfor specific uses by

firm it, and Willamette Week said, 'This is the date; take it or

leave it,'" he said. According t o W i l l amette Week's account, Brent Walth,

the paper's managing editor for news, booked the interview with Petrone in July, let-

ting Petrone set the date and time, only to have the Wehby

campaign ignore reminder calls about the interview and fail to show up. Petrone rejected suggestions that Wehby, whose campaign has been dogged in recent days by accusations that thehealth care andeconomics plans on her website had been

Low Prices.

lifted from other Republican sources, was trying to duck public appearances. "She thinks it's important

that she has as many opportunities as possible to discuss the

issues with voters of Oregon, and with Senator Merkley," he said, describing Merkley's tenure as a senatoras"ineffective and incompetent." Andrew Zucker, a spokes-

man for the Merkley campaign, called Wehby's announcement "a stunt from a

floundering, n o t-ready-forprime-time campaign."

' •

I

"We accepteda series of de-

bates sixweeks ago, and for six weeks, Wehby ducked, dodged

~50 ar

and ultimately turned down

the traditional Senate debate in Portland," he said. "Frankly, at this point we wonder if Wehby

mere

will even show up to the one debate we've already set. We'll

*

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cited by Wehby only learned of her decision via the same

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"Neither, until today, had accepted," she said. "We're happy to host it; we're just waiting to hear back from Senator Merkley." Mary Nolan, a

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fore the November election.

As it did with previous accusations of stalking a former boyfriend and lifting language from national Republicans, the campaign said nothing for three days, he said. "This will look like an act of

.

-

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desperation," he said of Mon-

day's announcement. "Regular voters are probably not going to be following back and forth (over the debates), but they will get a sense that the Wehby campaign is not organized,

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and that will reflect on Wehby

herself asa candidate." These kind of mistakes are

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"(She's had) three big crises, and in every one her campaign appears to have been caught entirely by surprise," he said. "Her campaign hasn't had the ability to quickly respond and move on to another issue, or get the conversation back to where po

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county commissioner, he said.

Wehby would want it to be."

Ingredients for life.


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

BRIEFING Alleged fight investigated The BendPolice Departmentcontinues to investigate analleged physical altercation that occurred early Sunday between aCalifornia police sergeantand a 34-year-old Bendman. Police officers responded to theWells Fargo at the900 block of NW Wall Street onSunday at12:07 a.m.after receiving a reportabout a man claiming to be a police officer displaying a handgun,according to a news releasefrom the police department. The police department determined that adispute occurred betweenfive men at theSummit Saloon andStagethat night. Stuart Epps,34, of Bend, and Humberto Rodriguez, 21, of Redmond,left the downtown barfirst. Up to two hourslater, they encounteredKevin McCarthy, 45, ofBend, and KevinCoehlo, 49,and Michael Tribble,43, both California residents. Near theWells Fargo, an alleged altercation occurred, according to police. Tribble, aVallejo Police Department sergeant, showeda handgun. Noshots were fired and noarrests have been madeat this time. Tribble, Eppsand Rodriguez sustained minor injuries. The incident remains under investigation, police said, becauseof conflicting statements during the initial investigation.

DESCHUTES COUNTY

Commissioners i ire restrictions < in li ht o recent autumn weather

f ' 'j".e"~!~J'~A, ~"> w ®qg

By Ted Shorack

The stat eofemergency dec-

our largest fire came early

The Bulletin

laration restricted smoking

when there were lots of re-

Fire restrictions for unprotected wildlands and unin-

while traveling, open fires, chainsaw use, welding, mowing of dried grass and use of exploding targets or tracer

sources available," said Keith, referring to the Two Bulls Fire.

corporated Deschutes County land were dropped Monday in response to rainfall last week and fall weather conditions. Deschutes County commis-

sionerspassed aresolution removing the restrictions based on the recommendation of County Forester Ed Keith.

"I think we've had enough

weather that it's prudent to

roll back those regulations," said Keith.

ammunition. The U.S. Forest Service and

BureauofLand Management lifted restrictions last week for Deschutes National Forest, Crooked River National

Grassland and the Prineville District of the BLM. Some restrictions will remain until

Oct. 15 for parts of the Lower Deschutes, Crooked and White rivers. Keith said the Central

Commissioners passed

the first-ever county fire restrictions June 25 in the wake of the Two Bulls Fire, which

burned about 7,000 acres west of Bend earlier that month.

Keith said fire chiefs from

"There's still some nice opportunities to enjoy weekends sard.

The county fire restrictions were initially set to last until

the new medical examiner for the Deschutes County District

Oct. 15, but could be changed depending on how soon conditions improved with cooler weather.

Attorney's Office.

County commissioners expressed relief that the re-

cent to Bend to reduce rental

missioner Tammy Baney said the change was also great because the community will

now be able to engage in pre-

In other news: • Commissioners appointed

• The board adopted an or-

dinance allowing destination resort property owners adjaavailability of their units from 45 to 38 weeks out of the year. The county code change affects individually owned units at Tetherow. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorach@bendbulletin.corn

e oo s

ns

fnft= NOV.4 ret

! .

s+~.

ELECTION

/

bendbniietin.com/eiections

t

Hopefuls

eye jobs, Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Students walk between classes on the first day of school at Central Oregon Community College on

In the story headlined "Pumpkin cannon gives fall a booming welcome," which appeared Monday, Sept. 29, on Page A7, aphoto caption accompanying the story listed an incorrect hometown for 10-yearold Kylie Durr. Kylie is from Redmond. The Bulletin regrets the error.

housing By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

Monday in Bend.

REDMOND-

Growth is picking up steam in Redmond, and

anyone — including the four City Council candidates — familiar

U.S. HIGHWAY 97

Man arraigned incrashthat killed stepdaughter By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

A 32-year-old Redmond

man was arraigned Monday on several charges following a Friday night single-vehicle crash that left his 7-year-old stepdaughter dead and four other girls injured, including his 14-year-old daughter. William Wayne Fix appeared by video from the Deschutes

— Bulletin staff reports

Correction

Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters ...................541-548-2186 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver.................541-617-7831

REDMOND

partment will host its

photo booth, food and a meet-and-greet with Bend firefighters. For more information about the event, visit www.bendoregon.gov/ fire or call 541-3226309.

2. Deception Complex • Acres: 6,033 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Lightning

Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-383-0367 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

The Bend Fire De-

a tour of the fire station,

• Acres: 5,520 • Containment: 69% • Cause: Humancaused

Cail a reporter

phone at 541-330-4620

annualopen house starting at11 a.m. Saturday at the North Fire Station on Jamison Street in Bend. This year's theme is "Working SmokeAlarms Save Lives," andthe event will feature CPR classes, disaster preparedness information,

1. 36 Pit

The Bulletin 1

e

The DeschutesCounty Bicycle andPedestrian Advisory Committee is looking to fill two at-large positions. Made up of13 voting members, thecommittee promotes safebicycling and walking for transportation in Deschutes County. Most of the meetings for the committee arein Bend from noonto1:30 p.m. on thefirst Thursdayofeachmonth.Committee membersserve three-year terms. The committee asks applicants to apply by5 p.m. Oct. 17.Formore information, contact Matthew Martin, county associate planner,by

Bend Fire to hold open house

Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit • http://inciweb.nwcg. gov/stat e/38 • www.nwccweb.ns/ information/firemap. aspx

Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!

Bike panel is seeking members

or matt.martin©deschutes.org.

FIRE UPDATE

3. Onion Mountain • Acres: 4,105 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Unknown

FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

ac 0

+q~~~~IKjafnath Fplls

and get out and about," Baney

Dr. Jana Van Amburg, a surgeon with St. Charles Bend, as

earlier than expected. Com-

Oregon fire season had an above-averagenumber offire starts and acres burned. "We were really lucky that

viously restricted activities.

around Central Oregon met last week and decided to allow for open burning after Wednesday.

strictions could be removed

I

Fix

County jail to face charges of second-degree manslaughter, three counts

of third-degree assault, one

count of fourth-degree assault and driving under the influence of intoxicants.

Fix's bail was set at $500,000 and he will appear in court Monday for a possible grand jury indictment on the charges. Fix would have to post

$50,000 to be released on bail. The Deschutes County District Attorney's Office

William Wayne Ftx appeared by video from the Deschutes Countyjail to face charges of second-degree manslaughter, three counts of third-degree assault, one count of fourthdegree assault and driving under the influence of intoxicants. the community's support, but asked Monday for the

alcohol if released or be allowed to go to bars or taverns

crash site to not become a memoriaL By Monday after-

and not to contact the four

noon, a wreath and a couple

injured girls. The crash occurred at

of stuffed animals had been placed at the site.

buzzword: livability. It's being used to evaluate economic initiatives,

infrastructure, city

transferredto Portland-area

ment and support.

acres east of the city core with the hope that companies seeking large parcels will set up shop there, creating family-wage jobs for Redmond.

the team from St. Charles

pleted a framework plan for the underdevel-

hospitals. Spansel's family released ing the community for their prayers, words of encourage-

asked that he be required

is hearing the same

Naomi Spansel, 14, and Olivia Jeanes, 10, both of Redmond, were critically injured in the crash. They were taken to St. Charles Bend and then

a statement Monday thank-

by the court to not consume

with activity in the city

"Naomi's family is thankful for the nurse at the scene,

amenities and budget

decisions. This winter, the city rezoned more than 400

Redmond also com-

Medical Center in Bend, the ECMO (extracorporeal membraneoxygenation)team and

oped southwest section

Pediatric Intensive Care Unit nurses at Randall Children's

Hospital at Legacy Emanuel and theRonald McDonald

block grant that it hopes to turn into housing initiatives. Projects underway or under con-

of town and accepted a federal community

of Bend on U.S. Highway 97, according to Oregon State

"The family and the kids have to go by there all the time and they're just having

Police. Fix lost control of his

a hard time, and they would

1997 Chevrolet Suburban and struck a rock embank-

rather not have people memorialize the place," Shuping sard. Price was a second-grade

House," the statement said. Fix's daughter, Valon Fix,

sideration include redeveloping the historical

14, and Izzabella Robbins,

Evergreen School into

7, were taken to St. Charles

student at Lynch Elementary in Redmond. Acrisis re-

Redmond following the crash and werereleased afterbeing

a new City Hall, creating a medical business

sponse team was made avail-

treatedforserious and minor

able at the school on Monday

injuries.

about 7:17 p.m. 5 miles north

ment, state police said. The

vehicle came to a rest on its side. Phoenix Marie Price, of Redmond, was pronounced

dead at the scene. Debora Shuping, a stepgrandmother of Price, said the family is appreciative of

and offered counseling for students and teachers.

— Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorach@bendbulletin.corn

district near St. Charles

Redmond and exploring the possibility of a family recreation center. See Redmond/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

MONDAY WRECK

Evxxr

for students; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.beattickets.org or REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: PUMPKIN PATCH: Featuring a 541-419-5558. 3-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh pumpkin patch, petting zoo and "DEAD POETS SOCIETY": A various activities; free admission, Street and Evergreen Avenue; redmondfarmersmarket1©hotmail. charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; screening of the1989 film about a teacher inspiring his students with DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock com or 541-550-0066. poetry; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net HISTORYPUB:Historian Linda Annex, Jefferson County Library, Tamura will present"What if Heroes or 541-548-1432. 134 SE ESt., Madras; www.jcld.org Were Not Welcome Home?"; free; 7 CENTRAL OREGONGUN AND or 541-475-3351. KNIFEMAKERS SHOW: Featuring p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis THE QUICKANDEASYBOYS: School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; gun and knife items with firearm The Portland rock and roll trio www.highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp safety presentations offered; $5, free for children14 or younger; performs, with McDougall; $10 plus or 541-382-5174. noon-6 p.m.; Deschutes County fees in advance; 8 p.m.; TheBelfry, KALIN & MYLES:The pop group Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. performs, with Ryan Beatty; $18 in Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo. belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. advance, $20at the door; 7 p.m., deschutes.org, ossz55@yahoo.com BARISONE: The Portland DJ doorsopen at6 p.m .;Domino or 541-610-3717. performs, with Mr. Wuand Rada; Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN Bend; 541-408-4329. $5; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 NWBrooks PATCH:An 8-acre Godzilla corn St., Bend; 541-706-9091. maze with pumpkin patch and market featuring pumpkin cannons, WEDNESDAY zoo train, pony rides and more; SATURDAY $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages PUMPKINPATCH:Featuring a 5 and younger for Corn Maize; pumpkin patch, petting zoo and PARKINGLOTSALE:Tobenefit the $2.50 for most other activities; 10 Ridgeview High Band's Carnegie various activities; free admission, a.m.-7 p.m.,pum pkin patchopen charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Hall fundraising campaign; 8 a.m.-2 until 6 p.m.; Smith Rock Ranch, DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock p.m.; Ridgeview HighSchool,4555 1250 NE Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net www.smithrockranch.com or SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www. or 541-548-1432. rvhs.redmond.k12.or.us, debi. 541-504-1414. dewey©redmond.k12.or.us or LUNCHANDLECTURE: Learn VFW DINNER:Fish and chips; $6; 541-389-5917. about Deschutes River restoration; 3-7 p.m.; VFWHall, 1503 NEFourth bring a sack lunch; free; noonVFW BREAKFAST: $8.50; 8:30 St., Bend; 541-389-0775. 1 p.m.; High Desert Museum, a.m.; VFW Hall,1503 NEFourth St., BEND FALL FESTIVAL: Featuring 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; Bend; 541-389-0775. fall-themed activities, homebrew www.highdesertmuseum.org or CENTRALOREGON GUNAND competition, live music, art and 541-382-4754. KNIFEMAKERS SHOW: Featuring food; free admission; 5-11 p.m.; "GONE WITHTHE WIND": A gun and knife items with firearm downtown Bend; www.j.mp/ showing of the 1939 film about safety presentations offered; $5, BendFallFest or 541-383-3026. a love affair during the Civil War; free for children14 or younger; 9 CREATEABILITYART AUCTION: $12.50; 2and 7 p.m.;RegalOld a.m.-5 p.m.; DeschutesCounty Fair & Fundraiser for Central Oregon Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Disability Support Network, SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; Redmond; www.expo.deschutes. during First Friday Artwalk; 5-10 541-312-2901. org, ossz55©yahoo.comor p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 541-610-3717. BEND FARMERSMARKET:3-7 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www. p.m.; Brooks Street, between NW PUMPKIN PATCH:Featuring a crowsfeetcommons.comor Frankli nand NW Oregonavenues; petting zoo, hay rides, pony rides 541-728-0066. www.bendfarmersmarket.com. and train rides; free admission, FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: "ALMOSTABLAZE":Showing of Event includes art exhibit openings, charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Teton Gravity Research's new ski artist talks, live music, wine and Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net and snowboard film; $12 plus fees foodindowntown Bend andthe or 541-548-1432. in advance, $15 at the door, $5 for Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; children16 and younger; 8 p.m.; CORN MAIZEAND PUMPKIN throughout Bend. Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., PATCH:An8-acre Godzilla corn JUBELALECELEBRATION AND Bend; www.towertheatre.org or maze with pumpkin patch and ARTIST POSTER SIGNING: 541-317-0700. market featuring pumpkin cannons, Featuring a celebration of the ANNIEGIRL AND THE FLIGHT:The seasonalbeerandsignings by zoo train, pony rides and more; $7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages folksy space-rock band performs; this year's label artists, Lisa and 5 and younger for Corn Maize; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, Lori Lubbesmeyer; free; 5-8 p.m.; 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; $2.50 for most other activities; 10 Deschutes Brewery 8 Public www.volcanictheatrepub.com or a.m.-7 p.m.,pumpkin patch open House, 1044 NWBond St., Bend; 541-323-1881. until 6 p.m.; Smith Rock Ranch, www.deschutesbrewery.com or 1250 NEWilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-382-9242. www.smithrockranch.com or CREATEABILITY:MAKING THE 541-504-1414. INVISIBLEVISIBLE:Featuring THURSDAY BEND FALLFESTIVAL:Featuring art for auction by children and fall-themed activities, homebrew PUMPKINPATCH:Featuring a young adultsexperiencing pumpkin patch, petting zoo and disability to benefit Central Oregon competition, live music, art and food; free admission; 11 a.m.-10 various activities; free admission, Disability Support Network; p.m.; downtown Bend; www.j.mp/ charge for activities; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; Crow's Feet BendFallFest or 541-383-3026. DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Commons, 875 NW BrooksSt., Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net Bend; www.crowsfeetcommons. FALL BOOK SALE: The Friends or 541-548-1432. com, stephanie©codsn.org or of the Bend Libraries hosts a 541-408-1092. "CATCHMAGAZINE": A film about book sale; free admission 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library fly fishing, Todd Moen will speak; AUTHORPRESENTATION:Janet Administration Building, 507 NW free; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Fisher will present on her book"A Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents. Wall St., Bend; www.dpls.lib. PlaceofHerOwn :TheLegacyof com or 541-815-9122. Oregon Pioneer Martha Poindexter or.us, foblibrary@gmail.com or 541-617-7047. Maupin"; $5;6:30 p.m.;Paulina TIM RICE'S"FROM HERE TO Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., HARVESTFESTIVAL: Featuring ETERNITY":Showing of the Sisters; 541-549-0866. live music, German food and musical that was adapted from the "THE TROUBLEWITH HARRY": 1951 novel about love and army more; free;11 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Stone Lodge Retirement, life set in1941 Hawaii, prior to the Alfred Hitchcock's comedic attacks on Pearl Harbor; $18; 7 whodunit about Harry Worp, who 1460 NE 27th St., Bend; www. p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & appears dead on ahillside by a stonelodgeretirement.com, kaitlin. IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, small town, presented by Bend dahlquist©holidaytouch.com or Bend; 541-312-2901. Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 541-233-9914.

TODAY

SP

rr

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Gus McConnell, with TracTowing, tries to free atruck from an embankment so hecan tow it after a two-vehicle accident on Mondayevening in Bend. Thecrash occurred at the intersection of NWPortland Avenue and NW Ninth Street, when onevehicle ran the stop sign. A passenger in the truck was transported to St. Charles.

STATE NEWS

Senators want moreoil train updates By Gosla Wozniacka

where 47people were killed. W yden and Merkley in June The West Coast has received similarly utged Foxx to expand PORTLAND — Four West u nprecedented amounts o f his order to cover crude hom all Coast senators are asking the crude oil by rail shipments in parts of the U.S. and Canada. federal government to expand a recentyears. More than a dozen Transportation Safety Board m ent order forrailroadsto no- oil-by-rail refining or loading fa- Chairman Chrjs Hart wrote the tify slate emergency responders cilities and terminah have been two senators that month saying of crudeoil shipments. built in California, Ottegon and all crude shipments are flammaThe letter, sent Monday to Washington, with another two ble and a risk to communities U.S. Transportation S e u e- dozen new pmjects or expan- and the envjmnment — not just tary Anthony Foxx, says rail- sions in the works in the tlme the Bakken oil. The Associated Press

ttoads should supply states with a dvanced notification of a l l

The four senators are now te-

states.

But according to the Calihigh-hazard flanumble liquid fornia Energy Commission, transports — including crude oil oil fmm the Bakken region fmm outside the Bakken region accountedjust for a fourth of of North Dakota and Montana, crude-by-rail deliveries to Calias well as ethanol and 71 other fornia since 2012. Canadian oil — which travels to California liquids. The letter was signed by Or- through Washington and Oregon senators Ron Wyden and egon, as well as thmugh Idaho Jeff Merkley, and California and Montana — accounted for senators Diatme Feinslein and Barbara Boxer. In May, Foxx ordered rail-

as much as 76 percent of California oil deliveries, the senators vtmte. Non-Bakken oil is also deliv-

peating the same demand and are also asking Foxx to lower

the threshold for reporting to no higher than 20 carloads. They say most of the ~ d ents, with

the exception of the Lac-Magentic disaster,weve caused

by smaller and non-Bakken shipments and resulted I e x plosions, fires or environmental contamination. In one case,

the train carried 14 carloads of flammable liquids; in another, 18

roads operating trains containcarloads. ing more than 1 million gallons ered to refineries and loading The Assodation of American of Bakken crude oil — or about facilities in Oregon and Wash- Railroads has said the rail in35 tank cars — to inform states ington — including a terminal dustry is complying with Foxx's that the trains traverse. The or- in Portland. A c ontroversial original order and the group der came in the wake of repeat- proposed terminal in Vancou- would have to see the specifics ed oil train derailments, includ- ver, Washington, would also re- of any proposed changes before ing in Lac-Magentic, Quebec, ceive some non-Bakken crude. commenting further.

Man in police beating awarded$560IC The Associated Press verdict Monday in the case of Portland police contended PORTLAND — A jury in Jason Cox. Cox was argumentative, failed Portland has awarded more Now 40, Cox testified that to follow orders and appeared than $562,000 to a man who he thought he was going to be to want to fight as he resisted said in his lawsuit that city po- beaten to death after three of- being handcuffed. Cox's lawyers found surveillice beat and used a stun gun ficers took him into custody in on him without provocation a parking lot on June 28, 2011. lance video that showed two after stopping him for investi- He and experts testified that officers taking the man to the gation of drunken driving. police irreparably injured his ground and punching him in The Oregonian reports that shoulder, m eaning he could no the head at least half a dozen jurors deliberated about 4 t/z longer earn $33 an hour as an times. The video showed Cox didn't swing at the officers. hours before returning their ironworker.

Exm a FRIDAY

XEws OF REcoRD Theft —A theft was reported at 8:11 p.m. Sept. 25, in the1300 block of S. U.S. Highway97. The Bulletin will update items in the Theft —A theft was reported at1:39 Police Log whensuch arequest p.m. Sept. 27, in the2700 block of NE is received. Anynewinformation, Rosemary Drive. such as the dismissal of charges or Theft —Atheft was reported and an acquittal, must be verifiable. For more arrest made at4:50 p.m. Sept. 24, in information, call 541-633-2117. the2600 blockofNE U.S.Highway20. Theft —Atheft was reported and an BEND POLICE arrest made at8:33 p.m.Sept. 24, in the2600 blockofNE U.S.Highway20. DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 9:59 Unlawful entry —Avehicle was a.m. Sept. 26, in the 20800 block of reported entered at 4:05 a.m.Sept. 20, Sockeye Place. in the100 block of NE Telima Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported and an Criminal mischief —Anact of arrest made at12:55 p.m. Sept. 26, in criminal mischief was reported at 9:12 the 300 block of SW Century Drive. a.m. Sept. 21, in the 900 block of NE Theft —Atheft was reported andan Franklin Avenue. arrest made at4:51p.m. Sept. 26, in the Criminal mischief —Anact of 20100 block of PinebrookBoulevard. criminal mischief was reported at 6:24 Theft —A theft was reported at10:48 p.m. Sept. 24, in the400 block of NE a.m. Sept. 27, in the1900 block of SE Thurston Avenue. Fairwood Drive. DUII —RexEdward Walz, 27,was Theft —A theft was reported at11:21 arrested on suspicion of driving under a.m. Sept. 28, in the1200 block of NE the influence of intoxicants at 8:12 11th Street. p.m. Sept. 24, in thearea of NEThird Theft —A theft was reported at1:52 Street and NE Franklin Avenue. p.m. Sept. 28, in the 20600 block of Theft —Atheft was reported at10:41 Couples Lane. p.m. Sept. 24, in the 20100block of Burglary —A burglary was reported Pinebrook Boulevard. at 9:19 a.m. Sept. 25, in the1400 block Theft —Atheft was reported at11:30 of NW OgdenAvenue. a.m. Sept. 25, in the 800 block of NE Criminal mischief —Anact of Locksley Drive. criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at11:10 p.m.Sept. 25, in Theft —A theft was reported at 2:49 the100 block of NEThird Street. p.m. Sept. 25, in the 700block of SE Third Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported and an arrest madeat11:11 p.m. Sept. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:59 26, in the1400 blockof NE Purcell p.m. Sept. 25, in the 20700 block of Boulevard. High Desert Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:13 PRIMEVILLE POLICE p.m. Sept. 26, in the 60900 block of Ashford Drive. DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 3:37 p.m.Sept. 26, Theft —A theft was reported at11:02 in the 2500 block of NEShepard Road. a.m. Sept. 26, in the area of NE Third

POLICE LOG

Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:06 p.m. Sept. 26, in the area ofNW Claypool Street. Theft —Atheft, burglary and act of criminal mischief were reported at 2:10 p.m. Sept. 26, in the area ofN. Main Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:54 a.m. Sept. 26, in the area of N.Main Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9 a.m. Sept. 27, in the area of N.Main Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:26 a.m. Sept. 28, in the area of N.Main Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:06 a.m. Sept. 28, in the area of SE Fourth Street. Burglary —Aburglary and a theft were reported at 3:02 p.m. Sept. 28, in the area of NWClaypool Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:21 p.m. Sept. 28, in the area of NE Third Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:29 p.m. Sept. 28, in the area of NW Ninth Street.

JEFFERSON COUMTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief, theft and avehicle was reported enteredat12:45 p.m. Sept. 22, in the 600 block ofCenterRidgeDrive. Burglary —A burglary, theft and an act of criminal mischief were reported at 2:09 p.m. Sept. 22, in the 300 block of First Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 6:12 a.m. Sept. 23, in the5100 block of SW ClubhouseRoad.

Theft —A theft and a vehicle was reported entered at10:34 a.m. Sept. 23, in the 7300 block of SWCulver Highway. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:18 a.m. Sept. 24, in the 300block of SE Dover Lane. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 7:59 a.m. Sept. 26, in the 6200 block of SW Iris Lane. Burglary —A burglary and a theft were reported at12:38 p.m. Sept. 26, in the 13000 block of Peninsula Drive. Burglary — Aburglary and atheft were reported at1:15p.m. Sept.26, in the 12000 block ofHorny HollowCircle.

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P,HA'.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Jason Lewis Hardesty, 43, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:17 a.m. Sept. 28, in the area ofE. U.S. Highway 20and Dalton Street.

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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Newsyayer s i n E d u eation I i I '

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Oor SILVER LEVELSponsors

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edmond voters have a rare opportunity to elect a new councilor who brings a unique set of world-class skills and experience that are directly relevant to Redmond's needs. We urge voters to elect Anne Graham, as well as incumbents Tory Allman and Jay Patrick. Graham, 63, is retued from a high-level career with SolarWord Industries and Intel Corp., where she directed manufacturing facilities and developed sites in new locations from Oregon to China. That experience is duectlyrelevant to Redmond's desire tolurehigh-paying jobs. Havingbeen on the other side of negotiation for business expansion, she knows the interests and language of the executives Redmondwants to attract. After losing her first bid for council two years ago, Graham plunged into Redmond life, participating in Kiwanis, Redmond Economic Development, Redmond Nuisance Appeal Board, Community Development Block Grant Task Foree, SMART book reading program and Veterans of Foreign Wars, among others. She continues to serve on the Redmond Planning Commission and has been a member of the city's budget and urbanrenewal committees. Graham grew up in Medford and earned a degree inmathematics with a minor in physics from the University of California Santa Cruz. She and her husband retired to Redmond four years ago. She's smart, analylical, weii-spoken and committed. She believes Redmond is well managed and that her skill set couldhelp "flesh out its 'Open for Business' vision and

urbanrenewal, andisthe council liaison for schools andparks. Allman said he's seeking another term so he can see some critical projects progress, induding U.S. Highway 97 beautification, renovation of the Evergreenschool, developmentof industrial land and possible c~ to the south U.S. Highway 97 corridor, where he wants to be sure existing businesses are protected. He thinks Redmond needs affordable housing, but not just more and more rentals, andhe wantsto see the developmentcode revised to help im prove thelookofnewneighborhoods. Jay Patrick, 57, is a network administrator for Jefferson County Schools who is seeking his fifth term on the Redmond council. That longevity informs thoughtful appmaches to the city's policy questions. He says council members work well together and he's pleased with progress, induding Centennial Park and downtown development. His priorities indude improvements to Sam Johnson Park and renovations to Eveq,reenschool, andhe'sproudthat Redmond isbecoming known as a business-friendlycommunity. Incumbent Ed Onimus, 55, has not been as constructive and effective as his colleagues, although we appreciate his focus on getting citizens involved in volunteering. Mayor George Endicott is running unopposedand three othercouncilorsare bringmoregoodjobs here." notup for election. Tory Allman, 54, lost a bid for Graham would bring drive, inelection to the council four years ago, sight and a unique skill set to the but was appointed not long after a Redmond coundl, with A l lman sitting councilor left. He has lived in and Patrick continuing to provide Redmond for 10 years and manages thoughtful approaches backed by Trailer World in Ttunalo. He's been deep knowledge of the community involvedintheplanning commission, anditshistory.

C HJVZLOT'CK

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M 1Vickel's Worth Media spins

than just being silent. entire (save the condor) industry. James Strelchun Whether or not CO2 has someBend thing to do with climate change, it is I was amused by your recent edia good idea to try to get the CO2 abtorial that whined about an erronesorbed by the flora (and released as ous quotation on a monument outOxygen) increased as well as other side the county courthouse, fearing Tony DeBone is my choice for "carbon free" activities. that "if you repeat falsehoods ... Deschutes County commissioner. Jay Feinstein people will start to believe it's true." While on the La Pine City CounBend Unfortunately, media fails to expose cil, there were issues that required a significantly greater falsehood Deschutes County participation. I Wilhelm is the best choice permeating our society: "anthropo- found a willing listener in DeBone. genic global warming." Peddled as He understood many of our conAs a longtime resident of Central irrefutable fact, this repeated false- cerns and problems. He was able to Oregon, I believe our community hood is the "elephant in the living convey our position on these mat- thrives when women thrive. I am room" that may be the greatest lie ters to the other commissioners. concerned about the ongoing — and

'global warming'

DeBoneismychoice

ever foisted on us.

M

Kee

institutions ofpublic education. That prohibition curtails a great opportunity for students at public colleges to learn. So the Legislature voted to put this meastue on the ballot to allow judges to be paid to teach atpublic colleges. The change to allow judges to serve in the Guard is similar. Some judges already serve in the Guard. Artide H, section 10, of the Oregon Conslitulion could be interpreted to mean theycannot be compensated for their service. The ballot measure

saysajudge"maybeemployedbythe Oregon National Guard for the purpose of performingmilitaryservice." There is no organized opposition to this measure. These are simple, straightforward changes. But the Legislature can't just tweak them itself, because they changethe Oregon Constitution. The changes require your vote. We urge you to support Meastue 87.

During his term as a commission-

The global warming theory is tainted with falsified data, faulty/ forced computer modeling and political influence. The deception has been propagatedby the dominant media and yes, The (Bend) Bulletin

er, he has worked hard for the best interest of the citizens of Deschutes County. He has always been aware that he serves all of Deschutes County, and was able to justify his support or opposition to any issue when asked. This is the kind of per-

via New York Times, AP and Washington Post articles.

son that I want to represent me as a

increasing — attacks on our repro-

ductive freedoms that are coming in the guise of religious protections for businesses such as Hobby Lobby. Oregon is the only state left in our union where a woman can make the right choices for herself and her family with the counsel of her doctor — independent of government or

The earth has entered a cooling Deschutes County commissioner. business interests. That's why I am voting for Craig period(i.e.,therehasbeen now armDonald Greiner ing since 1998, according to surface LaPine Wilhelm for state representative of temperatures and NASA satellite

Vete yes on Measure 87 easure 87 may be the least controversial item on the November ballot, and it deserves your vote in support. The measure amends the Chegon Constitution in two ways. It allows state courtjudges to serve as teachers at public universities and get paid for it It alsodarifies thatstate court judges can serve in the Oregon National Guard. Law students and others should be able to get instruction fmm experiencedjudges.Some judges already teach in the schools. The problem is that under the Oregon Constitution, thejudges cangetpaidforit atprivate collegesbutnot atpublic colleges. The Oregon Constitution has a "sepamtion of powers" dause that prohibits a person from simultaneously serving in more than one branch of Oregon government. The Oregon Supreme Courthas ruled that means that a judge can't teach at

Q

data), and "climatologists" now spin What carbon? global warming as "climate change" and "pause." "Experts" struggle to Where is this carbon? As far as I explain the record expansion of know, carbon is an element (moleAntarctic ice that's three times the cule). Which in its normal forms is area of Arctic ice. coal, diamond, graphite, etc. What These events tend to discredit an- is in the atmosphere, oceans, rocks, thropogenic causality claims and is carbon dioxide (CO2, a gas), the greenhouse effects. Global Warm- normal result of life. Some ways to ing Policy Foundation spokesman reduce CO2 is to breathe less, limit David Whitehouse says: "If we have population, plant more trees and not passed it already, we are on the other photosynthesizing plants (to threshold of global observations be- convert CO2 to 02) and generally coming incompatible with the con- limit combustion. sensus theory of climate change." This being the case, why is this A tough pill to swallow for the an- life-sustaining gas called carbon'? ti-growth, anti-petro, anti-capitalist, My best guess is that the word "carenvironmentalist activists.

bon" connotes dirtiness, blackness,

To restore its credibility, the media must stop its "spinning" and one-sided reporting on "global warming" and honestly report all relevant information, including opposing scientific positions. Otherwise, it's worse

extinct; yet the word has brewed an

House District 54. As the only can-

didate in this race who sought and earned the endorsement of Planned Parenthood PAC of Oregon — an

organization that offers effective, nonjudgmental health care services to both women and men — Wilhelm

knows that women's health should be a priority. W ilhelm will a l s o b r ing a well-rounded set of experiences to this office. He is a West Point graduate who has served this country in Afghanistan with distinction. He has used his MBA from Duke Uni-

versity to build businesses and create support systems for our veterans. He is a leader in the fullest sense.

With his pro-choice stance, busietc., and is purposely used by the ness acumen and understanding of environmentalists as a scare tactic. the needs of men and women, WilWords are powerful things. Think helm is the best choice for House California "condor" (desert vulture), District 54. which has tried its best to become Celeste Brody Bend

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D e sc utes commissioners to et er

By Teri Myers recently attended the joint La Pine

tTrails in Sunriver. The county comSunriver Chamber Breakfast

that is held annually at Thousand

missioners, administrator and others were there to give an annual update

on countybusiness, with each of them breaking down the long list of items to be covered and appreciated by local residents in our part of the county. It was a cohesive presentation of all of the issues and the accomplishments

achieved by the sitting commission during the past 12 months. As I listened to the commission-

ers present their individual parts of the program, one after the other, I was very impressed with how they seemed to work so well together. Tony DeBone seemed to have the en-

tire financial picture and the entire

IN MY VIEW

list of what was accomplished in his

who says he spends time elsewhere is have DeBone as our commissioner/ incorrect. I know his schedule is all

about service to the county. Now, Tammy Baney and DeBone forward thinking and timely. I like all three of the commissionare upforre-election,Baney unopDuring the weekend, I considered ers we have and will gladly support posed and DeBone running against several of the letters that were pub- them in any upcoming elections for Jodie Barram, of Bend. I would hate lished in the last few weeks in your as long as they should want to serve to see such a hard-working team paper and I wanted to be sure that I together. DeBone, as the first reprebe unable to continue their efforts addressed the fact that several, about sentative from our area,hasbeen an together. DeBone, seemed to not be vetted and excellent representative for this part These three commissioners have were inconsistent with what I have of Deschutes County, but in conversaworked well together. They have mas- seen as a reporter in south county for tions with DeBone, in interviews and tered their tasks and goals and made over 10 years. I see DeBone working seeing his presentations, DeBone has some realinroads in the process of hard as a county commissioner. been clear in answering any of the county government. If you only look Before writing, I went to ask about general county questions, setting the at the communications, the jail, the DeBone's work schedule. Other than priorities that address issues for all 911 system, the balanced county bud- the board of commissioners, he serves across the county and even more, he get, the work with the various county on Neighbor Impact Board and is ac- has gainedthe experience and knowldepartments and staff — well, that tive with EDCO and other timely or- edge that only comes from serving as alone is enough to prove my point. ganizations that are designed to make part of the board of county commisTheir record of accomplishments is Central Oregon more vibrant. Anyone sioners over time. We are proud to wheelhouse.

well known across the state for being

representative.

During the last four years, south county has seen more attention and more collaborative emphasis from

organizations that are countywide than in any of the years previous. It is because when DeBone works as part

of the commission, things are getting the proper attention they deserve

— everywhere. I hope you will consider voting for DeBone andBaney inthe upcoming elections. It is crucial that we keep

moving forward with a commission that works well together and does its

job with precise experience and just the right amount of passion for Deschutes County. — Teri Myersis a lead reporter for the Newberry Eagle and livesin La Pine.


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

BITUARIES DEATH 1VOTIt ES Roberta D. Kuhn, of Klamath Falls

Mark B. Gallinger, of Bend

Jan. 24, 1945 - Sept. 27, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services will take place in Klamath Falls.

May 30, 1948 - Sept. 26, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: Family and friends are invited to celebrate Mark's life at 3:30pm on Thursday, October 2, 2014 at Hollinshead Barn, 1235 NE Jones Road, Bend.

James "Jim" Edward Beyer, of Bend Nov. 19, 1926 - Sept. 26, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Private services for family and close friends will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Leukemia and Lymphoma Society www.lls.org OR American Heart Association www.heart.org

Raymond A. Babb, of Bend May 21, 1940 - Sept. 19, 2014 Arrangements:

Niswonger-Reynolds

Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: Celebration of Life on Fri., Oct. 17 at the Broken Top Club.

Jeffrey Aubin Grill, of Redmond July 5, 1967 - Sept. 26, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541) 504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net

Services: A private committal service wi full military honors will take place. Contributions may be made to:

Brightside Animal Shelter, 1355 NE Hemlock Avenue, Redmond, OR 97756, www.brightsideanimals.org or Battle Buddies Of Central Oregon, www.battlebuddiesco.org, (541) 390-7587.

Norman L. Weigand Jr., of Madras July 29, 1927 - Sept. 27, 2014 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel, 541-548-3219 Services: Service times are yet to be determined - an obituary will follow in the next day or so.

Betty Diane Benge Woll July15,1937- Sept. 24, 2014 B etty, a g e 7 7 , p a s s ed a way peacefully o n S e p t . 24, with family at her bedside. B etty enjoyed going camping, and loved living i n S i sters, O r e g on . S h e e njoyed feeding her b i r d s a nd ga r d e n i ng . Pla n t s flourished under her green t humb - esp e c i all y h e r b eautiful A f r i c a n v i o l e t s and pansies. Betty and her l ate hu s b a nd , H er m a n W oll, w o r k e d t o t ea c h their ch i l d r e n i m p o rtant values such as honesty and a strong moral character. B etty an d H e r m a n w e r e m arried 4 6 y e a r s b e f o r e his passing in 2001. Betty i s survived by he r 3 c h i l dren a n d t h e i r s p o u ses,

Mark (Tracy), Sue (Tom), Mike (Kadda); grandchil-

dren, Ryan, Sean, Haylee, Shaina, C a i t l yn , T r i s t en, Chase an d W e l l s ; g r e atgrandchildren, Austin and Logan. She will be missed by h e r fa m i l y a n d h er f abulous f r i ends i n T o l l g ate, wh o h a v e b e e n s o supportive.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will

Deadlines:Death Notices are be run for oneday,but specific accepted until noon Monday guidelines must be followed. through Friday for next-day Local obituaries arepaid publication and by 4:30 p.m. advertisements submitted by Friday for Sunday publication. families or funeral homes. Obituaries must be received They maybesubmitted by phone, by 5 p.m. Monday through mail, email or fax. Thursday for publication The Bulletin reserves the right on the second day after to edit all submissions. Please submission, by1 p.m. Friday include contact information for Sunday publication, and

in all correspondence. For information onany of these

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

by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for

display adsvary; please call for details.

NAME:Tory Allman

NAME:Anne Graham

NAME:Ed

NAME:Jay

Onimus

AGE:54 RFSIDENCE:

acE: 6s

AGE:55 RESIDENCE:

Patrick AGE:57 RESIDENCE:

Redmond EDUCATION: Bachelor's degree in exercise physiology, Oregon State University OCCUPATION: Sport and recreation manager

Redmond EDUCATION: Bachelor's degree in math, University of California Santa Cruz OCCUPATION: Manufacturing facilities director,

GOV/CIVIC EXPERIENCE:

Redmond City Council, Redmond UrbanArea Planning Commission, chair of Redmond's Downtown UrbanRenewal Advisory Commission, RedmondKiwanispast president; Redmond Chamber of Commerce ambassador, Redmond Downtown Partnership, Taproot

Redmond

retired GOV/CIVIC EXPERIENCE:

Redmond UrbanArea Planning Commission, Redmond Budget Committee, Redmond Downtown UrbanRenewal Advisory Commission, Redmond Kiwanis board of directors, Redmond EconomicDevelopment board of directors

"If we can vacate the current City Hall and use it as an

Jay Patrick. The top three can-

didates willbe elected.

ToryAllman A transplant to Redmond

beginning in 2005, Allman served as manager for longtime Redmond business CentWise Hardware & Sporting Goods until it closed earlier

thisyear.Currentl y manager of Trailer World in Tumalo, Allman has served on numer-

ous city boards and with business groups aimed at building Redmond's economic future. "I think the most important

part of livability is jobs," he said. "There are still people in our community who can't find work."

R etirement wasn't as i n teresting as she thought it

would be when Graham and her husband, Frank, moved to

the University of Phoenix OCCUPATION:Accountant GOV/CIVIC EXPERIENCE:

Redmond City Council, Redmond BudgetCommittee, Neighborlmpact board of directors, Boys 8 Girls Club of Redmond and Terrebonne board of directors, Volunteer Connect board of directors

the attractiveness of the U.S.

owners of businesses we want

Ed Onimus

Highway 97 corridor, he's a bit concerned about recent con- pot for interestedbuyers. versations concerning restrict-

"Not all businesses want

ingbillboards in the city. to wait until sites are ready," "1 like the idea of makingthe Graham said. "I'm aware from city look as good as it can, but my professional history what I don't want to hurt business it takes to get businesses into or their opportunity to market asite." themselves," he said. "I tend to Acknowledging the shorttake the middle ground." age of rental and affordable As for the Evergreen/City housing in Redmond, Graham Hall project, Allman said he said she has "a conflict in my feels like the mandate from the head. We're also short on highend housing, the kind that will be attractive to executives and

OCCUPATION:Network

administrator GOV/CIVIC EXPERIENCE:

Redmond City Council, City Care Clinic board of directors, Redmond Thanksgiving meal program

housing won't fill the hole fast

enough." Onimus said he's not sure how the city can increase the housing inventory in Redmond, but he considers it vi-

tal. "We can't sit back and do nothing."

jay Patrick If re-elected, Patrick will

Over the years — he was be the grand old man of Redappointed in 2009 and re-elect-

ed in 2010 — Onimus has developed a reputation for volunteer and landed on the speaking out when he feels the Redmond Planning Commis- city is heading in the wrong sion. Graham hoped her back- direction. ground with high-tech and The accountant and busimanufacturing corporations, ness owner has been vocal including Intel, would prove about his lack of support for helpful in Redmond, a town the city's financial backing of actively courting those busi- Juniper Golf Course, a deciness sectors. sion made before he was on "Family-wage jobs, proper- the City Council; and he does ty values, homelessness, the not agree with making Evercrime rate and unemployment green into City Hall. — those are key issues for "(Since the city has already Redmond," she said. "Bringing backed the loans for Juniper) I jobs to town, that is something don't know if there's an alter-

investment near the east-side industrial lands to sweeten the

Redmond EDUCATION: Generalassociate degree,COCC

Three seats are open on the Redmond City Council in the Nov.4 election; Anne Graham is challenging incumbents Tory Allman, Ed Onimus and Jay Patrick.

Redmond in 2010. She quickly sought opportunities to

heard from many residents

mond politics, with 15 years on

City Councilunder his belt. "When I first started on City Council it was all about fami-

ly-wage jobs, and it still is," he said. "Livability is important — it gives people the desire to live here — but it's not what

will build us as a town." However, certain efforts by

the city to increase livability in Redmond, such as Centennial Park, were worth every penny, Patrick said. "Anything that keeps people in town is good." He struggles with the city's efforts to increase the quality of housing through mandates, he said, because making housing affordable in Redmond is important. However, Patrick expressed confidence that the

city staff will find a way to raise standards without drasti-

cally affectingprices. Patrick supports the city's decision to restore Evergreen School for a City Hall and

thinks in later years it will be viewed as a landmark civic effort.

Looking back on his tenure, Patrick said he is particularly proud of the city's efforts to

develop land for business in a manner that does not compete with private development, as

well as the major improvements to downtown.

with prescriptions for the Looking ahead, Patrick drug, and pushing them out of agrees with other candidates the region to obtain it is not a that housing will be a key ismorally acceptable decisionby sue, as well as how to manthe city, Onimus said. age what he sees as another Looking ahead, Onimus growth spurt citywide. "It's going to be hard on the sees housing as a hot topic in the city, and he supports ac- people who want to live here, tions that would make it easier especially the young families," for developers to build multi- he said. "We need to look realfamily housing. ly hard at how we can attract "We have a supply prob- them and provide what they lem and need to think about need: jobs and homes." increasing density," he said. — Reporter: 541-815-3789, "Building new single-family lpugmire@bendbulletin.com

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

TheBulletin

Israeli agent likened toJamesBond much speculation. He was said

Find Your Dream Home

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

FEATUREDOBITUARY

New Yorh Times News Service

EDUCATION:MBA from

Allman fully supports the I know about. I can help with native other than continuing city's push to market its indus- that." Graham's connections to pressure the management trial lands, pointing out that in the Portland metro area led to make it self-supporting, any new jobs created trickies to a Hillsboro couple purchas- but I don't think simply acdowntothe rest of the commu- ing the historical Redmond cepting the situation is appronity, as workers find housing Hotel, with an ey e toward priate," he said. "There's no and spend money locally. Ide- restoration. right to cheap golf paid for by ally, he'd like to see underutiTo grow a workforce to meet taxpayers." lized programs the city offers, the demands of an increasHe does, however, support such as small-business coun- ingly industrial and techni- the idea of subsidies for public seling, grow as well as others cal business base, Graham transit, a service he sees as vihave done, such as the facade strongly supports the science, tal to the community. "Getting improvementprogram. technology, engineering and to work, patronizing our busiAllman was appointed in mathematics model and ca- nesses, that's very important. 2012 to serve the remainder reer education in local high If you can't get there, you can't of the term of former Red- schools as well as the manu- spend money," Onimus said. mond City Councilor Margie facturing program at Central He voted against the city's Dawson. Oregon Community College's decision to set a moratorium While Allman supports Redmond campus. She also against medical marijuana the city's efforts to increase advocatesfor infrastructure dispensaries in Redmond. He's

historic building.

By Bruce Weber

Redmond

to locate here." Supportive of Continued from B1 income-generating catalyst, the city's efforts to raise the bar Three seats are open on the even if it costs us something on building standards for housRedmond City Council in the to relocate, it's worth it. We're ing, Graham said she thinks Nov. 4 election; Anne Graham sitting on something valuable." it's important to change the is challenging incumbents perception that Redmond is the Tory Allman, Ed Onimus and Anne Graham placetogo for cheap housing.

community was clear: save the Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

RESIDENCE:

B5

But in a calamitous error in

to have been a military adviser, July1973,members ofHarari's Michael Harari, an Israeli in- an organizer ofsecurity forces, team who had traveled to Nortelligence agent who led the hit an intermediary in arms deals way in pursuit of the terrorists squad that was sent to avenge and a business partner, but Ha- mistook an innocent Moroccan the murders of 11 Israeli ath- rari denied all of it. there for a Black September "I'm not Noriega's adviser, leader, Ali Hassan Salameh, letes by Palestinian terrorists at the 1972 Olympic Games and I never was," he said in and gunned him down as he in Munich, died Sept. 21 in Tel an interview on Israeli televi- walked with his wife on a street Aviv. He was 87. sion shortly after he vanished in the city of Lillehammer. His death was reported by from Panama on Dec. 20, 1989, Harari escaped from NorThe Associated Press, citing the day of the U.S. invasion. way, but six Israelis were ara statement by Israel's prime "Noriega is not my partner. I rested there and charged with minister, Benjamin Netanya- didn't run his business. I didn't complicity in the killing. Five hu, who called Harari "one of m anage or instruct hisforces. were convicted and given senthe great warriors for Israel's I didn't organize his personal tences of one to five and a half security." bodyguards." yearsin prison; Norway later Harari, who was sometimes Harari joined the Mossad pardonedthree of them. referred to as the "Zionist in 1954 and was appointed to Salameh was killed in Beirut James Bond," spent decades in lead its special operations di- in 1979 by a remote-controlled the shadowy and dangerous vision, known as Caesarea, in bomb, in an operation said to echelons of global espionage, 1970. For a decade, he was at have been engineered by Haw orking formorethan25years the forefront of the Israeli fight rari. In Steven Spielberg's 2005 under the aegis of the Mossad, against Palestinian terrorism. film about the massacre, "Muthe Israeli intelligence agency, Reportedly, it was Harari who nich," Harari was portrayed by and participating in the 1976 established within Caesarea the Israeli actor Moshe Ivgy. rescue of Israelis held hos- the unit called Kidon (Hebrew Harari was born in Tel Aviv tage at an airport in Entebbe, for bayonet), which specialized on Feb. 18, 1927. As a teenager, Uganda. in assassinations. he joi ned Haganah, the Jewish In the 1980s, after retiring Shortly after the massacre in militia that preceded the Israeli from the Mossad, he was an the Munich Olympic Village by army. Some sources say he enaide to Gen. Manuel Antonio a Palestinian group known as listed at 16 after lying about his Noriega, the Panamanian dic- Black September, Golda Meir, age so that he could be admittator who was ousted in a U.S. then the Israeli prime minis- ted to Palmach, Haganah's elite invasion in 1989 and impris- ter, approved a Mossad plan to fighting unit. oned in the United States for seek out and kill those deemed Harari's survivors could not drug trafficking, racketeering responsible. be confirmed, but Israeli and and moneylaundering. It is uncertain how many of English news reports said they Harari's precise relationship those targeted had actually tak- induded a wife, two children to Noriega was the subject of en part in the Munich attacks. and five grandchildren.

Deaths of note fromaround

the likes of Mike 7yson and Floyd Mayweather Jr.Died Dan Goossen, 64: Boxing early Monday in Southern promoterwho handled a num- California after a short battle ber of world champions in a with liver cancer. lengthy career and promoted — From wire reports the world:

Pure. &rrbrt.6 Co.

aj. B~ dU Bend Redmond

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Burns Lakeview

La Pine 716 SW 11tII St. Redmond . 541.923.4732

541.382.6447

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B6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

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

o

'

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH 61'

ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 69 36'

THURSDAY

91' in 1 9 63 19'in 1985

EAST: A mix of sun and clouds today Seasid with a shower or two 63/53 around. Partial clear- Cannon ing tonight. 62/52

ria /5

FRIDAY

36' Sunshine

Mainly clear

Partly sunny

city

Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W 87/62/0.00 gonotc 80/54/0.00 70/53/pc 72/53/0.00 74/56/pc 77/59/0.01 75/51/s 52/35/0.00 50/32/s 71/68/0.08 81/63/pc 74/62/0.06 74/62/c 89/63/0.00 91/70/s 70/59/0.01 77/58/pc 59/47/0.06 68/44/c 84/69/Tr 84/63/pc 61/45/Tr 63/50/r 63/52/0.57 63/41/c 74/60/0.00 65/57/c

lington 7'I/43

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

FIRE INDEX

A full day of sunshine

48 contiguousstates) National high: 99 at Death Valley,CA

Yesterday Today Wednesday

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Puorin Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY

9Onz/pc 92/74/pc 76/58/s

Sacramento Si. Louis Snit Lake City Ssn Antonio Ssn Diego Snn Francisco Snn Jose Santa re Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa W ashingt on,OC

64/40/I 73/62/I

68/52/pc 58/52/I 85/60/s 45/27/pc 70/48/I 66/35/s 67/53/pc

66/55/pc 81/61/pc 74/56/c 71/55/c

59/39/pc 90/75/sh 88/76/pc 86/64/s 77/60/s

Wichita

89/71/pc 83/67/pc

Yskimn Yuma o

Amsterdam Athens

68/55/0.69 66/55/pc 67/55/pc 75/57/0.00 77/61/s 80/62/s Auckland 63/52/0.04 63/50/pc 62/50/pc 57/49 National low: 23 otron Baghdad 97ne/o'.oo 97/71/s 101/72/s at Bodie State Park,CA Bangkok 93/77/0.31 92/78/I 91/77/I Precipitation: 3.68" eeijing 72/60/0.00 63/50/pc 57/51/r Icngo 76/ 4 Beirut 81no/0.06 81/75/s S4nets at Leesburg, FL nh h cloco Snh O i x 2/49 ~ z • • Don 63/45 ~ Berlin 76/50/0.00 67/54/I 67/53/pc 75/60 /62 70/ * Lno V no 79 Bogota 66/48/0.00 69/44/pc 67/46/pc * * Iconsos CIW 5'I, 86/4 u Budapest 72/43/0.00 71/50/s 70/54/pc Louio ' 8 63 +. X X X 84/ Buenos Ai r es 75/50/0.00 71/53/pc 66/50/pc o Chorlo Los An leo 75/51 Cnbc Snn Lucns 95ne/o'.oo 93/75/s 93/74/s cv.WWXX Nao • / • L' Cairo 84/72/0.02 85/70/pc 85/68/pc Phoen 58 Anchorage oma Ci • Ao Calgary 66/45/0.00 54/37/r 60/30/sh • VO/47 • c •v. vvvv.' 50/3 n 0 St/43 Cnncun 88n3/0.08 89/77/pc sgns/pc v v.v.v.v.: air inehn 7 /es > ><> ' • nolia WPn Dublin 64/52/0.03 68/52/c 59/41/sh 84/ vtn Edinburgh 66/44/0.00 66/53/c 58/44/pc Geneva 68/52/0.03 69/57/I 69/51/pc Hsrnre 87/61/0.00 90/62/pc 91/63/pc ;o • x 9/73 w Orleans e e Hong Kong 93/80/0.00 93/80/s 90/80/pc XX Chihunhun I un Un 84/72 'e 'e Istanbul 70/63/0.00 70/59/s 72/61/s vons Mgrm++v i dy/59 Jerusalem 72/59/0.00 74/58/s 77/59/s Monte y.' w 'e: svxxn v.xuy 87/47 Johannesburg 72/54/0.25 74/44/s 73/49/s Limn 66/59/0.04 68/58/pc 68/58/pc Lisbon 75/63/0.00 78/65/s 83/68/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 66/55/0.03 70/58/pc 68/55/sh T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 75/57/0.00 78/59/pc 79/61/I Manila 88/78/0.02 9Om/pc 89mn

Source: USDA Forest Service

43'

Hi/Lo/W 93/72/pc 70/52/pc 72/53/c 77/48/pc 49/35/s 84/66/s 71/60/c 91/73/pc 74/57/c 61/40/pc 87/68/s 67/40/pc 63/42/s 64/57/r 71/57/c 75/57/pc 72/55/pc 64/39/pc 84/65/pc 81/61/pc 86/63/s 57/36/I 71/59/pc 78/59/s 67/51/pc 66/38/I 83/65/I 84/64/pc 85/67/s 75/57/pc 65/50/c

ya~~~~~

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

42'

Yesterday Today Wednesday

Wickiup 48203 Crescent Lake 5 9 3 50 68% Ochoco Reservoir 15276 35% Prinevige 89934 61% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 219 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 866 Deschutes R.below Bend 119 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1440 Little Deschutes near LaPine 149 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 1 8 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 162 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 218 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 4

77'

Nice with plenty of sunshine

Abilene Akron Meac am Losti ne / 47 Albany • 55/ 59/37 PRECIPITATION dl N he Oaa 6 Albuquerque Tdlamo • 66/ 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL: A mix of andy • Anchorage 69/47 63/48 Mc innvie 0.50"in 1994 clouds andsunshine JosePh Atlanta Record Ist Goven n t • u p i • He ppner Grande • o o • Condon /41 3 Atlantic City 60 40 Month to date (normal) 0.2 2 (0.40 ) today.Becoming unmn Lincoln o o Austin 52/ Year to date (normal ) 5.73 (7.16 ) generally clear tonight 62/50 Sale Baltimore pray Graniten Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 4" Sunny tomorrow. 66/ Billings a 'Baker C Newpo 54/35 ' Birmingham SUN ANDMOON 7/45 • Mitch 6 58/32 Bismarck CamPShmanRed WEST:More clouds ee/38 Today Wed. n OTVUIS Boise Yach GO/36 • John U Sunrise 7:01 a.m. 7: 0 3 a.m. than sun tomorrow 61/50 67/44 • Prineville oay /36 tario Boston Sunset 6:48 p.m. 6: 4 6 p.m. with a shower or two Bridgeport, CT 76/63/0.00 72/58/c 63/37 • Pa lina 59/39 67 41 Buffalo 76/56/0.00 71/56/c Moonrise 1:2 3 p.m. 2:1 6 p.m. north. Rather cloudy Floren e • Eugene • Ue d arothers 5936 Valen Burlington, VT 76/56/0.00 73/54/pc tonight. Moonset 11: 13 p.m. none Su ivern 61/33 69/41 Caribou, ME 64/46/Tr 55/45/pc Nyssa • 59/ Ham ton MOONPHASES Charleston, SC 75n1 /0.80 82/66/c La pjne Grove Oakridge Charlotte 70/65/0.14 79/59/pc First Fu l l Last • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES 66/37 67/45 43 Chattanooga 83/67/0.06 84/61/pc 66 9 • Fort Rock Riley 59/30 YESTERDAY d n d Cresce t • 61/31 Cheyenne 66/47/1.03 65/42/sh 59/32 59/33 Chicago 83/53/0.00 62/49/pc High: 80' Bandon Ro seburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 84/56/0.01 79/55/s Oct 1 O c t 8 Oc t 15 O c t 23 at Hermiston Jordan V Hey 65/50 Beaver Silver 62/31 Frenchglen 69/47 Cleveland 75/50/0.00 65/51/c Low: 34' 60/36 Marsh Lake 62/34 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 75/53/0.52 70/44/s 60/31 at Sunriver 62/32 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 85/59/0.00 83/61/s T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 65/ Columbia, SC 76no/0.01 81/62/pc • 61/35 Mercury 9:17 a.m. 7: 2 1 p.m. • Chgoquin 63/34 Columbus,GA 76no/o.o5 82/64/pc ' 63/32 Gold ach • 44 MedfO d Rorne Venus 6:27 a.m. 6: 4 0 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 84/58/0.01 76/54/pc ,Tt/43 65/ 61/34 Mars 12:43 p.m. 9 : 3 1 p.m. Klamath Concord, NH 77/53/0.00 65/51/c • Asm nd Jupiter 2:31 a.m. 4 : 5 2 p.m. • Lakeview Mcoermi Corpus Christi 87n3/Tr 88/74/pc BTO ingS 66/4 64/32 Saturn 10:43 a.m. 8: 4 1 p.m. 67I5 63/31 62/37 Dallas 90/68/0.00 91/73/s Dayton 84/53/0.00 74/49/pc Uranus 7:01 p.m. 7: 4 8 a.m. Denver 68/52/0.74 70/46/pc Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday nes Moines 85/59/0.01 73/61/pc city H i/Lo/Prnc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W city Hi/Lo/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 79/55/0.00 62/48/c 64/52/0.25 64/50/c 65/47/pc L n Grande 66 / 54/0.06 60/40/c 65/33/s Portland 63/5 4/0.1066/52/c 66/46/s 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin Duluth 48/44/0.43 52/45/pc Baker City 61/51/0.14 58/32/c 62/29/s Ln Pine 66/35/0.00 59/34/pc 65/36/s Prineviiie 67/ 4 0/0.0063/37/pc65/36/ n El Paso 90/66/0.00 86/64/s 2 N(~ 4 ~ 4~ N 2 ercckings 65/58/0.02 67/50/pc70/53/pc Medlcrd 7 9 /51/0.00 71/43/pc 76/43/s Redmond 73/ 37/0.0062/32/pc 66/31/s Fairbanks 44/33/0.06 43/28/c The highertheAccuWnniherxmmOVIndex number, eums 66/51/0.01 59/30/pc 63/27/s N e wport 63/5 4 /0.09 62/46/c 62/45/pc Rnseburg 74/ 5 1/0.0469/47/pc 73/44/ s Fargo 65/47/0.13 63/56/sh the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 71/51/0.03 68/43/pc 68/39/s N o rth Bend 6 6 / 55/0.11 66/49/c 65/47/pc Salem 67/48/Tr 66/46/c 67/43/s Flagstaff 61/32/0.00 67/36/s 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exlreme. Klamnth Falls 71/41/0.00 64/32/pc 66/32/s O n tario 60/53/0.32 67/41/c 67/38/s Sisters 69/40/0.00 62/33/pc66/32/ n Grand Rapids 79/50/0.00 60/47/c Lnkeview 73/37/0.00 63/31/pc 64/28/s P e ndleton 77/ 6 2/0.00 66/44/c 67/43/s The Oalles 7 5 / 55/0.00 69/47/pc 70/42/ s Green ssy 64/53/0.12 57/45/pc Greensboro 67/63/0.16 79/59/pc Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shnwers,t-thunderstcrms,r-rnin, st-snnwflurries, sn-snnwi-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data asnl 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 77/58/0.00 79/58/pc G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hsrffnrd, CT 77/58/0.00 74/55/c Absent ~ L o~ w Abs e nt Helena 65/47/0.00 60/41/sh Source: OregonAiiergyAssccintus 541-683-1577 90/76/0.15 90/75/sh ~ t os ~2 08 ~sos ~40s ~50s ~eos ~708 ~aos ~gos ~toos ~ttos Honolulu ~ tos ~os ~ o s Houston 89no/0.00 89/73/pc Huntsville 89/67/Tr 84/62/s X o I NATIONAL Indianapolis 82/54/0.00 73/51/s As of 7 n.m.yesterday .i ©u o Jackson, MS 89/73/0.00 87/68/pc Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES Jacksonville 80n2/2.81 81/68/I (for the C rane Prairie 294 8 6 53% YESTERDAY '" Portl n d nr k 24'yo /46

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C4 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4 NFL, C3

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

NFL

SeahawksTF.out with ankle injury The Seattle Seahawks will be without tight end

Zach Miller for at least a few weeks after he undergoes ankle surgery during the team's bye week,C3

49ers' Hardaugh denies friction San Francisco coach Jim Harbaugh bluntly disputes a report from NFL Network analyst Deion Sanders claiming players haveturned against the 49ers coach. NFL Notebook,C3

GOLF

NBA

Centra Oregoniansteamfor USGAevent

azers ex e rea

• Heinly, Kadin are representing Oregon at the State TeamChampionship By Zack Hall

State Team Championship. Hans

Amateur Championship, and Ka-

The Bulletin

Reimers, an Albany amateur who won the 2013 Oregon Open Invi-

din, who fell short of match play

Two Central Oregon golfers are getting a second crack at a USGA

tational at Juniper Golf Course

in July at the U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship, the State

national championship. Jesse Heinly, a 22-year-old Summit High graduate, and Justin Kadin, a 25-year-old Bend caddie, will make up two-thirds of the

in Redmond, will round out the three-player team at the Pete Dye

Team Championship represents a welcome chance to play in another

Course at French Lick Resort in

USGA event.

Oregon team at the USGA Men's

Southern Indiana. For Heinly, who was eliminated in the round of 32 in August's U.S.

"It's a blast," Heinly said by phone from FrenchLick on Monday. See USGA/C2

Heinly ,8

in s

.~ / Kadin

By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press

Charles leads Chiefs to rout

PORTLAND — Among the themes for the Portland Trail Blazers this season is to em-

PREP BOYS SOCCER

RB JamaalCharles returns from an injury to score three touchdowns,C3

brace the idea that theybelong with the elite teams in the West. The Blazers exceeded

SOCCER

expectations last year by

Highest-paid MLS player yet to play

games and advancing to

NEW YORK — Kaka

Firstup pre s eason opener:port-

is set to beMajor League Soccer's highest-paid player with a basesalary of $6.6 million from Orlando City, according to figures releasedMonday by the players' union. Including a prorated share of compensation not specified to aspecific year, the Brazilian midfielder's total earnings rise to a league-record $7167,500. Orlando starts play next season, along with New York City FC.The previous MLShigh for total earnings wasset by David Beckhamof theLosAngelesGalaxy at $6.5 million annually during a five-year con-

the second

tract that ended in 2011.

man and the return of guard Steve Blake.

David Villa's salary with NYCFC is listed as $60,000, which would be unusually low. NYCFC teammateFrank Lampard, on loanto Manchester City, is not included on the list. Seattle forward Clint Dempsey droppedto second in total earnings at $6,695,000, followed by Toronto midfielder Michael Bradley at $6.5 million andToronto forward Jermain Defoeat $6.18 million. The highest-paid Portland Timbers player is defender Liam Ridgewell, who was signed from English club West Bromwich Albion during the summerfor $1.2 million. — Bulletin staff report

round of the playoffs, where they fell to the eventual

ion San Antomo Spurs. Portland returns nearIy the ent~«R roster from that team,

including All-Stars La-

Game Watchset for OSU-Colorado A Central Oregon OSU BeaverFootball Game Watch is scheduled for Saturday at McMenamins OldSt. Francis School in downtown Bend. The OregonState vs. Colorado gamewill be shown on the big screen in the McMenamins theater. Doors open at noon; gametime at Folsom Field in Boulder, Colo., is1 p.m. A $5 donation to Beaver Nation athletes will be asked at the door. — Bulletin staff report

CORRECTION A scoreline in the prep football roundup that appeared in TheBulletin on Saturday, Sept. 27, included an incorrect opponent for Summit. Summit defeated The Dalles last Friday night, 55-14. TheBulletin regrets the error.

Oct. 7

Regular-seasoo oPener: Oklahoma City When:7:30 p.m . , Oct. 29 TV :ESPN adt o KBND 111 0 AM KRC O 690-AM,

96.9 FM

Marcus Aldridge and Damian Lillard, and fellow starters Nicolas Batum, Wesley Mat-

thews and Robin Lopez. The team addressed needs in the offseason with the

acquisition of center Chris KaPortland's stability is a big reason why most onlookers

do not see last season as a fluke. Now the Blazers, too, need to believe that.

SeeBlazers/C4

MLB Photos by Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin

Summit's C.J. Fritz, right, attempts a shot on goal while defended by a Ridgeview player Monday in Redmond. Fritz had two assists in

Summit's 6-1 Intermountain Conference victory.

• Four different Summiplt ayersscoregoals in a6-1 win over IMCrival Ridgeview Bulletin staff report REDMOND — Rid-

geview's game plan Monday

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

land at IJtah

When:6 p.m.,

was defensive-minded. Sim-

ply stay back and respect its opponent's strengths. In the first half, that strate-

gy was successful, as Summit struggled to navigate through Ridgeview's defense, to find open passing lanes or even get a shot off. But in the second half,

the reigning Class 5A state champion Storm broke through, erupting for five goals to secure a 6-1 Intermountain Conference boys

The Associated Press

do it.'" In the 18th minute, Cam-

NEW YORK — The final numbers are in, and Major

eron Ficher put Summit (2-0 IMC, 6-1-1 overall) on the board by scoring off a Conor

League Baseball's batting average has not been this low

Galvin assist. But with 10 minutes left in the first half,

the White House, a gallon of gasoline cost 55 cents, and

Ridgeview's Malachi Stalberg answered to bring the Ravens (0-2, 2-5-1) even at

the designated hitter was a

Summit's CaseyWeaver passes to anopen player while defended byRidgeview's Nick Nelson.

us in the first half. But the de-

us effectively playing that way, playing the ball wide and crossing the ball and

fense went off the rails in the second half.... Desire alone is rarely enough when there's a skill gap." SeeStorm/C4

test

"I think that we understood

said. "It was just a matter of

By Ronald Blum

"We played low pressure, stayed back and just defended," Ridgeview coach Rick Burns said. "That worked for

.

soccer victory.

how to break them down," Summit coach Ron Kidder

alize what we have to do. We

just have to go out there and

halftime. •

getting guys in the box. Everybody just took a deep breath and said, 'OK, we re-

Hitting was the worst in the DH era

since Richard Nixon was in

radical proposal limited to spring training experiments. Big league hitters batted .251 this year, down two

points from last season and 20 points lower than the ste-

roids-era peak in 1999. Lots of big names did not even reach the average, a group that includes Ryan Howard, Adam Dunn, B.J. Upton, Brian McCann and Curtis

Granderson. The last time the average

dripped this low was at.244 in 1972 — an offensive death that prompted owners to let

PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK

Coachesplay a big role in the sports section w

e aresealed offfrom the world at nights.

When the doors close behind us, when we sit at our

desks and soak in the glow of

GRANT

LUCAS

our computer screens, we sports

reporters are essentially quarantined. Only a few windows offer us a peek at the outside world.

egon that combine for 60 varsity sports teams — which can mean upward of 20 events on a given busy evening. Ideally, we will staff one game, maybe two, each day. But reporting resources are lim-

We are responsible for covering 13 high schools across Central Or-

ited relative to the broad range of prep sports we attempt to cover. SeeCalls /C4

Inside • Central Christian beats Open Door Christian. Roundup, C4

American League teams start using DHs the following year. SeeHitting /C4

Inside • With 87 wins Mariners consider the season asuccess — even without a playoff berth,C3 • A quick look at today's AL Wild Cardgame between Oaklandand Kansas City,C3 • MLB playoff schedule. Scoreboard,C2


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY SOCCER Europe, Champions League, PSG (France) vs. Barcelona (Spain) Europe, Champions League, Manchester City (England) vs. Roma(Italy) Europe, Champions League,Sporting Lisbon (Portugal) vs. Chelsea(England)

Time

TV / Radie

1 1:30 a.m.

R o ot

1 1:30 a.m.

FS 1

1 1:30 a.m.

FS 2

5 p.m.

TBS

BASEBALL

MLB playoffs, Oakland at KansasCity VOLLEYBALL

Women's college, Michigan St. at Michiga n 5 p.m. Big Ten High school, Redmond atRidgeview 6:30 p.m. playactionsportsmedia.com TENNIS

Japan Open China Open

7 p.m. Ten n is 3a.m. (Wed.) Tennis

WEDNESDAY BASEBALL

MLB playoffs, San Francisco at Pittsburgh BOXING Boxing, HassanN'Dam vs.CurtisStevens

5 p.m.

ESPN

6 p.m.

ESP N2

noon 8 p.m.

Golf Golf

GOLF

Golf, Big Break Invitational LPGA Tour ,Reignwood Classic SOCCER Europe, Champions League, Atletico Madrid (Spain) vs. Juventus (Italy) Europe, Champions League,Ludogorets (Bulgaria) vs. RealMadrid (Spain) Europe, Champions League, Arsenal (England) vs. Galatasary (Turkey) Europe, Champions League, Basel (Switzerland) vs. Liverpool (England)

11:30 a.m. ESPN2 1 1:30 a.m.

R o ot

1 1:30 a.m.

FS 1

11:30 a.m. FS2

VOLLEYBALL

Women's college, Missouri at Mississippi 4 p.m. SEC Women's college, Minnesota at lllinois 4:30 p.m. Big Ten Women's college, Southern Cal atWashington 7:30 p.m. Pac-12 TENNIS

China Open,JapanOpen China Open

7 p.m. Ten n is 1:30 a.m. (Thu)Tennis

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis notresponsib/efor late changes madeby Tfv'or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL TWinS fire manager Gardenhire —TheMinnesotaTwinsflred manager RonGardenhire on Monday,saying it was time for a new voice after his13-season tenure concluded with at least 92 losses in each of the last four years. Themovewas madewith one season left on Gardenhire's contract, ending the second-longest active tenure in the major leaguesbehind Mike Scioscia of the LosAngeles. Gardenhire played anintegral role in the franchise's renaissance, guiding the Twins to their first of six ALCentral titles in 2002 in his first year on the job. But Gardenhire's teams only got out of the first round once, and his postseason record was 6-21 with the last win coming in 2004.

AStrOS hire HiRCh aSmanager — Former Arizona Diamondbacks manager A.J. Hinch wasintroduced asthe newmanager of the Houston Astros on Monday. Hinch takesover for BoPorter, who was fired on Sept.1 inhis second year.TomLawless ran the teamfor the rest of the season on aninterim basis. The Astros finished 70-92 and fourth in the ALWest. Hinch managed Arizona from May 2009 until July 2010, when hewas fired after 31-48 start. He wasthe vice president of professional scouting for SanDiegofrom 2010 until August. The 40-year-old is a former catcher who spent sevenseasons in the majors with Oakland, KansasCity, Detroit and Philadelphia.

GAMBLING LeagueS file to StOP NeWJerSey SPOrtS detting — Four major professional sports leaguesandthe NCAAfiled a court challenge to the state's latest attempt to offer legal sports gambling on Monday, calling the effort "astounding," "specious" and a"blatant violation" of an earlier court order. Thefiling came three weeksafter Republican Gov.Chris Christie issued adirective that would allow casinos and racetracks to offer sports wagering as long as it wasn't state-regulated, anattempt to avoid conflicting with a1992 federal law. NewJersey voters overwhelmingly endorsed legal sports betting through a nonbinding referendum in 2011,andthe Legislature passed a sports wagering law that was signed byChristie in 2012. Christie this month announced adirective that sports betting at casinos and racetracks was nolonger illegal in the state. — From wire reports

USGA

which many of the golfers

Continued from C1 "They definitely treat you well here. The setup and everything they do here has been pretty awesome."

"We have a good shot to win this thing, definitely," Kadin said Monday from Indiana. "I'm not really sure if people know who we are

The biennial e vent which pits teams from all 50 states, the District of Co-

or whatnot, but I would like

are in their 30s and 40s.

to think we are one of the favorites." lumbia and Puerto RicoThe Oregon team will is being played for the 11th have to conquer a tough laytime and will feature three out designed by Dye, who rounds of individual stroke counts French Lick among play starting today. The two his many famous courses. best individual scores from (Dye's list of famed veneach team in each round will ues include TPC Sawgrass make up the team's overall in Florida and Whistling round score. Straits in Wisconsin.) No individual prizes are Though the course will awarded at the event, which play at some 6,900 yards will end Thursday. for the State Team ChamThe three Oregon players pionship, French Lick can were chosen because they play as long as 8,100 yards. have accumulated the most And Heinly, who played the points in the Oregon Golf course on Monday for the Association's points system first time, said he expects and are not current col- par to be "a great score." "It's a typical Pete Dye lege players. Collegians, by NCAA rule, are not eligible Course where he's just lookfor the event. ing to drive you crazy," HeinKadin, the oldest member ly said. "It will be a good of the Oregon team, said his test." team's relative youth should — Reporter: 541-617-7868, be alz advantage in a field in

zfzaII®bendbulletin.com.

ON DECK Today Boyssoccer:Mountain View atRedmond 3 p.m.; Sistersat CottageGrove, 7 p.m.; Estacadaat Madras, 4p.m4CrookCountyat Corbett, 4:15p.m.; La Pine at PleasantHill, 4 p.mcCentral Christianat Culver, 4p.m. Girls soccer: MountainViewat Redmond, 4:30 p.m.; Cottage Groveat Sisters, 4:30p.mcMadrasat Estacada,6p,m4Corbett atCrookCounty,4:30p.m.; La PineatJeferson, 4:30p.m. Volleyball:Redmondat Ridgeview,6:30 p.m.; Bend at MountainView,6:30 p.mcJunction City at Sisters,6:45p.mcMadras at Gladstone,6 p.m.; CrookCountyat Estacada,6pm4LaPine at Glide, 6 p.m.; TrinityLutheranat North Lake,5:30 p.m. Boys water polo: Bend vs. Summit at Juniper Swim &FitnessCenter Thursday Boys soccer: Summit atBend, 3 p.m.; Ridgeview at Mountain View,3p.m.; Redmondat South Albany, 4p.m4Sutherlin at Sisters, 3 p.m.; Madras at Gladstone,6:30p.mc Estacadaat Crook County, 4:30 p.mcCresweffat La Pine, 4:30p.mc Central Christian atHorizonChristian (HoodRiver), 4p.m. Girls soccer: Ridgeview at MountainView,4.30 p.m.; Summiat t Bend,4;30p.m.; Sutherlin at Sisters, 4:30p.m4Gladstone at Madras, 4p.mc Crook County atEstacada,6 p.m4 Glideat LaPine, 3 p.m. Volleyball:Mountain Viewat Summit, 6:30 p.m.; Bend at Redmond, 6:30 p.m.; Sistersat Sweet Home, 6:45p.mcCrookCountyatMadras,6p.m.; PleasantHil at LaPine,6p.m.; Culverat Stanfield, 4p.m. Boyswaterpole: Summit atMountainView

DEALS

IN THE BLEACHERS

Transactions BASEBALL

In the Bleachers ur 2014 steve Moore. Dist. uy Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

v/so

American League BOSTONRED SOX — Recalled INFJonathan HerreraandOF/1B Alex HassanfromPawtucket(IL). CHICAGOWHITE SOX — Recalled OFJared Mitchell, INFMattDavidson, LHPFrankDe LosSantos and RHPsErik Johnson,AndreRienzoandTaylor ThompsonfromCharlotte (IL); OFTrayceThompson from Birmingham (SL); and RHPRaul Fernandez from Winston-Salem (Carolina). CLEVELAND INDIANS — Reinstated 1B Nick Swisher fromthe 15-dayDL. Recalled OFCarlos MoncriefandLHPsScott BarnesandNick Maronde from Columbus(IL) and INFErik Gonzalez from

Akron(EL). HOUSTON ASTROS— Named A.J. Hinchmanager.ReinstatedOFGeorge Springer fromthe 15dayDL.RecalledLHPsRudyOwensandLuisCruz, OF Domi ngoSantanaand RHPsAlexWhite,Asher WojciechowskiandAnthonyBassfromOklahoma City (PCL). KANSAS CITYROYALS— Reinstated SSChristian Colonfromthe15-day DL. MINNES OTA TWINS — Fired manager Ron Gardenhire.RecalledLHPKris Johnson, INFChris ColabelloandRHPsStephen Pryor andYohanPino from Roch ester (IL); INFJorgePolancofromChattanooga(SL); andOFMaxKepler fromFort Myers (FSL).

NEWYORKYANKEES — Assigned LHPJosh Outman outright to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Recal ledOFRamonFlores,RHPJoseRamirezand LHP MannyBanuelos from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre; CGarySanchezfrom Trenton (EL); andRHPJose Friday Campos fromTampa(FSL). Football: Bend atRedmond, 7 p.mc Mountain SEATTLE MARINERS— RecalledLHPsAnthony View atSumm it, 7 p.m.; TheDalles at Ridgeview, Fernandezand Danny Hultzen, RHPLogan Baw7 p.mcMolalla atCrookCounty, 7 p.mc Sistersat com, INFJi-Man ChoiandOFJulio Morbanfrom Cottage Grove, 7 p.m4MadrasatGladstone, 7 p.m.; Tacoma (PCL). Activated 16Jesus Monterofrom Creswell atLaPine, 7pm4Culver at Irrigon,7 pm.; the suspendedlist. Designated OFCorey Hartfor "Bandwagon fan or non-bandwagon fan?" Gilchrist atChiloquin, 7p.m. assignment. Volleyball:CrookCountyat Gladstone,5:15 TAMPABAYRAYS— RecalledLHPsMikeMontp.m.; North Lake at Central Christian, 6 p.m.; gomery andEnnyRomeroandINFsVinceBelnome, Gilchrist atPaisley,4:30p.m. TimBeckham,Hak-JuLeeandColeFigueroafrom Crosscountry: Bend, Mountain View, RedDurham (IL). mond,Ridgeview,Summit, CrookCounty,Sisters, La TEXAS RANGERS— RecalledLHPAaron Poreda Pine,CulveratOxford Classic in Bend,1p.m. merica's Line andRHPsMattWest,NateAdcock,CoreyKnebel MOTOR SPORTS Favorite Open Current 0/u Underdog and BenRowen from Round Rock (PCL)andLHP JosephOrtizandWilmer Font fromFrisco (TL). NFL NASCAR Sprint Cup TORONT OBLUEJAYS—Transferred OFMelky Thursday BASEBALL Points Leaders PACKER S 10 9 'Iz 49 0 V i kingsCabreraandRHPChad Jenkins to the 60-dayDL. All at 3,0gg points: BradKeselowski, JeffGorRecalled CA.J. Jimenez,RHPsKyle Drabekand Sunday MLB Playoffs don,JoeyLogano,JimmieJohnson,KevinHarvick, PANTHE Delabarand LHPsColtHynesandRobRasRS 21/2 3 45~/~ B ears Steve M att Kenseth, De nny H am l i n , Kyl e Bu s ch, R ya n N e w from Bufalo (IL). MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL TITANS Browns mussen m an, Dal e E arnh ardt Jr., Carl E dw ards, K a se y K ahn e. National League 48~/r R a ms All TimesPDT EAGLE S 7 7 31/2 4 GIANTS 49 F a lcons ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Reinstated 1B Bucs Paul Goldschmidt from the15-dayDL. Recalled WILD CARD SAINTS fov2 fov 46'/i FOOTBALL Today'sGame 46~/~ Texans OF RogerKieschnickandRHPs Charles Brewer, Bo COWBO YS 4 4 4 4~/r Bil l s SchultzandMikeBolsinger fromReno(PCL). Oakland (Lester16-11) at KansasCity(Shields14-6), LIONS 7 7 NFL ATLANTABRAVES — Reinstated RHPShae COLTS 3>/2 3</z 47~/ R avens 5:07p.m. Steelers fgr/2 Br/2 46 JAGUARS Simmonsfrom the15-day DL RecalledOFTodd Wednesday'sGame NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE C unni ngham and INFsTyler Pastornicky andElmer BRONC OS 8 7 49~/~ C ards San Francisco (Bumga rner 18-10) at Pittsburgh All TimesPDT 49ERS Chiefs ReyesfromGwinnett (IL). Announcedtheyaremov(Volquez13-7),5:07p.m. CHARG ERS 7 7 4 3~/r Jet s ing theLynchburg(Carolina) clubto Zebulon, N.C., AMERICAN CONFERENCE it theCarolina Mudcatsandsigned themto PATRIOT S Bengals renamed DIVISIONSERIES East atwo-yearplayer developmentcontract. Monday W L T P ctPF PA (Best-ol-5; x-if necessary) 7 7 / 1 2 45'/~ REDSKINS CHICAGO CUBS—RecalledOFJoshVitters and Seahawks 2 2 0 . 50079 75 Thursday'sGames RHPDallasBeelerfrom lowa(PCL)and INFChris2 2 0 . 5 0096 97 Detroit (Scherzer18-5) at Baltimore(Tilman 13-6), tran V>llanuevafrom Tennessee(SL). College 2 2 0 . 50080 90 2:37 or3:07p.m. Thursday CINCINNATIRED S — Recalled LHPTony Cin1 3 0 . 25079 96 AL WildCardat L.A.Angels, 6:07or6:37p.m. Fla Atl a ntic grA 71/2 FLA INT' L grani, INF Ne f t al i Soto andRHPCurtis Partchfrom South Friday's Games 3 C Florida Louisville (IL); OF Juan Duran fromPensacola (SL); W L T P slPF PA HOUSTON 2 Detroit atBaltimore,907a m.or 1207pm. OREGON 23Yz 23 Arizona LHP IsmaelGuilon fromDaytona(FSL); andRHP 3 1 0 . 75087 67 NLWildCardatWashington,907am. or 1207p m. Houston Friday Raisel Iglesiasfromthe AZLReds. 2 2 0 . 500 136 95 St. Louis(Wainwright 20-9)at LA.Dodgers(Kershaw Indianapolis Louisville 4 3 S YRACU SE COLORADOROCKIES — RecalledRHPsChris Tennesse e 1 3 0 . 25060 110 21-3), 3:37p.m. PK FRESNO ST Martin andChadBetis from Albuquerque(PCL); Jacksonvile 0 4 0 . 00058 152 SanDiegoS AL WildCardat L.A.Angels, 6:37p.m.or 7:07p.m. BYU 17 17 UtahSt LHPsJaysonAquinoandKraigSitton fromNewBritNorth Saturday'sGames ain (EL);andINFRosell HerrerafromModesto(Cal). W L T PsfPF PA GEORGIA 32 Saturday NL WildCardatWashington, 2:37p.m. 32'/r Vanderbi lt MIAMI MARLINS— Recalled C RobBrantly, 3 0 0 1.000 80 33 St. LouisatLA.Dodgers,6:37 p.m. 38'/2 FLORIDA ST 38 W ake Fore s t RHPArquimedesCaminero, INFDerek Dietrich, OF 3 1 0 . 750 103 60 -1 Miami Fl a 1 Sunday'sGames GATECH Kyle JensenandLHP s Grant Dayton, BrianFlynn 2 2 0 . 5 0097 99 INDIANA 13'Iz 13'/z NTexas and EdgarOlmosfromNewOrleans(PCL) andRHP Baltimore at Detroit,12:45 p.m. 1 2 0 . 33374 77 ILLINOIS 11 11 Purdue JoseUrenafromJacksonville (SL). L.A. Angelat s ALWild Card,4:37 p.m. West Ohio St 7 7 MARYLAN D Monday,Dct. 6 MILWAU KEE BREWERS— Recalled 1B Hunter W L T PctPF PA ECARO LINA 36r/2 391/2 Smu Morris andRHPsMichael Blazek,Ariel Penaand L.A. Dodgers atSt. Louis,TBA San Di e go 3 1 0 . 750 102 63 CINCINNATI 6 5 Memphi s Johnny Heffweg from Nashville (PCL) and RHP Washingtonat NLWild Card, TBA Denver 2 1 0 . 66775 67 4'/r VIRGINIA 4 Pittsburgh BrooksHallfromHuntsville (SL). x-L.A.AngelsatALWild Card, TBA Kansas Ci t y 2 2 0 . 500 102 79 C MICHIGAN 3 3 Ohio U NEW YORKMETS — RecalledRHPJeff Walters, x- Baltimoreat Detroit, TBA Oakland 0 4 0 . 0 0051 103 W VIRGINIA 24 25)2 Kansas LHPScott RiceandOFsCesar Puello andAndrew Tuesday,Dct. 7 NATIONAL CONFERENCE T oledo 9 V 2 7 W MICHI G A N x-WashingtonatNLWild Card, TBA BrownfromLasVegas(PCL)and LHPStevenMatz East M arshall 1 8 16 LD DOMIIN ON from Bingham ton (EL). x-L.A.Dodgersat St.Louis, TBA W L T PsfPF PA Va Tech PK I'A NCARO LINA PHILADELP HIA PHILLIES — Recalled RHPs Wednesday,Dct. 8 Philadelphia 3 1 0 .7 50 122 104 NO ILLINOIS 23 24 KentSt EthanMartin, HectorNeris, B.J. Rosenberg, Jonax-L.A.AngelsatALWild Card, TBA Dallas 3 1 0 . 750 115 86 Wisconsin gr/2 9'/z N'WESTE RN than PettiboneandPhilippe Aumont fromLehigh x- Baltimoreat Detroit, TBA N.Y.Giants 2 2 0 . 5 00 103 91 MIAMI-OHIO 4 4 UMass Valley (IL)andCTommyJosephand OFsKelly DuThursday,Dct. 9 Washington 1 3 0 . 25095 109 S Alabama 5~/r 5 APP'CHIAN ST gan andAaronAltherr fromReading(EL). x-NLWildCardatWashington, TBA South S Carol i na Zr/r 5'/z KENTUC KY SAN DIEGO PADRES — Reinstated SS Everth x-St. Louisat L.A.Dodgers, TBA W L T PctPF PA A RMY 2'Iz 3 Ball St Cabrerafromthe 15-day DL.Recalled LHPJuan Atlanta 2 2 0 . 500 131 113 BOWLGREEN 5' /2 5V~ Buflalo Pablo O r a ma s , I NF JacePeterson,OFsYeisonAsenCarolina 2 2 0 . 50073 96 A KRON 2 1 21 EMichigan cio andRe ymond Fuentes andRHPsBurch Smith, N ew Orl e an s 3 0 .250 95 110 KANSAS ST 12 12 T exas T ec h HOCKEY evviu s Sampson and Donn Roachfrom ElPaso TampaBay 1 3 0 . 25072 119 RICE 5'I r 6'/r Hawaii K North COLORADOST14'/2 14'/2 Tulsa (PCL), BASKETB ALL NHL Preseason W L T P ctPF PA UL-LAFA YETTE 17 17 GeorgiaSt National Basketball Association 3 1 0 . 75085 62 Stanford 1 1'A NOTRE DAME NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE ATLANTAHAWKS — Signed G-F JarellEddie 2 2 0 . 5 0092 96 USC 10 11 Arizona St All TimesPDT CDexter Pittman. 2 2 0 . 50091 84 AUBURN 8'Ir 8 Lsu and BOSTONCELTICS — SignedG-FEvanTurner. 2 2 0 . 50092 100 Navy 4'/2 4V~ AIR FOR CE Monday'sGames R elea s edGJohnLucasIIIandFMalcolm Thomas. Wesl Oklahoma 5 5 TCU N.Y.Rangers6, Philadelphia 3 LOSANGELESCLIPPERS— NamedSam CasW L T P ctPF PA TENNE SSEE PK PK Florida sell, Detroit 3,Toronto0 LawrenceFrankandMikeWoodson assistant Baylor 1 3 r/r15'/2 TEXAS Arizona 3 0 0 1.000 66 45 Minnesota 4, Pittsburgh1 Seattle 2 1 0 . 66783 66 OKLAHOM AST 17 17 lowaSt coaches. Columbus 3,Nashvile 0 PHOENIX SUNS—SignedFsMarkief andMarSanFrancisco Alabama 5 6 MISSISSIPIP cus Morris to 2 2 0 . 50088 89 Dallas5, Florida4 four-yearcontract extensionsandG f'/z MISS ST 1 Texas A&M St. Loui s 1 2 0 . 333 56 85 Edmonton 3, Winnipeg1 U CLA 12 r /2 13 Utah ZoranDragicto atwo-yearcontract. Arizona 4, Vancouver2 FOOTBALL LA TECH 13 12 Utep Monday'sGame Today'sGames National Football League MIDTENNST16'Ir 17 So Miss Kansas Ci t y41, New E n gland14 NFL— SuspendedIndianapolisSLeRonLandry N.Y.IslandersatBoston,4 p.m. Oreqon St 7 7'/r COLOR ADO Thursday'sGame N.Y.RangersatPhiladelphia,4 p.m. WASH ST 3'/2 4 California four gamefor violating theperformance-enhancing Minnes o t a a t Gr e e n B a y , 5 : 2 5 p . m. substance policy. OttawaatWinnipeg,5p.m. TEXAS ST 14'/2 14'/2 Idaho Sunday'sGames INDIANAPOLI SCOLTS— ReleasedWRDa'Rick CarolinaatSt.Louis, 5 p.m. RUTGERS 3 3 Michigan Cleve l a n d a t T e n n e s s e e , 1 0a . m. TampaBayatDallas,5:30p.m. UT-SANTONIO18'Ir 17 NewMexico Rogers.PlacedLBRobert Mathis on the reserve/ T ampa B a y a t N e w O r l e a n s , 1 0 a . m. Coloradoat Calgary, 6p.m. UL-Monroe non-football injury list. SignedS DeweyMcDonald ARKANSA SST 10 9 HoustonatDalas, 10a.m. Los Angeleat s SanJose, 7:30p.m. CLEMSON 14 14 NC State from thepracticesquad. ChicagoatCarolina,10 a.m. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — ReleasedWR Donte Wednesday'sGames WKENTU CKY 13'/2 10 Uab St. Louisat Philadelphia, 10a.m. MICHIGAN ST 8 8 Nebraska Fosterfromthepractice squad.SignedQBChandler Washingtonat Bufalo, 4p.m. AtlantaatN.Y.Giants, 10a.m. Ga Southern 17 17 N.M. ST Harnish tothepractice squad. CarolinaatColumbus,4 p.m. Buffalo atDetroit, 10 a.m. NEW YORKJETS — ReleasedWRJalenSaunSANJOSEST Zr/ 7V~ Unlv PittsburghatDetroit, 4:30p.m. BaltimoreatIndianapolis,10 a.m. ders and CBLeQuan Lewis. SignedWRsTJ.Graham Boise St Zr/r 2'/r NEVADA MontrealatChicago,5:30 p.m. PittsburghatJacksonvile, 10a.m. and ChrisOwusu. Arizona at Edmonton,6p.m. Arizonaat Denver,1:05 p.m. OAKLANDRAIDERS— FiredcoachDennisAlKansasCityat San Francisco, 1;25p.m. Pac-12 len. N.Y.Jetsat SanDiego,1:25 p.m. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — SignedCBRichard All TimesPDT CincinnatiatNewEngland,5:30p.m. CrawfordandSJamarcaSanford. SignedOTTerren TENNIS Open:Miami,Oakland Jones tothepractice squad. Nerlh Division Monday,Ocf.6 HOCKEY Conf Overall Professional SeattleatWashington, 5:30 p.m. National HockeyLeague W L W L PF PA ChinaOpen ARIZONACOYOTES — NamedGregg Olson Oregon 1 0 4 0 194 85 Monday'sSummary Monday atBeijing California 1 1 3 1 190 143 chief financial officerandJohnPierce chief marketMen i n g officer. Stanford 1 1 3 1 110 26 Firsl Round BOSTONBRUINS — Re-signed D Torey Krug Chiefs 41, Patriots14 Washington St 1 1 2 3 169 151 Marin Cilic (4),Croatia,def. BaiYan,China, 6-3, Washington 0 1 4 1 178 121 and FReilySmithto one-year contracts. 6-4. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS— Assigned DAdam New England g g 7 7 — 14 Oregon St. 0 1 3 1 105 86 ClendeningandKlas Dahlbeck, GScott Darlingand ViktorTroicki,Serbia,def.MikhailYouzhny,Russia, KansasCity 7 10 10 14 — 41 SouthDivision 6-3, 6-4. F s Joaki m Nordstrom, Dennis RasmussenandGarFirst Quarter W L W L PF PA Rossto Rockford (AHL). Vasek Pospisil,Canada,def.LukasRosol,Czech KC — Charles2 run(Santos kick), 2:15. SouthernCal 2 0 3 1 131 70 retCOLORADO AVALANCHE — Signed F Cody Republic,6-4,6-3. SecondGuarler Arizona 1 0 4 0 168 109 Joao Sousa,Portugal, def.Teymuraz Gabashvili, KC — Charles 5 passfromA.Smith (Santos kick), Arizona St. 1 0 3 0 141 61 McLeodto a contract extensionthroughthe201716 season and D Brad Stuart throughthe2016-17 Russia,1-6, 7-6(4), 6-4. 10:58. UCLA 0 0 3 0 90 72 KC—FG Santos22,;00. Grigor Dimitrov(5), Bulgaria,def.FernandoVer0 1 3 1 168 79 season. Utah COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS— Assigned D Jaidasco,Spain,6-1,3-6, 6-3. Third Quarter 0 2 2 3 159 178 Colorado me SifersandFsJoshAnderson, Sean Collins and KC — Charles 8 passfromA.Smith (Santos kick), Women Thursday'sGame Ryan Craigto Springfield (AHL). First Round 7:53. Arizona at Oregon, 7:30p.m. DALLASSTARS — Signed FCodyEakin to a KC — FGSantos31, 5:29. AnaIvanovic(9), Serbia, def.BelindaBencic, SwitSaturday'sGames two-year contract. AssignedDCameronGaunceand NE — LaFel 44 passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), Stanford zerland,6-2, 6-1. at NotreDame,12:30 p.m. CScottGlennieto Texas(AHL). Tsvetana Pironkova,Bulgaria, def. MariaKirilenko, 3:26. Oregon St. atColorado,1 p.m. F LORIDA PANTHERS— AssignedDGregZanon Feurlh Guarler Russia,6-4,6-1. ArizonaSt,atSouthernCal, 4;30 p.m. and FsBobbyButler, JoeyCrabb,RyanMartindale KC — Kelce 2 passfromA.Smith (Santos kick), Californiaat WashingtonSt., 7:30p.m. Lucie Safarova (13), CzechRepublic, def.Camila and GarrettWilsonto SanAntonio (AHL). 11:52. Utah atUCLA,7:30p.m. Giorgi, Italy,7-6(3), 6-4. LOSANGELES KINGS— Assigned DVincent KC — Abdullah 39interceptionreturn(Santoskick), Mona Barthel, Germany, def. Bethanie MatLoverd eandCsNicDowdandNickShoretoMan10:34. AP Top25 tek-Sands,UnitedStates,4-6, 6-1,6-4. NE—Gronko wski 13passfrom Garoppolo (GostR ecord Pts P v chester(AHL). FlaviaPenne tta (14), Italy, def.ChristinaMcHale, NEWYOR KISLANDERS—Agreedto termswith kowskikick),7;25. 1. FloridaSt. (27) 4-0 1,4 1 6 1 F Michael UnitedStates,7-6(3), 6-4. Dal Coffe on athree-year, entry-level A—76,613. 4 -0 1,405 2 2. Oregon (13) Serena Wiliams(1), UnitedStates,def. Silvia Solcontract. 4 -0 1,387 3 3. Alabama (13) er-Espinosa, Spain, 7-5,6-2. COLLEGE NE KC 4. Oklahoma (7 ) 4-0 1,3 5 7 4 Peng Shuai,China,def. ZhangKai-Lin, China, First downs KENTUCK Y— Suspended RBStanley Wiliams, 1 3 26 5. Auburn 4 -0 1,272 5 6-4,6-1. otalNetYards 2 90 44 3 6. Texas 5 -0 1,206 6 QB DrewBarker, WRDorian Baker, andDETymere A&M Alize Cornet,France,def. JelenaJankovic (10), T Rushes-yards 16-75 38-207 7. Bavlor 4 -0 1,149 7 Dubosefor Saturdaynight's football gameagainst Serbia,7-5, 3-6,6-4. Passi n g 2 15 23 6 8. UCLA 4-0 9 7 5 11 SouthCarolinaforviolating teamrules. CarolineGarcia, France,def. ZhangShuai, China, PuntReturns UAB —Named Reava Potter assistanttrackand 2-10 2-3 4-0 9 7 2 8 9. NotreDame 6-1,6-4. Returns 2 -45 2 - 3 6 10. Michigan 3-1 9 4 4 9 field coach. St. LaurenDavis, UnitedStates, def.XuYi-Fan, China, Kickoff InterceptionsRet. 0 -0 2 - 7 3 11. Mississippi 4-0 9 0 6 10 6-3,6-3. Comp-Att-Int 20-30-2 20-26-0 12. MississippiSt. 4-0 8 4 8 14 Sacked-YardsLost 3 -14 2 - 1 2 13.Georgia 3-1 7 8 8 12 FISH COUNT ATPWorldTourRakutenJapanOpen 6-48.8 4-45.0 3-1 6 4 3 16 Punts 14. Stanford Mondayat Tokyo 2-1 0-0 4-1 6 3 6 17 Fumbl e s-Lost 15. LSU Upstream daily movement of adult chinookjack First Round 3 -30 4 - 35 16. SouthernCal 3-1 5 6 0 18 chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCoties-Yards Steve Johnson,UnitedStates, def. Hiroki Moriya, Penal 3-1 5 0 2 19 lumbia Time ofPossession 23:33 36:27 17.Wisconsin Riverdamslast updatedonSunday. Japan,7-6(4),6-2. 4-0 4 5 0 20 18. BYU Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsflhd Kevin Anderson(7), SouthAfrica, def. Dominic 5-0 4 4 5 21 B onneville 8,522 2,188 1,260 4 85 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 19. Nebrask a Thiem,Austria,7-6(5), 6-4. 3-1 2 9 8 22 RUBHING — New England:Ridley5-26,Vereen 20. OhioSt. T he Daffes 6,997 1,755 2,114 8 6 6 GillesMuller,Luxembourg, def.FedericoDelbonis, 3-1 2 4 6 24 John Day 8,527 2,642 2,363 f ,f62 8-26, J.White 3-21. KansasCity: Davis16-107, 21. Oklahoma St. Argentina,6-3, 6-4. 3-1 2 3 7 23 McNary 10,800 2,934 4,187 1,951 Charles18-92,A.Smith4-8. 22. EastCarolina Marcel Granollers,Spain,def. David Ferrer (2), 3-1 2 1 6 25 PASSING —New England: Brady14-23-2-159, 23. Kansas St. Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, Spain,4-6, 6-4,6-4. Garoppolo6-7-0-70. Kansas City: A.Smith20-26- 24. Missouri 4 -1 1 4 5 N R jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected AndreyGolubev,Kazakhstan, def. Pierre-Hugu es 0-248. 3 -0 1 0 9 N R ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. 25. TCU Herbert,France,6-4,6-4. RECEIVING —NewEngland: LaFell 6-119,VerOthers receiving votes:ArizonaSt. 97, South Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsilhd JackSock,UnitedStates,def.Alexandr Dolgopolov een 5-41,Edelman4-23, J.White3-15, Gronkow ski Carolina61,Clemson52, Arizona43, Marshall 40, Bonneville1,087,694165,746 309,225 125,048 (8), Ukraine, 6-4, 6-1. 2-31. Kansas City: Kelce8-93, Bowe5-81, Charles GeorgiaTech37, WestVirginia 24, Arkansas18, The Daffes707,918 113,589 220,165 87,825 DenisIstomin,Uzbekistan, def.TaroDaniel,Japan, 3-16, Avery 2-46, Davis 1-12,Jenkins1-0. Maryland 5, Louisville 4, N.DakotaSt.3, Washington John Day 583,671 96,369 f 62,545 62,21 6 7-6 (2),6-7(5), 7-5. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. 2, NCState1,Virginia 1. McNary 530,709 85,771 156,786 56,953


TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE

TELEVISION

SeahawksTEMiler out after anklesurgery By Tim Booth

and v ersus

The Associated Press

Dallas — before his status

RENTON, Wash.— The Seattle Seahawks will be with-

is reassessed. "It's

out tight end Zach Miller for at least a few weeks after he un-

derwent ankle surgery during the team's bye week.

b othe r i n g h im fo r a

Seattle at

nu mber

Washington said Monday that Miller had When:5:30 b e been bothered by "loose bod- p.m., Oct. 6 ies" in the ankle for weeks Ty.ESPN and instead of trying to play gadio:KRCO through pain that was likely to 690-AM, 96.9 get worse, Miller took advan-

tageoftheearlybyeweek and underwent had the surgery

been

Nezt pp

Seattle coach Pete Carroll

FM

overtime win over Denver in Week 3. Miller was in on 71 of

to Willson to start.

79 snaps against the Broncos.

But Carroll believes Seattle has in-house options to

Seattle has leaned on hav-

handle Miller's various roles.

ing three or more wide receiv- Willson and Cooper Helfet ers on the field this season will get the first cracks, but with the return of Percy Harvin. Through three weeks, the

the Seahawks could turn to

we e ks. H e's Seahawks have attempted just e n p laying 17 passes (19 percent) with two w ith i t a n d tight ends on the field versus we just don't nearly 81 percent of their pass

using an extra offensive lineman — like backup tackle Alvin Bailey — in running situations. Seattle also has former college tight end and

want him to

attempts coming with three or

now rookie offensive tackle

erate it any longer. We

to STATS Inc. Miller has six

of

four wide receivers, according Garry Gilliam on its roster. Gilliam had seven catches for r eceptions 65 yards during the 2012 sea-

in three games, while backup and hopefully he'll have a up Luke Willson has just one No timetable has been set speedy recovery. It was just a catch. for Miller's return. Carroll cleanup kind of thing but he Where Seattle will take a said the team would give him had some loose bodies in his blow is in losing Miller's skill a "couple of weeks" and then ankle and it was very, very as a blocker. He has regularly judge his progress on a week- uncomfortable." been asked to block a defenby-week basis. That means Miller was listed on the inju- sive end or help tackles to conMiller would miss the next ry report with an ankle injury trol the defensive pass rush. two games — at Washington before the Seahawks' 26-20 That responsibility now falls wanted to see if we can fix him

now.

oise o oosen 's ac ou rue By Edward Wyatt

ey, each team negotiates its pwn cp n t r a ctsfpr lpcal tele

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — For

v i s ion coverage.

decades, football f an s i n

Th e NF L n e vertheless is

son at Penn State before mov-

various markets wondered fighting desperately to keep whether, come Sunday, they the FCC rule intact, saying

ing to tackle for 2013.

would be able to watch their

"We've had a lot of guys in here," Carroll said. "We worked out a lot of people. We would like to stay with

our people and banking on the communication and the

system working for us. We're going to get it fixed right here."

"Byensuringthat televis-

to that week's game were

not sold out, the National i n g games will not reduce Football League could keep live attendance, the sports the game off teleblackout rule envision in the local courages sports market as a way In 2 0 1 3 , tW O lea g ues to reach receipts.

Of the NFI'S

deals with broad-

" g

the NFI. wrote in

ButtheFederal

NFL NOTEBOOK

t h a t i t a c t u ally i n creases

lamentable but b e loved t h e availability of games on team on television. If tickets broadcast television.

to protect g a te

"

its pleadings to th e commission. If

FCC's so-called

repealing the FCC rule, including the Natio n a l Ca b l e and Telecommunications Associa-

r

n ow nearly 40 S a n Q i eg o years old, would n mP allow cable and satellite c o m - B ag p anies t o g e t around l e ague

Bulletin wire services C L A RA , C a l if.

— Jim Harbaugh bluntly disputed a report from NFL Net-

work analyst Deion Sanders claiming players have turned against the San Francisco 49ers' coach.

cast n e tworks,"

Communications SeaSon Commission ap- g a m e S Miei.e pears ready to ' loosen some of thoserestrictions In 2 0 1 1 , today, allowing 1 6 g a m e S cable and satel" lite providers to show the game OUt IOCa/Ig r regardless of the a/I Of tQem b number of tickets I PP g sold — and up- happenIng setting the NFL in O ne Of intheprocess. foUi'CitieS: Ending t he

blackout r u le, CinCinnati,

S ANTA

C3

rules that call for a team's

cable and satellite

carriers were able to get around the leag u e s blackou policy, the league said, "the eventual esul t likely would e a dec r ease in the amount of prof essional

on

s p orts

broadca s t

teevision. A dvocates

for

tion, the cable in-

dustry group, say the NFL's argu-

m e n t has significant holes.

game to beblacked out on Few games are blacked the local broadcast channel out, they say, and the NFL if the game is not sold out.

"Personally I t h in k t h at's

cou l d easily take measures

The league rule would l i k e lowering ticket prices remain in effect, however, if sales are sluggish, much

a bunch of crap," Harbaugh said Monday.

so it remains unclear how

l i k e h otels and airlines do

"They w a n t hi m out. T hey're not o n t h e s a m e

— for example, if a Hous-

a t t endance by about 41,000

page," Sanders, a Hall of F ame c o rnerback, s a i d Sunday.

to show th e l ocal b road-

of l pe r cent.Manyfansstay

cast from Denver — it will require permissions that mightbehardtocomeby.

a w ay because of high ticke t p rices, they argue, and in ma n y cases they have

far-reaching the effect of w i t h u n sold rooms and an FCC repeal would be. If seats. a cable provider wants to The a dvocates for repeal show a game blacked out on calculated that the threat of the local broadcast channel blackouts increased league

Following th e 4 9ers' 26-

21 win Sunday over Philadelphia, Sanders stated that players are fed up with the fourth-year coach.

ton cable provider wants f a nsin2012,orone-quarter

ESPN analyst Trent Dilfer

chimed in Monday morning

When the NFL rule was

with a similar alarm bell, tell-

ing ESPN Radio: "I do think it's become almost toxic."

Harbaugh panned both Sanders' and Dilfer's analyMarcioJose Sanchez/The Associated Press sis, taking umbrage with how San Francisco coach Jlm Harbaugh denIed reports that hIs players have turned against him. neither named any sources for their information. "I haven't seen Trent or Deion around here much," Har-

baugh quipped. Both Sanders and D i lfer had brief stints with the 49ers

during their playing careers

"We're willing to do or fix anything to make it b etter. That's the kind of relationship that we have, and I include all those coaches, staff and players in that."

— Sanders in 1994, Dilfer

2006-07 — and they do have Raiders fire coachAllen ties with current players and The Oakland Raiders fired front-office personnel. coach Dennis Allen on MonSanders, in a f o llow-up day night four games into his tweet on Monday, announced third season. that his i nformation is n ot T he decision was a n coming from his longtime nounced soon after the Raidfriend Michael Crabtree, and ers (0-4) returned from Lonthat rather his sources wear don, where they lost their "uniforms, suits and ties." 10th straight game dating to After the win over Dallas, Harbaugh stated that he has

last season, 34-14 to the Mi-

an open-door policy for play-

Allen was the f irst head

ers to express concerns or

offer suggestions. No such concerns have been raised to him, he said. "Nothing specifically, no.

ami Dolphins on Sunday. coach hired by Oakland after the death of longtime owner

split among four teams since being selected by Chicago in

the NFL's 256 regular-sea- tising spots.

the fourth round of the 2005

Dallas Cowboys corner- draft. back Morris Claiborne will have season-ending surgery Cardinals's Dwyer charged after tearing the patellar ten- in domesticabuse case don in his left knee. Arizona Cardinals running Coach Jason Garrett said

Monday that Claiborne will have surgery in the next couple of days and be put on injured reserve.

B r o adcasters, which points

Orton, a nine-year NFL veteran, has a 35-35 career record

Lions. The Bills signed Orton on winning recordor a playoff Aug. 30 to back up Manuel.

Cowboys CB Claiborne out for season

are today. Some markets,

like Houston, regularly had out that football is the only blackouts. major team sport whose Now, a majority of teams' regular-season games are revenue comes from tele- t elevised mostly on f r ee vision rights, and barely b r oadcast stations. Cable a handful of games are s y stemoperatorscouldreap blacked out each season, rewards for importing a or even threatened with a b l acked-out game's broad-

rived. The Raiders have had 11 straight seasons without a

berth. Oakland will now have its eighth coach since 2003.

a l r e ady contributed to the

first put into effect, tick- l o cal team through taxes et sales were a much big- subsidizingitsstadium. ger contributor to a team's Su p porting the NFL is overall income than they t h e NationalAssociationof

back Jonathan Dwyer f a c-

es aslew of charges after he allegedly assaulted his wife during two separate incidents

Bills nameOrton starting QB

in July. Dwyer was charged Friday by the Maricopa County

E J Manuel is out as t h e

district attorney with felony

Buffalo Bills' starting quar-

aggravated assault and eight Al Davis. His 8-28 record is t erback, and v eteran K y l e misdemeanors, including asthe worst for the franchise Orton is in. Coach Doug sault, criminal damage, dissince before Davis arrived in Marrone's patience ran out orderly conduct and preventBut there are conversations," 1963. His contract was set to following two straight losses ing phone usage during an Harbaugh said. "Players run through next season. that exposed 2013 first-round emergency,according to the have good ideas. Coaches An announcement on the draft pick Manuel's lack of indictment. have good ideas. Equipment interim coach will come to- development. Dwyer was arrested Sept. managers, trainers, strength day, with offensive line coach Marrone benched Manuel 17 for two alleged incidents coaches have good ideas. Tony Sparano and offensive on Monday, one day after he that involved Kayla Dwyer, We welcome that. If w e 're coordinator Greg Olson the completed fewer than half of 27, at their home, according not doing something right or most likely options. his passes and threw two in- to officials. Dwyer allegedly there's a better way to do it, Allen is th e t h ir d c oach terceptions in a loss to Hous- fractured at least one of Kaylet's get it out in the open and fired during the season by ton. Orton will start Sunday's la's bones during one of the talk about it. Oakland since Davis ar- game against the Detroit assaults, officials said.

blackout. In 2013, two o f son games were blacked out. In2011, 16gameswere

ca s t and selling local adverBut th a t r e t r ansmission w o u l d r equire the permis-

blacked out locally, all of s i on of the remote station them happening in one of b r oadcasting th e g a me, four cities: Buffalo, Cincin- w hich might be reluctant nati, San Diego and Tampa to anger the NFL or might Bay. have other contractual reBecause of th e g r owt h

st r i c tions to prevent it from

of the league, the FCC says agreeing. People who do not that the blackout rule "has pay for cable would still be become outdated." Repeal-

ing it, the commission says, would eliminate unneces-

u n a ble to watch.

T h a t loss of control would l e ad broadcasters to pay less

sary regulation and leave for television rights, making the rules "to private solu- contractswithpay-television tions negotiated by the interestedparties."

c h a nnels more lucrative for

The commission is ex-

teams and making it harder f o r many Americans, par-

pected to vote on the pro-

t i c u larly low-income fans, to

posed change today. view their team. Although the rule is appliIn a ny case, the NFL faces cable to all sports leagues, it long odds in protecting the almost exclusively affects blackout rule. Both Republithe NFL, in p art b ecause football is the only one of

c a n commissioners and Tom Wh e eler, the commission's

the four major leagues that chairman, a lready h ave negotiates its television con- voiced their support for retracts as a group. In base- moving what they call an unball, basketball and hock- necessaryregulation.

Charles returnsfrom injury to lead Chiefs to blowout win over Pats By Dave Skretta

est outdoor sports venue. The record

The Associated Press

Charles, who missed last week's tions, one of which was returned for win in Miami with a sprained ankle, a touchdown, Brady was strip-sacked KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Jamaal ran for 92 yards and a score. The Pro by Tamba Hali to step up a field goal. Charles proved he is back to full Bowl running back also caught two Brady finished 14 of 23 for 159 yards. speed for the Kansas City Chiefs. short touchdown passes from Alex The Chiefs forced the Patriots to Tom Brady is still stuck in neutral Smith, who had 248 yards passing air it out by stuffing Shane Vereen for the New England Patriots. and three touchdowns in a sharp per- and Stevan Ridley. And when Brady Charles returned from an injury formance before a raucous crowd. droppedback,their front seven ran to score three touchdowns Monday The Chiefs (2-2) ended a four-game roughshod over their suspect offennight, Brady was picked off twice by skid at Arrowhead Stadium dating to sive line. the opportunistic Chiefs, and Kansas last season by handing the Patriots It hardly helped the Patriots' ofCity routed New England 41-14 to (2-2) their worst defeat since losing to fense that it was trying to operate hand Bill Belichick one of his worst San Diego 41-17 in 2005. on the same night Chiefs fans were losses as coach of the Patriots. Along with throwing two intercep- trying to reclaim the record for loud-

was set in the first half, when Guinness World Records record a noise

of the game early in the second half, taking a shortpass in the flat and stumbling into the end zone. He appeared to level of 142.2 decibels — breaking the grab his hamstring on the way down mark of 137.6 that Seattle Seahawks and was met by trainers as he exited fans hadsetlastseason. K nile Davis f i nished with

the field. After a brief trip to the locker 1 0 7 room, Charles logged a few more car-

yards rushing for Kansas City. Tight end Travis Kelce had eight catches

for 93 yards and a score.

ries before his night was done. By that point, the game was pretty

much done, too. Kansas City had 303 yards of firstWith the game out of hand, the Pahalf offense, the most against any Be- triots gave rookie quarterback Jimmy lichick-coached team. Garoppolo a chance to play. He threw Charles added his third touchdown a late TD pass to Rob Gronkowski.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

PREP ROUNDUP

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

i erssna s i wi Bulletin staff report

— for Central Christian (2-3 SD6, 2-3 overall), and senior er Caleb Roberts recorded Josiah Poole scored his first his first career shutout, six career goal. Bryson Eells and different players scored, Luke Reynolds also scored and Central Christian raced for the Tigers, who snapped a past Open Door C hristian two-game skid. of Troutdale 7-0 in a Class Jacob Biever and Aiden 3A/2A/1A Special District 6 Bristow each had a goal for boys soccer match Monday. Central Christian and assist"All those factors," Tigers ed on each other's goals. coach Drew Roberts reflectIn other Monday action: ed. "It was just a total team GIRLS SOCCER effort." Summit 12, Ridgeview 0: Caleb Reynolds scored REDMOND — T h e Storm twice — both in the first half picked u p t h ei r f o u rth REDMOND — Goalkeep-

e a uewin M'sln si er Standings

to 2-0 in Intermountain Con-

Boys soccer ference play and 5-2-1 overall. IntermountainConference Team Conference O v erall Christina Edwards logged 2-0 6-1-1 three goals for Summit, Sofia Summit 1-0 5-2 Bend 2-2-1 Ellington had two goals and M ountaiVi ne w 0 - 0 0-1 0-5 an assist, and Megan CorRedmond 0-2 2-5-1 Ridgeview nett scored twice. Anniston

Ward, Briana Katter and Lila Girls soccer lntermountainConference Reinecke each scored and Team Conference O v erall 2-0 5-2-1 dished out an assist, Emma Summit 1-0 6-0-1 Stevenson and Julia Hager Bend 3-2 M ountaiVi ne w 0 - 0 0-1 1-4-1 both scored, while Maggi Redmond 0-2 2-5-1 McElrath and Shaelynn DaRidgeview

WIAS 8 SUKBSS By Tim Booth

overcome its deficiencies, most

The Associated Press

of them offensive. Outside of

SEATTLE — Lloyd McClen-

Cano — who hit.314 in his first

tention until the final day will not be acceptable for the Mar-

out 19 times. They scored two

don's words after wrapping up season with Seattle — and Allhis first season as manager in Star third baseman Kyle SeaSeattle laid the foundation that ger, there was no consistent just being in postseason con- production in the batting order.

straight win and third con-

vis each had an assist. The Ravens fell to 0-2 in league

iners going forward. After a surprise season in

secutive shutout to improve

action and 2-5-1 overall.

which Seattle still had playoff

hopes entering Game No. 162, McClendon has made clear that the second-longest playoff drought in baseball needs to end.

Blazers

"I told them they are no lon-

The Mariners were shut runs or fewer 65 times and

won only eight of those games. Anytime Seattle scored at least four runs, the Mariners almost

always won because of their pitching staff — they went 6712 when scoring at least four

runs. Seattle stayed in the playoff

Continued from C1 "There are clearly high expectations

ger the prey," McClendon said. chase because ofits pitchers. "They're the hunters now, and The Mariners led the majors

and we need to start acting like an elite

with being hunters there is a

basketball team and I think the guys get that," said Neil Olshey, the Blazers' general manager.

responsibility to me, this or-

with a 3.17 ERA, setting a new

day when the Blazers held their annual

club record. Their bullpen was the best in baseball, anand how you go about your chored by Fernando Rodney's business this offseason is very league-leading 48 saves. Herimportant. That's the message nandez had a remarkable run

media day before the start of training

I sent."

ganization, your teammates,

Lillard echoed the sentiment on Mon-

camp. "People expect us to be a good team because of what happened last year," Lillard said. "We need to expect that of ourselves." The Blazers exercised their fourth-

year option on Lillard, who made the All-Star team in his second year in the league last season. Lillard averaged 20.7 points, 5.6 assists and 3.5 rebounds. Lillard will be backed up by Blake, who is embarking on his third stint with

Steve Dykes/The Associated Press

Portland's Damian Lillard answers questions during media day in Portland onMonday.

the Blazers after Mo Williams' departure. Williams, a free agent, landed with Minnesota.

Blake, who became a fan favorite during his first two stints in Portland

Trail Blazers preseasonschedule

Both are known for their quirky humor, although Lopez joked that the two big men are on "opposite ends of the crazy spectrum." Coach Terry Stotts suggested that he

may look for ways to get Lopez and Ka-

Calls Desert seem bleak.

Then a

p h on e r i ngs.

Then another. And anoth-

er. Coaches are calling in their results. The odds have moved in our favor.

Welcome to the sports department at T h e B u l letin, where, because of the steep

teams-to-staff ratio, h i gh school coaches and statisticians are relied upon greatly to help us get prep sports reports in the paper. Thanks to those coaches' calls, in the

next morning's newspaper you will read about how your favorite local high school team fared. Coaches and stat keepers often serve as our eyes, al-

lowing The Bulletin to be a

P ortland bettered its record by 21 shey said the addition of Kaman means

The Blazers start workouts for this

season Wednesday. They open the preseason on Oct. 7 at Utah, and the reg-

ular-seasonopener is on Oct. 29 when Portland hosts Oklahoma City. "I definitely feel like we can be one of the top teams in the league," Aldridge said. "It starts tomorrow."

and scores, come from those racked up but also which reports." players led the way. You are victories than the last four Invaluable to us are those reading the names of high y ears combined an d t h e calls. And we especially ap- school athletes whose efforts most single-season wins in preciate the ex traordinary and exploitsdeserve some program history. Yet even efforts coaches sometimes recognition. "High school sports is not during those down sea- make to get through to us sons, Winslow was reliably — like persistently battling necessarily where kids get prompt. poor cell service on a road recruited (to play), but they "Part of it is, I'm a teacher," trip, making repeated calls can shine in their school enWinslow says. "Every game until, f i nally, w e c o nnect. vironment with their friends should be a learning experi- Win, lose, draw or drubbing, and families," McFadden ence. Getting that in the pa- they are there to assist. Not says. "They care. You want to per, having the kids realize only are we able to report spread it around. It's importthat the final score may not a score, not only can we in- ant they come back and feel be what we wanted but the clude statistics and a recap good and special." "I think w hen t hey s ee effort on the field was your of an event's highlights and/ best ... you know what'? It's or key plays, we are able to their names in print, it just in print. We can sit here and get coaches' reactions. We solidifies that," says Winslow, see that we are 4-0-1, and are able to get the story of a who concedes that he enjoys that has never happened." game, meet or tournament. seeing even his own name in the paper. "It's huge. It's a big boost. Everyone wants someAnd we especially appreciate the extraordinary thing positive coming from it, win or lose. Seeing your name efforts coaches sometimes make to get the paper is just a huge through to us — like persistently battling poor in boost."

presence at each contest on

Cell SerViCe Ona rOad triP, making rePeated

any given afternoon or evening. They relay information

calls until, finally, we connect. Win, lose, draw

and answer our questions be-

two earned runs or fewer. There is reason to believe

A's won in Texas on the final day. It was the best mark for

the Mariners' pitching staff

Or drubbing, they are there to aSSiSt.

Most days, we reporters are

sealed off from the world once midafternoon rolls around. We keep tabs on Central Ore-

fore we construct an account that we hope tells the story

gon teams better than anyone else — often with the help of

For some coaches, those And at times, we are able to reports are more than just uncover a story worth digbuilding blocks. printed scores and high- ging deeper into — one we Fortunately, t h er e ar e lights. Just ask Ron Kidder. m ight feature i n a f u t u r e "It's our connection to the edition. coaches like Miki McFadden, now in her third season lead- greater soccer community But perhaps more importing Sisters volleybalL and sports fans in general," ant than how many goals "I just finished watching a says Kidder, the ninth-year were scored i n a n I n t e rgame and have impressions Summit boys soccer coach. mountainConference soccer — clear, recent impressions "That's the greatest asset match, arguably more sig— about who did a good job (of those reports). It's a very nificant than Crook Counin their positions," says Mc- s trong connection t o o u r ty's volleyball record in the Fadden of how she puts to- community. ... We might Tri-Valley Conference, is the gether her phone report. "It's not have a huge turnout (for "who factor" of each phone just fresh on my mind." games), but I do talk soc- call. Fortunately, t h er e ar e cer quite a bit with friends, Because as you read about sources like La Pine girls co-workers,people I meet another S i sters v o lleyball soccer coach Scott Winslow, around town. A lot of what win, you are seeing not just who in his 11th year at the they learned, our successes how many kills the Outlaws

the Internet and social media.

of a particular contest. But without that call, we have no

We are in the business of crafting stories. For 13 high schools and 60 varsity teams,

that cannot be accomplished without the assistance of coaches and statisticians. We

work diligently to provide timely, accurate and insightful reports, which are con-

structed upon foundational building blocks — the dozens of coaches and stat keepers

who take it upon themselves and make it part of their routine to phone in their reports.

Our hats are off to you. — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletirt.com.

mit accomplished that with

goals by Dane Kiger, Michael

assists and C.J. Fritz two for Summit.

"We've been really trying Continued from C1 S cinto an d A l e x B o w l i n . The Storm set a g o al And in the game's final 20 to get other guys involved during the intermission, Kid- minutes, Kiger and Bowlin because we can't just rely der said, to score multiple

each struck again to seal the

goals in the first 15 minutes Storm's fourth straight win. of the second half. SumGalvin finished with three

ers. "I think if they can play team soccer and play possession-oriented soccer,the

open shot is going to come, potentially, from a lot of difon Alex to score goals ev- ferent guys. I think you're ery game,"Kidder said of seeing that with us right his team's variety of scor-

now."

ber swoon. The promise is in

the continued development of youngsters James Paxton, Roenis Elias and Taijuan

Walker. McClendon regularly referred to Paxton as a "game

changer" for the Mariners' rotation. Elias earned a job out betweentheMariners and Se- of spring training after never ahawks in September. pitching above Double-A, then "It was a great experience," won 10 games. Walker might Cano said. "From the begin- be the most talented of the ning of the year, we fought to three and his final start of the the end. A lot of people doubted season was a glimpse of that that we would be here. It's sad potential: eight innings, one that wehave to go home." run allowed and six strikeouts Seattle ultimately could not against Toronto. fans were splitting their focus

Hitting Continued from C1 Hall of Famer George Brett says times have changed from the days fastballers like No-

lan Ryan and Goose Gossage stood out. "Now a lot of guys throw 95 (mph) or higher," Brett said. "Every team has them." For much of the season, most

games seemed like throwback nights — and not just because of vintage-jersey promotions. Colorado's Justin Morneau won the National League batting title at .319 — the lowest

for a batting champion in either league since the late Tony Gwynn hit .313 for San Diego in 1988.

Los Angeles Angels star Mike Trout had 111 RBIs, the

fewest for an American League leader in a full season since Baltimore's Lee May had 109 in

A's atRoyals When:5:07 p.m.today TV:TBS Pitchers:Athletics, Jon

Lester (16-11, 2.46 ERA, 220 Kswith Oakland and

Boston). Royals, James Shields (14-8, 3.21 ERA). Scouting report:The Royals took two of three in Oakland and three of four in Kansas City in AugUst.

... Shields allowed five runs in14 innings in two starts vs. Oakland, getting a win and a no-decision. He is 6-4 with a 3.82 ERA in15

career starts vs. the A's.... Lester is 9-3 with a1.84

ERA in13 career starts vs. the Royals, winning all three this season. executives that when it comes

1976. Just 12 players had 100 or to home runs,30 is the new 40 more RBIs, down from a record now that bulked-up boppers no 59 in 1999. longer are the norm. "Before,itused to be are we "PED use is way down," San facing 'that guy,' and if we're Diego Padres manager Bud not we've got a good shot out Black said. "I do think that has there,"Granderson said aftera knocked down some of the avfrustrating first year with the erages based on what we know New York Mets. "This season about PEDs and how they afI've noticed each team you go fectaplayer'sperformance." up against you're always facWith 95 homers, Kansas ing 'that guy,' and it tends to be City became the first AL team three, if not four or five times to reach the postseason despite out of the rotation." being last in the majors in long And gas comes out of the balls since the 1959 Chicago bullpen, too. Dominant closers White Sox hit 97, according to and setup men have led to a STATS. Oakland pitchers had .241 batting average from the a .290 opponents' on-base perseventh inning on — MLB's centage, the lowest in the big lowest since STATS' records leagues since the 1981 Houston began in 1974. There were just Astros and the lowest in the AL 116 complete games — the sec- since 1972. ond-lowest ahead of 112 in 2007 "The sport is changing. and down from 1,089 in 1974. Pitching has been dominant," "There are so many teams outgoing baseball commissionthat are bringing in guys er Bud Selig said. "There are throwing 95-98 (mph), more a lot of theories about it. But than I've ever seen," San Fran- everything does go in cycles. cisco Giants manager Bruce There are a lot of good, young Bochy said. hitters coming in, so I'm not Teams averaged 4.07 runs

Storm

could be just as strong next

the club since 2007, when the season. Hernandez is the faMariners won 88 games, but vorite for his second American was truly the first time Seattle League Cy Young Award and was in playoff contention to will not yet be 29 on Opening the final days since 2003, when Day. Seattle has a team option not even winning 93 games to bring back Hisashi Iwakuwas good enough to reach the ma after he won a career-high postseason. 15 games despite a Septemhelped put a winning product on the field in 2014, the biggest accomplishment this season was making baseball relevant again. In atown with the reigning Super Bowl champions,

helm has guided the Hawks to a 4-0-1 record — more

Continued from C1 The odds of touching on every program on the High

seven innings and giving up

forcing a one-game playoff against Oakland when the

and a longer-term deal. Olshey and

wins over the previous season for the man on the floor at the same time. Ol- biggest turnaround in franchise history. that Aldridge can almost always have a 7-footer on the floor with him. "They chose to be here," Olshey said of the summer additions. "They had multiple options. They believed in what we're doing." Aldridge reiterated that he plans to

87-75 record,missing out on

While All-Stars Robinson Cano and Felix H ernandez

points, 7.9 rebounds and 1.4 blocks over Both Lopez and Kaman will provide the levity in the Blazers' locker room.

during the summer of 16 consecutive starts pitching at least

re-sign with the Blazers next summer when he can command more money

6 p.m. team owner Paul Allen visited with Aland kept a home in the area, signed Tue, Oct. 7 at Utah a two-year deal with the Blazers this Thu, Oct. 9 vs. Utah 7 p.m. dridge and his agent this summer to summer. Last season he averaged 6.9 S un, Oct. 12 vs. L.A. Clippers 6 p.m . pledge the team's commitment to the points and 5.6 assists, splitting the sea- Fri, Oct. 17 vs. MaccabI Haifa (Israel) 7 p.m. three-time All-Star. son between the Los Angeles Lakers Aldridge had career highs with an av6 p.m. erage Tue,0ct.21 atoenver and Golden State Warriors. of 23.2 points and 11.1 rebounds 7 p.m. last season with Portland, his eighth The Blazers also brought in Kaman, Wed,Oct.22 atL.A.Lakers 7: 3 0 p.m.with the team. a burly 7-footer who has averaged 11.7 Fri, Oct. 24 at L.A. Clippers an 11-year NBA career. He will back up Robin Lopez.

Seattle finished with an

concerned about it."

per game, the lowest since 1981 And with all that pitching, and down from 5.14 in 2000, strikeouts per game set a rewhen sluggers ruled the field cord for the seventh straight and pe r f ormance-enhanc-season. Teams averaged 7.70 ing drugs were rampant. The pergame, up from 4.77in 1979. "Guys don't care if they homers-per-game average of 0.87 has not been this low since strike out. I used to get (angry) 1992.

when I struck out," Brett said.

Agents trying to sell teams "Now strikeouts are part of the on their position players tell game."


C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 NASDAQ ~ 0

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1,800

16,400 . A

172

171

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167

1 65 165 165

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NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,015 1,655 Pvs. Volume 2,860 1,576 Advanced 1297 1180 Declined 1834 1499 New Highs 29 37 New Lows 1 78 1 3 1

169

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1,850":. 8"

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16,000

Athlon Energy A

HIGH LOW CLOSE 17107.69 16934.43 17071.22 DOW Trans. 8506.56 8392.18 8498.08 DOW Util. 551.11 544.37 550.79 NYSE Comp. 10766.13 10687.93 10749.05 NASDAQ 4515.24 4464.44 4505.85 S&P 500 1981.28 1964.04 1977.80 S&P 400 1385.19 1373.40 1383.40 Wilshire 5000 20885.67 20688.46 20842.01 Russell 2000 1120.55 1107.81 1117.91

DOW

CHG. -41.93 +1 3.17 +2.84 -49.83 -6.34 -5.05 -2.76 -43.66 -1.42

%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD -0.24% T L +2.98% $.0.16% T L L +14.83% $.0.52% T +12.28% -0.46% T +3.35% -0.14% T +7.88% L -0.25% T +7.00% -0.20% T +3.04% -0.21% T +5.76% -0.13% T -3.93%

160 J

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2014

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Source: Factset NAME TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO Alaska Air Group A LK 30.13 ~ 50.49 4 3. 8 5 -.57 -1.3 T T Better quarter? Avista Corp A VA 25.88 ~ 33.60 3 0. 6 7 -.06 -0.2 T T BAC 13 . 60 ~ 18.03 1 7. 0 1 -.02 -0.1 T L Financial analysts anticipate that Bank of America BarrettBusiness B BS I 39 . 47 o — 102 . 20 40 . 66 + . 46 +1.1 L T Walgreen's latest earnings and Boeing Co BA 113.34 ~ 144. 5 7 12 8.77 + . 08 +0.1 L L revenue improved from a year Cascade Baacorp CA C B 4 . 1 1 ty 6.35 5.1 1 +.1 1 + 2.2 L T ago. T ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.53 ~ 3 0.3 6 25.17 -.17 -0.7 T The drugstore chain operator, ty Columbia Sportswear COLM 28.94 44.98 35 .62 -1.52 -4.1 T T due to report fiscal fourth-quarter CostcoWholesale COST 109.50 ~ 1 27 .78125.32 -.22 -0.2 T L financial results today, has Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ~ 18.70 14. 1 1 +. 7 3 +5.5 L L benefited from growing revenue FLIR Systems F LIR 27.91 ~ 37.42 31. 6 7 ... ... T this year. The company is feeling Hewlett PacKard HP Q 2 0.25 ~ 38. 2 5 34.97 -.40 -1.1 T T pressure from shareholders after Intel Corp I NTC 22.48 ~ 35.56 34.9 0 +. 6 4 $ .1.9 L T

lowering its forecast for the earnings it expects following the planned combination with health and beauty retailer Alliance Boots

MDU Resources Mentor Graphics MicrosoftCorp

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Business barometer The Institute for Supply Management releases its latest Chicago business barometer index today. Economists expect that the index, a gauge of business activity, fell in September to 62 from 64.3 in August. The index was 56.3 in September 2013. An index reading above 50 indicates economic activity is growing. Readings below 50 indicate the economy is contracting.

Chicago business barometer seasonally adjusted

70 65.5

63.0

Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific

64.3 62 6

62.0

60

-.06 -0.4 T T +. 2 4 +0.5 L L +. 0 2 + 0.3 L L -.34 -2.4 T T + . 0 4 +0.1 L T MEN T 19.14 ~ 24.31 2 0. 9 2 -.18 -0.9 T T MSFT 3 2.70 — o 47.57 46 .44 + . 03 +0.1 L L N KE 69.85 ~ 89.99 8 9. 1 2 -.38 -0.4 T L J WN 54.90 ~ 71.45 6 8. 6 6 -.28 -0.4 T T N WN 40.05 ~ 47.50 42.7 1 +. 1 3 + 0.3 L T T PCAR 53.59 ~ 68.81 5 7. 2 0 -.38 -0.7 T P LNR 1.81 ~ 5.30 3.87 +. 1 6 $.4.3 L T PCL 38.70 o — 50.0 8 39. 25 + . 1 2 +0.3 L T PCP 225.00 ~ 275. 0 9 23 7.25 -2.25 -0.9 T T SWY 26.69 ~ 36.03 34. 3 8 +. 0 3 +0.1 L T SCHN 2 3.14 o — 33.3 2 22 . 7 8 -.76 -3.2 T T SHW 170.63 — 0 22 1 .44221.44 + . 65 + 0.3 L L S FG 54.29 ~ 69.51 6 3. 4 2 -.07 -0.1 T T S BUX 67.93 ~ 82.50 75.2 7 +. 1 0 +0 .1 L T T QNT 6.80 ~ 21.48 1 9. 4 3 -.20 -1.0 T T UMP Q 15.56 ~ 19.65 16. 5 9 +. 1 1 +0.7 L T U SB 35.69 ~ 43.92 4 1. 7 3 -.14 -0.3 T T WA F D 20.08 ~ 2 4.5 3 20.60 -.02 -0.1 T T WF C 4 0.07 ~ 5 3.8 0 51.69 -.18 -0.3 T L W Y 2 7 .48 ~ 34.60 3 2.2 5 -.07 -0.2 T T K EY 11.05 ~ K R 3 5 .13 ~ L SCC 4.17 ~ L PX 12.71 ~ MDU 27 . 35 o —

14.70 52.96 9.19 18.96 36.0 5

1 3.4 3 51. 9 7 7.56 1 3. 9 5 27. 76

:::"'"" Dave & Buster's IPO Dave 8 Buster's initially went public in 1997, but was bought out by Wellspring Capital Partners and HBK Main Street Investors in 2006. The chain was sold four years later to private equity firm Oak Hill Capital. Dave & Buster's expects to list on the Nasdaq under the ticker 14

PLAY

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The company, formed in 1982, has 70 locations in 27 states and Canada and plans to expand overseas in 2016. Expected ticker: PLAY

IPO history: Initially went public in 1997, taken private in 2006 Size of offering:approx. 5.9 million shares at an expected price $16 to $18

50 A

T +19. 5 +4 0 .2 1 063 10 0 . 5 0 T +8.8 +19. 8 25 8 10 1. 2 7 L + 9.2 +21 . 5 66640 20 0 .20f T -56.2 - 42.8 11 7 1 7 0 . 7 2 L -5.7 +10.0 3280 1 9 2 . 92 T -2.3 -13.9 1022 T -8.4 +5 . 0 26 2 1 8 0 . 56f T -9.5 + 2 3.2 1 9 6 2 3 0. 5 6 L +5.3 +9.0 11 3 3 2 8 1. 4 2 L -14.1 - 2.3 1 1 6 6 1 T +5.2 +1.8 369 23 0. 4 0 L +25 . 0 +6 8 .9 9 025 1 3 0. 6 4 L +34.5 $. 5 0.2 28487 17 0 . 9 0 T +0.1 +21. 1 6931 13 0 .26 L + 31. 5 +2 7 .9 1 644 17 0 .74f T +37. 7 +6 6.4 1 099 3 6 T -24.6 -18.2 2448 cc T - 9.1 + 1 . 6 1 040 1 8 0 . 7 1 T -13.1 - 9.3 47 2 1 7 0 . 20 L +24.1 +45 .0 25644 18 1 .24f L +13. 3 +2 8 .6 7 184 30 0 . 9 6 L +11.1 +24 . 1 994 18 1 . 32 T - 0.3 + 5 . 5 66 20 1. 8 4 T -3.3 + 5. 1 2 0 11 1 6 0. 8 8 L +52. 4 +9 6. 3 2 5 2 6 5 T -15.6 - 13.6 1072 3 3 1 . 76 T - 11.9 + 4. 2 7 3 3 1 9 0 . 1 2 L +17. 9 +2 0 .9 73 8 3 0.92 T -30.3 - 12.4 375 d d 0 . 75 L +20.7 +22 .1 43 0 2 8 2. 2 0 T -4.3 +16.7 1 2 7 1 3 1 .10f T -4.0 -1.3 3153 29 1 . 04 L +133 .0 +1 40.3 1922 cc T -13.3 + 6 . 5 1 7 78 2 4 0. 6 0 T +3.3 +17 . 2 4 0 95 1 4 0 . 9 8 T -11.6 + 2 . 7 3 2 8 1 3 0 . 59f T +13. 9 +2 7 .8 9 323 13 1 . 4 0 T + 2.2 +15. 4 3 1 31 2 5 1 . 16f

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8 AP

2014 Source: Factset

AmdFocus

SelectedMutualFunds

AP

BBH Core Select's assets have nearly doubled to $6.3 billion MarhetSummary in the last two years, according Most Active to Morningstar. The fund has NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG slumped since leading its peers S&P500ETF 847775 197.54 -.36 in 2012. FordM BkofAm iShEMkts Petrobras

JanusCap iShBrazil Apple Inc s 8 iPVix rs RiteAid

806911 666395 663066 529451 502452 479706 474280 434023 432939

15.11 17.01 41.56 14.70 14.70 43.72 100.11 30.81 4.95

-1.22 -.02 -.86 -1.76 -1.19 -2.77 -.64 +1.44 -.27

BBH CoreSelN d VALUE

BBTEX B L EN D GR OWTH

Gainers NAME AmbitBio

L AST CHG 1 5.34 + 7 .14 EinsteinN 2 0.15 + 6 .76 LookSmt rs 2 .45 +.82 RadaElec 3 .67 +1 . 1 0 AMAG Pll 2 9.72 + 6 .54 DrmWksA 2 8.18 + 5 .82 AthlonEn 58.32 + 11.59 BS IBM96 5 0.20 +9 . 5 8 Viggle n 4 .01 +.74 TibcoSft 2 3.65 + 4 .14

Losers NAME

Exchange: Nasdaq

%C H G +8 7 . 1 +5 0 .5 oDc +50 . 3 83 +4 2 . 8 +2 8 .2 673 +2 6 .0 MomingstarOwnershipZone™ + 2 4 .8 e Fund target represents weighted +2 3 . 6 Q +22 . 6 average of stock holdings +2 1 .2 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings

CATEGORY Large Blend

L AST C H G %CHG MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * ** * r t -7.01 -50.2 TonixPhm 6.95 Civeo n 12.84 -12.63 -49.6 ASSETS $5,953 million -1.94 -22.6 CTC Media 6.66 EXP RATIO 1.00% Alcobra 15.91 -3.60 -18.5 MANAGER Timothy Hartch -2.41 -18.2 Endologix 10.86 SINCE 2005-10-01 RETURNS3-MO -0.6 Foreign Markets YTD +4.8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +11.9 -36.68 -.83 Paris 4,358.07 3-YR ANNL +19.0 London 6,646.60 -2.79 -.04 5-YR-ANNL +14.9 -67.64 -.71 Frankfurt 9,422.91 Hong Kong23,229.21 -449.20 -1.90 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 44,898.19 +13.86 + . 03 Berkshire Hathaway Inc Class A Milan 20,526.11 -269.26 -1.29 Tokyo 16,310.64 +80.78 + . 50 Comcast Corp Class A Stockholm 1,392.39 -3.81 -.27 U.S. Bancorp -47.00 -.88 Wells Fargo & Co Sydney 5,269.60 Zurich 8,776.73 +2.37 + . 03 Novartis AG ADR

J A 52-week range

$26.91 Vol.:41.3m (22.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$5.68 b

CVEO Close:$12.84%-12.63 or -49.6% The energy industry workforce logistics company said it will move to Canada and it expects a downturn in the fourth quarter. $30

M

8

J J A 52-week range

S

$12.76~ $ 28.46 $58.38 PE : 94.1 Vol.:22.2m (14.8x avg.) P E: ... Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$1.37 b Yie l d : 1.0%

Nl Close:$40.84%2.26 or 5.9% The gas and utility company plans to split off its natural gas pipeline business into a stand-alone publicly traded company. $42 40 38

General Cable

BGC Close: $15.45 T-1.07 or -6.5% The cableproductscompany won't proceed with a proposed $250 milhon debt offenng, mting uncertain and weak market conditions. $30 25 20

A 52-week range

8

J $38.89~

$4 1.46

Vol.:8.6m (4.5x avg.)

A 52-week range

J 81498 ~

8 $34.6 1

PE:2 3 . 3 Vol.:2.6m (3.5x avg.)

Mkt. Cap:$12.88 b

Yie l d: 2.5% Mkt. Cap:$752.12 m

P E: .. . Yi eld: 4.7%

DreamWorka Animation DWA Tibco Software Close:$28.18L5.82 or 26.0% Media reports suggest the animation studio is in discussions with telecommunications company SoftBank about a possible deal. $30 20 15

TIBX Close:$23.65 L4.14 or 21.2% The cloud computing software company is selling itself to private equity firm Vista Equity Partners for about $3 98 billion

$24 22

25

20

J

A

8

$79.29~

8

52-week range

$36.D1

Vol.:19.3m (13.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.17 b

A

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52-week range PE: . Yield:.

Amag Pharma.

AMAG Close:$29.72%6.54 or 28.2% The drug developer is buying the women's health care business of Lumara, gaining the key preterm birth prevention drug Makena. $30 25

$18.28~

$26.98

Vol.: 72.8m (17.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $3.92 b

PE : 65.7 Yield: ...

Clovis Oncology

CLVS Close:$48.08A5.59 or 13.2% The biot echnology company presented positive midstage study results for its developing ovarian cancer treatment, Rucaparib. $50 40

20

$16.49 Vol.:4.4m (11.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $652.59 m

8

J A 52-week range

$36.33~ Vol.:2.3m (3.1x avg.) Yie ld: ..Mkt. Cap:$1.63 b

8

$93.33 P E: .. .

$29.84

PE: . .

Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.48 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3-month T-bill . 0 1 .0 1 6-month T-bill . 0 3 .03 52-wk T-bill .09 .09 2-year T-note . 5 7 .5 8 5-year T-note 1.76 1.80 10-year T-note 2.48 2.53 30-year T-bond 3.17 3.21

BONDS

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 25 . 52 -.82+5.8 +13.2 +16.0+12.5 A A A CaplncBuA m 59.74 -.17 +5.3 +10.2 +12.5 +9.4 A 8 A The price of CpWldGrlA m 46.50 -.26 +4.3 +11.6 +17.4+10.0 8 8 D crude oil rose EurPacGrA m 48.75 -.38 -0.7 +6.0 +13.2 +6.9 A 8 8 more than $1 FnlnvA m 54. 2 6 - .14 +6.2 +16.3 +21.1+14.2 D C C per barrel for GrthAmA m 45.97 -.11 +6.9 +16.4 +22.2+14.2 C 8 D the third time in IncAmerA m 21.49 -.84 +6.5 +12.4 +14.8+12.0 A 8 A the last four InvCoAmA m 39.77 -.14 +9.6 +20.3 +21.9+14.2 A 8 C days and NewPerspA m38.20 -.21 +1.7 +9.7 +17.3+11.4 C 8 8 reached its WAMutlnvA m42.82 -.85 +8.0 +17.9 +20.5+15.8 8 C A highest settleDodge &Cox Income 13.81 +.81 +4.6 + 5.8 +4.9 +5.3 A A 8 ment price in IntlStk 45.33 -.54 +5.3 +12.5 +17.7 +9.5 A A A Stock 180.89 -.57 +8.1 +20.5 +26.0+16.0 A A A nearly two Fidelity Contra 101. 4 2 - . 18 +6.6 +17.1 +20.7+15.8 8 C 8 weeks. Natural ContraK 101 . 43 -.18+6.7 +17.2 +20.9+16.0 8 C 8 gas also rose. LowPriStk d 49.81 -.11 +3.8 +11.7 +20.9+15.9 D D 8 Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 70.48 -.17 +8.6 +19.3 +22.0+15.6 A 8 A FraakTemp-Franklio Income C m 2. 51 .. . + 5 .8 + 11.2 +13.1+10.6 A A A IncomeA m 2. 4 8 -. 81 +6.3 +11.4 +13.7+11.2 A A A Oakmarb Intl I 25.80 -.11 -5.0 -1.7 +16.8+10.7 E A A Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 70 -.86+5.6 +15.2 +18.0+13.1 D E D RisDiv8 m 18 . 50 - .85+4.9 +14.3 +17.0+12.1 D E E RisDivC m 18 . 38 -.86+4.9 +14.3 +17.2+12.3 D E E SmMidValA m45.65 -.16 +3.4 +12.2 +18.7+12.4 D E E SmMidValB m38.41 -.14 +2.8 +11.3 +17.7+11.5 D E E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.8 9 - . BB+4.7 +13.3 +20.3+13.7 E C C Exchange GrowStk 54.9 8 - . 14 +4.6 +16.7 +22.7+16.9 C A A The dollar was HealthSci 69.3 3 +.10+19.9 +30.5 +37.2+26.8 8 A A little changed Newlncome 9. 5 2 ... +4 .4 + 4 .6 + 3.2 +4.4 C C D against other Vanguard 500Adml 182.49 -.45 +8.6 +19.3 +22.0+15.7 A 8 A major 500lnv 182.49 -.45 +8.5 +19.1 +21.9+15.5 8 8 8 currencies. It CapOp 51.63 -.11 +11.8 +19.9 +26.7+16.4 A A A was nearly flat Eqlnc 31.30 -.87 +7.2 +16.2 +20.9+16.2 C C A against the IntlstkldxAdm 27.45 -.26 +0.3 +4.5 +11.5 NA 8 C British pound, StratgcEq 32.30 -.82 +7.7 +19.3 +26.0+18.7 A A A up slightly TgtRe2020 28.47 -.87 +5.0 +10.0 +12.8+10.0 A A A against the Tgtet2025 16.55 -.84 +5.1 +10.7 +14.1+10.6 A 8 8 Japanese yen TotBdAdml 10.79 +.81 +4.2 +4.0 +2.5 +4.0 C D D and down Totlntl 16.41 -.16 +0.2 +4.4 +11.4 +6.0 8 D D slightly against TotStlAdm 49.50 -.11 +7.4 +17.7 +22.2+15.9 C 8 A the euro. TotStldx 49.48 -.12 +7.3 +17.5 +22.0+15.7 C 8 A USGro 30.63 -.86 +6.8 +17.9 +22.1+15.0 8 8 C Welltn 39.75 -.87 +6.7 +13.0 +15.3+11.5 A A A

T L

T T

-0.01 L -0.04 T -0.05 T -0.04 T

L L L L

L .33 L 1.40 T 2.63 T 3.69

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

h5Q HS

FUELS

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

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

.01 .03 .09

...

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.02 3.06 -0.04 T L T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.41 4.42 -0.01 T T Barclays USAggregate 2.36 2.34 +0.02 T L L PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.16 6.03 +0.13 L L L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.06 4.06 .. . T L T YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 2.05 2.06 -0.01 T L L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.10 3.05 +0.05 L L L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

FAMILY

PCT 6.13 5.64 4.72 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 4.43 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 4.34 redemption fee.Source: Mominestar.

Civeo

20

50

NiSource

Y TD 1YR V O L QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV

DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredcr paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafter stock split, co regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared cr paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared cr paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value cn ex-eistributicn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 8 clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.

Dave & Buster's Entertainment 52.6

ATHL

Close:$58.32L11.59 or 24.8% The oil and natural gas company is being bought by Encana for $5.93 billion in an effort to tap into the booming Permian Basin. $60

J A 52-week range

The restaurant and arcade chain, Dave & Buster's Entertainment, set the price for its expected initial public stock offering on Monday. The parent company of the restaurant and arcade chain, Dave& Buster's, plans an initial public offering of approximately 5.9 million shares in its return to the public markets. The IPO is expected to price between $16 and $18 per share.

EURO 1.2692

) 'p3

After opening sharply lower, the stock market recovered the bulk of its losses Monday to close the day with only modest declines. Originally stocks fell sharply as investors reacted to a growing number of clashes between police and pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong, a world financial center. That's on top of the geopolitical worries investors have had to face in Ukraine and Iraq. Hong Kong's stock market fell nearly 2 percent because of the protests. The Dow Jones industrial average was down as much as 178 points in the first hour of trading, but ended the session down roughly 42 points.

'

StocksRecap

175

170

1,900

+

Dow jones industrials

.

index. The 20-city index increased 8.1 percent in June from 12 months earlier. It rose 9.4 percent in May.

$94.57

Close: 17,071.22 Change: -41.93 (-0.2%)

16,920" ""' 10 DAYS "

.

CRUDE DIL

p4

3.47 5.09 2.36 6.11 4.55 1.57 3.29

CLOSE PVS. 94.57 93.54 1.60 1.56 2.70 2.70 4.15 3.98 2.70 2.66

%CH. %YTD +1.10 -3.9 +0.51 -1 6.1 +0.13 -1 2.1 -1.8 +3.14 +1.29 -3.2

CLOSE PVS. 1217.50 1214.10 17.52 17.48 1307.80 1302.00 3.05 3.03 789.30 783.55

%CH. %YTD + 0.28 + 1 .3 +0.21 -9.4 -4.6 +0.45 +0.69 -11.3 +0.73 +1 0.0

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.61 1.58 +1.58 +1 9.7 Coffee (Ib) 1.85 1.85 +66.7 Corn (bu) 3.26 3.23 +0.85 -22.8 Cotton (Ib) 0.62 0.62 -0.67 -26.7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 328.90 327.20 +0.52 -8.7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.44 1.44 + 0.21 + 5 . 5 Soybeans (bu) 9.24 9.10 +1.46 -29.6 Wheat(bu) 4.81 4.74 +1.48 -20.5 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6250 -.0001 -.01% 1.6133 Canadian Dollar 1.1 1 49 -.0007 -.06% 1.0301 USD per Euro 1.2692 +.0009 +.07% 1.3515 JapaneseYen 109.43 + . 0 7 + .06% 9 8 . 30 Mexican Peso 13. 4 948 +.0416 +.31% 13.1705 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6839 +.0110 +.30% 3.5538 Norwegian Krone 6 . 4413 -.0130 -.20% 5.9956 South African Rand 11.2814 +.0536 +.48% 10.0944 Swedish Krona 7.2 4 06 -.0281 -.39% 6.4291 Swiss Franc .9509 -.0005 -.05% . 9 061 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1459 +.0045 +.39% 1.0734 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1500 +.0220 +.36% 6.1183 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7672 +.0096 $..12% 7.7545 Indian Rupee 61.690 +.530 +.86% 62.505 Singapore Dollar 1.2748 -.0001 -.01% 1.2563 South KoreanWon 1056.28 +7.26 +.69% 1075.54 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.49 + . 1 5 +.49% 29.56


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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

DEEDS Deschutes County • Further 2 Development LLC to Jeffrey W.Greiner and Maura Elkin, Silver Ridge PUD,Lot15, $356,500 • Sage Springs LLC to KWDSLLC,Boyds Acreage, Tract 3, $900,000 • Steven O. Larkin to Elizabeth A.Costa, Wildflower, Lot 5, $230,000 • Lois A. and Harold L. Schudel, trustees of the Harold and Lois Schudel Joint RevocableTrust etc., to Roberta E.Valladao, trustee of theValladao Family Trust, Township 14, Range13, Sections 6 and 7, Lots 6-7, Partition Plat1991-77, Parcels 2-3, $1,550,000 • John Teutschman to Jody Shaffer ,Paulina Peaks, Phase 2, Lot 34, $185,000 • Josephine B. BergmanFiscus to AaronS. Bergman, Partition Plat 2004-35, Parcel 2, $155,000 • Deutsche BankNational Trust, co-trustee etc., to Marcia Legg, OrionEstates, Lot12, Block15, $282,000 • SFI CascadeHighlands LLC to GregWelch Construction Inc., Tetherow, Phase1, Lot 90, $190,000 • Federal HomeLoan Mortgage Corporation to Carrie S. Matsushita andRobertG.Bumstead, Westside Pines,Phase2, Lot14, $310,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Travis and Brittany Kohler, Parkland, Lot 73, $241,950 • Triad HomesInc. to Pacwest II LLC,Sundance Meadows, Lots12-17,34, $420,000 • Mark E. Birge and Tenley N. Webb toDebbra K. Summers, Ridge atEagle Crest 3, Lot12, $198,500 • Gregory A. andKacie S. Pitnerto Benjamin M. Moen Arnold, HiddenGlen, Phase 2, Lot13, $230,400 • Hayden HomesLLCto PamelaR.Nodland,Megan Park, Phase1, Lot 28, $190,301 • Federal HomeLoan Mortgage Corporation to Brian T.Maloneyand Brittini K. Borden,Cascade Gardens, Phases1 and2, Lot 9, $224,900 • Carrie L. McKayto Robert C. Groninger, Partition Plat 2003-54, Parcel1, $150,500 • Larry E. and Patricia M. Sherrickto Gary Greenwood, OregonWater Wonderland, Unit No. 1, Lot28and 29, Block6, $175,000 • Cherie G. andNancy L. Echelbarger to David M. Jacobs, StonegatePUD, Phase1, Lot11, $283,000 • Harvey E. and Catherine A. Moen, trustees of the Harvey E.andCatherine A. Moen Community Property Revocable Living Trust, to Ash &Adams LLC, McCafferys First Addition, Lots12-16, Block 3, $294,000 • Jonathan N. andRoberta P. Kenney,trustees of the Jonathan N.andRoberta P. KenneyLiving Trust, to Robert H. andAlexandra D. Pfister, Enchantment on Deschutes, Lot 6, $610,000 • Sonnie L. Grossmanto Clayton F.and Pichit Horn, Valley ViewEstates, Lot1, $205,000 • Fletcher C. Chamberlin to Janet Sackin, Shevlin Ridge, Phase5, Lot96, $190,000 • John H. Burton Jr. and Caren L. Bogumil-Burton to Jonathan N.and Roberta P. Kenney,Township 18, Range13, Section18, $560,000

EXECUTIVE FILE

aens u

What:Rogue Guitar Shop LLC What it does:Online sales of electric guitars, amplifiers and special-effects pedals Pictured:Jonathan Brosnan, co-owner

OVBFSBBS CBA B I'8 BX I S

Where:62990 NE18th St.

Employees:Four Phone:844-447-6483 Wehsite:www.rogueguitarshop. com

By Andrew Pollack

seas, the makers of some of

substantial tax benefit. That's because the true value of a drug lies in its patent — which protects it from competition and allows it to be sold at a higher price. Alexion Pharmaceuticals

the world's most lucrative and expensivemedicines areusing

has said that as of this year, certain intellectual property

another tactic to reduce their

for Soliris, its super-expensive drugforrarediseases,isbeing

New York Times News Service MegRoussos/rhe Bulletin

Howdoyou Q •• explain the growth in sales over the past two years? • Jonathan • Brnsnan: We were really aggressive about expansion.... I would open upto new manufacturers to broaden mynet to capture more clients and more sales. Rather than carrying a lot of one item, I'd carry a great variety of items.... I grow by capturing all their clientele. People that follow that brand end up following me because I carry it.

A

0 By JosephDitzler •The Bulletin

Rogue GuitarShop has made a new home ina rambling office and warehouse space on NE 18th Street in Bend, a far cry from its former home at 15 NW Greenwood Ave. "Most of our inventory was in

keeps 8,000 to 10,000 pedals in

stock, along with 30 guitars and 30 square feet down there, and for the amplifiers. "It's crazy the amount of suclast six months we'd been working with product up to our backs," said cess he's had," said Compass Jonathan Brosnan, 26, who coCommercial broker Graham owns the company with his wife, Dent, who worked the transaction Me'kelle Brosnan, 24. with Peter May, also of Compass Two weeks ago, the 2~/2-year-old Commercial. company, which sells guitars, amBrosnan attributed Rogue's plifiers and special-effects pedals success to his aggressive style as online, moved into its new home at much as theim proving economy. 62990 NE 18th St. The Brosnans, Even before founding Rogue Guithrough a separate company, Red- tar Shop, Brosnan leveraged his land Group LLC, paid $750,000 credit card to buy and sell electric to buy the building from S.D.M. guitars online, he said. He reinInvestments LLC on Sept. 15, acvested everythingback into the cording to Deschutes County pub- business, except what he needed lic records and Compass Commer- for his family, he said. cial Real Estate, which brokered Rogue Guitar Shop occupies the sale. 3,500 square feet of the total 8,500 The move made sense, and not square-foot building. Two tenants, only from space considerations, lawn care company TruGreen Jonathan Brosnan said. and Boyd Coffee Co., occupy two "I'm confident that I can at least suites. Plus, Brosnan bought and manage the payment for the build- moved an electric guitar maker, ing if anything ever happened. If Taylor McGrath Guitars Inc., the basement; it was about 800

I had to liquidate the inventory at

from Woodland Hills, California,

cost, it would pay for the building," he said. Salesattheshop rosefrom $1.4

to the building in Bend, he said. The brand, although struggling, is popular with musicians who

million in 2012 to $2.2 million last

work with artists like John Mayer,

year, he said. Rogue's strong suit

Jennifer Lopez and Lady Gaga, Brosnan said "Right now, we're trying to re-

is special-effects pedals, Brosnan

said. The company sells products by morethan 160manufacturers worldwide, said Trey Anderson, business manager for Rogue Guitar Shop. Brosnan said Rogue

How importQ •• ant is social media at Rogue Guitar Shop? • Trey Ander• snn:We have 18,000 followers on Instagram.... It's essential.... We can market to18,000 people three times a day without paying

A

for it.

As the Obama administration tries to stop companies

from avoiding taxes by movingtheirheadquartersover-

payments to the government. Take the case of Gilead Sciences, which has come

under severe criticism for the high cost of its in-demand new hepatitis C drug, Sovaldi, which sells for $1,000 a pill, or $84,000 for a typical course of Although Gilead, the developer of Sovaldi, is a U.S. company based in Foster City, California, the patent rights have been transferred to an

$67.5 million to BioMarin

treatment.

Irish subsidiary. So Gilead's Pharmaceutical foravoucher profits from the booming sales that will entitle the cholesterol of Sovaldi are taxed at Iredrugtoafasterreviewby land's rate, which is well below the Food and Drug Adminthe American one. istration. Although RegenBig pharmaceutical eron is based in Tarrytown, companies have done this New York, and BioMarin in for decades, as have some San Rafael, California, the technology companies. Now transaction was between the biotechnology companies are Irish subsidiaries of the two following suit. companies. Transferring individual BioMarin earned the vouchproducts is not as advantaer as a reward for developing a drug for a rare childhood geous, tax-wise, as moving the company's official headdisease. The drug, Vimizim, quarters, which is known as which treats an enzyme dean inversion. Pharmaceutical ficiency called Morquio A companies, including Pfizer, syndrome, will eventuallybe AbbVie, Actavis and Mylan, manufactured mainly in Irehave been particularly active land, the company has said. recently in pursuing this inThe companies in general version strategy, and President declined to be interviewed Barack Obama is trying to about their taxes. But in writrein it in.

ten statements some said that

But for many biotech companies, the transferring of product rights is providing a

they complied with the law andprovidedjobs andvaluable medicines to Americans.

The Associated Press NEW YORK — Card data

of Supervalu and Albertsons shoppersmay be atrisk in another hack, the two supermar-

ket companies said Monday. The companies said that in

jditzler@bendbuffetin.com

ber, malicious software was

Boeing to cut2,000 Seattle jobs

installed on networks that processcreditand debit card

transactions at some of their stores. Albertsons said the mal-

The Seattle Times

Boeing announced Monday

homa, and St. Louis, Mis-

at four Cub Foods stores in Minnesota. The breachcould affect Albertsons stores in California,Idaho, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Oregon, Utah,

Washington and Wyoming; Acme Markets stores in Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania; Jewel-Osco stores in Illinois, Indiana and Iowa; and Shaw's and Star Markets stores in Maine, Mas-

ware may have captured data including account numbers,

sachusetts, New Hampshire,

card expiration dates and the

Supervalu Inc. said it believes the malware was only

three years it will move significant defense work out of the

jetunit.

Puget Sound region in Washington state, affectingthe jobs

The number of layoffs won't be known until Boeing finds

of about2,000 employees.

out how manypeoplerelocate,

— the 767-based Air Force tanker and the 737-based P-8

that processes card transactions at several chains, but it

transferorchoosetoleave.

anti-submarine jet.

believes data was only taken

Some workers with critical

from certain checkout lanes

The jet maker currently employs a total of about 5,200 people in defense work in the region. Boeing's plan will not affect the two major Boeing defense programsbased intheregion

souri. Others may find local jobs at Boeing's commercial

afternoon that over the next

ticals has made Ireland the

Another cardsystem hack at Supervalu,Albertsons

build it, rebrand it, breathe some life into it," Brosnan said. — Reporter:541-617-7815,

skills will be offered relocation to Oklahoma City, Okla-

established certain operations. Regeneron Pharmaceutaxbase forforeign salesof its big-selling eye drug Eylea and for some drugs still in development like the powerful cholesterol-lowering medicine alirocumab. A sign of the times: Regeneron recently agreed to pay

late August or early Septem-

By Dominic Gates

held in Ireland, where it has

names of cardholders atstores in more than a dozen states. Supervalu said the malware

was installed on a network

Rhode Island and Vermont. able to capture card data

from some checkout lanes at four Cub Foods locations in Minnesota because it had not

finished making security improvements at those stores.

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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

HOME

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

The spoon bowls in the mirror frame mimic the arrangement of

flower petals.

Afower that booms from pasticspoons By Linda Turner Griepentrog

sell spoons separately, and at

For The Bulletin

others they can be purchased

Upcyding is all the rage these days, and most anything can have a new life for the better. This whimsical

only in sets with knives and forks, so shop around. If you're using colored spoons, spray the foam

sunburst mirror is made

board to match before be-

ginning the project. Spoons er you save them from Friday also can be spray-painted night ice cream adventures after gluing, but spray befrom plastic spoons. Whethout on the town, or you pur-

fore attaching the mirror to

chase them specifically for this project, people will take

the center. And no one says

a second look at your creation in wonder.

to be a single color. Change colors for each row around

Plastic spoons are available in clear, white and

Thinkstook images Bulletin photo illustration

several colors,so ifyou're purchasing, checkthe dollar store for quantities at rea-

that the flower petals have for a shaded look, or mix

and match the plastic spoons lingering in the back of your utensil drawer for eclectic

colorations.

sonable prices. Some stores

SeeMirror/D5

GARDEN

• Children can bepicky eaters. Herearesome tips and tricks tomake their food fun toeat. By Linda Turner GriepentrogeFor The Bulletin

f you have kids around, you know that getting them to eat healthy foods can sometimes be a challenge. Whether you're packing school lunches, enticing toddlers to eat their veggies or looking for eat-your-heart-out after-school snacks, adding a little fun to the process makes it more likely your little ones will not balk at the good-for-you options. There are some basic principles of making foods more fun to eat, and using one or more tactics might cause your finicky eaters to take a second look. M ake it a cute shape Whether it's a sandwich on whole

wheat bread, a piece of cheese or a veggie or fruit slice, anything is more fun if it's cut into a shape. So get out the cookie cutters and play with the food before it's

By Daniege Brnff Chicago Tribune

also use it to spread mulch and peat moss in your garden, so it's a good all-around

Even if you're tending to the same garden, you'll need fall tool. The rake teeth will different tools in the fall. also help with total yard "In the fall, you're putting cleanup of residue. $7.99 at the garden to bed, so it's amazon.com important to have large S.ttsS- p multipurpose tools to pho„, Spreader work the soil," said Maree Gaetani, director of Fall is the best time gardening relations at to fertilize your plants Vermont-based Gardener's and roots so they'll have a Supply Co. "In the growing base on which to thrive in season, you'reusing smaller the spring, and this is an hand tools around the grow- easy way to do it. You simply ing plants." push this through your lawn, and it evenly and directly Gardex Leaf Scoops spreads the bag of Snap Pac When you have leaves Fertilizer (fertilizer bags are piling up in the yard, this is sold separately and snap into the tool you'll want to grab. the spreader). When you're It was designed to fit inside done, it folds for easy storyard bags or receptacles, age. $49.98 at homedepot. and each scoop fits into your com right or left hand. You can SeeTools/D5

TODAY'S RECIPES

served. Cutting a finished sandwich into

a dogbone shape or a star it from mundane FOOD takes to amusing. Depending

Making green lookgreat: A trio of recipes starring the healthful and delicious pistachio — OrangePistachio and Goat Cheese-Crusted Pork Chops, Pistachio BakedFish, Spiced MapleGlazedPistachios,03

on what you're cutting, metal cookie cutters usually cut thicker portions easier than some plastic cut-

tersand create a m ore defined edge on things such as bread and rolls that have a spongy texture. Scraps from the cut-

tingprocess can be used as smalleraccents around the newly created shape — think mini-stars around a moon or

circular planet — or can simply eaten by the creator. Cookie cutters also work well to cut

Toos to put a garden to bed for the winter

Julie Johnson /The Bulletin

Black olive and creamcheese penguins with carrot feet and beaks are cute as can be, and fun for kids to eat.

sticky rice into shapes to serve with en-

Kid-friondly fare:Stick Stacks, Mini Monster Cheese Balls, Whole Grain Krispie Granola Bars, Birds in aPasta Nest, Penguin Poppers,02

trees or to use in a bento box lunch. Po-

hasn't enjoyed eating doughnut holes or minibagels'? Look for minimuffin pans, tiny cupcake holders, etc., to showcase these smaller food portions. Making minis is also a great way to give kids a "no-thank-you" helping of something bake for about six minutes at 350 de- they don't anticipate liking. grees. Turn and bake for six more minFreezing spoonfuls of yogurt is a fun utes until they're crispy. minisnack. Simply dollop the yogurt

the yogurt thaws. Freezing single grapes is also a pop-

is fun, and there's no committing to a

control, as you can dole out the proper

lentaand cornbread are also good cut-toshape candidates. Make your own baked chips in shapes. Simply cut whole grain tortillas with small cookie cutters, spread them on a lightly greased cookie sheet and

it-in-your-mouth treat, and the tactic works with some other water-laden

fruits as well.

Stickit It's fun to eat foods from a toothpick

or skewer, whether stacked fruit or vegonto a cookie sheet covered with waxed gies, quarter-size pancakes or a desMake it mini paper and put into the freezer. When sert stacking of minicookies. Lining up Eating mini versions of larger things the individual mounds are frozen solid, foods on a stick also helps with portion put them into a zip-top bag and store in

full-size portion. This is the premise the freezer for instant bite-size snack- number of skewers fora serving. behindmany ready-made foods — who ing. They have to be eaten fast, before SeeFun food /D2

Recipe Finder:Ricotta cheesecake,03


D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

FOOD

Next week: Autumn cabbage salads

Funfood

Mini Monster Cheese Balls

Continued from 01

Makes approximately 18 monsters.

Dip it Kids love finger foods. The tactile experience is a fun one for adults, as well. Car-

FOR THE CHEESE BALLS:

8 oz cream cheese, softened 8 oz shredded sharp cheddar cheese

rot sticks with hummus dip,

celery with a nut butter dip and apple slices to dip into caramel sauce are good options to involve kids as active participants in their eating experience.

t/s C finely chopped cooked

bacon For the decorations:

8 oz shredded cheddar cheese Black olive slices Pretzel sticks White cheese slices

Surprise factor

Black food coloring marker

Any food that comes with

a surprise makes it more fun to eat — biting into a cheese ball and finding an olive inside or cutting into a muffin to find fruit or jam in the mid-

SUPPLIES:

1 TBS size ice creamscoop (optional) Small round metal cutter (from a set of round fondant

cutters)

dle is an unexpected treat. It's

also a way moms and dads can "hide" a food that might not be a f avorite and have it consumed with t h e o u t-

er wrapping, perhaps even unnoticed.

Freezing fruit bits in ice cubes and later using them in water not only adds flavor

and nutrition, but also an element of fun as the cubes defrost and the fruit floats in

the drink.

Faces Who wouldn't love a smi-

l ey-face quesadilla w i t h cheese oozing through the grin, eyes and even the nose cutouts of the top tortilla layer? Faces add fun to lots of foods, from pancakes to veggie slices, and are great additions to most sandwiches. Use fruits and vegetables, such as olives, carrot rounds

and grapes to add details or look for a food-safe color pen to create eyeballs and fea-

tures you can draw on to the food. A cup of pudding takes on a whole new appeal if you use raisins, apple bits and grapes

Stir the cheese ball ingredients together. Place the remaining shredded cheddar cheese in a bowl. Scoop out a tablespoonful of the cheese ball mixture and drop it into the bowl of shredded cheese. Toss it around in the e cheese, pressing the cheese onto it until the entire cheese ball is coated in shreds. Repeat until you have a tablespoon of filling rePhotos by Julie Johnson/The Bulletin maining — keepthat for the "glue" Stick Stacks of fruit and minipancakes skewered together make a fun breakfast. to hold the eyes and mouths onto your monsters. Use the small round cutter to cut eyes from the white cheese Stick Stacks slices. Draw pupils onto the eyes Makes12 to14 pancakes. using a black food coloring marker. FOR THE PANCAKES: 3 eggs slices Break pretzel sticks in half. 1 s/4C unbleached all-purpose flour 1 tsp vanilla extract 2 kiwis, peeled and sliced widthwise into Stick one, two or three sticks 3 TBS packed light brown sugar 1 TBS unsalted butter, softened circles coming out of the top of each t/4 C blueberries 1 TBS baking powder 1 C milk mini cheese ball. Use some of the 2 TBS flax meal FOR THE STACKERS: 4skewers remaining cheese ball filling to atPinch of ground cinnamon 4 strawberries, cut widthwise into thin Maple syrup for dipping tach the cheese slice eyes to the pretzel sticks. To make thepancakes: Combinethe eggsandvanilla in a mixing bowl. Add the butter and milk. Slowly add theegg mixture to the flour and other dry Use the round cutter to cut ingredient mixture. Stir until smooth. Chill in the freezer for 5 minutes. small mouths from the black olive Preheat a griddle to low. Lightly spray the griddle with nonstick spray. Ladle the pancake mixture onto the griddle to make 2-inch mini pancakes. slices.Use some of the cheese When the pancakesstart to bubble lightly and the edgesturn golden brown, flip them over. Cook onthe other side for one to two more minutes, until the ball filling to attach them to each pancakes comeoff the griddle easily with a spatula. monster. To make thestacks: Layer the pancakes andfruits on the skewers. Dip in maple syrup and eat one layer at a time. — Adapted from yyww. — Adapted from "BeanAppetit"

hungryhappenings.com

to create a funny face on the

top.

Character bA Any food that can showcase a favorite character or monster i s a n i n s t ant h it. W h ether i t ' s a Bat -

man-shaped sandwich or a zombie fruit bar, there's add-

ed appeal when it's a recognizable favorite.

Faces addfun to lots offoods,from pancakes to veggie slices, and are great additions to most sandwiches. Use fruits and vegetables, such as olives, carrot rounds and grapes to add details or look for a food-safe color pen to create eyeballs and features you can draw on to the food.A cup of pudding takes on a whole new appeal if you use raisins, apple bits and grapes to create a funny face on the top.

Whole Grain Krispie Granola Bars Makes 30 2-inch bars. 1 C shelled sunflower seeds 1 t/s C raw whole almonds 2 C old-fashioned rolled oats 1/3 C toasted wheat germ

1 C dried apricots, diced

'/4 C honey

1 C dried cranberries

2 TBS maple syrup

2 tsp kosher salt

Peanut butter, banana slices and raisins for decoration

3 C brown Rice Krispies cereal

1 C almond or peanut butter

2 tsp ground cinnamon

Heat the oven to350 degrees. Toast the sunflower seedsand almonds on abaking sheet for approximately10 minutes. Removefrom the oven and let cool. Chop thealmonds into small bits. The unexpected Turn the oventemperature down to 325 degrees. Who would havethought Toss the nuts, oats, cereal, wheat germ, apricots, cranberries, salt and cinnamon together in a large bowl of creating a b a nana conand set aside. In a small saucepan, heat the almond or peanut butter, honey andmaple syrup until smooth and coction in a whole wheat hot hot. Do not let it begin to bubble. Pour over the granola mixture and mix well to get everything incorporated and dog bun? It's easy. Just slice a alsogood forfeatures,asare materials to link parts of your "glued" together without crushing the cereal. Cleanhandsarethe best utensils for this. banana lengthwise, separate d ried apricots that can b e creations. Turn the mixture into a 9-by-13-inch baking pan lined with parchment paper and press it evenly and firmly, the halves and "glue" them easily cut. Cream cheese and assorted trying not to crush the cereal. back together with peanut Cookie cutters are a must nut butters make great "glue" Bake for15 to 20 minutes, just until the bars start to color. Remove from the ovenand cool. Cover with plastic or other nut butter. Top with for shaping foods of all sorts. for putting parts together. wrap and refrigerate for several hours until firm. Cut into 2-inch squares before serving. Bars will keep in the chopped fruit and serve the Don't forget ordinary rounds Natural food colors and refrigerator for up to aweek. dog on a plate. in varying sizes needed for fruit/vegetable juices can be Before serving, spread the barwith peanut butter and press in two bananaslices for eyes andsome raisins to eyes and other features. used to transform the ordi- make a mouth. Toolsofthe trade Circular fondant cutters of- nary into extraordinary,such — Adapted from Mryirwtstfckygooeycreamycheytrt/com Tiny chocolate chips or ten come with multiple sizes as tinting pasta or pancake r eady-made candy e y e s in one set, from '/2 to 4 inches batter from boring beige to should be in your face-mak- or more. fun brights. Food decorating pens look Find It All Online ing bag of tricks, along with Pretzels, especially sticks, Check a kitchen or craft similar t o f e lt-tip m arkers, bendbulletin.com Weekly Arts Sr f ruit leathers than ca n b e are good for attaching things store for gel paste food col- but the "ink" is edible food Entertainment In cut into any shape desired and making arms, legs and or that can be painted on, as coloring. Visit Central Oregon's using kitchen scissors.Small antennae. well as food decorating pens Have fun playing with black sesame seeds, raisins Toothpicks and skewers that can write or draw on any food! and dried cranberries are are also good construction firmfood surface. — Reporter: gtwizdesigns@aot.com

HunterDoullas

Penguin Poppers

Birds in a Pasta Nest

MAGAZBK

Makes1 serving. •

Cookedspaghetti

2 ready-made turkey meatballs 1 tsp butter 1 stalk of celery with leaves attached

TheBulletin

Candy eyes 1 carrot

Sauce (optional) Cook the spaghetti according to the product instructions, drain. Prepare the meatballs according to the product instructions. Add butter to the spaghetti and toss to mix well. Use your fingers to "comb" a handful of spaghetti and lay it on the plate in a swirl to form the nest. Use a sharp knife to make small holes in the meatballs for the eyes. For the bird beaks, cut two small triangular sections of carrot about /2 inch across at the Reminiscent of the movie "Mr. Popper's Penguins," these cute little snacks arefun for kids of all ages. base. Poke the knife point into the meatball to make a slit; insert the Black olives, pitted (jumbo and Cream cheese Long wooden appetizer picks carrot with the point out. colossal sizes) Whole carrots or toothpicks Insert the eyes after the beaks so they don't pop out as you're Slice off both ends of the colossal olives, then cut a football-shaped lengthwise opening to serve asthe "bel- pushing the beaks in place. Slide ly." Fill the cut opening with cream cheeseand place in the refrigerator to firm, about 15 to 20 minutes. Peel the leafy celery stalk under the and slice carrots into '/4-inch discs. Carefully slice a triangular wedge out of carrot discs for "feet" and insert nest and position the birds in the the wedge into the round hole of jumbo olives to create the nose. Placethe carrot disc flat and stand the cream center. Serve the sauce on the cheese-filled colossal olive on top so the carrot "feet" face forward. Stack the jumbo olive "head" horizontally on side if desired. top of the body, then secure both olives to the carrot basewith a long wooden appetizer pick. — Adapted from — Adapted from Mryirwtcherylstyle.com

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D

D3

An Italian-stylecheesecake •

I

4e

By Julie Rothman

RECIPE FINDER

The Baltimore Sun

B etty Jackson o f L a Porte, Indiana, was tr y-

Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun,

ing to locate a recipe for a cheesecake that she used

to purchase at a Chicago bakery but that no longer is offered. When she inquired, she was told

501 N. Calvert St., Balti-

more, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.

the cake was made with c heese, but n o t c r e a m

cheese, and the bakery would not give her specif-

By Debbie Arrington The Sacramento Bee

ics. She said the cake was s omewhat taller t hen a

Healthful, delicious and growing in popularity, pistachios make green look

h

normal cheesecake, perhaps by about 3 inches, and had a lighter texture. Carol Cipriani of South

recipe for an

Bend, Indiana, sent in her

for.

I t alian-style

cheesecake made with ricotta

cheese that she thought might be what Jackson was looking

great. Ricotta Cheesecake

Finding new fans around

Makes 8-10 servings.

the world, this California tree Thihkstcck

nut with the distinct color and taste is on a roll. (And it's not "In China, they're called the 'happy nut' because they're always smiling," said Thom Dille, of Lincoln, As they bring in the new harvest this month, pistachio farmers have a lot to smile about. Orange Pistachio and Goat Cheese-Crusted Pork Chops

come a billion-dollar crop. Just 50 years ago, California's

Makes 4 servings.

c ommercial p i stachio c r op was nonexistent. The f i r st commercial harvest in 1976 totaled 1.5 million pounds. In

Zest and juice of 2 oranges

2012, California, which accounts for almost all of the American harvest, produced

almost 551 million pounds of pistachios. About 250,000 acres of the

central valley are now planted with pistachio trees, with about 180,000 acres at bearing

age. As those newer orchards mature, the American pista-

chio supply should continue to grow, too. Pistachio trees yield about 3,400 pounds per acre.

/2 C finely chopped pistachios

4 oz log soft goat cheese /4 tsp ground allspice 1 tspsalt

/2 tsp ground black pepper Four 6-oz bone-in or boneless

pork chops t/2 C white wine 1 C chicken broth

ies point to this nut's potential health benefits. Studies show

pistachios can support men's

/2 C orange juice 1 TBS cornstarch

Salt and ground black pepper, to taste

Heat the oven to 375 degrees. In a small bowl, combine the orange zest and juice, the pistachios, goat cheese, allspice, saltand pepper. Arrange the pork chops in asmall metal roasting pan. Spread a quarter of the pistachio mixture over the top of each chop. Roast for 20 to 25 minutes, or until the chops reach155 degrees at the thickest part. Transfer the pork chops to a plate. Cover with foil to keepwarm. Place the pan on the stovetop over medium heat. Add the wine and scrape the bottom of the pan to loosen any browned bits. Add the chicken broth and bring to a simmer. In a small glass, mix the orange juice and the cornstarch, then add to the pan, stirring until thickened. Strain the sauce through a meshstrainer, if desired. Adjust the seasoning with salt and black pepper. Serve the sauce with the pork chops. Per serving: 477 calories;196 calories from fat (41 percent of total calories); 22 g fat (8 gsaturated; 0 g trans fats); 108 mg cholesterol; 18 g carbohydrate; 47 g protein; 2 g fiber; 982 mg sodium.

Our appetite for pistachios has increased as more stud-

5 eggs, separated

Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. Combine graham cracker crumbs, sugar and butter in a medium bowl. Press graham cracker mixture into bottom of a 9-inch springform pan and up the sides to form a pie crust. Bake for 5 minutes. In a stand mixer, add ricotta one-third at a time and blend until smooth. Gradually mix in /4 cup sugar, reserving the remainder. One by one, add egg yolks to mixture until fully combined. Gradually add flour, then vanilla and increase speed slightly to combine well. Set mixture aside.

California, chairman of the 550-member American Pistachio Growers.

Thanks to a robust export

1 C sugar, divided

1 C graham cracker crumbs 1 TBS sugar 3 TBS unsalted butter, melted FILLING: 4 C fresh ricotta cheese

just comedian and pistachio pitchman Stephen Colbert's famous "bump.")

market, pistachios have be-

CRUST:

— Reci pefrom TheAssociatedPress

t/sC all-purpose flour 1 tsp pure vanilla extract

1'/ C heavy cream

Beat egg whites with remaining cup of sugar until stiff peaks form. Set aside. Whip heavy cream until stiff peaks form, then gently fold together whipped cream, egg whites and batter until combined. Pour batter into crust and bake for one hour, then turn off heat and allow cheesecake to cool in oven for two hours. Refrigerate overnight and serve. t/t

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Pistachio Baked Fish

Makes 4 servings. lar fitness and eye health. This easy entree works well with a widevariety of fish including red snap"Pistachios are unique," said per, cod and tilapia. health as well as cardiovascu-

K. ®5 II .

Palo Alto, California, nutrition-

ist Arianna Carughi, a pista- 1 Ib fresh fish fillets /4 to1 tsp dry mustard chio expert. "There's not just /2C dry breadcrumbs Salt and pepper to taste t/4 C milk one thing they're good at, like /2 C natural pistachios, highprotein, but a combination chopped and divided 2 TBS butter or margarine, of nutrients that they deliver." 2 TBS grated Parmesan cheese melted While providing plenty of 1 TBS minced parsley protein, pistachios have the lowest fat and highest dietary Cut fish into serving-size pieces. Combinebreadcrumbs, 1/4 cup pistafiber content of the major tree chios, cheese, parsley, mustard, salt and pepper in shallow dish. Dip fish nuts, she noted. Pistachio's in milk and roll in crumb mixture; place in shallow greased dish. Drizzle green color as well as the nut's with butter; sprinkle with remaining pistachios. yellow tint and purple skin are Bake at 450 degrees, allowing 10 minutes per inch of thickness mealinked to several antioxidants sured at its thickest part or until fish flakes whentested with fork. and phytonutrients. — Recipe courtesy American Pistachio Growers The nuts

"contain com-

pounds that make you feel full," Carughi said. "That's another advantage for pistachios

Spiced Maple Glazed Pistachios

What tbe great Cascadia earthquake could mean to Central Oregon.

Makes about 4 cups.

over other nuts." As a snack food, pistachios have "built-in portion control,"

1 Ib shelled natural pistachios /4 C maple syrup noted Shape magazine, whose FOR SUGAR MIXTURE: editors recommend pistachios 3 TBS natural cane sugar as an office favorite. The effort 2 tsp cumin

2 tsp sweet paprika 2 tsp chili powder

Join expertsforapanel discussion on Cascadia and an in-depth look at how the major earthquake predicted to hit the Oregon coast sometime in the next 5o years could impact Central Oregon.The panel includes: Dr. Scott Ashford, Dean of the College of Engineering, Oregon State Univeristy Sgt. Nathan Garibay, Emergency Service Manager, Deschutes County Sheriffs Office

1 tsp sea salt /8 tsp cayenne pepper

needed to crack and pop them Position a rack in thecenter of the oven andpreheat to 350 degrees. Spread the pistachios in a large roasting pan and bake until lightly browned andnuts are hot, about 6 minutes. Pistachios naturally comPour the maple syrup over the pistachios and coat well. Bake, stirring bine their inherent nutty flavor occasionally, until the nuts have absorbed most of the syrup, about 10 with an underlying sweetness. minutes. That fruity note makes pisFor sugar mixture: Mix together the sugar, cumin, paprika, chili powtachios a natural choice for der, salt and cayennepepper. Gradually add the sugar mixture to the pisdesserts. tachios, tossing with a spoon, until the nuts are well-coated. Cool slightly "I love pistachios; even be- and break apart any nuts that are sticking together. Pour onto a greased fore I knew more about them, baking sheet andcool. I loved them," Carughi said. — Recipe courtesy AmericanPistachio Growers out of their shells tends to slow

down consumption and prevent "mindless" munching.

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

"They'repart of a Mediterranean diet."

Pistachios have been part of can pollinate a block of 25 to 30 female trees. lennia, but more recent history Those female trees take made them a California star. about seven years to reach full Before the 1970s, Iran sup- maturity and nut-bearing age. plied much of the world's While almonds tend to remain craving for this popular snack productive for less than 20 nut. But Middle East conflict, years, pistachioskeep bearing particularly the 1979 Iranian for generations. "We don't know how long hostage crisis and U.S. boycott of Iranian exports, made they'll keep bearing," Dille a global market for California said. "Almonds, it's 20 years pistachios. max. With pistachios, there's "There are still embargoes no end to it. Many of the Cali(on Iranian pistachios)," Dille forniaorchards were planted said. "That definitely helps the in the 1970s, and they're still U.S. industry but also helps us going strong." in Europe." Another plus for pistachios: Mediterranean cuisine for mil-

About 40 percent of the Cal-

They take less water to grow.

ifornia crop stays in the Unit- Native to arid regions of the ed States. About 29 percent is Middle East, pistachios have a exported to China, with the

remainder destined mostly for Europe. As a crop, pistachios have

shake. And that's how pistachios are harvested. Machines grab

the trunks and give them a good shaking. Ripe nuts, which grow in grapelike clusters, are caught by crews before they hit the ground. "We want the shells to be as immac-

ulate and clean as possible," Dille said. As the nuts ripen, the shells

are allowed to crack open on the tree before the pistachios are harvested and dried. Once

processed (usually w i thin 24 hours of harvest), the raw

Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2014 7 p.m. at the Tower Theatre A panel presentation with time for audience questions. Free and open to the public. Tickets and information: www.towertheatre.org 541-74S-41SS

unshelled nuts will keep for

months. This season, many t r ees

lot ofbuilt-in drought tolerance.

"In Iran, they actually grow

likely will get a second shake, Dille said. Rainy March weather made for spotty pollination.

them as bushes," Dille explained. "In California, we

Some trees continued to bloom into April.

some advantages over other train them into small trees so nuts and tree fruit, Dille said. they're easier to harvest." Unlike almonds, which need The one issue: Older trees honeybees, pistachios are have bigger, thicker trunks. wind-pollinated. One male tree That makes them harder to

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

The peak of pistachio season is coming soon, Dille noted. "Traditionally, the holidays are when we sell the most. Pista-

chios make a wonderful gift."

t The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

Amerlcan Red Cross Oregon Mountain River Chapter

OregonState Cascades

I

StfCharles HEALTH SYSTEM


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

HOME ck ARDEN

Next week: Unconventional usesforeveryday items

urne ou on

LIVING SMART

o i n Shouldyoudoyour own garage-door

By Steven Kurutz New York Times News Service

It started so innocently. This month, John and Sher-

maintenance?

ry Petersik, the husband-andwife duo behind the hugely popular home-renovation blog Young House Love, apologized to their readers for not writing

theirregular Thursday post and asked how they felt about

ANGIE HICKS

shorter posts when "we can't

write something juicy." The casual visitor to Young House Love would hardly have noticed a lack of industriousness. The Petersiks, who are in mond, Virginia, have bought and renovated three homes in

the last eight years, each project bigger than the last, published a best-selling how-to book, designed a line of wall hooks soldby Target, decorated an entire show house, had two

t's easy to ignore your garage door. But it's a

Test the emergency manual release

bad idea, because a bro-

This is a bright red handle that hangs from a rope. If the door were to malfunc-

tken overhead door is more

their early 30s and live in Rich-

LE. Baskow/The New York Times

Mandi Gubler, who writes the blog Vintage Revivals, at her home in St. George, Utah, this month. Like

than a hassle. It's a danger. Your garage door is generally your home's largest moving object, and possibly its hardest-working component. The average electric opener raises and lowers

children and blogged, tweeted many do-it-yourself design bloggers, Gubler occasionally finds herself drained of inspiration and and Instagrammed everylast struggling to satisfy content-starved fans.

the 150- to 250-pound door more than a thousand times

detail of it.

a year.

Young House Love has an almost mind-numbing amount Aging out? of DIY content, such as inIs the first generation of destructions on how t o i n stall sign bloggers aging out of the laundry-room cabinets and blogosphere? Or is this just a how to stain concrete floors, new twist on an old business all of it delivered step-by-step story, updated for the Internet in the cheerful, self-deprecat- age? ing, broadly comic tone that Pam Kueber, the midcentury has made the Petersiks Internet design expert behind the blog stars. But some loyal readers had

Retro Renovation, is 55, and

she sees the Petersiks' escalating stress levels and unhappiness simply as evidence of the

lately noticed a decrease in quantity and quality. There were more product giveaways, latter: A passion turns into a fewer in-depth tutorials. The hobby, which becomes a fullPetersiks' trademark gung-ho time career. "And in some preenthusiasm seemed f orced. dictable period of time, it conAnd since the birth of their sec-

sumes your life and sucks the

ond child, Teddy, in April, they were increasingly voicing their difficulty in balancing work and family. In hundreds of replies to the

joy out if it," said Kueber, finishing the arc."That lastpart of the Shakespearean tragedy is what you have to be mindful of not letting happen."

Petersiks' query, these and oth-

It's a tricky thing to avoid as

er concerns were raised, sometimes bluntly. One commenter

a full-time blogger, considering

named Margaretsaid she had

that the Internet never sleeps, readers want fresh content dai-

lost interest in Young House

ly, and new social media plat-

Love because each of the couple's three homes "look exactly thesame" and complained they decorate with "cheap furniture." The couple shouldn't use

forms must be mastered and

Built, a blog with a dean Scan- telling strangers about redoing d inavian aesthetic. Her l i f e the dreary den of their starter hasn't been nearly as stream- home. But from the outset, the lined lately. "Right now, our couple forged an intimate bond home is a disaster of props with their audience that went because we had four photo beyond fix-it projects. When shoots this week," said Jepsen, they staged their DIY wedding 32, who shares an apartment in the backyard in 2007, they with her husband, Paul Jepsen, posted an album's worth of in Provo, Utah. "Tuesday night photos, complete with a cost I just sat there and I couldn't breakdown (cupcakes and move. This is the week of s'mores: $125). And when Sherburnout." ry Petersik had life-threatening And when Jepsen posts one complications during the birth of hercraft projects, such as of their first child, she shared making a custom coverlet for the emotional story online. a camp chair, she said, it may The couple also worked tiretake her days to shop for the lessly. Barely had they finished materials and create, style and one total home redo when they photograph it. Then she has to bought another fixer-upper figure out a way to translate it and then a third, as if they were to her readers in six easy steps. trapped on a house-jumping "DIYtakes a lot of planning, ex-

hamster wheel by the need

ecuting and money," she said. to generate blog content. Last "Even the simplest of projects November, the couple posted a take quite abit of materials."

to-do list for their latest home,

It gets more complicated when you're using your house as the staging ground, as Mandi Gubler does. Gubler, 31, runs the decorating and DIY blog Vintage Revivals, and as her loyal readers know, her home

a stately brick four-bedroom with a showcase lawn. If you print the list, it runs to 20pages.

added to the already demanding workload. Add to that the economicchall enges of blogging full time. As Grace Bontheirchildren as an excuse fora neyof Design Sponge lamented in southern Utah has been declack of posts, Margaret added, this year in a "State of the Blog orated, redecorated and decobecause they "make big bucks" Union," advertising rates have rated again. "My mom comes to my from their blog. dropped significantly because Other readers rushed to the advertisers are flooded with house, and there's this revolvPetersiks' defense, and the options. ing door of furniture," Gubler

You could exhaust yourself just reading it. Erin Loechner, who publishes the blog Design for Mankind, said that professional bloggers such as herself take on very demanding, self-imposed workloads. "I think there's a

comment thread devolved into

the tedious back-and-forth Web forums tend to. After absorbing the criti-

cism,the couple responded in a post titled "Feeeeeelings," in which they confessed to "feel-

ing off for a while" and missing the days when "we did this for the love." Although they had scaled back outside projects to recommit to the blog, they were unable to shake the sense

of "letting you guys down repeatedly. "They had decided to step away from Young House Love for an indeterminate period and explore other career options. The unexpected an-

nouncement has generated more than 4,000 comments. The Petersiks declined to

be interviewed for this article; Sherry Petersik responded in an email that "we really would liketo clear ourheads and refocus." But they are not alone

in their experience. Blogger burnout seems to be something that many of their col-

leagues in the world of home and DIY blogs, most of them in their20s and early 30s, can

relate to as well.

The challenges

said. "She can't understand it."

The Philadelphia 1nquirer

A few weeks ago, I present- tor at the Thomas A. Edison ed a question from a mother High SchooVJohn C. Fareira who was looking for an expla- Skills Center, was helpful and nation for the smell of tobacco not judgmental. emanating from not just one Zimak suggested that the window air conditioner in her odor may be the result of wason's bedroom, but from a re- ter lying in the air conditioners placement unit as well. and not draining properly beApparently enough of us cause of "improper, or lack of, have smoked behind our par- pitch" on both the new and old ents' backs over the years that units. That's a reasonable possibil45 readersoffered that as the only explanation for the smell ity, because if such units don't of smoke in the son's bedroom. drain properly, the standing Jim Zimak, wh o t eaches water can smell mildewy after Philadelphia students about awhile.

It's a good idea to read and h eating, v entilation, a n d air-conditioning as an instruc- follow directions for proper op-

such obstacles. Chicago-area reader Larry Walsh recommended anozone

release and move the door

up and down on your own. H owever, i f t he do o r won't move e asily, don't

force it. Call a pro instead. Likewise, call an expert

To ensure that your sys-

if the door gets stuck in a

tem operates smoothly, quietly and safely, it's wise to inspect it periodically, as often as monthly. Here's what garage door pros who've earned top ratings from Angie's List members recommend:

partly open, crooked po-

Evaluate visually

sition. You don't want the door to crash down should

the springsystem be unable to counterbalance the weight.

Tighten loose bolts and lubricate moving parts

Use garage door lubricant, silicone spray or powen't rusty, broken or on the dered graphite on rollers, verge of breaking. (Be cau- hinges and springs. tious around the springs, Every three to four years, as they are under extreme wipe springs with motor oil. tension. Unless you really (But avoid lubricating old, know what you're doing, rusty springs, because they leave repair, r eplacement could break.) or adjusting of springs to a Wipe the door opener chain with a light oil, as pro.) Look for loose fasteners, spraying may make a mess. worn tracks and hinges, frayed cables or crooked Hiring a contractor Make sure springs ar-

roller wheels.

To hire a pro for an annu-

Some rollersneed to be replacedafterthree orfour years. Springs typically last five to 10 years, depending on the amount of usage.

al inspection and tuneup, expect to pay $100 to $120. Angie's List members re-

port paying between $100 and $300 for garage door repairs, such as roller or

Test the automatic reversal system

spring replacement. Service after hours or on weekU . S. ends may add $100 to $150.

Required by t h e Consumer Product

S a fe-

The cost to install a new

readers will find that content

sition when it

elsewhere," she said. And yet

obstruction. To test your door's au-

eration of appliances. Still, hav- tle that they aren't much help, ing lived in older houses, I real- he said. ize that their age often works Walsh said he has had good against modern requirements. luck with ozone generators on Thus, sometimes you need all types of smells — even mold to work on ways to overcome

er during an outage, you should be able to pull the

fear that if we post less, our

She added: "That's the pro- many bloggers don't want to To earn money, many blog- cess.I love when a room is complain for fear of sounding gers have had to embrace spon- done, but let's be honest: It's go- whiny or ungrateful. sored content,breedingdistrust ingto be changed." One wonders what the Peamong readers. Several Young Retro R e n ovation h as tersiks will do should they deHouse Love readers, for in- evolved into a p r actical re- cide to resume Young House stance, thought the giveaways source for other vintage-mind- Love. Much of the blog's conwere product placements in ed renovators, but Kueber's tentand appeal have derived disguise, even though the Pe- blog got its initial boost when from seeing them transform tersiks maintained they weren't she redid the kitchen of her their own homes; a studio space compensated for doing them. own house in Lenox, Massa- or a third-party house doesn't "If readers begin to suspect chusetts, using 1963 Geneva seem like a solution. that your content is heavy on steel cabinets. Despite the trafIndeed, the very aspects that product placement, if they see fic boost that created, she said, fueledtheir success — theirmaexcessive amounts of spon- "I really don't want to be knock- chinelike c ontent-generation, sored posts, you risk losing ing down any more walls." the dosepersonalengagement what's most important, which with readers that bordered on is trust and authenticity," said 'Living in chaos' oversharing, the romance of Kueber, who still relies largely Kueber suspects the Pe- being a husband-and-wife DIY on banner ads and has done tersiks' never-ending home blogging team — may turn out two sponsored posts. c onstruction contributed t o to be the things that make conAnd blogs that focus on the their feelings of burnout and tinuing the blog in its current home come with their own par- their decision to re-examine form impossible. ticular set of challenges. Unlike their careers. "Have you had It wasn't always so. Go back a personal style blog, in which to renovate a house?" Kueber far enough in the Young House generatingnew content can be said. "It's worse than having Love archives and you will find as simple as getting dressed in kids. Making a living by living the couple's first post, dated the morning, producing a dec- in chaos might get old." Sept. 24,2007. "We're about a month into orating or DIY blog involves The Petersiks were early considerable time ,expense and adopters of the blog format blogging," John Petersik wrote domestic upheaval. and hardly could have antici- in reply to a reader's wish of Brittany W a tson J e psen pated the success and oppor- good luck. "And we're still lovwrites The House That Lars tunities that would result from ingit."

YOUR PLACE

tion or the system lose pow-

ty Commission since 1991, door ranges from $700 to t his f e ature c a uses t h e $1,500 or more, depending door to immediately stop on size and materials. Insuand return to the open po- lation and windows add to

Air-conditioner smelmi l ght needcreative solution By Alan J. Heavens

inches off t h e g r ound, should — if an obstruction moves within r ange cause a closing door to stop and reverse itself.

in walls and inside ductwork.

"Ozone generators convert

oxygen to ozone that is toxic to bacteriathat cause odors,"he

generator. SRld. Some ionizers do produce — Contact Alan J. Heavens at ozone, but most produce so lit-

aheavensphillyriews.com.

d etects an

the price. An opener system

adds $350 to $500. When hiring a garage to-stop feature, place an ob- door service provider, look ject, such as a cinder block, for companies with good in the path of the closing consumer ratings, who prodoor. vide proof of insurance and When the door contacts appropriate licensing and the object, it should quickly who have an e stablished reverseitself.

location.

Test the infraredmotion system

— Angie Hicksis the founder of Angie's List, which offers consumerreviews on everything from home repair to health care.

This feature, about six

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014• THE BULLETIN

Mirror

ASK MARTHA

Nake yourownflower mirror

Continued from 01 T he f l ower

D5

Chickenknow-how

m i r ror c a n

also be made in almost any size you need — simply cut a larger or smaller circle, use a different size mirror and vary the number of spoons.

- MARTHA STEWART

W hatyou'll need: ~/4-inch-thick foam board,

15 by 15 inches 7-inch-diameter mirror

garlic, onion and ginger. Reduce heat to medium and simmer 10 minutes. 'Itjrn off heat

and cover pot. Let chicken sit in poaching liquid 45 minutes. Remove chicken from broth.

uying a whole bird When coolenough to handle, rather than parts has strip meat from bones and

ci r c u l ar

B

Approximately 100 plastic spoons (Note: The actual number of spoons needed depends on the size and shape of the bowl portion and spacing. The featured mirror uses 88 spoons.) Hot glue gun/glue Snips or utility scissors Adhesive picture hanger

m any v i r t ues:

', ih".,

blade Paper or plastic to cover

Meg Roussos 1The Bulletin

A mirror frame made of plastic spoons is a whimsical, easy DIY craft.

Getting started: the foam board. Use a plate or tray for a pattern, or draw

a pattern on paper first using a circle template.

I \il II I I I

'lln r.: N<4itva|w

l3->~ ~

~ on ~

( II nlantlrs eflvr 'A- m

IIOW' 8C-

hlagy led

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bgtlsu' Of

~hw~

2. Carefully trim the foam

circle along the drawn line using a craft knife. Cut carefully for a smooth edge. 3. Mark quarter points on the circle edge using a light

I

A

pencil mark. Center the mir-

ror and lightly trace around it.

4. Using snips or utility scissors, clip off the spoon handles at the base of the bowl, leaving about onefourth of an inch of handle intact. (Save the handles for

Linda Turner Griepentrog i Submitted photo

Glue the first row of spoons with the bowls extending over the edge of the foam.

another craft project.) 5. Heat the glue gun and secure it in a holder on a protected work surface. 6. Place a drop of glue on the spoon underside at the base of the bowl and press

Linda Turner Griepentrog i Submitted photo

Abut but do not overlap the spoon bowls.

s 4' s

'Slr,'~j.

Qf j~ ~ > 'RSt~

rk

in place on the f i rst quar-

ter marking along the circle edge. The spoon bowl will "cup" upward slightly and extend slightly beyond the foam board edge.

stt M M j ~~~ '

7. Secure spoons at each

quarter marking around the edge. 8. Continue to glue spoons

between the quarter spoons until the sections are filled in completely around the cir-

cle. Spoons should be placed th e y

Linda Turner Griepentrog /Submitted photo

Keep gluing spoons around the edge, careful to space them evenly.

Linda Turner Griepentrog iSubmitted photo

Glue the entire outer ring of spoons before

starting on the next row. 9. Working inward, continue the spoon gluing process. Row two spoons should be placed between the bowls manner as above. tuck in a few extra "petals" dle stubs on the last row of of the first row, overlapping 11. Check the placement of randomly into the rows, if spoon petals. the previous bases slightly to the mirror in the center, and desired. 13. Adhere t h e p i c t ure mimic flower petals. ifnecessary,add afourth row 12. Glue the mirror in place hanger to the back side and 1 0. Add a t h i r d r o w o f of spoons to fill the area up in the circle center, either hang the mirror. spoon bowls in the same to the mirror edge. Glue and abutting or covering the han- — Reporter: gwizdesigns@aoI.com

When separating it from the

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doors (although the birds may be confined), and 100 percent organic feed are among the U.S. Department of Agriculture's standards. Free-range: The USDA

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are nunimally processed after slaughter: No flavors, colors, preservatives or brines are added duringprocessing. Kosher: These conventionally raised chickens are processed according to Jewish dietarylaw. Air-chilled: During pro-

new flavorcompounds. Ifyou take the time to get it right, the finished dish will be delicious.

Tip 3: Brown chicken, skin side first and undisturbed. If it

doesn't release when you try to flip it, don't force it. Let it cook

until it releases easily.

9. Howto butterfly

This method gives you a neat, symmetrical shape for A m e rican a paillard. Before you begin,

cessing, most birds are chilled in water

remove the small inner "ten-

(thus absorbing some). ders" and cook them the same Air-chilling takes longer but way. seemsto resultin aless dilutStep1:The goalis tokeepthe ed flavor and crisper skin. meat all in one piece, so make a straight vertical cut down the

3. Kitchen shears

center of the breast half, but do The best tool for cutting not slice all the way through. up a whole chicken is agood, Use a sharp long (not serrated) sharp pair of kitchen shears. knife. Step 2:Holding your knife at an angle, start to open up one side of the breast half so it will

be able to lay flat. Pull the wideningfl ap open asyoucut. Step 3: Iljrn the breast half

around and open up the oth-

butterflied breast h alves

er side exactly the same way.

individually wrapped in plastic wrap, then stack and wrap a batch in foil. Always label and date the packages. Thaw in the refrigerator if

To free each flap of meat at the narrow ends, make short,

you have time. If fast-track-

cooking, balance out the thick-

ing is a must, unwrap the chicken, place it in a resealable plastic bag and submerge it in cold water. One pound of chicken breasts

ness of the meat by making short, shallow vertical cuts in theopened fl aps.Thenpound it

scraping cuts with the tip of

your knife. Step4: To ensure quick, even

thin with the flat side of a meat

mallet or small heavy pan. — Questions of general interest can be emailed tomsIIetters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.

5. Howto poach Poaching is the gateway technique to tacos,

ropean ash hardwood, this

s alads, sandwiches a n d

tool lets you stand up straight while you work so you mini-

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Searing a food until it's well browned creates hundreds of

crowd the pan. If air can't circuNatural: A ll t h i s t e r m late around each piece of chickmeans is that the chickens en, it will steam, not brown.

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are allowed access to the outdoors. All organic birds are raised under free-range conditions, but not all freerange birds are organic.

will take less than an hour

mize back strain as you cut

Photos by Tribune News Service

c oriander or c umin, and

requires that the chickens

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sugar, coarse salt, coarsely cracked black pepper, ground

breast, pull it toward you so impart flavor. Although cooks enough skin remains on the generally marinate a few hours breast to cover it. Then cut before cooking (freeze the the thigh from each drum- chicken in the marinade, if destick, through the joint. sired), if there's no time, then do it after cooking: A simple dous2. Labels to know ing of olive oil, lemon juice and Certified organic:No an- garlic is all you need.

Freeze skinless, boneless chicken-breast halves whole, wrapped individuallyinplasticwrap, theninfoil or freezer paper. Or freeze

ISSI

blend, for instance, of brown

smidge of cayenne — comes together in a snap. Rub it over Wings: Cheat more to- chicken in the morning and ward the breast than you refrigerate until dinnertime to might think in order to find add flavor and protection from the joint. direct high heat. Legs:Awhole legconsists Marinades: A m a r i nade of a thigh and a drumstick. doesn't tenderize, as popularly

4. Freezing andthawing

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to two months.

en shears or a knife. Cook 7.All aboutflavor likeother parts, orfreeze for Spices and herbs: Build a futurebroth. pantry of favorite flavors. Breast: An a tomically, Rubs: A simple rub — a

tibiotics, access to the out-

Make the flower:

c lose t o gether, b u t should not overlap.

completely before refrigerating up to threedays orfreezing up

boneless c h icken-breast halves, slide a sharp knife along the bone to remove meat, then pull off the skin.

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1. Let's break itdown

chickens have one breast, not two. To make skinless,

4 u I* f & l l lll Ih

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by half. Salt to taste and let cool

sides of the back with kitch-

! biX"

1. Draw a 13-inch circle on

you want it.

Back: Cut along both

t

C raft k n ife w i t h a n e w

work surface

I t ' s shred to desired size.

more economical, it's handled less along the way, it 6. Bonusbroth lends itself to a variety of Strain p oaching l i quid cooking techniques and you through a cheesedoth-lined can cut it up exactly the way sieve, then boil until reduced

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Jo n ivera s ournaismto iscome TV SPOTLIGHT

full amount awarded may not always be used as recipients' plans change or evolve." Oliver has journalists who

"Last Week Tonight" 11 p.m. Sundays, HBO

2004 thatthe embargo had out-

lived its usefulness. But in a weekly show, Oliver needs to go beyond daily developments. He hasn't hesitated

worked at the New York Times

By David Bauder The Associated Press

NEW YORK — In poking

fun at the Miss America pageant on the most recent episode of HBO's "Last Week Tonight,"

John Oliver reached forthecomedic equivalent of low-hanging fruit. Then he veered into something wholly unexpected — investigative journalism. His subsequent report questioning the pageant's scholarship program was the latest example of how Oliver has quickly moved beyond his roots at "The Daily Show" to produce something distinctive, andusually hilarious.

Eric Liebowitz/ HBO via The Associated Press

John Oliver, who subbed for Jon Stewart as host of "The Daily

Show"lastsummer and began hisown HBO weekly show in April, often devotes about half of his 30 minutes to one topic of current interest. He has examined net neutrality and the politics of

Stewart as host of "The Daily

soccer's World Cup. His report questioning the MissAmerica pageant's scholarship programwas anexample of what one scholar

Show" last summer and began

called "investigative comedy."

Oliver, who subbed for Jon

his own HBO weekly show in April, often devotes about half of his 30 minutes to a single

eant. Then he zeroed in on the

topic below the headlines. He's Miss America organization's discussed gender pay inequali- claim of making $45 million in ty, anti-gay laws in Uganda, net scholarship money available to neutrality and the politics of young women eachyear. "Forty-five million," Oliver the World Cup. Remember, this is a comedy

show. His 15-minute Miss Ameri-

said. "That is an unbelievable

amount of money. As in, I literally did not believe that."

ca segment began with jokes His staff researched docuabout how dated a beauty ments, finding a federal disclopageantseems, and his incre- sure form that said the pageant dulity at some of the questions spent $482,000 in scholarships contestants are asked. He took in 2012. They researched tax some shots at Donald Trump, forms on statewide pageants, who owns a competing pag- finding several scholarship of-

fers that couldn't possibly be

Magazine and ProPublica on to get into issues that others his writing staff. might consider eye-glazing. Robert Thompson, director He even makes that part of the of Syracuse University's Blei- comedy. er Center for Television and In describing the concept of Popular Culture, calls Oliver's net neutrality, Oliver said, "the work "investigative comedy." only two words that promise Thompson has played the more boredom in the English net neutrality segment for his language are 'featuring Sting.'" students. The segment, besides a look at Research indicates that the arcanity of federal commuyoung people are much more nications regulation, included a likely than their elders to take break-dancing Abraham Lina deeper dive into news stories coln impersonator. that interest them, searching Before the World Cup, he for more information online, took an exhaustive look at corsaid Tom Rosenstiel, executive ruption charges against the director of the American Press tournament's operating body. Institute. What Oliver is doing Oliver had a cheap and pointresponds to that desire, he said. ed laugh line, showing video "There is a natural link beof FIFA President Sepp Blatter tween committing journalism falling during a public appearand committing comedy," Ro- ance. "That's one time you can senstiel said. "They're both in say, 'I'm glad that old man fell the uncovering and unmask- off the stage,'" he said.

awarded at the same time were ing business, but with different added togetherto help reach approaches."

With Oliver's adept mixture

of comedy and tangents in his longer segments, Thompson people shouldn't confuse mon- available by HBO for an in- said, "You never feel like you're ey that may be available with terview,has made no secretof watching something 13 minmoney spent. his debt to "The Daily Show," utes long. It's always moving." That's journalism, minus and viewers of "Last Week ToOliver's m entor S t ewart night" will find many similar broke ground, and filled a jourany apparent attempt to let pageant officials offer their elements. Thisweek he paired nalismlike role, with his show's side. The organization subse- a l ittle-noticed development research and use of video arquently issued a statement not — President Obama acting to chives, Rosenstiel said. Oliver's specifically addressing Oliver's continuethe economic embar- long-form pieces may be where charge that Miss America was go against Cuba for another he makes his mark. "It is really an interesting being misleading, but said that year — with a video clip of "as with any scholarship, the prepresident Obama saying in convergence," he said. the final figure. In other words,

Oliver, who w asn't made

in care iver eservesa rea

MOVIE TIMESTOQAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • iNovie times are subject to change after press time. f

Dear Abby:How can I convince my aging, sick sister-in-law that her feeble husband's care is too much for her at this point'? She

or face away from me when they to do something. speak. The second would be to do some I have asked people to repeat research and see what options are what they say (I try not to do it ofavailable for part-time caregivers ten) if I missed something. They or senior day care centers where get frustrated and so do I, and own lives, it might motivate them

can barely care for herself, yet she must help him eat, get out of chairs — everything short of chew her husband would be safe and his food for him. I looked after while have tried telling her your si s t er-in-law she deserves respite has a few precious DEP,R careo some tn ' o hours to herself. The no avail.

ABBY

H ave you a n y ideas how I can convince her she is literally killing herselfand deserves some assis-

tance? Their three daughters are no help at all to them. They turn a blind eye from their parents' situation. — Relative Who Cares in Ohio Dear Relative: I can think of a

then they say, "Never mind!"

I try so hard to hear people. But it seems the harder I try, the less it seems worth it to find a rela-

tionship. Any tips on dealing with

man's doctor could

impatient and nonunderstanding

guide you. Then have a frank

people?

talk with her and explain that for

— Frustrated in Wisconsin

Dear Frustrated:As people age,

her tobe as effective a caregiver many of them encounter the probas she obviously wants to be, she's lem you are trying to cope with going to have to take better care of now at your young age. Hearing herself, because the track she's on

loss is difficult because it is often

right now could cost her her own health or even her life, and that's

subtle and can be extremely isolating for the person who has it.

few things you might do to help. The first would be to talk to the daughters and explain your concerns for their mother's healthbecause if she doesn't get some

no exaggeration. Dear Abby: I'm a 29-year-old single man who is hard of hearing. I have a steady job and plans for a good future, but I'm having trouble in the dating world.

noisy places for meeting women, if you can. My second would be to be upfront about your hearing loss right off the bat. If a woman finds you attractive, she will find ways

respitecare, SHE could die before

I would love to have a special

to accommodate the problem. And

My first tip would be to avoid

I

I

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someone in my life, but I'm shy. I have a hard time talking with ther's care would become THEIR the girls who live in my area. I responsibility. When they realize can hear people pretty well unthe effect it would have on their less they mumble or talk quietly,

if she doesn't, then she wasn't the right candidate for a relationship

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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY,

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

their father does. Be sure to point out that if that happens, their fa-

SEPT. 30, 2014:This yearyou wil be more verbalthanyou havebeen ina while. You will attract people who might be very different from your present circle of friends. You will evolve and beeven more accepting of other lifestyles than you have in the past. You will gain professionally and personally. If you are single, you discover thatyour type gars show the king has changed. You of dsy yoo'I hsvs might want to date ** * * * D ynamic for a while before

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

be close to impossible today. Youeven might believe thatyou succeeded only to find out otherwise. Open up to newpossibilities, but do notactyet. Tonight: Don't

make anywaves. CANCER (Jone21-Joly 22)

** * * Emphasize getting the job done, rather than getting distracted. If you feel *** * positive m aking any com- as if there is no possible way that you can ** * Average mitments. What clear out what you needto, say so and re** Bo-so you are drawn to vise your schedule. As aresult, your clarity, * Difficult now might not be as well as your honesty, will be appreciatwhat you want later. ed. Tonight: Nap, then decide. If you are attached, your sweetie might LEO (July23-Aug.22) be taken aback by your transformation. ** * * You appear to have workable Involve him or her more in your life, and ideas, whereas others' seem to fall flat. If he or she will open up more as aresult. SAGITTARIUStakes even more risks than you are looking for a brainstorming situayou do! tion, try another day. Youmight decide to go off on yourownanddo whatyouwa nt ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * You couldbe dealing with a lotof for a change. Try not to be too serious! flak from yesterday, as many people seem Tonight: Ride the wave of reason. to have experienced a lot of intensity. You VIRGO (Aog.23-Sept. 22) might want to detach in order to gain a ** * Tension seems to surround your more complete perspective. Try to keep personal life. Youcould havea problem decision-making to a minimum. Tonight: making a decision, but ultimately you will Whatever feels right. find the right solution. Do not push yourself so hard, as you will only makeyourself TAURUS (April 20-May20) more frustrated. Tonight: Reach out to a ** * You will need to go over some friend at a distance. of yesterday's communication. Your intentions might be excellent, but others' LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) ability to internalize messages seemsto ** * * You might consider having a talk, be lacking. Expect to approach the issue in but make sure the other party is ready to question one more time. Tonight: Ask and have this same conversation. Otherwise, you shall receive. you will have to postpone this chat for another time. Return calls and catch up on GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * Go along with others as much as emails. Play it relaxed andeasy. Tonight: you can. Trying to blaze anew path could Hang out with a friend.

— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

* ** Choose totakea backseatand not get involved in any turmoil. If you don't, your attention simply will feed the chaos. Answer emails and do some research, but play it low-key. Observe what is going on behindthescenes.Tonight:Takea hard look atyour budget.

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** * *

You could be, and probably are,

on top ofyour game.Listen to newsmore openly, and be more forthright. You might not have any regrets about a situation, but others might. Don't try to change their opinions; instead, just respect them. Tonight: Be spontaneous.

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * Qbserve more. You will learn a lot about those around you in asituation that you feel could boil over atany given moment. Your opinion could change with a new perspective. Continue this process until you know what to do. Tonight: Get some extra R and R.You are going to need it.

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * * Your objectives are clear, and you will gain the support you need today. Relax, and move apersonal matter to another day. If your schedule was free, what would youdo?Go offand make plansaccordingly. Tonight: Make sure you arewhere you want to be.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * You could feel out of sorts and strange aboutsome demands thatare being made. The problem will be thatyou might have to say "no." Though you'll think yourmessage is heardtoday,youcould discover otherwise soon enough! Tonight: A force to be dealt with. © King Features Syndicate

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 7 p.m. on NGC,"Live Free or Die" — This new series examines a growing lifestyle phenom-

enon knownas"rewilding"dropping out of modern society in favor of bare-bones living off the land — as experienced by five persons toughing out winter

in America's backwoodsand

swamps. In the premiere, "Rise of the Wild," Blue Ridge woodsman Thorn struggles to find wildlife for food, while across country in California, nomadic hunter Gabriel is delighted to find a rat that will serve his immediate dinner needs. 8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Selfie""Pygmalion" and "My Fair Lady" come into the modern age in a big way with this new sitcom from "Suburgatory" creator-producer Emily Kapnek. The "Pilot" presents "Doctor Who" alumna Karen Gillan as anavid tweeter — namedEliza,no less— who realizes having lots of "friends" in cyberspace isn't the sameas having actual flesh-and-blood

pals. 8 p.m.on 6, "NCIS" —Wasa Navy lieutenant's murder one of several muggings plaguing Washington, D.C., or was it committed to keep him from making it to a private meeting he had scheduled with the occupant of the Oval Office? That's what Gibbs (Mark Harmon) and the team have to determine in the new episode "Kill the Messenger." Former NFLstar turned football analyst Tony Gonzalez guest stars as an NCISagent. 9 p.m. on10, "New Girl" —Rob

Reiner returns asJess' (Zooey

Deschanel) father, who has a new girlfriend (guest star Kaitlin Olson, "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia") in the new episode "Julie Berkman's Older Sister." Jess and Cece(Hannah Simone) aren't thrilled by his choice of companion, since during their high school years, they had big problems with her. 10 p.m. on 2, 9, "Forever"An expensive product that purportedly reverses the aging pro-

cess causesseveral deaths in the new episode "Fountain of Youth." Abe (Judd Hirsch) gives thought to using it anyway. Henry's (loan Guffudd) investigation of the clinic offering the supposed miracle potion leads him to recall a friend's early-20th century health battle, which could provide clues for the present-day investigation.

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Fuel & Wood

Sales Northeast Bend

Furniture for Sale from Log Home: Oak roll-top desk. German Short Hair AKC Coffee table,end pups, parents on site, tables, 2 lamps. $550. 541-306-9957 Aii beautiful and German Shorthair pure- reasonablypriced. bred puppies, qreat 541-549-0805 or hunting dogs! 3 fem s, 2 541-588-2301 males, ready to go 10/10.

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Yorkie pups AKC, 2 girls, 2 boys, beautiful! Shots, potty training, health guar. $1100. 541-777-7743 210

Aussie standards, shots, Furniture & Appliances worming, & tails docked, $500. 541-459-2322

I TheBulletin > Serving Central Oregon sinceigaa

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212

Antiques & Collectibles

r e - WHEN YOU SEE THIS quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple sysOn a classified ad tems/ software, to disgo to close the name of the business or the term www.bendbulletin.com to view additional "dealer" in their ads. photos of the item. Private party advertisers are defined as 263 those who sell one Tools computer. 60 gal. air compressor 257 6hp, lightly used, Musical Instruments $600. 541-385-9350

MoreP ixatBendbjjlletin.com

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$300. 541-771-0956

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Boxer cross very loving 6-year-old male free to good home, must have fenced yard or property. 541-815-0620

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Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jeweliy. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the $500. 541-728-1004 Estate, Honest Artist Jack Russell puppies, G ENERATE SOM E Elizabeth,541-633-7006 purebred tails docked EXCITEMENT in your 2 fem, 1 male, ready neighborhood! Plan a 205 9 /27/14 $ 30 0 ea . garage sale and don't Items for Free forget to advertise in 541-279-9935 classified! Free queen mattress in Kittens & cats to adopt 541-385-5809. good cond, come and at Petsmart (near Target) Fri-Sat-Sun Hide-a-bed by Basset, get it! 541-693-3079 12-4. 8 1 5 -7278 for while, mattress good 208 kitten info, 389-8420 shape. good shape, re: adult cats. $75. 541-382-6773 Pets & Supplies Nonprofit animal rescue having huge yard King Bed and matThe Bulletin recoms ale Oct. 3-5! R e tress set,Sleep mends extra caution donated items Comfort massager, when purc has- quest to benefit homeless includes linens, ing products or seranimals. Need help and electric blanket, vices from out of the with prep & at sale. $800 obo area. Sending cash, Also need d e posit 541-516-8578 checks, or credit incans/bottles. 8950 S. f ormation may be Hwy 97, Redmond, 2 subjected to fraud. mi. N of Tumalo Rd. For more i nforma541-419-7885. Plafform Bed tion about an adversize including tiser, you may call Pom-mix puppies, white Queen mattress & bedding the O regon State w/ brown patches, so duvet with cover + Attorney General's cute & fluffy! 1 girl, 1 sheets in excellent Office C o n sumer boy, born 7/17, $175 c ondition. $15 0 . Protection hotline at Call 541-280-8307 541-306 -6832 1-877-877-9392. POODLE puppies,toy, lovinq companions. Side x side refrigerator; The Bulletin Serving Central tt eyon sincetggg 541-475-3889 light beige hideabed; anQueensfandHeelers tique china hutch, $100 Adopt a rescued cat or Standard & Mini, $150 each, obo. 541-480-4296 kitten! Altered, vacci& up. 541-280-1537 nated, ID chip, tested, www.rightwayranch.wor The Bulletin more! CRAFT, 65480 dpress.com recommends extra ' 78th St, Bend, Sat/ Sun 1-5. 3 89-8420 Rottweiler pups, par- i caution when purents on site. Call for chasing products or I www.craftcats.org. details. 541-923-2437. services from out of I ~ the area. Sending ~ Adorable AKC Scottish Terrier, AKC, Registered Lab Pup- black female, shots, dew- ' cash, checks, or i n f ormation pies. Chocolate claws, dewormed, $450. i credit may be subjected to ($750), Silver and Will deliver. 541-325-9615 i FRAUD. For more Charcoal ($1000.). All puppies, reserve information about an t pups have dew claws Scotty now! Mom & dad on site, advertiser, you may I removed, first shots and wormed. Contact 1st shots. 541-771-0717 I call the Oregon e Atto r ney ' 541-462-3946 if inter- Silky Terrier female born State O f fi ce ested. 7/27, parents on site in i General's Consumer ProtecValley. 1st t ion h o t line a t •I Aussie Miniature pups, 4 Christmas shots; can to black-tri males, 1st shots, Bend. Can deliver text pics. i 1-877-877-9392. tails docked, wormed, $400. Jeff, 707-350-1981 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

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LA Beach Cruiser Custom made, one of a kindno 2 alike! Excellent condition. Fun, fun, fun! $850. 541-749-8720

• New, never fired Weatherby VanguardS2, synthetic stock, cal 30-06. $550. • New, never fired Howa,wood stock, cal .300 Win Mag.$725 Must pass background check. Please call 541.389.3694, Medium full-suspension leave message. Solo Santa Cruz Mtn racinq bike,good cond,must sell, $2000. 541-480-2652

RANS Stratus XP 2011 Recumbent LWB; exc. cond. 27 gears SRAM X9 twist shifters; seat bag; specialized computer/odometer; fairing, kick stand and more. $1400

Sage Rodw/Tioga reel, $225. Custom TFO rodwith Redington reel, $200. Simms waders, men's Lg, worn once, $200; ladies small, new in box, $175. Simms boots,men's 13, used once, $100; ladies 9, new in box, $100.Simms wading stick,new, $50. Fishpond chest pack,$50. 541-382-6664

541-504-5224 245

Golf Equipment

Callaway X-12 graphite, 3-lob, $100. Big Bertha graphite fairway metals, 3-13, $40 each. Lady Callaway graphite, 5-lob, D-3-5 metals, $100. Lady TaylorMade Miscelas graphite, 7-SW, driver-7 wood, $100. (2) Sun Mountain Speed Carts, $75 ea. 541-382-6664

Taurus Raging Bull 454 also 45lc great condition. Also Savage 111 cal. .300 mag, w it h M i l lett 4-16X 50 scope Taurus, $595. Savage $495. Contact Jim Fields 408-309-2408 in Bend.

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

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'

• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. Firewood ads C ommercial Delt a • MUST include Unifence table saw, & cost per e xtended ben c h , species cord to better serve router, new lift, complete grip m a ster. our customers. Many extras. $1500.

2009 Beautiful Lowrey Adventurer n Organ Absolutely perfect condition, not a scratch on it, about 4-feet wide, does everything! Includes a nice bench, too. $750obo. 541-385-5685

541-923-6427

Shopsmith

with bandsaw, excellent condition. Customized extras. Retired shop Back to School SALE! teacher; 25%-35% OFF don't need anymore! all music equipment. available. Bend Pawn & Trading Co. Pictures $475. 61420 S. Hwy 97, Bend Call 541-598-6486 541-317-5099 265

Building Materials

SPINET PiANO 1973 Fayett S Gable

made by Everett 8 Sons, excellent condition, recently tuned. sounds great! $1 000 541-385-8367 260

Misc.ltems

Bend Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 740 NE 1st 541-312-6709 Open to the public.

Natural gas Ruud tankless water heater, brand new! 199 BTU, $1600.

The Bulletin

Serelng Central Oregonsince fggg

Seasoned, split & delivered pine, $160/cord in LaPine, or small delivery charge to outlying areas. 541-876-7426

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway.

Argus 300 slide 42" TV cabinet with rojector Model slate t ri m $ 2 5 0; 11 Series. also Boxer/French Mastiff pups Ethan Allen buffet, slides of Drake Park, ready for new homes storage, to p folds 400 rds 22mag factory now(Docked tails, dew- out for serving, $250; local camping/huntammo, $175. claws removed, 1st shots. Heavy metal queen ing/fishing trips and 541-647-7950 Wanted: Collector seeks Females, $450; males bed frame, $30; Pair Alaska - in Bend local pays CASH!! high quality fishing items $500. Call 541-419-0149 38 nx84n beige 1950's-1960s. $75 for all firearms & & upscale bamboo flv black-out d r apes, obo. 541-419-6408 Donate deposit bottles/ $15; Folding table ammo. 541-526-0617 rods. Call 541-678-5753, cans to local all vol., and 4 foldinq chairs, or 503-351-2746 non-profit rescue, for in the box, $40. SE The Bulletin reserves Caldwell Lead Sled 247 feral cat spay/neuter. Bend. 541-508-8784 the right to publish all DFR rifle rest, $100. Cans for Cats trailer at ads from The Bulletin Sporting Goods Ruger 10/22 with Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 newspaper onto The - Misc. 3x9 scope, $175. E; P e t co (near A1 Wsshers&Dryers Bulletin Internet webRemington 11-87 W al-Mart) i n R e d - $150 ea. Full warsite. Police 12ga with rifle mond; or donate M-F ranty. Free Del. Also sights, $750. Baikal at Smith Sign, 1515 The Bulletin wanted, used W/D's gereing Central Oregonstnca tggg Bounty Hunter 12 NE 2nd; or CRAFT, 541-280-7355 ga, 20" double bar78th S t , Tu m alo. rels with screw-in Leave msg. for pick up 215 chokes, $350. of lar g e amt s , Couch, black leather w/ Coins & Stamps 2 recliners, like new. Aii like new! 541-389-8420. Like new Necky Es$475. 541-408-0846 541-550-7189 www.craftcats.org kia 16' kayak with Private collector buying rudder. Bulkheads stamp albums & G en. ops. m gr. o f USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! postage water tight. Seat like collections, world-wide CASH!! well-established nonnew. Hatches, deck and U.S. 573-286-4343 For Guns, Ammo & profit cat rescue retir- Door-to-door selling with (local, cell phone). lines and grab loops Reloading Supplies. ing due t o h e alth,fast results! It's the easiest all in perfect condi541-408-6900. need new mgr. or tion. Orig i nally way in the world to sell. People Look for Information mgrs. Volunteer, no Colt.38 special 6-shooter $1450, asking $700 About products and pay. Challenging but The Bulletin Classified revolver, holster, gun obo. P lease c a l l Services EverY Daythrough belt, ammo, great shape! satisfying work. 541 541-312-2435. 541-385-5809 280 3172. The Bulletin Classifierfs $700. 541-480-0872

KIT INCLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad

• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE Kll at

1777 SW Chandler

Ave., Bend, OR 97702

The Bulletin

Serrrng Cenrral Oregon rrnre raas

quest donated items to benefit homeless animals. Need help with prep & at sale. Also need d e posit cans/bottles. 8950 S. Hwy 97, Redmond, 2 mi. N of Tumalo Rd. 541-419-7885.

This

advertising tip brought to you by

The Bulletin Serving CentrelOregonsince tgaa

269

Gardening Supplies & Equipment BarkTurfSoil.com

In Sunriver area.

The Bulletin

with 2 barrels: one 22" modified; & one 181/2", $250. Background check required. Please call 541.389.3694, Iv msg.

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

Aii YearDependable 290 Firewood: Seasoned; Sales Redmond Area Lodgepole, split, del, B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Nonprofit animal resor 2 for $365. Call for cue having huge yard multi-cord discounts! s ale Oct. 3-5! R e 541-420-3484.

275 Gallon Like New PROMPT DELIVERY 530-938-3003 Plastic Totes, Over542-389-9663 stock Sale: $109. for one tote, 2 to 5 totes New Trex Select 2x6's CHECK YOURAD a t $99.95/ea., 6 o r Full 20' Bundle -$1400. Check out the classifieds online 541-706-1331 Thompson Center Arms more at $89.95 ea. GioryBee Foods wwsr.bendbuffetin.com muzzleloader, 50 cal Sisters Habitat ReStore Eugene, OR. New Englander, exclnt Updated daily Building Supply Resale 541-689-091 3or shape, $295. Quality items. 1-800-456-7923 541-419-1604 For newspaper LOW PRICES! on the first day it runs Buyfng Dismonds delivery, call the 150 N. Fir. to make sure it isn cor- ThompsonContender /Gofd for Cash 541-549-1621 Circulation Dept. at rect. nSpellcheck and pistol w/2 barrels: 44 Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-385-5800 Open to the public. human errors do oc- Rem Ma@Genf with 541-389-6655 To place an ad, call cur. If this happens to Bushnell scope & carry 266 541-385-5809 BUYING your ad, please con- case; & 22 LR match Heating 8 Stoves or email tact us ASAP so that Lionel/American Flyer with Bushnell scope & claggified@bendbulletin.cgm corrections and any trains, accessories. carry case, $850. NOTICE TO 541-408-2191. adjustments can be SavageMod. 116 .300 ADVERTISER Serving Central Oragon sincetggg made to your ad. Win Mag, stainless BUYING & S E LLING September 29, 541 -385-5809 steel w/scope & case, All gold jewelry, silver Since 1991, advertising for 270 The Bulletin Classified $550. and gold coins, bars, used woodstoves has Mossberg300A 12Ga Lost & Found rounds, wedding sets, been limited to mod246

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit

325

Hay, Grain & Feed 1st & 2nd cutting orchard grass mix, small bales $235/ton. Madras, OR. 541-420-9736

1st Quality mixed grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters Premium orchard grass, barn stored no rain, 1st cutting $225, 2nd $250, delivery avail. Call 541-420-9158 or 541-948-7010.

Quality Orchard/Mixed Grass hay, between Bend& Redmond. $230/ton, small bales. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 341

Horses & Equipment J

•. els which have been 5, certified by the Or- Found; Sports equipment on Hwy 26, beegon Department of Environmental Qual- t ween M adras & 541-382-9419. ity (DEQ) and the fed- Warm Springs, 1/2 2001 Silverado E n v ironmental mile before P elton CRYPT at Deschutes eral 3-horse trailer 5th exit. Call to deMemorial G a r den Protection A g e n cy Dam wheel, 29'x8', deluxe (EPA) as having met scribe and i d entify showman/semi Meadow Pond space living 541-475-4887. smoke emission stan4D4 - dbl depth lawn quarters, lots of exdards. A cer t ified crypt, full grave for 2. Found youngfemale cat tras. Beautiful condiB uyer w il l ne e d w oodstove may b e in NE Bend. Call to tion. $21,900. OBO identified by its certifi- identify. granite & bronze dbl 541-420-3277 interment m a r ker cation label, which is 541-330-7369. permanently attached plus interment costs. Sat. 9/20 on Petti$1500 For more info to the stove. The Bul- Lost Horseshoeing or Bear Creek Rd., c all K e l lie Al l e n letin will not know- rew n portable table Tools akita 10 ingly accept advertis541-382-5592 or JHM 110-Ib certifier ing for the sale of saw. 541-420-3062 seller, 207-582-0732 anvil, anvil stand uncertified w/vise, all GE hand Infrared Sauna, 220-V woodstoves. tools, hoof stand 8 hook-up, no building, forge tools, all in REMEMBER:If you $1000. 541-536-7790 Get your have lost an animal, new condition, Wanted- paying cash don't forget to check business $1600 for Hi-fi audio & stuThe Humane Society or part trade for dio equip. Mclntosh, generator. Bend JBL, Marantz, Dya ROW I N G 541-382-3537 541-430-4449 naco, Heathkit, SanRedmond sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 541-923-0882 with an ad in Call 541-261-1808 Madras The Bulletin's 541-475-6889 Horse stalls, pasture & "Call A Service Find exactly what Prineville arena. Owner care. 541-447-7178 F amily ranch S W you are looking for in the Professional" or Craft Cats Redmond. $150/mo. CLASSIFIEDS Directory 541-389-8420. 541-207-2693. class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill Fl e ming,


E2 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745

Employment Opportunities

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Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • I chasing products or II services from out of area. Sending Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. I the c ash, checks, o r I I credit i n f ormationI Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. • may be subjected to I FRAUD. I more informaThursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. I For tion about an adver- I

you may call Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. I tiser, the Oregon State I I Attorney General'sI C o n s umer a Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. al Office Protection hotline atl Saturday • • • • . 3:00pm Fri. I 1-877-877-9392. I Sunday. • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • L

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Loans & Mortgages

AptiMultiplex General

WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have

CHECK YOUR AD

Homes for Sale

NOTICE

All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e Federal F air H ousing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or 860 discrimination based llotorcycles & Accessories on race, color, reliion, sex, handicap, Harley Davidson Iamilial status or na- 1985 1200C with S portster tional origin, or inten- frame and '05 Harley tion to make any such crate motor. Rat Rod preferences, l i mita- look, Screaming Eagle tions or discrimination. tips, leather saddlebags, We will not knowingly e xtras. S a crifice a t accept any advertis- $4000 Call Bill Logsdon ing for real estate 458-206-8446 (in Bend). which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified 2001 Honda Goldwing 1800cc w/2005 Cali750 fornia side car trike Redmond Homes conversion, 40K actual miles, every option imaginable! CD, Looking for your next AM/FM, cruise, has 5' emp/oyee? Brake, side rails, some Place a Bulletin help riding gear. Well serwanted ad today and viced. located in Mt. reach over 60,000 Vernon, OR. Trailer readers each week. optional. $22,500. Your classified ad 541-350-5050 will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1 5 milhon page views every month at no extra cost. 2005 HD Heritage SoftBulletin Classifieds Tail, Big Bore kit, lots of Get Results! extras, 28,600 mi, exlnt Call 385-5809 or cond., $9750 firm place your ad on-line 541-318-8668 at bendbulletin.com

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please conconcerns or questact us ASAP so that tions, we suggest you corrections and any Looking for your next consultyour attorney adjustments can be employee? or call CONSUMER made to your ad. Place a photo inyourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES Place a Bulletin help HOTLINE, 541 -385-5809 for only$15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines wanted ad today and 1-877-877-9392. The Bulletin Classified reach over 60,000 *UNDER '500in total merchandise OVER'500 in total merchandise readers each week. BANK TURNED YOU Where can you find a 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 Your classified ad DOWN? Private party helping hand? will loan on real eswill also appear on 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 From contractors to bendbulletin.com tate equity. Credit, no *tlllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 problem, good equity yard care, it's all here which currently 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special receives over 1.5 is all you need. Call in The Bulletin's Oregon Land Mort4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 lcall for commercial line ad rates) million page views "Call A Service every month at gage 541-388-4200. no extra cost. Professional" Directory LOCAL MONEYr We buy Bulletin Classifieds A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: secured trust deeds & Get Results! Apartmentnote,some hard money Senior Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Call 385-5809 Independent Living loans. Call Pat Kellev * or place ALL-INCLUSIVE BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) 541-382-3099 ext.13. your ad on-line at with 3 meals daily REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well bendbulletin.com Month-to-month lease, check it out! as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin TiCk, TOCk Call 541-460-5323 bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at Tick, Tock... Small studio downtown any time. is located at: Need to get anad Old Mill area. No pets, ...don't let time get 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. no smoking $495 mo., in ASAP? away. Hire a $475 dep., All util. inBend, Oregon 97702 cluded. 541-330-9769 professional out of The Bulletin's 634 Fax it to541-322-7253 PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction "Call A Service Apt./lllultiplex NE Bend 763 is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Professional" to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these The Bulletin Classifieds Recreational Homes Call for Specials! newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Directory todayi & Property Limited numbers avail. Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios Cabin adj. to F.S. Iand Harley Davidson CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE 8 mi. from Sisters, mtn 476 476 476 or decks. 2001 FXSTD, twin 'Approx. 3-month assignment* view, horse corral, MOUNTAIN GLEN, cam 88, fuel injected, Employment Employment Employment Immediate opening in the Circulation depart1/7th share $49,500. 541 -383-931 3 Vance & Hines short ment for an entry level Customer Service RepOpportunities Opportunities Opportunities 541-928-6549 or shot exhaust, Stage I Professionally r esentative. Additional projects may b e 503-260-9166 with Vance & Hines managed by Norris & DELIVERY - Make ex- asigned asneeded. Looking for someone to fuel management Stevens, Inc. CDL Truck Driver Civil Unit tra money!! Deliver assist our subscribers and delivery carriers 771 system, custom parts, Needed. Supenrisor the phone book. For with subscription transactions, account quesextra seat. Lots Our wood chip and The Jackson County more info, c o ntact tions and delivery concerns. Essential: Posi$1 0,500OBO. lumber drivers averCircuit C o ur t in Rhnjj tive attitude, strong service/team orientation, Nancy 253-720-1638 Call Today FSBO - 16178 Hawks age 54K annually. Medford, O r e gon and problem solving skills. Must be able to 541-516-8684 Vse &lls Lair Rd., La Pine, OR. 421 Off weekends,paid seeks a Civil Unit function comfortably in a fast-paced, perforCall The Bulletin At 1 acre lot w/ grandfavacation, health inSchools & Training Supervisor. Salary mance-based customer call center environt hered s e ptic a p s urance. For 3 5 541-385-5809 $4554 to $7417 per ment and have accurate typing, phone skills proval. Close to Bend, REDUCED! y ears w e hav e month. For further and computer entry experience. Most work is HTR Truck School Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Sunriver Resort, Mt. serviced E a s tern info and to apply go At: www.bendbulletin.com done via telephone, so strong communication RED!v!OND CAMPUS Bachelor skiing. Oregon, Ce n t ral to h t t p://courts.orskills and the ability to multi task is a must. Our Grads GetJobs! $35,000. Call Sandra Oregon, Southern 1-888-438-2235 egon.gov/OJD/jobs Work shift hours are Friday through Tuesday. 541-895-3515. 713 O regon an d th e WWW.XXTR.EDU and click on "paid ELECTRICALMust be flexible on hours, as some Holidays, Boise Valley a nd OR Licensed Journey- and early morning hours are required. positions" by OctoReal Estate Wanted 775 Harley D a vidson 476 man, 70 hours a week, Accepting resumes through October 5, 2014. you can live in any ber 5, 2014. Equal 2006, FXDLI Dyna $75 per day per diem, of these locations. Illanufacturedi opportunity em• WE BUY HOMES• Employment Low Rider, Mustang $28-$32 per hour. InWe run late model ployer. Any conditionThe Bulletin Mobile Homes Opportunities seat with backrest, d ustrial work. C a l l 5<rvrsacentral oregon since 19IB P etes an d K e n Close in 7 days. 877-695-1200. new battery, windworths all 550 cats Scott L. Williams Real c/o Kurt Muller, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR Add your web address Special shield, forward conwith 13 speeds, our Estate - 800-545-6431 New3 Dream 97708 or e-mail resume to: bdrm, 2 bath to your ad and readtrols, lots of chrome, trailers are C urtin kmullerObendbulletin.com $50,900 finished ers on The Bulletin's 732 Screamin' Eagle exBanking- Accounting vans (no tarps to No phone calls, please. The Bulletin is a on your site. web site, www.bendhaust, 11K mi. Sedeal with) 4 0'-23' ommercial/Investment drug-free workplace/EOE J and M Homes bulletin.com, will be nior owned, w e ll doubles year around 541-548-5511 Properties for Sale able to click through maind! $7950 L a work. We our lookautomatically to your Pine (928)581-9190 ing for long term BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS GOOD TO GO! website. drivers, our average CreditUnion Rustlers Inn 20 unit Search the area's most employee has motel & leased comprehensive listing of Need to get an w orked for us f o r Accounting/Operations Coordinator • s restaurant building in J classified advertising... I ad in ASAP? over 8 years. So if Prineville — Sunny real estate to automotive, you are looking for a Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for a You can place it Central Oregon! merchandise to sporting detail-oriented team player with a positive Lorraine Edhome, give us a call $1,218,000. Good goods. Bulletin Classifieds Grandma online at: wards of Livingston, TX, 541.523.9202 attitude to assist with general accounting cash flow for invesappear every day in the www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful, self-motiduties and back office operational activities, is hoping to reach Justin, tors or owner operaprint or on line. vated person to work in the newsroom, assistJaxon, Pearl or Shawn. including data entry. Maintains accuracy of tors. Terms may be Call 541-385-5809 ing the features staff in a variety of duties, inGrandma's very conCredit Union accounting systems though 541-385-5809 available for qualified www.bendbulletin.com cerned about T hom. cluding with the production of a weekly arts verification of entries, posting, adjustments buyer. Thank you, no Please call 936-252-2168 and entertainment section. The right candiand reconciliations. Balances assigned GL agents. Details, call The Bulletin or email LorraineEEdwards Banking date will enjoy a fast-paced work environment, accounts, performs necessary entries and Swwngcentral oregonsince ets 808-938-7549 ~@ assists w it h m o nth-end G L ac c ruals. be very detail-oriented, understand the importance of accuracy, meet tight deadlines and Processes drafts, ACHs, and wires. Provides exercise excellent grammar, spelling and orexcellent member service to internal business ganization skills. The position is largely cleripartners and members. Processes and/or Credit Union cal in nature with some opportunities for writdisburses accounts payable checks and ing, so solid writing skills are a must. College provides administrative services on debit and Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for special degree and/or previous related experience is credit cards. Successful candidate must be people to join our dynamic, growing team. PC-proficient in a W i ndows environment, preferred for this 30-hour-per-week position. Call54l385dl09 to promoteyourservice• Advertise for 28daysstorting atrlfgIttrr Srrtrt trdatr t rtrt arrttttr e er ntstrl Both positions require excellent customer The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an including Word and Excel. Previous credit service and sales skills, sound decisionequal opportunity employer. Pre-employment union or operations experience preferred. making, and the ability to understand and drug screening is required prior to hiring. retain a variety of complex product and Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care services information. Successful candidates To apply, please emailresume and any Excellent benefits package and competitive will be able to work in a team environment and relevant writing samples to: salary. Visit our web site at NOTICE: Oregon state be PC-proficient. featuresassistant©bendbulletin.com www.midoregon.com for more details. law requires anyone No phone inquiries, please. who con t racts for Mid Oregon Credit Union offers a competitive Please send resume, Zdped Qua/rrI construction work to salary package an d p r ovides excellent cover letter and application to: Serving Central be licensed with the Zttrar4 Ptxtr 4/an, General benefits. S e e our web site at Mid Oregon FCU Oregon Since 2003 Construction Contracwww.midoregon.com f o r mo r e det a ils The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturResidental/Commercial Attn: HumanResources tors Board (CCB). An MANAGING day night shift and other shifts as needed. We including application form. P.O. Box 6749, active license Central Oregon currently have openings all nights of the week. Sprinkler Bfovv-out Bend, OR 97708 means the contractor Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts Sprinkler Repair Bend is bonded & insured. LANDSCAPES start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and • Member Services Representative (Teller) Nid Oregon Credit Union is a drug-free workplace Back Flow Testing Since 2006 Verify the contractor's end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Al l po25 hours week CCB l i c ense at sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Maintenance • Member Service Representative (Teller) www.hirealicensedFall Clean Up Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a 40 hours week contractor.com Don't track it in all Winter • Fall Clean up Registered Nurses ~Weekly Mowing minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Bend or call 503-378-4621. •Leaves are short (1 t:30 - 1:30). The work consists of & Edging • Contact Center Member Services The Bulletin recom•Cones Live and work i n t h e b eautiful outdoor •Bi-Monthly & Monthly loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack• Needles mends checking with Representative40 hours week recreation area of John Day, Oregon, home of ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup Maintenance • Debris Hauling the CCB prior to conthe John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, •Bark, Rock, Etc. and other tasks. For qualifying employees we tracting with anyone. Please send resume, hiking, biking, hunting, fishing, camping, and offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, Some other t rades cover letter and application to: Winter Prep boating - something for everyone year round. short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid ~Landsca in also req u ire addiMid Oregon FCU •Pruning •Landscape Community Counseling Solutions is a 501(c)3 vacation and sick time. Drug test is required tional licenses and Attn: Human Resources ~Aerating Construction serving Gillam, Harney, Wheeler and Grant prior to employment. certifications. P.O. Box 6749, •Fertilizing •Water Feature Counties by providing dynamic, progressive Bend, OR 97708 Installation/Maint. and diverse supports to improve the well Please submit a completed application attenDebris Removal Compost •Pavers being of our communities. tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Mid Oregon Credit union is a drug-free workplace •Renovations at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanApplications JUNK BE GONE •Irrigations Installation We are recruiting for Registered Nurses to dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be I Haul Away FREE Use Less Water Banking work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center, a obtained upon request by contacting Kevin $$$ SAVE $$$ Senior Discounts For Salvage. Also Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). Cleanups & Cleanouts Secure Residential Treatment Facility Bonded 8 Insured Improve Plant Health No phone calls please. Only completed appliproviding services to individuals with a 541-815-4458 Mel, 541-389-8107 cations will be considered for this position. No severe mental illness. T hese positions LCB¹8759 2015 Maintenance resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reprovide mental h ealth n ursing c are Credit Union Handyman Package Available Aeration/Dethatching quired prior to employment. EOE. including medication oversight, medication 1-time or Weekly Services Financial Services Representativerelated t reatment, f o llow p h ysician's I DO THAT! EXPERIENCED Ask about FREEadded Loan Officer — Contact Center The Bulletin prescriptions and procedures, measure and Home/Rental repairs servrngrentrar oregon since $03 Commercial svcs w/seasonal contract! record patient's general physical condition Small jobs to remodels Bonded & Insured. & Residential Mid Oregon Federal Credit Union is looking for such as pulse, temperature and respiration Honest, guaranteed COLLINS Lawn Maint. a qualified candidate to fill their Loan Officer work. CCB¹151573 to provide daily information, educate and Senior Discounts Ca/i 541-480-9714 position in their Contact Center. Home Delivery Advisor Dennis 541-317-9768 train staff on medication administration, and 541-390-1466 The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking ensure documentation is kept according to Same Day Response Painting/Wall Covering Due to internal promotions Mid Oregon Credit F. Weedon Const. & Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time Union is looking to fill a full-time lending policies. Th i s p o s ition w orks w i th a Home Services. NOTICE: Oregon Landposition and consists of managing an adult the treatment team to promote recovery ALL AMERICAN position in Bend. Position includes processing carrier force to ensure our customers receive Handyman & light const. scape Contractors Law PAINTING loans requested by phone; processing of from mental illness. This position includes 541-598-6150 (ORS 671) requires all superior service. Must be able to create and Interior and Exterior dealer fax and online applications; monitoring t elephone c o nsultation a n d cri s i s perform strategic plans to meet department CCB¹t 86744 businesses that adFamily-owned of Contact Center loan queue to insure intervention in the facility. vertise t o pe r form Residential & Commercial objectives such as increasing market share turnaround time meets service standards and Landscape Construc- 40 and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts Wheite buyerS making follow up calls to the member as Qualified applicants must have a v alid self-starter who can work both in the office tion which includes: 5-year warranties n ecessary; o u t bound cal l ing; loa n l anting, deck s , Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's and in their assigned territory with minimal meet sellers. Summer Special! maintenance r e quests; n e w mem b er license at the time of hire, hold a valid ences, arbors, supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary Call 541-337-6149 member/loan retention closure requests, water-features, and inOregon driver's license and pass a criminal with company vehicle provided. Strong CCB ¹t 93960 request for payoff; and other duties as stallation, repair of irhistory background check. customer service skills and management skills assigned. rigation systems to be are necessary. Computer experience is l icensed w it h th e Parking Lot Maintenanc Wages dependent upon education and required. You must pass a drug screening Position requires excellent sales and customer Landscape Contracand be able to be insured by company to drive AB Parking Lot experience, but will be between $23.08 to service skills, sound decision-making, and the tors Board. This 4-digit This is an entry-level position, but we Maintenance $34.62/hr. E x c ellent benefit package, vehicles. number is to be in- Forall ability to understand and retain a variety of b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o your parking lot / including signing bonus. complex product and services information. cluded in all adverWhether you're dnveway needs. advancement within company is available to tisements which indiSuccessful candidate must be PC-proficient in sweeper the right person. If you enjoy dealing with looking for a home cate the business has •• Commercial a Windows environment. 1-2 years consumer Do you havestudent loans? Make a 2-year Crack fill from diverse backgrounds and you are or need a service, a bond,insurance and lending experience preferred. commitment and you will receive an people coat energetic, have great organizational skills and your future is in workers compensa- •• Seal additional $10,000 that you can use to pay interpersonal communication skills, please tion for their employ- • Striping these pages. Go to www.midoregon.com for down your loans. Do you need to relocate Dust send your resume to: ees. For your protec- • Snowcontrol more information including job application. Removal and find housing? We can help with that, tion call 503-378-5909 • De-icing The Bulletin too! or use our website: c/o Kurt Muller Please send resume, CCB ¹203383 www.lcb.state.or.us to Call Scott PO Box 6020 cover letter and application to: 541-815-2332 Please visit th e O regon Employment check license status Bend, OR 97708-6020 Mid Oregon FCU Department or the Community Counseling before contracting with FIND IT! or e-mail resume to: Thousands ofadsdaily Attn: HumanResources Solutions website for an application or the business. Persons kmuller©bendbulletin.com in print andonline. P.O. Box 6749, BUY IT! contact Nina Bisson at 5 4 1-676-9161, doing lan d scape No phone calls, please. Bend, OR 97708 maintenance do not nina.bisson©gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE SELL IT! r equire an L C B Heppner, OR 97836. Pre-employmentdrug screen required. Mid Oregon Credit union is a drug-free workplace I a s~ cense. The Bulletin Classifieds

The Bulletin

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, SEP 30, 2014

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

DAILY BRIDGE CLUBTkaesday,september30,2014

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sbortz

Straight and narrow

ACROSS 1 Light bender

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

"Let's hope Steve Carlton gets his curveball straightened out." — a

vulnerable. The dealer, at your right, opens one heart. What do you say?

baseball announcer's comment when

ANSWER: A few fearless players

the Hall o f F am e p i tcher wasn't throwing strikes. The defense against today's 3NT started well but veered out of t he strike zone. West led the queen and jack o f hea r ts , E a s t s i g n aled

would double for takeout, but the soundest action, despite the 13 highcard points, is a pass. This hand has good defensive values, including secondary honors in th e o pening bidder's suit, but it has a bundle of

encouragement and South played losers and would make a poor low. When West led a third heart, South won,led a diamond to dummy and returned the eight of clubs. West took the queen and led a d iamond, b u t So u t h r an the diamonds, forced out the ace of clubs and took the rest, making three.

dummy for partner if you doubled and forced him to bid a suit. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

NORTH 45743

Q63 0 AK J109 4J83

MISSING POINTS Let's try to straighten out West.

Once East showed the king of hearts, WEST

EAST 411086 2

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South had every missing point to open 1NT. So West can't beat 3NT with the hearts. He must try for a spade trick, plus two hearts and two

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B EAM S P H A S E S A P LOM B A K R ON L I E B OB B LE H EA D S L AB E L ON U S L EA K

4 A Q 7 . Neither side (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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

A P P E

C AM E R A M A N

Opening lead — 9 Q

9 Q J4

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Z ES T E R T E N S E I NTO W G A M E T A B L E N Y U M Y B A D EA T

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DAILY QUESTION 43 K J 5

S T A B

SOUTH 4IAQ9 9 A105

At Trick Three, West must lead the king of spades, hoping East has the ten. When West takes the queen of clubs, he continues with the jack of spades. All South can do is cash out for down one.

Youhold:

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

I N U S E

L E T T

E R I E

N O M A D

O R Z O

D O S E

63 Canadian Plains tribe 64 Eggheaded sorts 65 Like patent infringers, often 66 Part of P.G.A.: Abbr. 67 Secret rendezvous

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14

15

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8

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33

25

26

27

29

31

34

35

38

28

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No. 0826

36

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41 44

47

48

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53

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55

58

59

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63

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60

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PUZZLE BYVICTOR FLEMING

56 AWOL chasers ... or a hint to the answers to 50 Stop producing the six starred water, as a well clues 51 Crossword needs 57 Perrier, par exemple 52 Baker's supply 58 Little Rock-toChicago dir. 54 Pet care 59 Hi- m o n itor specialists, for short 60 Kesey or Follett

37 *It'5 not worth

48

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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 Io download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xworda.

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E6 TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 30 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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