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IN Go!: HALLOWEEN EVENTS• IN SPORTS: Duclos,'SWIN INOTATARIZONASTATE,C1
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LOCAL• B1
TODAY' S READERBOARD
Limitingmarijuanasellers
BOTCbroadens reach
facilities to limit the proximity of
— Bend-based Bankofthe Cascades is branching out to the coast.Co
P ran ve
The city of Bend is considering adding buffer zones around schools anddaycare recreational marijuana sellers. The map at right shows how thesebuffer zones could prohibit marijuana sellers in some of the city's established commercial districts and how they might affect existing medical dispensaries that may want to become recreational outlets. uuSchool R Day care facility w Medical marijuana dispensary R Extent of a proposed 1,000-foot buffer area around schools • t Extentof a proposed150-foot buffer area around day care facilities
Newport Ave
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Canine costumecraze-
Pete Smith / The Bulletin
Panel,parkdistrict clash over potbufferzones By Tyler Leeds
month, the committee was
The Bulletin
A group advising the city of Bend on the regulation of
tasked with discussing if and how to apply buffer between recreational cannabis facilities
retail marijuana outlets has
and places such as schools,
agreed on a set of restrictions governing where such businesses may locate, generally taking a light touch in its approach. That doesn't sit well
parks and day care centers. The panel reaffirmed its
with the Bend Park & Recreation District.
tives that the group revisit the
At a meeting earlier this
earlier decisions at a meeting
Thursday, despite lobbying from park district representaissue and take a stricter stance. See Buffer /A5
Dogsare no longer just dressing up just on Halloween.E4
College basketball
Developer questions need for affordable housing
SCanllalS —Four Hall of Fame coachesare mired in scandal.C1
Redefining 'texas'InNorway, "texas" takes on a whole new meaning.A3
And a Web exclusiveFewerblack menareapplying to medical school than in 1978. bendbulletin.corn/extras
By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
EDITOR'5CHOICE
A developer has taken legal action to stop the city of Bend from rezoning a propertyplanned foraffordable housing, arguing in part that
Changeof seasoncan stir changes
the city hasn't proven there
is a need for low-cost homes. Larry Kine, a longtime localdeveloper behindsuch subdivisions as Westside Meadows, has challenged the city's actions before the
Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals. The property in
In mood
question is a 5-acre parcel off NE Butler Market Road,
By Colby ltkowitz story began: "I should have
located directly south of an irrigation canal and Pine Nursery Park. Depending on how it is developed, city
been a bear."
staff say the land could fit
The subject, quoted under a pseudo-name, was a young professional woman in New York suffering from depression that only emerged in the fall as the days got shorter, cooler and gloomier. A researcher at
around 90 apartments. SeeHousing/A5
The Washington Post
A 1981 Washington Post
sic'
At the end of the Post
ga
Nedn Unit Me'
the National Institutes of Mental Health, Norman
Rosenthal, was studying the impact of light on mental health, and theorized that in rare cases the human brain may respond negatively to the diminishing exposure to sun.
PineNursery Pad
e
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
.
I
i
—l
Greg Bland, right, and Anne Shouse, of Bend, take in the view of the clouds over a snow-capped Mount Bachelor as Bland snaps a cellphone photo while hiking around Todd Lake on Thursday City-ownedproperty slated for affordable dovolopmont
west of Bend. "You can't ask for a much prettier scene than this," Bland said. Clouds remain in the forecast today, with temperatures topping out at 58 degrees. See the full forecast on Page B6.
L
article, the reporter gave
Pete Smith / The Bulletin
Rosenthal an assist, asking readers to contact him if
they too experienced seasonal mood changes. "I thought I was deal-
ing with a very rare syndrome," he said in an interview. "I thought we' d
getmaybe halfa dozen and we could do something. We got 3,000 responses from all over the country." Rosenthal, who in 1984 was the first to identity and
later label Seasonal Af-
What to do with sex offenders after they do time? By Monica Davey
of the daily routine inside a
offenders — have already
psychopathic personalities"
New York Times News Service
remote facility here that was
completed their sentences.
by courts. The intent, the
than 700 sex offenders who
MOOSE LAKE, Minn. built based on a design for a — Behind razor wire and prison. locked metal doors, hundreds But this is not a prison, and of men waited on a recent most of these men — rapists, morning to be counted, part pedophiles and other sex
They are being held here indefinitely under a policy
Yet not one of the more
authorities say, is to provide
have been civilly committed
known as civil commitment,
treatment to the most dangerous sex offenders until it
in Minnesota over the past two decades has actually
having been deemed "sexually dangerous" or "sexual
is safe for the public for them to go home.
gone home. See Offenders /A4
fective Disorder, or SAD,
has spent the last 30 years of his careerstudying and refi ning thecauses, symptoms andcures for depression induced by lack of light. See Season /A4
TODAY'S WEATHER Rather cloudy High 58, Low 49 Page B6
INDEX All Ages Business Calendar
E1-6 Classified Dt - 6 D ear Abby C5-6 Comics/Puzzles D3-4 Horoscope f5 $ Qt 4 In GO! Crosswords D 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies E5, GO!
The Bulletin An Independent
Q I/I/e userecyclednewsprint
Voi. 1 13, No. 303,
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