Bulletin Daily Paper 09-16-15 by Western Communications, Inc. - Issuu

Bulletin Daily Paper 09-16-15

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Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1

WEDNESDAY September16,2015

oosin a us-ri

a i re Prepvolleyball SPORTSC1

SCOTT MOUNTAIN•OUTDOORS, D1

bendbulletin.corn TODAY’ S READERBOARD

IN D.C.

Debate on fire funding flares up in Congress

Return of vinyl Asthe music format is resurrected, the machines that makethe re› cords need to be aswell. A3

Flydoardiug 2015and still no jet pack? Try this device while you wait for one.D2

By Taylor W.Anderson

By Scott Hammerse The Bulletin

The Bulletin

The first significant changes to Bend’s bus system since it was created a decade ago are com›

A program offers classes at Deer Ridge in Madras.Ce

Cascades East Transit,

which operates the bus network, is adding three

new routes, extending weekday bus service lat›

GOP dehateS Theforum

er into the evening, and

for the top 11candidates airs tonight at 5 onCNN.Tunein at 3 p.m. for the other candidates. For more,seebelow right andA4

boosting the number of buses traveling the busiest routes during the busiest times.

Annual ridership on the

And a Wed exclusive› A Kenyan road project is taking huge bites out of a slum. beutibuuetin.curn/extras

city’s system climbed to nearly 405,000 in 2011, and

New routeswouldtarget campusesandhospital

bus routes

8 I

has since declined to just

I

The Washington Post

When the 550 students

at a private school in Virginia Beach recently returned to class, they walked into classrooms newly monitored by gun› shot-detection technology. Acousticsensorstucked high on walls listened for the distinct sound of gunfire, able to pinpoint its location and alert author›

ities. The technology also greeted students heading back to schools in Newark, California and Reynolds› burg, Ohio. These schools are among the few early adopters of military battlefield tools

that today are being de› ployed to address a night› mare scenario much closer to home: the school shoot›

ing. The technology doesn’ t stop gunfire, but supporters say it can limit the carnage by speeding up the emer› gencyresponse.Interestin thesesystems appearsto be growing, seeded by the

still on fire, with more major wildfires flaring up almost weekly during what is typically the tail end of wildfire season. Two

fires in Northern Califor› nia this month displaced thousands of people in Cal› ifornia and burned down entire neighborhoods.

8 ark’

over 366,000 in the budget

Oregon’s Democratic

year that ended in June. Scott Aycock, commu›

GgntrdlQcejgllP ge

ernmental Council

Sen. Ron Wyden hopes to highlight the 2015 fire sea› son to push a bill through

Cha Be

0 ’

opment manager with the Central Oregon Intergov› the

the Senate this fall that

would allow federal agen› cies to pay for fires without having to use money in›

me Stak

minal

Cascades East Transit›

said the rise in ridership numbers and the subse› quent leveling off tracks

tended to prevent them. "I’ ve made it clear to con› servatives that as it relates

ank i

to fire funding fixes I’m very open for ways to com› promise and find common ground," Wyden said in an

closely with enrollment at

Central Oregon Commu› nity College. Students and faculty at the college have historically been the heavi›

rihfts

v

interview this month.

est users of the bus system,

he said, and the opening of the new OSU-Cascades campus in southwest Bend

By Todd C. Frankel

Huge stretches of the western United States are

~ Route l ~ Route10 ~ Route12 ~ Existing and modified bus routes Areas no longer served

organization that oversees

For security, schoolslook to war zone technology

what may be the costliest wildfire season on record, Congress is gearing up for a fight over how best to pay for the destructive blazes.

, New Beud

The Central Oregon Intergovernmen› tal Council, which runs CascadesEast Transit, has created newweekday bus routes within Bend. The routes are being supported with funding from St. Charles Health System, OSU-Cascades, CentralOregon Community College and others.

nity and economic devel›

EDITOR'5CHOICE

next year is expected to boost rider numbers.

0 0~ , ,

08U-Ccodes t mpu

8

OSU-Cascades has

dedicated $300,000 to the expansion over the next

Busesmoreprevalent on Bendroads

three years, as has St.

Charles Health System, while COCC has pledged $150,000. Aycock said the three› year window all told, the system has secured

$3.4 million to cover the expansion over the next three years will give Cascades East Transit

urphy Rd.

40,000 riders›

ger-term funding plan. He said funding could take the form of a property tax or a utility fee, and he said it’ s going to be challenging to persuade the public to sup›

35,000 .›

port a transit system that

15,000 .

won’t necessarily be a use› ful alternative to driving

for many residents.

30,000 "› ›

25,000›

39,749 riders

20,000›

The record number of monthly riders was set in October 2012

10,000›

See Bus/A4

shooting, the latest coming

Monday when a history professor was fatally shot by another professor at Delta State University in

Mississippi. But the technology has created discomfort, too. Its emergence is seen by some as a tacit admission that school shootings have

By Reed Abelson

"Don’t go," said Allan

2009 total: 300,959

2010 total: 343,896

2011 total: 39 I,9 I7

2012 total: 405,803

2013 total: 388,368

Source: Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council

2014 total: 2015*: 370,962 190,098 PeteSmith i The Bulletin

effort to remake the health

the third casualty among 23 insurance startups created under the federal health care

cheaper prices

law to inject competition for coveragein certain partsof

sold by large established in› surance companies in some regions. But as the new co-ops be› gin failing just a year into the

become unavoidable, that

the country.

classrooms are targets that need to be hardened. Some

Set up as nonprofits with consumer-led boards, the co›

SeeFire /A6

So how in the world do you win a debate for losers?

5,000 .

ops were designed to provide affordable insurance coverage to individuals and small businesses. They were in› tended under the law to offer alternatives and hopefully

Late last month, the Ne› vada Health Co-op became

reserves that are set aside to prevent wildfires, like forest thinning.

The Washington Post

Health moperatives find the goingtough New York Times News Service

amount, it dips into other

By David A. Fahrenthold

"It’s very much a chick›

en and egg kind of situa› tion," he said.

The House and Senate have long bickered over how to reform the way federalagenciespay to combat large wildfires like thosethatdevoured more than four dozen homes in Oregon this year. When the U.S. Forest Service spends its entire allotted

A debate with no way to win?

CASCADE EASTTRANSIT RIDERSHIP BY MONTH

the time to develop a lon›

even in its expanded form

In addition to the new routes, the Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council, which operates Cascade East Transit, is running its 33 buses later and more often on some lines to shorten wait times.

three major companies that

make the devicesand driven by school administrators grappling with how to keep students safe. Inquiries alsospikeaftereach school

While state

working to get to the end

ing Monday. Inmate entrepreneurs

SALEM

and federal firefightersare

to the plans

Louden, a debate coach, a professoratWake Forest

University and an occasion› al adviser to political candi› dates. "I’m serious."

On Wednesday evening, four long-shot Republican candidates will step on› stage and into one of the weirdest and most diffi› cult moments in the his›

tory of presidential debates. There will be no way

has promised to consider care industry with more com› ways of helping them to get

for them to confront the

petition and lower costs, some

a firmer foothold, but some

the usual tactic of an un›

policy experts and insurance executives worry that the

insurance experts doubt that government changes will

derdog. Donald Trump won’t even appear until

marketplace is still hostile to

be enough to prevent more

after they’ re finished, to

newcomers trying to break into an industry dominated by powerfully entrenched businesses. Faced with these condi›

failures.

face 10 other candidates in the night’s main event. For

tions, the federal government

"This is not a market for the faint of heart," said Sabrina

Corlette, a law professor at Georgetown University. SeeCooperatives/A4

front-runnerfaceto face,

these four long shots, there

will also be little point in confronting one another. SeeDebate/A4

schoolsafety experts doubt

the value of gunshot-de› tection technology. But the industry compares its

devices to fire alarms› common-sense measures that can save lives.

SeeSchools/A4

TODAY’S WEATHER Showers High 58, Low 44 Page B6

INDEX Business C5-6 Comics/Puz zles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Outdoors 01-6 C1-4 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B 1-6 Sports Classified E 1 -10 Dear Abby 06 Ob i tuaries B5 TV / Movies 06

The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper

vol. 113, No. 259, 34 pages, 5 sections

Q l/l/e use recycled newsprint

’: IIIIIIIIIIIjl 0

8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

How to reachUs Fatal SChOOI bIIS CraSh Aschool bus plunged off a highway overpass in Houstonafter being hit by acar driven by ateacher Tues› day, killing two students andseriously injuring three other people, police andschool officials said. A17-year-old femalestudent died atthe scene, while a14-year-old girl died at ahospital, according to the Hous› ton Independent School District. The driver andthe other passengers on the bus amalestudent and afemale student are hospitalized. Their injuries arenot believed to belife-threatening, according to a po› lice statement. Thenamesof the students haven’t been released.

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541-382-1811

Targeting TrumP A deep-pocketed conservative organization with a long list of Republican scalps said onTuesdaythat it would launch a major adcampaign aimed at DonaldTrump in an effort to weaken him. TheClub for Growth is focusing its considerable fire› power first on iowa, whereTrump has leapt to asignificant lead over more conventionally credentialed Republican candidates. Allies of the club said the newcampaign was consistent with its past activism: Trump, a former Democrat who hassupported higher taxes andna› tional health care, is a recent and in theclub’s mind, insincere› convert to conservative ideas.

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Rick Bowmer/The Associated Press

A woman in traditional dress looks at a damaged vehicle swept away during a flash flood Tuesday in Hildale, Utah. The floodwaters swept away vehicles in the polygamous, secluded Utah-Arizona border

town, killing at least a dozen people.

00 S I

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in own, na iOna ar

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By Kimberly Pierceall and Brady McCombs The Associated Press

H ILDALE, Utah ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Eliz abethC.McCool ..........541-383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................541-383-0337 ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................641-383-0356

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CORRECTIONS The Bulletin’s primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you Knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0358.

R e s›

cuers trudged through mud› dy streambeds Tuesday in a small polygamous town on the Utah-Arizona border and found the bodies of several

children who died when their two vehicles were swept away in a torrent of floodwaters that

survived the flood. towns of Hildale, Utah, and "The little boy was standing Colorado City, Arizona, locat› there," Yvonne Holm said. "He ed about 315 miles south of Salt said, ’Are you guys going to Lake City at the foot of pictur› help me?’" esque red rock cliffs. It was in Only one person was still this area at Maxwell Canyon missing Tuesday in the border where heavy rains sent water town, and authorities had not down Short Creek and barrel› identified the dead. The chil› ing through the towns. dren in the vehicles ranged The torrent was so fast, "it from 4 years old to teenagers. was taking concrete pillars At nearby Zion N ational and just throwing them down, Park, authorities found four just moving them like plas›

killed at least 12 people. The same flash floods claimed at bodies and searched for three t ic," said Lorin H olm, w ho least four lives in nearby Zion missing hikers who set out called the storm the heaviest National Park. Monday to rappel down a nar› in the 58 years he’s lived in the The van and SUV were filled row slot canyon. They left be› community. with three women and 13 chil› fore park officials closed the The women and children dren when a wall of brown canyons that evening because were in the SUV and van on a water overtook them Monday of flood warnings, park spokes› gravel road north of the towns. evening, carrying the vehicles woman Holly Baker said. The They were returning from a several hundred yards down› hikers, from California and Ne› park when they stopped at a stream and s e nding t h em vada, were all in their 40s and flooded crossing and got out plungingdown a fl ooded-out 50s, Baker said. She had no de› to watch the raging waters, embankment with terrifying tails on their identities. Hildale Mayor Philip Barlow force. The SUV was smashed In Hildale, the streets were said. What they apparently did beyond recognition. Three caked in red mud, and earth not know was that a flash flood people survived, all children, in movers cleared the roads and was brewing in the canyon the secluded community that is piled up mounds of dirt. As a above, he said. It came rush› the home base of Warren Jeffs’ helicopter buzzed overhead, ing down and engulfed their polygamous sect. crowds of boys in jeans and vehicles. ’%’e’re greatly humbled by A witness described rushing girls and women wearing to where the vehicles came to deep-colored prairie dresses this, but we realize that this is a stop and seeing a gruesome watched the rescue effort. an act of God, and this is some› scene of body parts, twisted Residents called it the worst thing we can’t control," said metal and a young boy who flood in memory for the sister Barlow, a Jeffs follower.

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All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may be convertedto anelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublisheddailybyWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsoradilustrations. They may not bereproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

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

MEGA MILLIONS

Cracking down onflow of migrants, Hungary blocks akeycrossing point New York TimesNewsService H ORGOS, Serbia

The

multitudes of refugees and mi› grants who had been surging into Hungary in recent days found their path blocked on Tuesday, the first day of an intensified crackdown by the Hungarian authorities. Their

sages we have been sending on Tuesday, proof that people migrants for a long time have were heeding the warning, or reached them," said Gyorgy at least waiting for the picture Bakondi, an aide to P r i me to clear. Minister Viktor Orban of Hun›

gary. "Don’t come. Because this route doesn’t lead where access narrowed to a single you want to go." door in a small, white trailer Indeed, Hungarian officials through which they were be› said, after several days that ing slowly processed, one by saw record numbers of mi› one. grants crossing the border› Hundreds of migrants were

"I knew they would close

it, but I thought maybe they’ d do an exception," said Salib Yussef, 57, who had arrived

at the border at 3 a.m. with his two wives and two sons. "We were just three hours late!

Now I’m stuck here."

halted at the Hungarian bor›

der, on a main highway to Budapest. By late afternoon, about 800 of them simply sat

in the highway and waited to see what would happen next, or began plotting ways to circumvent the Hungarian

j

j

l

obstruction.

"Open the door! Open!" a crowd of about 200 protest› ers began to chant late Tues› day afternoon at the Roszke

border station. "Germany! Germany!" The migrant crisis that has

rattledEurope and fractured its already shaky unity pro› ducing heart-rending images of squalor, death and the joy› ful celebration of those who

The numbers drawnTuesday night are:

made it through has now found fresh focus on this flat,

4gQss OO Q7fiops Q

forested border at the edge of

The estimated jackpot is now $20 million.

week in Brussels. 9,000 on Monday alone the "We hope that th e m es› numbers were much lower

the European Union. Just one day after European leaders failed to find a sub›

stantial collective approach to the crisis, and two days after Germany, Austria, Slovakia and the Netherlands instituted

new border controls, Chancel› lor Angela Merkel of Germany and Chancellor Werner Fay› mann of Austria called for an urgent summit meeting next

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HP jOb CutS Hewlett-Packard Co. is preparing to shed up to another 30,000 jobs asthe Silicon Valley pioneer launches into a new era in the samecost-cutting mode that has marred much of its recent history. The purge, announcedTuesday, will occur within the newly formed Hewlett Packard Enterprise, a bundle of technology divisions focused on software, consulting and dataanalysis that is splitting off from the company’s personal computer and printing operations. The spinoff is scheduled to becompleted by the end of next month, dooming 25,000 to 30,000 jobs within HPEnterprise. Oll SXpOI’iS Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-calif., the House majority leader, said Tuesdaythat the House was preparing to vote later this month to repeal a 40-year-old ban onthe export of crude oil. The plan was immediately celebrated by the oil industry but is already drawing fire from environmental groups. The oil industry has started a major lobbying campaign to generate support in Washington for the repeal of the ban, first imposed during the 1970s oil crisis. But several refiners oppose lifting the ban becausethey fear the action will raise the price of domestic oil. Bad ilItelligellCS A group of intelligence analysts has provided investigators with documents it saysshow that senior military officers manipulated theconclusions of reports on the war against the Islamic State, according to several government officials. ThePentagon’s inspector general, who isexamining theclaims, is focusing on senior intelligence officials at U.S.Central Command, or CENTCOM.Officials said analysts allegetheir superiors within CENTCOM’sintelligence operation changedconclusions about anumber of topics, including the readiness of Iraqi security forces andthe success of the bombing campaign in IraqandSyria. The revisions presented amore positive picture, officials said. BOtChed ailStrike Mexico’s foreign minister traveled to Egypt on Tuesday to demandanswers about a mistaken military airstrike over the weekendthat hit a picnic full of Mexican tourists, killing a dozen people, while her Egyptian counterpart defended the profes› sionalism and sacrifice of the Egyptian armedforces. The back and forth raised newdoubts about the likelihood of a solution to the mys› tery of how anApache military helicopter crew could havemistaken a midday picnic in the desert for a camp ofheavily armed militants. Earlier Tuesday, President Abdej-Fattah el-Sissi called President En› rique PenaNieto of Mexico to express his condolences. Thailand attaCk Thailand’s national police chief on Tuesday blamed Uighur militants, members of anaggrieved minority in west› ern China, for a deadly bombing in Bangkok last month. After nearly a month of investigations into the bombing, which killed 20 people, Thai authorities havearrested two suspects and issued arrest war› rants for a dozenmore. But the comments Tuesdaywerethe first time investigators were explicit about who they believe perpetrated the attack. Local newsoutlets havespeculated for weeksthat the attack was a response to theThai government’s repatriation in July of more than 100 ethnic Uighurs to China. JSI’IISBIIm CISSllSS Palestinian youths andIsraeli police clashed againTuesdayatAlAqsaMosqueinJerusalem,and KingAbdullah II of Jordan issued ararewarning to Israel that the fighting could weaken relations between the two countries. Concerns aregrowing that the clashesoverJewish visits to the contested holy site, which be› gan on theeveof the Jewish NewYear, could set off wider violence. In acall Tuesdaymorning to KingAbdullah, Vice President JoeBidenand the king "expressedconcern" about the violence, and Biden urged "all parties to exercise restraint," the White Housesaid in a statement. — Fromwirereports

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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news

It’s Wednesday,Sept. 16, the 259th day of 2015. Thereare 106 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS GOP debate Thecandi› dates return to the stage in a pair of debates airing on CNN, this time at the RonaldReagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California.A1,A4

HISTORY Highlight:In 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Selective Training and Service Act. SamuelRayburn of Texas waselected Speaker of the U.S. House ofRepresen› tatives. In1498,Tomas deTorquema› da, notorious for his role in the Spanish Inquisition, died in Avila, Spain. In1810, Mexicans were in› spired to begin their successful revolt against Spanish rule by Father Miguel Hidalgo yCos› tilla and his "Grito de Dolores (Cry of Dolores)." In1893,more than100,000 settlers swarmed onto a section of land in Oklahoma known as the "CherokeeStrip." In1908,General Motors was founded in Flint, Michigan, by William C. Durant. In1919,the American Legion received a national charter from Congress. In1965, "The DeanMartin Show" premiered onNBC. In1974,President Gerald Ford announced aconditional amnesty program for Vietnam War deserters and draft-evad› ers. In1982,the massacre of between 1,200 and1,400 Palestinian men, womenand children at the hands of Israe› li-allied Christian Phalange militiamen began inwest Bei› rut’s Sabra andShatila refugee camps. In1994,a federaljury in Anchorage, Alaska, ordered Exxon Corp. to pay $5billion in punitive damagesfor the1989 Exxon Valdezoil spill (the U.S Supreme Court later reduced that amount to $507.5 million). Two astronauts from the space shuttle Discovery went on the first untethered spacewalk in 10 years. In2007,O.J.Simpsonwas arrested in the alleged armed robbery of sports memorabilia collectors in LasVegas. (Simp› son was later convicted of kidnapping andarmed robbery and sentenced to nine to 33 years in prison.) Ten years ngo:President George W.Bushruled out raising taxes to paythe massive costs of Gulf Coast reconstruction in the wakeof Hurricane Katrina, saying other government spending hadto be cut to pay for the recovery effort. Five years ego:PopeBenedict XVI began acontroversial state visit to Britain, acknowledging the Catholic Church hadfailed to act decisively or quickly enough to deal with priests who raped andmolested children. One year ngo: President Barack Obamadeclared that the Ebola epidemic in West Africa could threaten security around the world and ordered 3,000 U.S. troops to the region in emergency aid muscle.

BIRTHDAYS Actress Janis Paige is93. Movie director Jim McBride is 74. Actress SusanRuttan is 67. Rock musician RonBlair (Tom Petty 8 the Heartbreakers; Mudcrutch) is 67.Actor Ed Begley Jr. is 66. Country singer David Bellamy (TheBellamy Brothers) is 65. Actor-come› dian LennyClarke is 62. Actor Kurt Fuller is 62. Actor Christo› pher Rich is 62. TVpersonality Mark McEwen is61. Baseball Hall of FamerRobinYount is 60. Actor Mickey Rourke is 59. Magician David Copperfield is 59. Retired MLBAll-Star pitch› er Orel Hershiser is 57.Retired MLB All-Star Tim Raines is 56. Comedian Molly Shannon is51. Singer MareAnthony is 47.Co› median-actress AmyPoehler is 44. RapperFlo Rida is 36. Actress Alexis Bledel is 34.Ac› tor Daren Kagasoff is 28. Rock singer-musician Nick Jonas (The Jonas Brothers) is 23. — From wire reports

the things you needto know to start out your day

TRENDING

NEED TO KNOW

ecor

ressin mac ines Ioai 0 ieami vin renz While vinyl LPs are experiencing an unexpected resurgence in popurity, the trend is putting a strain on the few dozen plants around the world equipped to press them, leading to delays and other problems.

Task force backing aspirin’s health use By Laurnn Neergnnrd The Associated Press

W ASHINGTON

A

By Ben Sisario

sure. If the temperature, pres›

New York Times News Service

sure or consistency of the vinyl is off, the result is an imperfect

government task force says a daily low-dose aspirin could help certain people in

record that is scrapped. "This is the dirty, brutal side

their 50s and 60s prevent a firstheart attack or stroke

of the record business," Mill›

and they might get some protection against colon cancer at the same time.

BORDENTOWN, N.J. The machines at Independent

Record Pressing whirred and hissed as they stamped out a test record. The business’ own›

er said. "Nobody realizes the

ers waited anxiously for Dave Miller, the plant manager, to vinyl. "That’s flat, baby!" Miller

work it takes to actually make a record. There is now a global rush to set up more plants and find ex› isting presses, but the few that

said as he held the record, to

have been tracked down are

roars of approval and relief. "That’s the way they should Independent Record Press› KarstenMoran /The New YorkTimes ing is an attempt to solve one A test record from Independent Record Pressing in Bordentown,

oftenin poor shape.This year Chad Kassem of Quality Re› cord Pressings in Salina, Kan› sas, found 13 disused machines in Chicago (" They looked like

of the riddles of today’s music

scrap metal to anybody but

aspirin therapy on a case› by-case basis for people in

restore five of them within six months.

their 60s, who can expect a

Yet talk of a possible bubble hangs overthe vinylbusiness, and some plants seem to be bracingfor a decline even as they expand. United Record ~ssing in Nashville, Tennessee, one of the biggestplants,has 30 presses running 24 hours a day and has acquired 16more machines.

Potential can d i dates should have at least a 10

Yet the plant, overwhelmed by

the guidelines said. That’s because pro› longed aspirin use can trigger serious bleeding, in the gastrointestinal tract or

inspect the still-warm slab of

come off, just like that."

industry: how to capitalize on the popularity of vinyl records

New Jersey. Vinyl, which faded with the arrival of compact discs in the 1980s, is having an unexpected renaissance.

when the machines that make

them aredecades old and often tactile power of a well-made re› require delicate and expensive cord at a time when music has maintenance. The six presses become ephemeral. at this new 20,000-square-foot Most surprising is the youth plant, for example, date to the of the market: According to 1970s. MusicWatch, a consumer re› Vinyl, which faded with the search group, about 54 percent arrival of compact discs in the of vinylcustomers are 35 or 1980s, is having an unexpected younger. Hansen and Darius renaissance. Last year more Van Arman, a founder of Se› than 13 million LPs were sold cretly Group, a consortium of in the United States, according small record companies that is to the Recording Industry As› a partner in Independent, said sociation of America, the high› they believed their customers est count in 25 years, making it were often discovering new one of the record business’ few music through streaming and growth areas. then collecting it on LPs. "None of this was supposed But the few dozen plants around the world that press the to happen, and yet it’s hap› records have strained to keep pened,"said Michael Fremer, up with the exploding demand, a senior contributing editor at resulting in long delays and Stereophile magazine and a other production problems, ex› longtime champion of vinyl as ecutivesand industry observ- a superior medium for sound. ers say. It is now common for Independent’s machines tell plants to take up to six months some of the history of the mod› to turn around a vinyl order› ern music business. Miller, 62, an eternity in an age when lis› helped build them as a young teners are used to getting music

much revenue from LPs as they do from CDs.

When it is operating at full capacity, Independent should produce up to 1.5 million re›

cords a year, Hansen and Van Arman said. But first the ma› chines must be fully restored

and tested, and after several months they are still not quite ready. While tweaking two ma› chines, Miller, the plant man› ager, showed how many parts of the physical process must be alignedto make a record properly. Vinyl pellets are poured from a bucket into an extruder,

demand, has stopped taking or› ders from new customers. Hansen, 52, said he was not

sure whether the vinyl gold rush would continue, either, but he has staked a considerable

personal investment in it and called the plant part of his re› and then formed into a small tirement planning. "The dream is to build capac› lump of vinyl that is placed be› tween metal stampers forming ity for our label and provide a the shapeof each side ofthe re-

that doctors should decide

smaller benefit. percent risk of a heart at› tack or stroke over the next

decade, have a life expec› tancy of at least 10 years and be willing to take daily aspirin that long, and not have other health condi› tions that cause bleeding,

brain.

Aspirin therapy has long been recommended for heart attack survivors.

service for the indie labels that

cord. The machine then presses I loveand respect so much," the stampers together with 150 Hansen said, "and at the same pounds per square inch of pres› time, make a few bucks too." I ~

man in the 1970s, and they were used for decades at the

online instantly. "The good news is that every› Hub-Servall plant in Cranbury, one wants vinyl," Dave Hansen, New Jersey; Miller recalled one of Independent’s owners pressing copies of the "Satur› and the general manager of the day Night Fever" and "Grease" alternative label Epitaph, said soundtracks there. on a recent hot afternoon as the In 2007, Hub-Servall’s press› plant geared up for production. es were sold to RIP-V, a new "The bad news is everything plant in Montreal that took on you see here today," he added, Epitaph as a client. RIP-V shut noting that the machines had down last year, and Indepen› to be shut down that afternoon dent bought six of its 14 ma› because of the rising tempera› chinesand brought them back ture of water used as a coolant. to New Jersey. (The rest went To replace an obsolete screw to other plants.) Hansen said he in one machine, Independent and Secretly had invested $1.5 spent $5,000 to manufacture and install a new one.

tial: Both now take in nearly as

me," he said) and he hopes to

The U.S. Preventive Ser›

vices Task Force issued draft guidelines Monday recommending a s p irin only if people meet a strict list of criteria. The guidelines said the recommendation is stron› gest for 50-somethings, but

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million in the venture. For the music business over›

The vinyl boom has come as all, vinyl is still a niche product, if an increasingly substantial listening format and both CDs one. According to Nielsen, LPs and downloads have declined. now represent about 9 percent The reasons cited are usually of sales in physical formats. But a fuller, warmer sound from for indies like Epitaph and Se› vinyl’s analog grooves and the cretly, vinyl has become essen› streaming has taken off as a

STUDY

Half of all sea turtles have

ingestedplastic, studysays By Rachel Feltman

seem to be particularly dan›

The Washington Post

gerous. Schuyler used a com› Ugh, humanity. bination of predictive models According to a new study, and actual necroscopy evi› half of the sea turtles on the dencetoreach hisconclusions. planet have ingested some First, Schuyler told The form of plastic. This comes Washington Post, his team just days after another study made a model of marine plas› (with some of the same re› tic distribution based on found searchers involved) reported debris. Then they overlaid similar findings in seabirds› the distribution of turtle pop› some 90 percent of which have ulations over this model, to consumed plastic. see how much debris species The new study, led by Qa› would likely encounter. Pub› mar Schuyler of the University lished sea turtle necroscopies of Queensland and published were then factored in, to see in Global Change Biology, es› how likely it was for turtles timates that 52 percent of sea to ingest certain amounts of turtles worldwide have eaten plastic based on the conges› plastic debris, some 13 million tion of plastic in their area. tons of which is dumped into Olive Ridley Turtles, which the ocean every year. The east eat jellyfish and other floating coasts of Australia and North animals in the open ocean, America, Southeast Asia, were shown to be at the most southern Africa and Hawaii risk.

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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

Bus

drop a little-used loop along Simpson Avenueand Mount Continued from A1 Washington Drive starting Fares on the expanded sys› Monday, but will begin pro› tem will remain unchanged: viding Saturday service for $2.50 a day, and $1.25 a day thefirsttim e.

campus opening next year. The campus site is being built with just 300 parking spac› es for around 1,000 students during the school’s first year, and the university has set a

goal of having 20 percent of Judy Watts with Cascades match up with the start of the students and faculty using The expansion is timed to

forseniorsand the disabled.

East Transit said Route 3, run› ning from Hawthorne Station

academic year at OSU-Cas› transit.

system’s busiest route, while

time.

cades, where students and to COCC’s campus along NW faculty will receive a free Newport Avenue is likely the yearly bus pass for the first

Aycock said Cascades East Transit has not set a ridership targetto measure the success

to the roundabout on Century

of the expanded system and OSU-Cascades spokes› will instead initially focus woman Christine Coffin said on growing the number of the university’s support for transit users specifically at the transit expansion is part COCC, OSU-Cascades and

Drive at Reed Market Road, has been the least used.

of the push to get more stu› dents and faculty out of their

St. Charles Bend. — Reporter: 541-383-0387,

Service along Route 11 will

cars in anticipation of the new

shammers@bendbulletin.corn

Route 11, running from the station past downtown, Drake Park, and Galveston Avenue

OOMRLO TRUMP P

Max Whittaker / The New York Times

Cards mark the lecterns for Ben Carson and Donald Trump on stage ahead of the second Republican presidential debate at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California.

Schools

training and mental health

Continued from A1 The demand for this mili›

Debate Continued fromA1 The strongest of them, for› Santorum, has been polling at 0.8 percent, according to CNN’s most recent average of major

polls. If one of the others some› how swiped all of his support, that candidate would be at less than 1.5 percent.

Finally, unlike a

s imilar C l eve›

land, this debate won’t even offer a chance to make a first impression. In that

CNN will require its audience

First round:3 p.m. Second round:5 p.m. Channel:Both air on CNN (BendBroadband channel 55 or 655 for HD). Who:The second round primetime debate contains the 11 candidates whohave polled in the top 10since the last debate. Theearlier debate features four candi› dates who havepolled at 1 percent or better.

mer Pennsylvania senator Rick

event last month i n

ous arena was largely empty for the lower-tier candidates›

If youwatch

tobe in their seats for both. Even so, this time might be more depressing for the long shots: There are fewer of them now.

Fiorina got promoted, which means they didn’ t. Former Tex› as governor Rick Perry, who was supposed to get the center

podium, exited the race. And former Virginia Gov. James Gilmore wasn’t even invited,

because he couldn’t meet a re› quirement to reach 1 percent in three major polls. Which

d ebate, business›

woman Carly Fiorina intro› five minutes to talk." duced herself with a sharp and Beyond Santorum, the other steady performance, and she threecandidateson theundergot moved up to the main event card are Louisiana Gov. Bobby this time. But for the rest, this is Jindal, South Carolina Sen. a repeat. TV debate No.2. Or, in Lindsey Graham and former Santorum’s case, No. 22. New York governor George But still, they’ re going. De› Pataki. The candidates in the prived of other options, all four top debates are Donald Trump; are hoping to use this moment

means there might be a fate worse than dropping out. The result is a an entire televised,

major-party debate in which

none of the participants are sol›

idly above 1 percent. "Who are they debating? Are they debating each other’?

former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush;

as a springboard. They believe Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walk› you have to believe that er; retired neurosurgeon Ben being involved in a sad specta› Carson; Sen. Ted Cruz of Tex› cle on national television is bet› as; Sen. Marco Rubio of Flor› ter than not being on national ida; former A r k ansas Gov. television at all. Mike Huckabee; Sen. Rand "In an odd way, it might ac› Paul of Kentucky; Ohio Gov. tually be better for Sen. San› John Kasich; New Jersey Gov. torum to be center stage in the early debate, than to be a Chris

Chris Christie; and f o rmer Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Christie, or a John Kasich ... on Fiorina. the wingsofthe second debate," There will be two notable

said Matt Beynon, a spokes› man for Santorum, putting the best face on things. "Where

Sen. Santorum might have 20 to 25 minutes to talk, those

folks from (Santorum’s) ex› perience four years ago, they’ re really only going to have four or

Thelead›

ing Republican presidential hopefuls havespent the weeks since their first debate provoking each other, with distant taunts and tweeted insults.

And now CNN,which hosts the second candi› date clash tonight, is aiming to capture that same combative spirit by getting the candidates to en› gage with oneanother in person and oncamera. The effort to encouragecandidate interaction differs from the approachtaken in thefirst debate by Fox News,which relied heavily on its three accomplished moderators to asktough questions, forcIng the partIcipants to outline their positions and explain their records, yielding only ahandful of memorable exchangesbetweenthemenonstage. Fox News drewpraise for Its handling of the event along with a record number of viewers but CNN’s team of producers andmoderators said they were looking to establish a different tem› po and to emphasizecandidate interaction above allUelse. My goal is more about: Let’s draw the con› trasts between thecandidates, and havethem

Cooperatives Continued fromA1 The co-ops’ problems are compounded by moves among the industry’s biggest compa› nies, like Anthem and Aetna, which plan to buy their rivals to

become even bigger. That rais› es thespecter ofeven less competition in the marketplace and

lessroom forsmallerplayersto make a dent. Congress is hold› ing hearings on the proposed mergers’ potential for raising insurancecosts,and regulators

are expected to scrutinize the deals closely. The latest co-op to retreat

was Nevada’s, where the chief executive, Pam Egan, informed customers that the co-op would

stop selling policies next year, pointing to high medical costs and "limited opportunities for new investment."

Co-ops in Iowa and Loui›

siana have also dropped out,

and many others appear to be scrambling to have enough money to cover claims as well

as enroll new customers as they enter their third year. "We’ re seeing what peo›

ple in the industry could have said many times all along: It’ s

director of the nonprofit Na›

tary-inspired technology in tional School Safety Cen› schools and the apprehension ter, said one manufacturer it causes can be traced to the asked his center to endorse fear that reverberates from its gunshot-detection tool. the massacre nearly three He declined, in part because years ago at Sandy Hook El› his center doesn’t promote ementary in Newtown, Con› products. But he also consid› necticut, where a g u nman ers the technology to be mis› killed 20 first-graders and six guided. He noted that hasn’ t adults. tampered enthusiasm for the In fact, one school near devices. "I’m a little surprised at the Newtown is installing a gun› shot-detection system right number of schools getting

The administrator also said

the school, like most schools with this technology so far, did not pay full price for the system. The system at the Virginia Beach school is based on Boo›

merang, which was created by the Pentagon and Raythe› on BBN Technologies to help U.S. military forces locate sniper fire on battlefields in

Iraq and Afghanistan. The school version listens these installed," Stephens for gunfire and looks for now. "Unfortunately, there’s a said. muzzle flashes using infrared market for this," said Chris› The system at Newark Me› sensors, a system that might tian Connors, chief executive morial High was installed be particularly useful in a of Shooter De› this summer as a test project situation such as the one at Related tection S y s ›by ShotSpotter, a company Virginia Tech in 2007, when a Oregon tems, which ls best known for providing po› gunman kil led 32peopleashe gun control working with lice with outdoor gunshot de› roved among multiple build› efforts,B3 the C onnecti› tection services in crime-ad› ings on a vast campus. c ut

sch o o l . dled areas of Washington, St. Louis, New York and other

He declined to name the school because of contractual

cities.

To buttress their case for

installing the devices, the gunshot-detection companies

ShotSpotter chief executive point to a 2013 FBI study of ac› reasons. At N e w ar k Me m o r ial Ralph Clark said his compa› tive shooter cases.

Are they debating the /eading GOP) candidates in absentia’?

High in California, Principal

ny wasn’t looking to expand

The study examined 160

Phil Morales said he sees the

Are they debating the Demo› crats’?0 said Alan Schroeder,

gunshot-detection sensors

into the schools market until the Newtown shooting. That’ s

incidents in the United States from 2000 to 2013. It found

a professorat Northeastern University who has written sev›

eral books about presidential debates. "The normal dynamic of comparing and contrasting yourself with your competitors is out the window. There’s no dear purpose to this debate."

Still, Fiorina made it out, giv› ing the remaining four some changes from the last under› hope. "Like the last debate, this c ard, which w il l m ak e t h e early debate more like the late next debate is likely to reshuf› one. Both debates will share a fle the deck," Kyle Plotkin, a moderator: CNN anchor Jake spokesman for Jindal, said in Tapper. And they will share a an email. "Expect at least one crowd. After last month’s first breakoutappearance from the debate in which the cavern› undercard debate."

Candidate VerSuS Candidate

are needing to do this," the

efforts. administrator said, "but it’s a Ron Stephens, executive reality."

fight it out over these policies, over whohasthe best approach to Putin, over whohasthe best approach to taxes, over whobelieves what over immigration reform," said JakeTapper, CNN’s chief Washington correspondent, who is moder› atingWednesday'sdebateattheRonaldReagan Presidential Library. "Havethem lay it all out so U

voters can see it.

Tapper said the most riveting exchange in the first debate wasthe one betweenGov.Chris Chris› tie of New Jerseyand Sen. RandPaul of Kentucky, over the National Security Agency’s bulk collection of data. Hedescribed the feisty back-and-forth as "electric" and "illuminating," saying he hopedto create as many of those moments aspossible. "That’s how we’ve beencrafting our questions, so that Senator X will respond to whatGovernor Y said about him or apolicy he proposed, andtry to encourage them toactually debate Lincoln-Doug› las style as much aspossible," he said, referring to the face-offs betweenAbraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas. — The NewYork Times

for the most costly patients, company that is competitive," said Kevin Counihan, the chief said Mark Hall, a health pol› executive of the federal mar› icy professorat Wake Forest ketplace. "The program is not University. biased against small issuers," These new c arriers may he said. have been hobbled from the But even for-profit compa› beginning, some policy ex› nies trying to join the health pertssay, because the federal insurance business under the law that allowed them to sprout federal law are finding it a may not have first made the daunting environment. field level. For example, the Only two for-profit com› federal loans granted to co-ops panies that were not already to get established are typically health insurers have entered far below the capital needed the state marketplaces so far: to weather the uncertainty of Oscar, a New York-based up› the first years and be able to start with a S i l icon Valley attract enough members to be flair and plans to take on Cal› successful. ifornia and Texas in 2016, and On top of that, the federal ZoomPlus, which just received loans are accompanied by a approval to sell policies in tangle of regulations that make Oregon. "It’s really difficult to build it hard to attract outside money that would ensure a strong foot› this business," said Josh› ing as they expand. ua Kushner, the 30-year-old "You normally don’t get a lot co-founder of O scar, which of startup activity in the health expected to lose money. In a insurance market because of regulatory filing, it estimated it the incredible barriers to en› had lost about $27.5 million last try," said Mark Rust, a law› year, roughly half of its 2014 yer in Chicago with Barnes & revenue. Thornburg. The company has raised Federal officials insist the about $350 million, including rules are fair. All insurers have a new infusion of $32.5 mil› benefited from t h e g overn› lion from Google Capital, the ment’s program to help pay investment arm of the search

about the size of smoke when the inquiries began, detectors and placed in every asking whether the ShotSpot› classroom and hallway as ter devices could be modified just another safety device. His to protect students. Its first effort came last school of 2,000 students does not have a violence problem. September, when ShotSpot› No metal detectors meet stu› ter'sSecureCampus system went live at the Savannah

dents at the doors. But Mo›

rales, a former police officer, College of Art and Design in Georgia. said he welcomed the ability On Aug. 27, at nearby Sa› to detect gunshots. "I think all schools should vannah State College, a stu› h ave this, j u s t l i k e f i r e dent was fatally shot during a fight in the student union. alarms," Morales said. Just as fire alarms don’ t For some, this highlighted the prevent fires, gunshot-detec› need for the technology. School shootings are a wor› tion technology doesn’t pre› ry everywhere, Clark said. vent shootings. But, Morales said, if gun› "This is sadly becoming the fire is detected, he gets an new normal." "active shooter alert" sent to Another supplier, Shooter Detection Systems, said that

his desktop computer and his

cellphone with precise details about where the shooting oc› curred in the building. Police and first responders get a sim› ilar message. The instant no›

that these shootings were rare but were increasing, al›

most tripling in the study’s second half to 16.4 a year. A total of 486 people were killed

over the 14-year span. The study captured high-profile shootings such as the ones at

Virginia Tech, at Fort Hood, Texas,in 2009 and ata movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, in 2012. Twenty-seven of th e 160

shootings occurred in schools serving kindergarten to 12th grade. Twelve other shoot›

ings took place at colleges and trade schools. The study also noted how

quickly the shootings unfold› ed: 70 percent lasted less than five minutes.

in the last year it has placed In Reynoldsburg, gun› devices at one school in shot-detection devices now Methuen, Massachusetts; four monitor one of th e high

tification allows him to more

more in California; and anoth› schools. It was installed by er in Virginia Beach. It said it Battelle, located in nearby is in talks to install the technol› Columbus. The science and

away from a shooter, and aid

done work in factories, a hos› proached the school about do›

effectively direct lockdown ogy at 36 schools on the West technology firm, a major U.S. procedures, ushering people Coast. The company also has defense contractor, had ap› the emergency response, Mo› pital and two airports. ing a pilot project Shooter Detection Systems "Why not take this oppor› rales said. C ritics v ie w

t h e g u n › said its clients did not want

shot-detection systems, which to be identified. The Wash› can cost $10,000 to $100,000 ington Post was able to locate depending on the size of a the Virginia Beach school school, as failing to address and talked with an admin›

tunity to try out this system?" said Todd Hutchins, district

communications director, ex› plaining why the district took up Battelle on its offer. what they say should be the istrator there, who spoke on Hutchins said he didn’t find real goal preventing gun the condition that the school it depressing to have the capa› violence. not be named. The adminis› bility to detect gunshots inside "It’s a mistake to install, trator, while thankful for the a school. "If it h elps unease, then and it shouldn’t even be on technology, didn’t want to the board for consideration," draw undue attention to the that’s great," he said. UI have said school safety consultant caInpus. a feeling this is going to be the "It’s kind of sad that schools norm." Ken Trump, who favors staff

land and in nearby Vancouver, Washington, with a health plan and some of the same techno› logicaland consumer appeal as Oscar. Members can chatvia

hard to start a new insurance

video about their heart condi› tions, for example.

In addition to the co-op fail› ures, there have been other

g

notable departures. Assurant Health, a for-profit insurer that tried an aggressive entry into the individual insurance mar›

ket last year, stopped selling coverage altogether. Even one of the most popular new plans in Minnesota, offered in 2014 Thomas Patterson / The New York Times

Dr. Dave Sanders, chief executive of ZoomPius, stands outside one of the startup’s clinics in Portland. ZoomPius is only one of two for-profit companies that were not already health insurers to enter the state markets since the Affordable Care Act passed.

by a collaboration of local hos› pitals and doctors, no longer covers people through the state marketplace.

The McKinsey Center for U.S. Health System Reform counted dropouts among in›

giant. Oscar has attracted more than 40,000 customers in New

ing to one of its founders, Dr.

David Sanders. One of the pow› York and New Jersey who can erful players that ZoomPlus use the website to easily look at is competing against in Ore› theirmedical recordsand book gon is Kaiser Permanente, the appointments. Customers also California HMO with its own have unlimited access to nurses doctors and hospitals serving or doctors via telephone. more than 10 million customers By way of contrast, Zoom› overall. Plus, which began as a collec› ZoomPlus’ goal is to combine tion of urgent care centers, bills a delivery system, currently 26 itself as a "Kaiser 4.0," accord› clinics and centers across Port›

surance carriers that were selling insurance to individ› uals for the first time (rather

than group coverage to small businessesor large employers). It found that eight carri› ers had dropped out of nine states so far. "We would view this overall

marketplace as evolving," said Patrick Finn, a McKinsey part› ner in Detroit.


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 THE BULLETIN

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Ae

TH E BULLETINe WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

Annual U.S.fire suppression costs

Fire Continued from A1 The process i s

The California wildfires: what to know about an escalating crisis

$20 billion .......

S1.925 dilllon

c a lled

"fire-borrowing," and the For›

estService has needed to dip into its other funds six times

in the last decade, according to U.S. Secretary of Agricul›

By Richard Perez-Pena

ture Tom Vilsack. On Mon›

Large wildfires have raged in Northern Califor› nia since Friday, forcing

day, the U.S. Department of Agriculture had to transfer another $250 million from other accounts to pay for fire suppression, bringing the total fire-borrowing costs for 2015 to

$700 million. The newest costs as of Sept.

New York Times News Service

thousands of 1 985 19 9 0 1995 2000 2005 2010 201 5* "Costs for 2015areincomplete; costs through Sept. Bfrom t/S. Forest Service but do notinclude firefight/ng costs from Department of the Interior agencies Source: National Interagency Fire Center

Pete Smith /The Bulletin

8 showed the U.S. Forest Ser› River, was a strong supporter of a bill that passed the House

vice, which faces a majority of wildfire suppression costs among federalagencies, has spent $1.23 billion so far this fis›

in July that proposed larger forest management changes

Crapo told The Bulletin. "We’ re

Wyden said he believes law› going to be looking for every makers should deal with the appropriate vehicle to move fire funding issue first before forward on this legislation." trying to tackle the problem of That could include attaching forestmanagement, which con- it to a budget bill, which Oregon servatives blame for the larger Democratic Sen. Jeff Merk› wildfire s. ley did earlier this year with a Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood must-pass appropriations bill.

Q

So, just how bad are the fires?

Elaine Thompson/The Associated Press

A in California, compared

Firefighter Jeff Ohs looks into a car that fell victim to wildfire and a fallen tree at the Harbin Hot Springs resort near Middletown, Cal› ifornia. The fire, less than 100 miles north of Sen Francisco, hes con›

with about 500,000 in a typi›

tinued to burn since Saturday despite a massive firefighting effort.

Around 700,000 acres have burned this year

cal year, and the fire season is nowhere near over. Right ployed fighting wildfires has officials on edge is less about the total acreage than about how readily new fires start, and how quickly› and unpredictably they grow. "We’ ve had fires in California since the begin› ning of time," said Mark Ghilarducci, director of the governor’s Office of Emer› gency Services, "but what

Resilient Federal Forests Act. Wyden didn’t rule any option out and instead echoed Cra›

po in saying he’ ll look at "ev› ery possible vehicle" to fix the fire-borrowing issue. But he said now isn’t the time to try for a wider forest man›

agement solution. "My hope is that this summer will have reaffirmed how im› portant it is to fix the fire fund›

ing system now, where there is very substantial bipartisan

support, and then come back and do the broader questions of forest management, which

obviously there has been more controversy," Wyden said. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletirt.corn

With s uc h

a

se v e re summer. But even the hottest

drought, do firefighters Q have enoughwater to do their

weather would not have creat› ed the extreme fire danger the

work? Yes, but it requires some

state is seeing, if there had been

pumper trucks and helicopters

drought. One important indica›

A creativity. O r d i narily,

enough rainfall. California is in the fourth year of a severe

with water buckets can tap into tor of just how severe it is came the streams, lakes and reser› this spring, when state scientists voirs dosest to the flames. But

is known as "water shuttling"

measured the Sierra snowpack

Q

Q

A

Yes, and that spells some›

moving water dose to the thing of a reprieve for the fires. And helicopter pilots are people and farms that use wa›

Why is it t his bad?

Drought and heat. A fornia, from the mesquite V egetation in C a l i ›

scrub in the desert to the tall

pines in the Sierra Nevada, is as dry as kindling after a yearslong drought, the

often having to travel farther to

ter, but it doesn’t water all those

find places to dip their buckets.

millions of acres of wild land. Only nature does that.

Q

What about the human toll?

Is this about global In the past few days, one warmmg. • persondied and fourfireThe governor says it worst in the state’s record› fighters suffered second-degree is. C l i m ate s c i entists ed history. So fire catches burns. Up to 1,000 buildings say the clearest link is that m ore easi ly,spreads faster- were destroyed, officials esti› a w a rmer c l i mate c auses and carries farther on the mate, though the real number more evaporation, so that wind. The state’s major res› will not be known for a while. even when rain and snow do ervoirs hold less than half

A

About 13,000 people were evac› fall, less stays on

Q

ONEr

Q A

as much water as they typ› uated; most of them stayed with ically would at this time of friends and family, but 2,700 year, many wells have run went to evacuation centers. dry, and underground aqui› fers are so depleted that in H ow b a d ha v e th e some places, the ground drought and heat been?

llSoy

and in›

the ground and the plants. California has had extreme swings between dry years and wetter ones in the past, but the

increasing heat of recent years is something new.

LEATHER MATCH Power Recliner

AND ONLY N

Last year was the hot› test on record in C ali›

in many places,those sources at 5 percent of normal, the low› we’ re seeing now that’s dif› are now too low to rely on. Fire› est ever recorded. ferent is the extreme rapid fighters are making more use of spread of the fires, and the tanker trucks and big, portable But haven’t people been extreme volatility." plastic water basins to do what conserving a lot of water’?

Or senators could tweak the

| I

A

fornia, and this has been a hot

across the state. But what

require the BLM toconduct more studies andoffer other alternatives for man› aging the 0&C lands. What’s next:U.S. House passed the bill in July. Awaits action in Senate. Online:Readthe bill at http://l.mp/10dhT99

r

has been sinking as much as 2 inches per month.

now, 15,000 people are de›

the bill if passed it would

Cehoco~late Microfiber Sefa

4

to some questions about the developments:

HouseResolution 2647 would remove aprovision that prevents the U.S. Forest Service from cutting live trees that are 21 inches or more in diameter. History:The Bureauof LandManagement delivered a proposedmanage› ment plan for the more than 2 million acres within the Oregon andCalifornia Railroad lands inWestern Oregon. The proposal found little support, and

that seek to promote more log›

ging and would make it more the all-time record of $1.65 bil› expensive to sue to challenge a lion spent in 2002, adjusted for forest plan. inflation, according to Jennifer On Tuesday,Walden chalJones, a spokeswoman for the lenged the Senate to pass the Forest Service in Boise, Idaho. Resilient Federal Forests Act, "It sure wouldn’t be surpris› which had support from two ing if we hit the record," Jones Oregon Democrats but was said, noting 40 uncontained largely opposed by other House large wildfires continue burn› Democrats and was opposed ing nationwide. by Wyden when it passed the In the heat of fire season, the House. The bill also addressed Forest Service spent $243 mil› the fire-borrowing issue. "People are pretty hot in lion in a single week fighting fires. Eastern Oregon about what Suppression has eaten up happened this summer and more than half the Forest Ser› they want changes in federal vice budget this year, and it ex› forest policy, which legislation pects that two-thirds of its 2025 we passed in the House would budget will go to fighting wild› give them," Walden said in a fires unless Congress passes statement Tuesday. "It’s long reform. Wyden is working with overdueforthe Senate to take a bipartisan group of senators action." to address it before 2016. Wyden and Sen. Mike Cra› "I want to get it done this fall po, a Republican from Idaho because the fire specialists say whose state was also charred that the fire season is going to by wildfires this year, both run into October and they say said this month they’ re willing they can hardly tell when one to look at different ways to ad› fire season ends and another dress the budgeting problem. "My 10 colleagues, includ› begins," Wyden said. Wildfires so far this year ing Budget Chairman (Wyo› burned nearly 9 million acres, ming Republican Sen. Mike) an area bigger than the state Enzi and Sen. Wyden, are very of Maryland. That’s well above aware that we have opportuni› the 10-year average of 6 mil› ties as we move up to the reso› lion acres burned with about lution of all of the budget issues a month still left of the typical this year to move it forward,"

cials said. Here are answers

Bill in Congress›

cal year. That’s not far behind

fire season.

people to flee their homes and killing at least one per› son, state offi›

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

' www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

Development proposal denied at former mine By Ted Shorack

with Deschutes County this

The Bulletin

year to create 19 residential lots on 157 acres to the east of Lower Bridge Way, which the county rezoned to rural

A proposed housing devel› opment on a former mining site west of Terrebonne was denied approval last week. The site is about 556 acres

hethF. Ih

FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon.For more information, visit the Northwest Interagen› cy Coordination Center’s webpage:bit.ly/bbflres

and has been subject to envi› ronmental testing and clean› ups in the past.

Karen Green, a Deschutes County hearings officer, decided in a written decision

within the proposal. The western portion of the

days from Sept. 11 to file an

residential in 2008.

extract diatomaceous earth,

The proposed residential lots would range from 2 to 4.4

a silica-containing type of rock consisting of fossilized

acres.Part ofthe property is

marine skeletons. The Ore›

were submitted. Residents

located within a floodplain along the Deschutes River.

gon Department of Environ› mental Quality cleaned up hazardous and radiological

living near the former mine

sitewas used fordecades to

Green wrote in her decision the development couldn’t be

OUR STUDENTS

waste at the site in the 1980s.

Greendeniedthe company’s permit application and site plan. The decision could be appealed to Deschutes

provided several concerns

about the development pro› posal, especially the potential for dust being spread during construction and potential

impacts to water quality. See Development/B6

JEFFERSON

co uNTYg ---4~ › c› -

-

.

Falls er Bri ge

o-,

Former

Oee Can on C ek

1 Lower Bridge Nine

I

h’

co UN Tv~ REDMD Pete Smith/ The Bulletin

Redmond considers

Educational newsandactivities, and local kids andtheir achievements. Schoolnotesandsubmissioninfo,BS

art for new

OrSO aem

2. Canyon Creek Complex Acres: 110,422 Containment: 90% Cause: Lightning 3. National Creek Complex Acres: 16,744 Containment: 70% Cause: Lightning

County commissioners. Lower Bridge LLC has 12 appeal. The proposal drew dozens to two public hearings in M ay andJune afterthe permit application and site plan

Friday that the proposal failed permitted within the flood› to meet requirements for the plain or on a portion of the property’s land use zones. property that is zoned for Lower Bridge LLC applied exclusive farm use. She also

1. County Line 2 Acres: 67,207 Containment: 97% Cause: Unknown

found other inconsistencies with local land use policies

City Hall

CO ID BCCBSSI 8 OI’ BIBIl S

The city has set aside $25,000for permanentdisplays

Mors fire news, B3

By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

REDMOND

BRIEFING Heroin found after traffic stop Two Portland resi› dents were arrested late Monday night in Sisters by drug enforcement detectives, who subse› quently found 2.5 ounc› es of heroin, a scale, packaging material, cash and astolen gun, according to anews release issuedTuesday evening. Investigators with the Central Oregon Drug Enforcement Team had been monitoring Richard Mercer, 35, andlearned he was traveling Monday to Deschutes County. With help from the Deschutes County Sher› iff’s Office, detectives stopped the carMercer was driving about 11:45 a.m. on U.S.Highway 20 at N. PineStreet, according to the news release. Mercer andKatherine Roberts, 30, wereboth arrested, anddetectives searched thecar, which was stolen, the news release stated. Both were arrested on suspicion of possession, distribution and manu› facturing of a controlled substance, unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, engaging in an illegal financial transaction and money laundering, the news releasestated. Mercer wasalsoarrest› ed on suspicion of being a felon in possession of a firearm, first-degree theft and identity theft.

Both were taken tothe Deschutes County jail, according to the news release. However, they were not listed among the lail’s current inmates Tuesday night.

(I(

ul

ti

’.~i

to extend to its new City Hall. Members of the Red› mond Committee for

+ie t,e, ,S’ .

Art in Public Places on Tuesday took a tour of the

’u

er Richards, the city’ s community development director, $25,000 of the

$9 million reconstruc› tion project has been set asideforpermanent art

displays. "The biggest thing is thatthe art representthe

history of the building as a school and its future use

as City Hall," Richards said. "Everything has been filtered through that ’ t’,~’," I-"!&,4@i, Andy Tullie /The Bulletin

Maggie Prevenas, STEMoutreach coordinator for OSU-Cascades, right, helps Josiah Meade, center, and his twin sister, Sarah, both 12, during a workshop on computer coding at the Redmond Public Library.

decision." Richards and com› mittee members focused

on three potential proj› ects Tuesday within the new City Hall. One

By Abby Spegman The Bulletin

To get the bird to the pig, you haveto move him one

space to the right, one space up, then another space to the right. "Do you see how this is se› quential? A step, a step, a step at a time?" said Maggie Pre› venas, the STEM science, technology, engineering and

"You can have a computer work as a tool to help yousolve a problem, and that's a totally

This past school year Pre› venas was based in Culver schools, helping teachers Maggie Prevenas, STEM outreach coordinator at OSU-Cascades there incorporate STEM and hands-on learning in their

Most students see computers as a time killer."

Public Library last week de› instruction for what to do and lessons on Code.org, signed for parents who home› which has computer science tutorials for students as

at OSU-Cascades, leading a group of parents, students

said, she needs to know what she’s doing if she is going to

young as 4 and advanced tu›

and educators through a les›

pass that on to her children.

son on the website Code.org. Central Oregon STEM Hub hosted a computer coding workshop at the Redmond

Over two hours, Prevenas walked the group through the basics of coding sim› ply put, giving a computer

outreach coordinator

time killer," Prevenas said.

different I/I/ay than StudentS See COmPuterS.

school their children. If cod› ing is the future, one parent

math

students see computers. Most students see computers as a

torials that teach JavaScript and HTML.

"You can have a computer

work as a tool to help you

solve a problem, and that’ s a totally different way than

A new ranger station is in

rals throughout the school many depicting scenes

Hall, national monument superintendent. What they have

bu il d ing is located. e Along the access road to

The national monument

has put in a funding proposal to the National Park Service for $270,000 to build the new

Cl ar n o Unit. e Adjacent to the Clarno

books such as "Charlotte’s Web," "The Giving Tree"

solve the puzzle, complete

and "The Cat in the Hat" on to tiles as well.

sequencing: First do this, then do that.

Another possibility for a permanent art display is

SeeCoding/B5

and transferring them

the installation of stained

glass in four of the build› ing’s windows. Richards said the city’s hub logo Redmond calls itself

the hub of Central Oregon activity

could be one

option for the half-circle› shaped windows. "(With $25,000) we pick one grand idea and on the rest go more humble," said committee member

Jessica Rowan, referring to the stained glass proj› ect, which would likely be much more expensive than bathroom tiles paint› ed by schoolchildren.

monument, there are GraPhie three initial sites under While small, the new office would be a big upOl l B6 cons i deration: gradefrom the current Along state High› setup for rangers, said Shelley way 218, where the current now is a shed. Oregon Museum of Science "There is no bathroom faa n d Industry’s Camp Han› cilities," she said. "There is no cock. The camp is an OMSI running water." field station located in the

from classic children’ s

the maze but they actually require problem-solving and

office, and is accepting public comments as it begins plan› nin g . Comments are due by t he end of the month. Accor d i ng to the national

mittee members also dis› cussed the possibility of taking pictures of the mu›

By Dylan J. Darling the works for the Clarno Unit of the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument.

mond-area students. Com›

classrooms. As part of that

raatc events

The Bulletin

option would be to use hand-painted wall tiles in the building’s four bath› rooms. Ideally, it would be artwork created by Red›

work she taught coding to kindergartners using Code. org lessons designed for ages 4 to 6. These beginner lessons feel like computer games›

Bone-marrow

More briefing,B2

93-year-old Evergreen School, which is in the process of being renovated into Redmond’s new City Hall. According to Heath›

New ran er station anne or Camo

Firefighters from Bend, Redmondand Sisters haveset up bone-marrow match events Mondayto find potential donors, according to anews release. Working with the non› profit Firefighters With Matches, they organized the events. Firefighters have a higher risk of de› veloping major cancers like leukemia because they get exposed tocar› cinogens on thejob, the news releasestated.

The

city’s recent push to add art in public spaces looks

SeeArt /B2

"(Witty $25,000) We John Day Fossil Bede National Monument/ Submitted photo

This shed along state Highway218 is being used as a ranger station in the Clarno Unit of the John Day Fossil Beds National

P i c nic Area off Highway 218. Monument. The national monument is planing to build a new See Station /B6 ranger station.

pick one grand idea and on the rest go more humble." Jessica Rowan, committee member


B2

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

Evxxr TODAY BEND FARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket. corn or 541-408-4998. JOE BUCK YOURSELF: The Kentucky band performs, with Third

Seven; $5plus feesin advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY CENTRAL OREGONFALL RV SHOW AND SALE:Featuring trailers, campers,mo torhomes and more; 9 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; 360-903-8840. "AVENUE O,THEMUSICAL": A

modern musicalcomedyabouta group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs and their purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27 to $38 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. AMY LAVERE: Thesongwriter from

Memphis,Tennessee,performs, with Downhill Ryder; 8 p.m.; $5 plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. JEREMIAHCOUGHLAN AND BEN HARKINS:Featuring a finalist in the 2015 Oregon’s Funniest comic contest and a semi-finalist in The 2014 and 2015 Portland’s Funniest Person Contest; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www. bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111.

FRIDAY CENTRAL OREGONFALL RV SHOW AND SALE:Featuring trailers, campers,mo torhomes and more; 9 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; 360-903-8840. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locall y made goodsand more;2 p.m.; Barclay Park, Hood Street, between Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030.

ENm a

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" at least 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0351.

UNCORKEDSUNRIVER STYLE:

food, beer, live music, games, tricycle and weiner dog races and more; noon; downtown

Featuring morethana dozen Oregon wineries, live music, a comedy show and more; 3 p.m.; $18, $23 two-day

Bend, OregonAvenue, Bend;

pass, $5 for nondrinkingentry; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; www.bendticket. corn or 541-585-3147. BEND OKTOBERFEST: Featuring food, beer, live music, games, tricycle and weiner dog races and more; 5 p.m.; downtown Bend, Oregon Avenue, Bend; www.bendoktoberfest.corn or 541-788-3628. ANNUAL MEETINGAND VOLUNTEER RECOGNITION: Honor volunteers at the High Desert Museum; 6 p.m.; $5 for

nonmembers, freefor members; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.

highdesertmuseum.org orwww. highdesertmuseum.org. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The bluegrass/Americana roots group

from Portlandperforms; 6p.m.; $5; Faith, Hope andCharity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; 541-350-5383. FOURTHANNUALTCBCCHILE FEST BENEFIT:Featuring a chili cook-off, a wing eating contest and more, to benefit, the American Cancer Society; 6 p.m. free, donations accepted; Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Court, Sisters; 541-549-1963. TASTE OFSISTERS: Featuring food, live music, performances and more, to benefit Furry Friends and Sisters Food Bank; 6 p.m.; $15 to $50 suggested; Eurosports Sisters Food Cart Commuity Space,223 E.Hood Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.corn; 541-549-2471. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Barbara Drake presents her new book, "Morning Light," about living on

a small farm inrural Oregonfor 30 years; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood St., Sisters; www.paulinasprings.corn or 541-549-0866. BREWS ANDBANDS:A tribute to Hank Williams, American singer songwriter and musician; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; wwww. btbsbend.corn or 541-728-0703. A BICYCLEBUILT FOR TWO BILLION SLIDESHOW: Jamie

7 ’r

Jarod Opp erman/The Bulletin

Tommy Kuchulis and Matthew Vigil perform as Nicky, left, with Joe

Reynolds performing asRodduring a rehearsal for "Avenue Q," which will be performed Thursday to Saturday at the Tower Theatre. Bianchini shares photos, videos and stories captured on his eight-year, 81-country tour around the world on atandem bicycle;7 p.m.;Crows FeetCommons, 875 NW BrooksSt., Bend;www.bb42b.corn/event/bend/ or831-465-4787. "AVENUE O,THEMUSICAL":A modernmusicalcomedy abouta group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs and their purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27-$38 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. "AN IDEALHUSBAND":A play about Sir Robert Chiltern, his wife Gertrude, and Mrs. Cheveley; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave.,

Bend; cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. MIKE LOVE:The Hawaiian roots› reg gae artist performs; 9 p.m.;

$8 plus fees inadvance, $10at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.

SATURDAY MADRASSATURDAYMARKET: Featuring food, drinks, live music and more; 9 a.m.; Sahalee Park, 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778. CENTRAL OREGONFALLRV SHOW

AND SALE:Featuring trailers, campers, mo torhomes and more; 9 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; 360-903-8840. NWX SATURDAYFARMER’S MARKET:Featuring local organic artisans in produce, meats, baked

goods, skincareandmore; 10 a.m.; NorthWest Crossing, NW Crossing Drive, Bend; www. nwxfarmersmarket.corn/ or 541-350-4217. 20TH ANNUALFAMILYFUN DAY — MODELRAILROAD SHOW:Featuring anopen house with Eastern Cascades Model Railroad Club and Central Oregon Live Steamers; 10 a.m.; Eastern Cascades Model Train Club, 21520 Modoc Lane, Bend; 541-317-1545. ELK LAKERESORTFESTIVAL OF BEER:Featuring a freestyle flatwater competition, live music and more, to benefit the Central Oregon Humane Society; noon, $10 for BBQ;Elk Lake Resort, 60000 Century Drive, Bend; www.elklakeresort.net or 541-480-7378. UNCORKEDSUNRIVER STYLE: Featuring more than a dozenOregon wineries, live music, a comedy show and more; noon; $18, $23 two-day pass, $5 for nondrinking entry; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; www.bendticket. corn or 541-585-3147. BEND OKTOBERFEST: Featuring

The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhensuch arequest is received.Any newinformation, such as thedismissal of charges or acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at8:37 p.m. Sept. 12, in the 100block of NWOregon Avenue. DUII Nicholas RonnieDieringer, 36, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at 2:13 a.m.Sept.13, in theareaof NW BroadwayStreet andNWFranklin Avenue. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat1:39 p.m. Sept. 13,in the 600 block of NE Third Street. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat2:43 a.m. Sept.12, in the 800 block of NW Delaware Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at1:48 p.m. Sept.14, in the900 block of NE Warner Place. Theft Atheft was reported at 8:39 a.m. Sept.14, in the21200block of E. U.S. Highway20. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered, itemsstolen andan arrest madeat4:56 p.m. Sept.12, in the 60900 block ofBrosterhous Road.

DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE Theft Atheft was reported at 9:52 a.m. Sept.11, in the56900 block of Enterprise Drive. Theft Atheft was reported at 6:33 p.m. Sept.11, in the70800 block of Indian FordRoad. Theft Atheft was reported at 5:35 p.m. Sept.12, in the56800 block of Venture Lane. Theft Atheft was reported at 7:08 p.m. Sept. 12, inthe areaof BoydCave near ForestService Road18. Theft A theft was reported at11:55 p.m. Sept.12, in the16100block of Eagles NestRoad. Theft Atheft was reported at 8:28 a.m. Sept.13, in the16100block of Eagles NestRoad. Theft Atheft was reported at 9:36 a.m. Sept. 13, inthe 600 block of N. Arrowleaf Trail.

REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat noonSept. 2, in the 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Burglary Aburglary and anact of criminal mischief werereported andan arrest madeat9:42 p.m. Sept. 2, inthe 2000blockofNW OakAvenue. Theft Atheft was reported and an

arrest madeat11:50 a.m. Sept. 5, in the 2100 block of NWElm Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at10:40 a.m. Sept. 7, inthe 2200 block of SW First Street. Theft Atheft was reported at 3:46 p.m. Sept. 7, inthe 300 block of NW Oak TreeLane. Vehicle crash An accident was reported at 7:42a.m. Sept. 8, inthe area of SW27th Street andSWQuartz Avenue. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 1216 p m. Sept. 8, in the1700 block of SW OdemMedo Road. Theft Atheft was reported at 8:32 p.m. Sept. 8, inthe3600 block ofSW 21st Place. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered, itemsstolenand arrests madeat1:52 a.m. Sept. 9, in the 400 block ofNW17th Street. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at7:13a.m.Sept. 9, in the 300 block of NW27th Court. DUII LaceyDawnHedges, 33, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at 8:39a.m. Sept.9, inthe300blockof NWOak Tree Lane. Theft Atheft was reported at 9:25 a.m. Sept. 9, inthe1800 block of SW 21st Street. Theft Atheft was reported at 9:48 a.m. Sept. 9, inthe 2000 block of S. U.S. Highway97. Theft A theft was reported at10:24 a.m. Sept. 9, inthe1000 block of SW Rimrock Way. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported enteredat10:49a.m. Sept. 9, in the 2300 block of NW Greenwood Avenue. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at11:48 a.m. Sept. 9, inthe 2300 block of SE First Street. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported enteredat12:30 p.m. Sept. 9, in the1400 block of SW Cascade Avenue. Theft Atheft was reported at 2:14 p.m. Sept. 9, inthe1700 block of SW Juniper Avenue. Theft Atheft was reported at 2:19 p.m. Sept. 9, inthe 4200 block of SW 21st Street. Vehicle crash An accident was reported at 2:37p.m. Sept. 9, inthe 800blockofSW DeschutesAvenue. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat 3:15p.m. Sept. 9, inthe 300blockofNW OakTreeLane. Vehicle crash An accident was reported at 4:43p.m.Sept. 9, in the area ofSW23rd Street andSW Salmon Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at6:11p.m. Sept. 9, in the 1900block of SWTimber Avenue. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat 6:22 p.m.Sept. 9, in the 300blockofNW OakTreeLane. Unlawful entry Avehicle was

reported entered at5:51a.m. Sept. 10, in the2500 block of SWUmatilla Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at9:54a.m. Sept. 10, in the 100block of NW27th Court. Theft A theft was reported at10:02 a.m. Sept.10, in the500 block of NW 17th Street. Burglary Aburglary was reported at 10:07 a.m.Sept. 10, inthe 300 block of NW17th Street. Theft A theft was reported at10:11 a.m. Sept. 10, inthe 1100 block of NW Elm Avenue. Theft A theft was reported at12:59 p.m. Sept. 10, inthe 2300 block ofSW 30th Street. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat1:29 p.m. Sept.10, in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at2:05 p.m.Sept. 10, in the 1300block of SW33rd Street. Theft Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat 3:30p.m. Sept. 10,in the300 blockofNW OakTreeLane. Criminal mischief An act of criminal mischief wasreported at3:48 p.m. Sept.10, in the3000blockof SW Juniper Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at8:37a.m. Sept. 11, in the3100 block of SWNewberry Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported enteredandanarrest madeat 10:29a.m. Sept.11, in the2100 block of NW Larchleaf Lane. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported enteredat10:42a.m. Sept. 11, in the 900 block of SW Veterans Way. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported enteredat11:35a.m. Sept. 11, in the 2300 block of NWCedar Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at2:08 p.m.Sept. 11, in the 2200 block of NWIvy Avenue. Theft Atheft was reported at 2:56 p.m. Sept. 11, inthe 2600 block ofW. Antler Avenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered, itemsstolen andan arrest madeat 3:17p.m.Sept.11, in the 1700blockofNW KingwoodAvenue. Unauthorizeduse Avehicle was reported stolen at9:27 p.m.Sept.11, in the300 blockofNE HemlockAvenue. Criminal mischief An act of criminal mischief wasreported at6:55 a.m. Sept. 12, inthe areaof NW17th Street andNW JackpineAvenue. Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported entered at8:37a.m. Sept. 12, in the 1500block of NWIvy Avenue. Criminal mischief An act of criminal mischief wasreported at9:44 a.m. Sept.12, in the2200 block of SW ReindeerAvenue. Criminal mischief An act of criminal mischief wasreportedat 12:29 p.m.Sept.12, in the1400block of NW17th Street. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at12:36 p.m.Sept. 12, inthe 800blockofSW HighlandAvenue.

Drake readsfrom hernewbook,

"Morning Light," about living on a small farm in rural Oregon for 30 years; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SWSixth St., Redmond; www.paulinasprings.corn or 541-526-1491. FOURTHANNUALTCBCCHILI FEST BENEFIT:Featuring a chili cook-off,

awing-eating contestandmore,

to benefit, the American Cancer Society; 6:30 p.m. free, donations accepted; Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Court, Sisters; 541-549-1963. "ABBAQUEEN":Featuring the Portland Gay Men’s Chorus performing ABBA, presented by Human Dignity Coalition, PFLAG Central Oregon andGSAClubs of Central Oregon; 7 p.m.; $15 to $20, $10 for seniors and students, $20 for VIP; First Presbyterian Church Sanctuary, 230 NENinth St., Bend; www.bendticket.corn/go/ ABBAQueen or 541-385-3320. "AVENUE 0, THEMUSICAL":A modernmusicalcomedy abouta group of 20-somethings in the big city, looking for love, jobs and their purpose in life; 7:30 p.m.; $27 to $38 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700.

Art

NEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG

www.bendoktoberfest.corn or 541-788-3628. AUTHOR DENISEFAINBERG: Fainberg reads from her latest book, the account of a walking pilgrimage along the French trails of Camino de Santiago; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SWDeschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-312-1032. PICKIN' B PADDLIN'.RENEGADE STRING BAND: The swing, blues and bluegrass band performs, with Franchot Tone; 4 p.m.; Tumalo Creek Kayak and Canoe, 805 SWIndustrial Way, Bend; 541-317-9407. WORTHY HOPTOBERFEST: Featuring fresh hop and Oktoberfest beers with commemorative bier steins and German inspired food, live music by Heidi Moore & KC FlynnandgBots8 theJourneymen; 5 p.m.; Worthy Brewing Company, 495 NE Bellevue Drive, Bend; 541-639-4776. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Barbara

Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported enteredat1:31 p.m. Sept.12, in the 900 block of SW Veterans Way. Vehicle crash Anaccident was reported at1:41 p.m.Sept.12, in the area of SW17th Placeand SWOdem Medo Road. Theft Atheft was reported at 3:01 p.m. Sept.12, in the300block of NW Oak TreeLane. Theft Atheft was reported at 4:55 p.m. Sept.12, in the300block of NW Oak TreeLane. DUII Wilfredy Gutierrez-Molina, 23, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at 1:36a.m. Sept.13, in theareaof E. State Highway126andSEVeterans Way. Criminal mischief Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 9:30 a.m. Sept. 13, inthe areaof SW28th Street and SW Metolius Avenue. Theft Atheft was reported at 3:27 p.m. Sept. 13, inthe 1800 block of NW IvyAvenue.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry Avehicle was reported enteredand items stolen at 11:14 a.m.Sept. 14, inthe areaof NE Crest Avenue. Theft Atheft was reported at 4:11 p.m. Sept.14, in theareaof S. Main Street. Burglary A burglary was reported at 9:55 p.m.Sept.14, in thearea of NE Seventh Street.

REDMOND FIRE RUNS Sept. 7 2:06 p.m. Brush or brush-and› grass mixture fire, 8164SW61st St. 8:06p.m. Unauthorized burning, 2941 SWPeridot Ave. 10 Medical aid calls. Sept. 8 5 Medical aidcalls. Sept. 9 7 Medical aid calls. Thursday 5:20p.m. Barkdust fire, 300 NW Oak TreeLane. 12 Medical aid calls. Friday 11:28 a.m. Brush or brush-and› grass mixture fire, 657 SW Glacier Ave. 11 Medical aid calls. Saturday 9 Medical aidcalls. Sunday 7:13a.m. Barkdust fire, 850 SW Rimrock Way. 6:04 p.m. Barkdust fire, 850 SW Rimrock Way. 9 Medical aid calls.

"AN IDEALHUSBAND": A play about Sir Robert Chiltern, his wife Gertrude, and Mrs. Cheveley; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. BUSTIN’ JIEBER:Thejazz-funk band from Eugene performs, with That Coyote; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.

SUNDAY 20TH ANNUALFAMILYFUN DAY — MODELRAILROAD SHOW:Featuringanopen house with Eastern Cascades Model Railroad Club andCentral Oregon Live Steamers; 10 a.m.; Eastern Cascades Model Train Club, 21520 Modoc Lane, Bend; 541-317-1545. DOWN SYNDROME CONNECTION OF CENTRALOREGON BUDDY WALK:Featuring a walk, activities and more to kick off the start of Down Syndrome Awareness Month in October; 10 a.m.; $10, free for kids and VIP; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www.dscco.org or 541-678-2704. CENTRAL OREGONFALL RV SHOW AND SALE:Featuring trailers,

campers, motorhomesandmore; 10 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; 360-903-8840. "AN IDEALHUSBAND": A play about Sir Robert Chiltern, his wife Gertrude, and Mrs. Cheveley; 2

p.m.; $20,$16for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. FOURTHANNUALTCBCCHILI FEST BENEFIT:Featuring a chili cook-off, a wing-eating contest and more, to benefit, the American Cancer Society; 3 p.m. free, donations accepted; Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Court, Sisters; 541-549-1963. BERN VOLCANICCONCERT FUNDRAISER:Live music from The Sweatband, Bravey Don, and Bill Valenti, all ages welcome, to benefit Central Oregon for Sanders; 5:30p.m.;$5 suggesteddonation; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-749-0944.

$250,000, the school — built in 1922 as Redmond Union

Continued from B1 High School — housed eleThe building's two a l - mentary, middle school and coves by the stairways on high school students over the the ground floor are the third years before closing its doors areainEvergreen targeted for in 2010. The new City Hall public art displays.The art will include multiple public that would be installed in the

meeting rooms as we ll a s

alcoves is still in the brainstorming stage.

the City Council chambers.

The transformation of Ev-

Council meets at the police station, about two bl ocks from City Hall.

ergreen into Redmond City Hall is expectedto be completeby October 2016. Bought by the city five years ago for

Currently, the Redmond City

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletin.corn

Nelson said heasked them to stop and the man reacted rudely, so Continued from Bf Nelson' shiking buddytookaphoThe Central Oregon firefighters to of the family. Nelson then post› also want to honor Tyler Van edthephotoonFacebook witha Pelt, the son of a retired Corval› message abouttheencounterand lis fire chief, who is awaiting a it went viral, shared more than bone-marrow match, the news 64,500 times as of Tuesday.Major release stated. newspaper and television outlets Anyone between ages 18to picked up the story. 44 whopassesabasicmedical Three days later Nelson spoke screening may get tested, the with Deschutes National Forest news release stated. Testing Officer Mark Ditzel and said he consists of swabbing the insides had received aFacebook message of the cheek to obtain somecells, identifying the man in the photo with the results being placed in as Duke. the registry operated by the Na› Duke has awife who lives in tional Marrow Donor Program. Bend and headmitted to giving The events are scheduled his kids permission to scratch for 3 to 7 p.m. at the BendFire the railings, according to the Department Training Facility, document. He also "repeatedly ex› 63377JamisonSt.;Redmond pressed regret for having allowed Fire and Rescue, Station 401, 341 the incident to occur." NW Dogwood Ave.; andthe Sis› In investigating the case, Ditzel ters-Camp ShermanFire District’s found a total of 130 inscriptions main station, 301 ElmSt., Sisters. on the railing at Tumalo Falls.

LOCAL BRIEFING

Facedook tip led to Tumalo Falls ticket

Fire driefly closes shoulders onHighway 26

A FacebooktipledaDeschutes National Forest ranger to the man ticketed for last spring’s viral van› dalism case atTumalo Falls. Scott G. Duke,57, of Bothell, Washington, was cited for aiding and abetting the damaging of a natural feature or property of the United States, according to a fed› eral document releasedTuesday by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Oregon. On May 2, Brett Nelson, 41, of Prineville, saw Dukeallow a boy and a girl to scratch their initials into the railing of the overlook downstream of TumaloFalls.

The shoulders on U.S. Highway 26 about 4 miles south of Warm Springs were closed for several hours Tuesday morning because of a wildfire. The highway, includ› ing the shoulders, was completely open about 11:30 a.m. A vehicle putting off sparks apparently started a string of five fires along the highway, Peter Murphy, spokesmanfor the Ore› gon Department of Transportation wrote in an email. Firefighters put out the blazes, and the shoulders were closed while fire crews fin› ished up their work. — Bulletin staffreports

Find It All Online bendbulletin.corn The Bulktin


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

unconro a vocaes o e winssi na ac an in i e By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

I @O NO%I ’MINTONKS!

P ORTLAND I t ’s l ong been conventional w i sdom

that fighting for gun control is a good way to end a politician’s career.

But advocates of tighter gun laws are pointing to a pair of

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victories in the Pacific North› west as evidence that the tide is

shifting. / Last year in Washington, voters overwhelmingly sup› / ported mandatory background checks on private gun sales. Lawmakers in Oregon ap› Kobbi R. Blair /(Salem) Statesman-Journal via The Associated Press proved similar legislation this Gun control supporters join together for an Oregon Alliance to I

year, and last week it became

Prevent Gun Violence Day of Action rally at the Capitol steps in

Wildfire near RiChland TheBaker County sheriff has reduced the evacuation level for those living in homesthreatened by awildfire northwest of Richland. Authorities, however,ask residents to remain aware andexercise caution. TheDry Gulch Fire hasscorched nearly 30 square miles sinceSaturday; it is 20 percent contained. Crewshave been helped byrain and muchcooler temperatures in Eastern Oregon, but winds from the southwest could havebeena problem Tuesday afternoon. Thecause of thewildfire has yet to bedetermined.

Last week, state elections offi› cials ruled that more 15 percent or more were invalid and the organizers fell 200 short of the

threshold to require a recount. The Legislature’s approval

Man threatenS StudentS, hitS prinCipal Eugenepolice

sor, Democratic Sen. Floyd

Prozanksi of Eugene, collected more than 10,000 signatures.

with the help of money from gun-control interest groups› expanded their legislative ma› jorities in the 2014 election. Kevin Starrett, head of the Oregon Firearms Federation,

supporters were unable to gath› Northwest.

cates are reading too much into

supporters. "We are seeing it again and again, that this is actually a

winning issue and you can vote to protect the American public and make the American public

safe, and your political career will flourish," said John Fein› blatt, president of Everytown

for Gun Safety, an advocacy group backed by millions from billionaire Michael Bloomberg, the former New York mayor. Gun rights supporters scoff at the idea that their politi›

cal power is eroding. While gun control advocates have notched a stringof successes

the recall’s failure. According to the secretary of state’s count, it "What we saw after San› barely fell short even after get› restr ictions. "Once again we see Michael dy Hook, states that tended ting no money or support from Bloomberg funded gun control to have very strict laws made national gun rights groups, he groups lie and distort the facts their laws even more strict," said. in an effort to further their an› said Wilson, director of the In› Washington state voters last ti-gun agenda," said Lars Dal› stitute for Policy and Opinion year overwhelmingly support› seide, a spokesman for the „ Research at the Virginia uni› ed an initiative to require back› tional Rifle Association. versity. "But states that tended ground checks on all gun sales, The NRA and other gun to have lenient laws in many including private transactions rights advocacy groups have cases made their laws even less that don’t involve relatives. spent the past two decades strict. States continued on the Colorado’s Legislature ap› pushing state legislatures to path that they’ ve run." proved stricter gun laws fol› adopt laws friendly to gun own› The new Oregon law re› lowing the 2012 shooting at ers, such as less restrictive poli› quires gun buyers and sellers an Aurora movie theater. Two cies on concealed weapons and who aren’t related to visit a li› Democratic lawmakers who protections for using a gun in censedfirearm dealerwho can supported the bill were recalled self-defense. Gun control advo› conduct a background check. in 2013, a move that sparked cates have only recently start› Ifthebuyerpasses,thegun can concern among D e mocrats ed taking a similar track, fo› be sold. that they could lose their job if

since the 2012 shootings at San› dy Hook Elementary,they've cusing on victories at the state come largely in battleground level, said Harry Wilson, a or left-leaning states. Chang› Roanoke University professor es at the national level have stalled. And conservative states

have gone toward fewer gun

said a manthreatened to rape and shoot children at a back-to-school event for a French immersion elementary school. Police said the 37-year-old Eugenemanmadethe threats when hestumbled onto the playground of CharlemagneFrench Immersion Elementary School last Tuesday. School district spokeswomanKerry Delf said school principal Eric Anderson confronted the manabout his behavior and the man struck him the face. Delf said the principal was not injured. She said several parents then restrained the man.Police said the man left the school on his bicycle andwas arrested after causing another disturbance at anearby church. Hewascharged for both disturbanc› es. Delf said the disturbance is unusual andthat officials are consid› ering additional playground fencing.

came only after Democrats›

which funded the recall at› tempt, said gun control advo›

recall elections for the bill’ s

who wrote the 2015 book "The

Triumph of the Gun Rights Argument."

Gun rights advocates

who

POrtland hOmiCide A manfatally shot near a suburban Port› land police station has beenidentified as a34-year-old originally from South Carolina. A Hillsboro police officer walking to his patrol car Sunday at 2:20 a.m. heard at least six gunshots and found Alonzo Sentel Gregg in the middle of astreet. Gregg died at the scene. Hills› boro police Lt. Michael Rouchessaid Tuesdaythat Gregg had recently been living in the Portland area. Hesaid no arrests have beenmade and police havenot established amotive. Ayoung manwasseen run› ning away after the shots were fired. Records showGregg previously lived in Rembert, Bishopville and Fort Jackson, South Carolina. HaZelhutS SSII Illgll Oregon hazelnut growers were pleasantly surprised when this year’s crop fetched the second-highest minimum price ever. TheHazelnut Growers Bargaining Association says this season’s initial minimum price was$1.22 apound. Last year’s start› ing price was$1.70 apound, which rose to $1.81 by the season’s end. The record-high prices were related to adisastrous freeze in Turkey, causingmorecandy-,spread-andsnack-makersto purchaseOregon nuts. Turkey expects a goodcrop this year. Bargaining association President DougOlsensaid the 2014prices were ananomaly and that this year’s starting price is fair. Oregon produces 5percent of the world’s supply of hazelnuts. Thestate is expected to grow about 39,000 tons of the nuts this year.

they earn the wrath of the NRA

say the law infringes on their by supporting gun restrictions. rights began collecting sig› But groups seeking tougher natures in an effort to recall gun laws point out that Dem› four of the lawmakers who ocratswon those seats back in supported the bill. Three of the

Fe era overnment ic su ta ormoresc oo meas

A forestfire

near the Eastern Oregoncommunity of Halfway has forced Cycle Oregon bicyclists to reroute the path for their weeklong ride. Ride officials, prompted by safety concerns, said Mondaythey would have to cancel plans to ride through Halfway onTuesdayand instead the 2,200 riders and 200 support staff would remain in the small town of Cambridge, Idaho. Executive director of the nonprofit, Alison Graves, said the route will return to Farewell BendRecreation Areanear Hun› tington today for an overnight stay. Shesaid officials are discussing further route changesdue tothe forest fire.

dear there wouldn’t be politi› Salem in 2013. Supporting gun restrictions has long been a risky cal consequences.Gun rights move in politics, but advocates are hopeful that’s changing in the er enoughsignatures to force

CyCle OregOn reruuteS deCauSe Of fire

movements quickly fizzled, but organizers of a recall tar› geting the bill’s primary spon›

the next election.

— From wire reports

EVERY PURCHASE

By Teresa Thomas (Medford) Mail Tribune

MEDFORD

All kids eat

free this year at nearly 30 Jack› son County public schools. No need to pack a lunch or

deposit money into a school meal account. The Communi› ty Eligibility Provision of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 will allow schools with

high percentages of low-in› come studentsto provide free breakfast and lunch for all students and will eliminate the

burden of determining eligibil› ity for school meal programs. The program was piloted for three years in public schools east of Mississippi before being launched nationwide in July Bob Pennell i The (Medford) Mail Tribune via The Associated Press 2014. This year, 71 school dis› Mae Richardson Elementary kindergarten students Daisy Rays, tricts statewide with 52 last year

compared are taking

advantage of the program, said Heidi Dupuis, Oregon’s school nutrition manager. "Kids just show up f or breakfast and lunch, and we

feed them," Dupuis said. CEP removes the stigma for students who receive free or

reduced-pricemeals, and kids who used to pay full price for lunch no longer have to wor› ry about whether they have

enough money in their ac› counts to cover meals, Dupuis said.

Six schools in Central Point, three schools in Eagle Point,

13 schools in Medford, three schools in Phoenix-Talent, two schools in Butte Falls and one

school in Prospect are eligible to provide federally funded meals under CEP.

Eligibility is determined by the percentage of students re› ceiving government assistance or receiving educational ser› vices as a homeless, runaway or migrant youth o r

f o ster

IN YOUR COMMUNITY

left, and Addison Saksraida eat a healthy lunch produced in the school’s kitchen Friday. All kids eat free this year at nearly 30 Jack› son County public schools through the The Community Eligibility Provision of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010.

anced meal with 100 percent will still be able to provide free whole grains." meals to students who had On Thursday at Mae Rich› previously qualified for re› ardson Elementary, one school duced-price meals. staff member noticed a student "The purpose of the pro› unpacking a Go-Gurt, Hostess gram is to eliminate applica› Ding-Dong and banana and tions and simplify the process invited the student to eat the for providing meals," said Jeff school’s lunch chicken nug› Ashman, manager of Sodexo, gets, deli sandwiches, Manda› the food-serviceprovider for rin orange chicken with brown the Medford, Eagle Point and rice, steamed broccoli, salad Phoenix-Talent school dis› and fruit instead. tricts. "But one of the greatest Leavens said about 80 per› benefits is the inclusive nature cent of students took advan› of themeal service.Everyone tage ofthe free meals offered is having a common experi› last year a t C entral Point, ence. They aren’t stopped to Sams Valley, Jewett and Pat› pay and don’t have to worry rick elementary schools, but about whether they have mon› some still packed their own ey or not. It gives every child lunches. "Maybe they were picky, the same meal experience regardlessof their income or maybe they didn’t want to wait means." in line or maybe they didn’ t A nother b enefit i s th a t want to take fruit and veggies," students will have access to she said. healthier lunches, said Anne This year, Mae Richardson Leavens, nutrition services su› Elementary and Hanby Middle pervisor for the Central Point School also are providing free School District. meals. The school district sent "I’ ve seen kids’ cold lunch› home fliers with students last es," she said. "It’s chips, Capri week reminding parents about Suns, sandwiches and treats, the free meals and, this week, and they go for the treats first will put a sandwich board that are not eligible for CEP

child. Based on the eligibility formula, schools with a high› er level of poverty can share "points" with schools with less poverty so both can partici› pate in CEP, Dupuis said. Students attending eligible schools will no longer have to pack a lunch, and their par› ents will no longer have to fill and toss half their lunch. But outside of Mae Richardson re› out an application for free and this way, they are getting quite minding them that "breakfast reduced-pricemeals. Schools a bit of variety and a well-bal› and lunch are on us."

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f the number of students honored as semifinalists by the National Merit Scholarship Program is a measure of a school’s success, Central Oregon’s schools have some

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work to do. Only three students, two from Redmond and one

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It would be wrong to draw hard f are better on some measurements and fast conclusions about the t h an their peers. Bend’s standard› state of education in Central Ore- i zed test scores are above state av› gon from that number, to be sure. erages, just barely. But collectively Semifinalists are chosen based on they don’t stand out from the crowd. students’ scores on then’ Prehmt› That arguesforbecoming a disnary SAT scores as juniors. SoPh› trict in which excellence in core omores can take the test, too, but areas is the chief goal. Our schoo bo~ s h ould st ve to put th;s dis› qualify as semifinalists and match trict at the head of the hst. otherstandards go on to compete The commitment should stretch for scholarships. beyond the performance on the All that said, Bend-La Pine stu› PSAT. Central Oregon school dis› dents should have done better. Af› tricts have an obligation to see that ter all, school districts in Places like every student no matter what his Drain and Paisley, which together background or her parents’ edu› have fewerthan 250 high school cation le el, is qualifie to go on to students, each had as many Merit ~danced training to Central Ore

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Oregon is a state with just all right schools, in many respects. And in that state of "all right-ness" is this: Bend-La Pine students may

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c a des or wherever without having to spend time and money learning what they should have learned in high school.

Backlog of rape kits in Oregon needs testing

O

regon got $4 million recent› Rape kits can include

ly to do DNA testing on a backlog of some 4,700 un› tested sexual assault evidence kits. It’s part of a nationwide effort to spend nearly $80 million in gov› ernment grants to eliminate an estimated backlog of hundreds of thousands of the untested kits, com› monly called rape kits. Testingthe backlog can make a difference. For instance, Houston Mayor Annise Parker began a cam› paign to test that city’s untested kits. There were nearly 6,600. Some went back almost 30 years. The testing turned up 850 hits in the FBI’s nationwide database of DNA profiles. Prosecutors say a price was paid for the delay as crim› inals in some cases committed other crimes. Rape kits can indude biologi› cal samples and physical evidence gathered from sexual assault vic› tims. The results are sent to the FBI’s Combined DNA I ndex System. Only a handful of states not in› cluding Oregon require that ev› ery kit be tested. Bend Police Chief Jim Porter told us his department found one kit that should have been tested and was not. There are many reasons giv› en across the country why some kits are never tested. Most of them

biological samples and physical evidence gathered from sexual assault victims. The results are sent to the FBI's Combined

DNA IndexSystem. Only a handful of states not including Oregon — recluire that every kt t be tested. seem to be about resources. It costs $500 to $1,500 per kit. It takes time. It takes staff. There can be doubts about a successful prosecution. A study of the backlog in Detroit of 11,000kitsfound a lack ofresources played an important role, but there also was a disturbing dismissive at› titude of some officers toward some vlctltIls.

None of those are good excuses. But there can be legitimate reasons why kits are not tested. Suspects can be convicted in other ways. In some cases,the suspect and the victim can agree that they had sex. They disagree if it was consensual. The $4 million that Oregon re› ceived makes it possible to process much of its backlog. Then suspects should be pursued. The victims de› serve better than having their evi› dence sit on a shelf.

C ENGR

lASAiVIT-’

from Bend, were named to that group this year.

oem’NYcIIM P@ESTN 19E 1 tK5!

Threatening lawsuits over spotted frogs not productive IN MY VIEW

w

By Gi’s I. Biglor

aterWatch of Oregon and Center for Biological Diver› communities. sity threaten to sue Central WaterWatch has been a part of Oregon, ’Ibmalo and North Unit Ir› the basin study work group all along rigation Districts along with the U.S. with direct involvement in the pro› Bureau of Reclamation over Oregon cess. CBD, of Tucson, Arizona, on spotted frog habitat. Am I the only the other hand has never joined the Central Oregonian disgusted with collaborative work groups. Neither endless destructive environmental group has contributed monetarily to lawsuits’ ? these efforts to my knowledge. Let’s look at some ongoing collab› Most importantly, their lawsuit orative efforts focused on improving threats have the potential to disman› habitat for bull trout, steelhead and tle all meaningful steps the Upper the Oregon spotted frog in the De› Deschutes Basin Study and D-HCP schutes River Basin. Currently these have developed. Improved habitat three irrigation districts along with for bull trout, steelhead and Oregon 20 additional diverse stakeholders spotted frog habitat in the basin will (including Deschutes River Conser› be the loser. vancy, Trout Unlimited, Confederat› Additional important facts include: ed Tribes of Warm Springs, city, state Reasonsfor Oregon spotted frog and federal agencies) have worked decline, according to the U.S. and Or› together to develop a basis for future egon Department of Fish and Wild› water management in the basin. The life agencies, include invasion of non› irrigation districts along with five native plants and fish, natural suc› additional partners and the city of cession of plant communities from Prineville are also developing a De› marshes to meadows, loss of marsh schutes Basin Habitat Conservation habitat, and overgrazing of stream› Plan which provides clear, specific side vegetation. habitat improvement techniques for The biggest spotted frog lossesare implementation to improve habitat caused by invasive bullfrogs accord› forthesethreespecies. ing to the Oregon Zoo, which in the Patrons of the irrigation districts recent past has conducted a breeding (our neighbors, friends, farmers, and release program in the Pacific ranchers many who are organic Northwest under the direction of the food growers) are investing millions Washington Department of Natural of dollars into these plans and their Resources. successful deployment. Irrigation pa› The largest losses of s p otted trons understand the importance of frog habitat, according for U.S. and balanced river/community sustain› ODFW, are in the Willamette and able policies. They care deeply about Klamath basins. the environment, our flora, fauna, The most effective conservation threatened and endangered species, measures to spotted frog habitat im› and our thriving Central Oregon provement include eliminating inva›

sive bullfrogs and warm-water game fish, active management of nonna›

tive plant species and maintaining healthy aquatic habitats. ’Itunalo and Central Oregon Irri›

gation Districts initiated a pilot study in 2015 to determine the benefits of

increasing winter and spring releas› es from Crescent Lake to improve frog-breeding success. Central Oregon Irrigation District

patrons voluntarily released water this year from Crane Prairie Reser› voir to counteract natural drought-re›

lated low flows in the Deschutes Riv› er to improve breeding conditions for the spotted frog and have pledged additional water cutbacks to increase fall storage and flows in the De›

schutes River. A pilot program is underway in the Ryan Ranch area todetermine

the feasibility of creating spotted frog habitat in the meadow. Should it prove successful, irrigation districts

have committed to permanently maintaining the marsh. Regardless of these positive mea›

sures, WaterWatch and Center for Biological Diversity irrationally de› mand irrigation districts maintain

a consistent flow of water in the De› schutes River without showing that existing spotted frog habitat in the

Deschutes River Basin is critically damaged, and without showing that current water flows in the Deschutes

River Basin have caused Oregon spotted frog decline. Threatening a lawsuit when so many members of our community are actively working toward positive solutions is counterproductive. — Gladys I. Biglor lives in Bend.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

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

Debate of Iran deal feeds public’s distrust of politics By Walter Pincus

ties are dysfunctional comes from. On July 14, the day the deal was hree days of Senate speeches signed in Vienna by the United and the vote Thursday related States, its five negotiating partners to the Iran nuclear agreement and Iran, President Barack Obama presented perfect examples of why warned, "I will veto any legislation according to a new Washington that prevents the successful imple› Post-ABC News poll 64 percent of mentation of this deal." adults think the American political It has been reported since that the system is dysfunctional and 72 per› White House preferred to avoid hav› cent say most people in politics can› ing to take that step. not be trusted. Last Tuesday b efore debate The whole thing was a charade, de› began it became apparent that fining that word as "something done Democrats had 42 Senate votes in just for show." support of the controversial agree› The Washington Post

T

I will discuss details of the so›

called debate later, but suffice it to say that when supporters and oppo› nents of a matter divide the hours,

each side presenting its own version of the facts with no interaction be› tween them, it can hardly be called

a debate. In fact, the only real debate in the

Senate came on precisely what the chamber was going to vote on and here is where the belief that our poli›

want to filibuster, as there already

a vote on the resolution to disapprove

Then there are statements made

by individual members that either What that parliamentary maneu› are wrong or misleading but were Senate floor, offered a resolution that ver did, besides muddying for the not questioned or contradicted, since an up-or-down vote would be on the public what was going on, was give most statements are given without already-introduced resolution of dis› the Republicans another talking interruption. approval of the Iran agreement but point for the debate. They could ac› The nuclear agreement limits the would require 60 votes to pass. cuse Democrats of wanting to fili› Iraniansto research only on newer There were precedents for requir› buster the disapproval resolution in IR-6 and IR-8 centrifuge technolo› ing a 60-vote supermajority for such order to prevent an up-or-down vote gies and after eight years allows the national security measures. It was on it. manufacture of only 30 for testing done, for example, with legislation on When the vote on cloture took purposes. It does enable Iran to keep the controversial foreign intelligence place Thursday, there were 58 votes 1,000 IR-ls at its Fordow uranium-en› surveillance measure. for it two short of the 60 needed to richment facility, but those are not Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, cut off debate. Another vote on it has newer-technology centrifuges. Some ment. That provided Senate Minori› R-Ky., proposed that the vote take been scheduled, but the results are of the IR-ls will be idle, and the oth› ty Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., with place but without mentioning the expectedto be the same. ers will be used for producing stable enough votes not only to stop Repub› 60 votes required for adoption. Reid In the end, the Senate will probably isotopes, not for enriching uranium, licans from successfully overriding objected, and in doing so prevented not vote directly on approval or dis› according to the agreement. a presidential veto but also allow the need for Obama to veto a joint approval of the agreement, and Re› Is it any surprise that the Post-ABC Democrats to use a Senate rule that House-Senate resolution disapprov› publicans and Democrats can blame News poll found that 77 percent of requires 60 votes to block a filibuster, ing of the Iran agreement, passed each other for the confusing result. adults with some college education if they wanted to keep debating the with the knowledge Congress could As for the Senate speeches on the voiced mistrust of most people in pol› nuclear agreement and prevent an not override the veto. substance of the agreement, they itics and almost half strongly see our up-or-down vote on the measure. On Wednesday, McConnell in› fed the widespread view, as found in political system as dysfunctional? Reid, however, immediately an› stead introduced a cloture motion, the poll, that politicians cannot be — Walter Pincus is a reporter nounced that the Democrats did not which would end debate and require trusted. forThe Washington Post. was an understanding that a vote would come Thursday. Reid, on the

of the Iran agreement.


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 THE BULLETIN

B5

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH 1VOTIt ES Doris E. Kays, of Bend April 6, 1918 - Sept. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. Please visit our website to share condolences on the online guestbook. 541-382-0903 www.bairdfh.corn

Services: A Memorial Service will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, 541-382-5882, www.partnersbend.org

James "Ed" Edward Mikesell, of La Pine Oct. 17, 1940- Sept. 9, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdfh.corn Services:

No formal services are

planned at this time. Contributions may be made to:

Klamath Hospice,4745 S. 6th St., Klamath Falls, OR 97603, www.klamathhospice.org

Ellery Richard Grant, of Madras Sept. 4, 1935 - Sept. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Bel-Air Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Memorial Services will be held on Saturday, September 19, 2015 at 1:00 PM at the Madras Christian Church. Contributionsmay be made to:

Erickson Air Museum.

Ruth Marie

(Thompson)

Reynolds, of La Pine Jan. 5, 1924 - Sept. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdfh.corn Services: A Memorial Service will be held Sunday, September 20, 2015, 2:30PM at Prairie House, located at 51485 Morson St. in La Pine. Contributions may be made to:

St. Charles Hospice, 2500 NE Neff Rd., Bend, OR 97701, 541-706-6700, www.stoharleshealthoare.org

David James Morrison, of La Pine Aug. 20, 1940 - Sept. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdfh.corn Services: Private services will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, 541-382-5882, www.partnersbend.org

Rodney Roberts, of Three Rivers Nov. 27, 1953 - Sept. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdfh.corn Services: No formal services are planned.

Donna Grace (McMannemy) Tate, of La Pine Mar. 3, 1937 - Sept. 11, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdfh.corn Services: A Celebration of Donna’s Life will be held on Saturday, September 26, 2015, 1:OOPM at Faith Lutheran Church, located at 52315 Huntington Rd. in La Pine. Contributions may be made to:

Heart ’n Home Hospice, PO Box 3540, La Pine, OR 97739, 541-536-7399,

www.gohospice.corn

Fae Alice (Moudy) Hampton

By Robert D. McFadden New York Times News Service

Fred DeLuca, who in 1965,

at 17, borrowed $1,000 to open a sandwich shop in Bridge› port, Connecticut, to h elp

(Tony),

(Karen); one great-grand› son and o n e g r e at-great› granddaughter. F ae w a s pr e c e ded i n death by he r h u sband, of 72 years, Lloyd H a m pton in February of 2013 and by h er d au g h t er , Pat r i c i a

( 1970) an d (1996).

s on, G ary

Fae w a s r a i s e d o n a ranch, on Catherine Creek. S he attended school a n d g raduated f r o m t h e 8th rade i n U n i o n , O r e gon. h e was m a r r ied D ec. 7 , 1 940. S h e a n d h e r h u s › band moved t o F l o r ence, OR, in 1955. I n 1 9 63, she went to work for the USPS a nd retired in 1983. U p o n r etirement, sh e a n d h e r h usband m oved t o p r o p › erty outside of Sisters, OR w here t h e y ma d e th e i r home until M a rch of 20 15 when she moved with h er d aughter t o G a r den C i t y , ID. A memorial service with be held next summer at the Hampton family reunion. I n lieu of c a rds or f l o w › e rs please make a d o n a › tion to y ou r l o cal hospice organization.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnote from around

location. In 2013, while traveling

and reviewed and modified some of its business prac›

tices. But it also produced thousands of success stories among franchise owners, have leukemia. Since then, many with no previous com› he had been receiving treat› mercial experience, who ments and still overseeing the profited from the company’s brand as chief executive, but training, marketing and busi› he recently named his sister, ness guidance. around to visit w ith f r an›

chisees, DeLuca became ill and was ultimately found to

Suzanne Greco, president

"I really feel terrific that

to run Subway’s day-to-day so many people have done operations. so well," DeLuca told For› A gregarious, hands-on tune in 1998, responding to chief executive, DeLuca ran its findings of abuses in Sub› thoseoperations fordecades, way business operations. personally signing company "But there are risks. People checks, making corporate de› can lose money. It bothers me cisions, traveling the country that people lose money, but I in an old car and stopping at don’t lose sleep over it. This is Subway outlets incognito to America." sample the food and service F rederick D e Luca w a s born in Brooklyn, New York, on Oct. 3, 1947, to Salvatore and Carmela Ombres DeLu›

ca. His father was a factory worker, and Frederick spent part of his childhood in the

Bronx. The family moved upstate to the Schenectady area when he was 10, and

moved again a few years lat› er to Bridgeport, where he graduated from Central High School in 1965. His second shop was not a Hoping to study medicine, success, either. He opened it, he took a summer job in a as he once told Fortune mag› hardware store, but he knew azine, "to create the image his wages would not cover of success." But the earnings college expenses and thought defrayed his costs at the Uni› of opening a sandwich shop versity of Bridgeport, and to help pay his way. At a fam› his experience laid the foun› ily barbecue, he broached dation for today’s empire of his idea to Buck, a family 44,268 independently owned friend and nuclear engineer Subway franchises in 110 with General Electric, who countries, surpassing the out› provided startup money and lets of Kentucky Fried Chick› became a full partner in a en (18,000) and McDonald’s venture that would bring fab› ulous wealth to both. (36,000). A privately held company DeLuca rented a s m all with headquarters in Milford, store for $165 a month in Connecticut, and r egion› downtown Brid geport, al offices around the globe, built a takeout counter and Subway does not publicly opened on Aug. 28, 1965. He report financial results, but sold subs, known regionally Forbes said it had revenue across the country as heroes, of $18 billion in 2012. It listed grinders, po’boys or hoa› DeLuca, the president, and gies: Italian or French bread his co-founder and partner, stuffed with meats, cheeses Buck, as the 259th-richest and other ingredients. Americans, each with about He enlisted family mem› $3.5 billion in 2015. bers to help. His mother host› Subway, which sells made› ed weekly planning meetings to-order sandwiches, indud› at her kitchen table and later ing foot-long "submarines" became a company officer so called for their oblong and director. His sister, Grec› buns and salads, beverag› co, became the vice president es and desserts, grew phe› in charge of operations and nomenally after 1974, when ofresearch and development. it began using franchises to DeLuca’s wife, Elisabeth, expand. It undercut its com› petitors with relatively low

whom he married in 1966,

startup costs, lower prices and marketing that empha› sized fresh ingredients and lower-calorie, reduced-so„i

corporate hea d q uarters. They had one son, Jonathan.

later worked at Subway’s

Saturday at his country home

with doctors or medicine.

Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter sub› mission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday forTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

Phone: 541-617-7825

Mail:Obituaries

Email: obits'bendbulletin.corn Fax: 541-322-7254

P.O. Box 6020

Bend, OR97708

"O..~

death in a s t atement but Subway over the years set› did not provide the cause or tled many claims, paid fines

Survivors include his wife,

Obituary policy

’cg",I

tracts requiring minimum investments, royalty pay› ments on gross sales and fees for advertising and other services. Subway provided few guarantees, even against other franchisees moving in nearby. Regulators and law› suits have challenged Sub› way product claims and said

in Southampton, New York, the world: from complications of kidney William Becker, 88: The› failure. um foods. ater critic and financier who Corneliu Vadim Tudor, 65: While DeLuca’s success acquired Janus Films with N ationalist politician a nd story was often portrayed a partner in 1965, expand› court poet to late Romanian as inspirational, Subway’s ed its catalog of art-house dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, extraordinary growth was and Hollywood classics and who attracted audiences by achieved with aggressive, broadened their distribution saying what mainstream poli› sometimes questionable tac› to university audiences and ticians didn’t dare. Died Mon› tics, and despite occasional home viewers on DVD. Died day in Romania. unflattering publicity. — From wire reports

.

pay college expenses and parlayed that experience into building the world’s largest chainoffast-food franchises, Subway,died Monday night. its franchise sales force mis› He was 67. led some owners about their Subway confirmed his prospects.

a success. Its name had to be den City, Idaho. She is survived by her el› changed after his local radio d est son , T i m H a m p t o n advertisements, delivered in (wife, Dana) of Bend, OR his native Brooklyn accent, and her d a ughter, Cathe› confused many l isteners, rine Hampton of Garden who thought he was saying City, ID; t h ree grandsons, "Pizza Marines." Steven Hampton (Deanna), a nd Sco tt H ampt o n

’ .

DeLucastarted Subway with a loanwhenwas 17

Oct. 20, 1922- Sept. 6, 2015 Fae Alice (Moudy) Hamp› and talk with franchise own› ton was born O ctober 20, ers and customers. 1922, in K e a ting, O r egon His first sandwich shop, to parents, Mabel (Godsey) named Pete’s Submarines to M oudy a n d A r t M ou d y . acknowledge the loan from S he d i e d S e p t ember 6 , 2015 at her home in Gar- his friend Peter Buck, was not

Greg H a mpton

,

The latest round began in

July, when the home of its well-known spokesman, Jar› ed Fogle, was raided as part of a child pornography inves› tigation. Subway suspended its relationship with Fogle, who gained celebrity for los› ing more than 200 pounds on his so-called Subway diet. He pleaded guilty to sex acts with minors and distribution of child pornography. Subway’s business tactics drew lawsuits, government

his son and his sister.

As his growing operation gained traction, DeLuca gave up plans fora m edicalcareer and received a degree in psy› chology from the University of Bridgeport in 1971. He and Buck incorporated the busi› ness as Doctors Associates, although it had nothing to do "He’s the doctor, I’m the as›

sociate," DeLuca often said. In 1974, halfway to their

goal of owning 32 stores in the company’s first decade,

the partners adopted fran› chises as the key to growth. It worked. In 1978, Subway opened its 100th outlet; in 1987, its 1,000th. Since then, it has averaged 1,500 new

restaurants a year, and in recent years it surpassed all competitors,

es t a blishing

restaurants across Europe, investigations, run-ins with regulatory agencies, disputes Asia, the Americas and with landlords and com› Oceania. DeLuca, who received an plaints by franchisees of be› h onorary d o ctorate f r o m ing misled or defrauded. Federal inve s t igators the University of Bridgeport found that many franchisees in 2002, was the author of were young couples, busi› "Start Small, Finish Big: 15 ness novices or immigrants

Key Lessons to Start

and

who invested life savings, Run Your Own Successful although some were unable Business" (2000, with John P. to understand Subway con› Hayes).

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Laura Kelton, of Redmond, goes through the steps to learn about computer coding at a workshop for parents at the Redmond Public Library.

Coding

"I have no idea how to

gartners, most of whom could

can learn and pass it

do this. It's definitely Continued from B1 She also taught the kinder› worth my time so I

notyetread,to recognize and along." define the words "engineer," "experiment," and "algorithm" — MarieMeade, of Redmond, ("the steps to solve a problem," about using Code.org to help Prevenas chanted in a sing› teach her children. song voice). The idea was to promote problem-solving, trial and error and persistence from Laura Kelton, also of Red› an early age. mond, has a seventh-grader at Marie Meade, of Redmond, Obsidian Middle School. He homeschools her 12-year› loves computer games but he old twins, Josiah and Sarah, beats them so quick, she said, whom she brought to the cod› it’s hardly worth buying them ing workshop. They both love anymore. Kelton wants him to playing on computers, but Me› learn to code so he can design ade wants them to learn about his own games, and she wants codlllg. "I have no idea how to do

to learn with him so she can

help.

this," she said, nodding toward

It was an intimidating idea, the laptop in front of her. Near› but after 30 minutes on Code.

by, the twins raced through be› org. "It’s not as bad," she said. ginner Code.org lessons. "It’ s definitely worth my time so I

can learn and pass it along."

— Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbullet in.corn

SCHOOL NOTES COLLEGE NOTES The following OregonState University studentswere namedto the Scholastic Honor Roll for the 2015summerterm: From Bend: PeterAskew, Jessica Cesar, Ankit Chopra, David Kargol, Bradley Show,Joshua Sprague, Cassidy Thompson, Emily Varco, Kylie Welch, Michaela Bennett, Makenzie Brian, Marissa DiTunno,Alexander Esselstrom, LIndsey Gardner, Olivia Haro, Nolan King, SarahMadison, Natalie Morris, Paul O’ Neill, Heather Pack, ColtonPope,AmyRosendahl, Nicole RyanandSerenaZendeias. From Redmond: BrookeStalter, Sarah Fisher andCorinne Schnitzer. From Powell Butte: Monika Koehler. From Prineville: Angelia Newstrand. From Madras: Megan8oyle. Lauren Rlback,of Redmond, and Awbrey Cyrus,of Sisters, each received a$1,500 scholarship from the Deschutes County FarmBureau. Sydney LisignoliandChristian Llslgnoll,both of Terrebonne, and William Cyrus, Andrew Stengel and Ethan Stengel, all of Sisters, were awarded a $1,000scholarship from the Deschutes County FarmBureau.

TEEN FEATS RedmondProficiencyAcademy studentsDillon Sieler, Mellssa Martinez, Nelli Sanchez and Matthew Barber haveearned college Spanish credits from Southern Oregon University for their Spanish proficiency. The following BoysScouts have earned the rank ofEagleScout: Preston Sartell, Troop 9063, son of Sean and LesleySartell of Prineville; Tyler RayAshcraft, Troop 9076, son of JR Ashcraft of La Pine;Seth Roy, Troop 9139, son of Ryanand Trish Roy of Sisters; Riley Brown, Troop 9036,sonof Ron andBonnie Brown of Bend; EvanGoetz, Troop 9025, son of Robert and LauraGoetz of Bend; Andrew Stengel, Troop 139,son of Gory and Joni Stengel of Sisters; James B.Seed, Troop 21, sonof Brian and Stephanie Seedof Bend; Justin Bozarth, Troop 28, son ofTerry and Sharon Johnson of Prineville; Cohen Merritt, Troop 126,sonof Jason and Kate Merritt of Redmond; John Wright, Troop 126, son ofTomand Julie Wright of Redmond;andGriffin Scalley, Troop 9023, son of David and Jennifer Scalley of Bend.

How to submit Teen feats:Kids recog› nized recently for academic achievements or for partic› ipation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.) Contact: 541-633-2117,

youth@bendbulletin.corn Mail:P. O.Box6020,Bend, OR 97708

Other schoolnotes:Col› lege announcements, mili› tary graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-633-2117,

bulletin'bendbulletin.corn

Story ideas Schoolnews:Itemsand announcements of general interest. Contact: 541-383-0354,

news'bendbulletin.corn Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story? Contact: 541-383-0354, aspegman@bendbul letin.cor n

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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

B6

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. '2015

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74 40’

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PRECIPITATION

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Tonight’s ulty:Low in the west the waxing crescent moonisaboveSpica.

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FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver Mod~crate~ ~ Redmond/Madras ~M od ~erato ~ Sisters ~M o d~crate ~ Prineville ~M o d~crate ~ Lu Pine/Gilchrist ~M od ~erato ~ Source: USDA Forest Service

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Mostly sunnyand nice

Yesterday Today Thursday

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litee Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

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

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 51/47/0.18 51/47/r 51/45/r 83/68/0.00 87f/2/pc 88/69/pc 83/60/0.00 80/58/s 81/65/pc 82/74/0.01 88/66/pc 89/67/s

81/51/0.00 84/54/s 84/57/s 90/69/0.00 89f/1/pc 89/59/pc 90/56/0.00 89/68/pc 95n1/pc 80/70/2.39 78/65/pc 81/66/s 83/51/0.00 85/58/s 85/63/s 83/64/0.00 81/66/s 82/67/pc 86/63/0.00 88/68/pc 90n1/pc 90/81/0.27 86n7/t 86n8/t 84/64/0.00 80/65/s 82/67/pc 87/66/0.01 84ff1 /pc 78/57/t 84/54/0.00 85/60/s 85/62/pc

stns/0.00 86n4/t 87n3/pc

84/62/0.00 85/58/0.00 81/56/0.00 OklahomaCity 90/62/0.00 Omaha 93/68/0.00 Orlando 89/76/0.35 Palm Springs 87/73/0.14 Peoria 86/64/0.00 Philadelphia 83/58/0.00 Phoenix 97/76/0.11 Pittsburgh 80/49/0.00 Portland, ME 83/57/0.00 Providence 84/58/0.00 Raleigh 82/50/0.00 Rapid City 90/58/Tr Reno 76/60/0.00 Richmond 83/53/0.00 Rochester, NY 82/51/0.00 Sacramento 78/59/0.00 St. Louis 85/63/0.00 Salt Lake City 72/64/0.62 San Antonio 93/73/0.00 San Diego Tgn4n.fs San Francisco 68/57/Tr San Jose 73/59/0.00 Santa re 82/56/Tr Savannah 84/62/0.00 Seattle 64/50/0.00 Sioux Fags 84/65/0.00 Spokane 57/42/0.00 Springfield, Mo 81/61/Tr Tampa 92/77/0.12

87/69/s 87/68/s 87/65/s 87/64/s 81/64/s 81/66/pc

91n2/pc 94n3/pc 87/73/pc 88/60/1 86f/3/t 83n3/t 93/69/s 96n2/s 87/68/s 88n2/pc 87/63/s 87/64/s 95f/3/pc 96n3/s 83/54/s 83/56/s 81/59/s 82/59/s

84/60/s 85/61/s 82/58/s 83/59/pc 82/50/pc 70/42/pc 66/45/pc 73/44/s

85/59/s 85/60/pc 83/59/s 82/60/s 71 /56/r

81/55/s

64/53/1 90f/6/t 80/69/pc 70/59/c 73/59/pc 83/51/pc 80/69/t 66/54/c 86/68/pc 63/45/c 84/70/pc

66/46/1

86ne/s 89n4/pc 94ne/pc 81/69/s 73/56/s

77/55/s 82/49/pc 79/68/1

63/55/ah 78/52/pc 58/45/ah 87n1/pc 86n4/t 84n4/t 94ne/0.06 93/68/pc 94/67/pc 86/59/0.00 88ff4/pc 92n4/pc

Tucson Tulsa Washington,Dc 84/60/0.00 85/63/s 86/63/s Wichita 90/68/0.00 90n4/pc 95n2/pc Yakima 65/35/0.00 69/47/c 70/44/c Yuma gene/0’.00 96f/3/s 96n2/s l

I

Mecca Mexico City

110/83/0.20 108/81/t 79/56/0. 20 70/55/1 Montreal 79/57/0.00 81/60/s Moscow 63/37/0.00 65/51/pc Nairobi 77/59/0.02 79/54/s Nassau 90/82/0.09 88/76/pc New Delhi 99/80/0.00 gtnt/s Osaka 82/64/0.04 76/67/r Oslo 55/53/1.26 54/52/sh Ottawa 81/54/0.00 82/55/s Paris 66/52/0. 21 68/56/r Rio de Janeiro 82/66/0.00 86/70/s Rome 81/68/0.02 82/70/s Santiago 61/46/0.00 59/44/sh Sao Paulo 86/59/0.00 86/69/s Sap poro 71/53/0.00 76/56/s Seoul 82/58/0.00 78/56/pc Shanghai 74/65/0.05 81/67/sh Singapore 85/79/0.19 87/81/t Stockholm 64/56/0.57 64/51/sh Sydney 85/57/0.00 68/54/s Taipei 87/77/0.42 84/75/pc Tel Aviv 91/77/0.08 89n9/s Tokyo 77/65/0.00 75/64/c Toronto 82/57/0.00 81/57/s Vancouver 65/50/0.00 63/52/r Vienna 70/55/0.00 82/64/pc Warsaw 75/57/0.14 79/67/pc

109/82/t 70/55/1 81/59/pc 67/56/pc 81/57/pc 89/79/pc 96/78/pc 76/67/r 57/54/r 80/54/pc

65/52/ah 89/70/s 85/68/s 62/40/pc 86/68/s 71/57/pc 79/56/s 82/68/pc 90/80/1 64/53/r 61/55/sh 85/74/pc 89/77/s 67/66/r 80/58/pc 62/53/c 88/60/s 84/62/s

John Day National, Monument

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units in the John Day Fossil

NATIONAL FOREST

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Prooosedsites tor

Beds. The Sheep Rock Unit has the Thomas Condon Pale›

neW ranger Statian - Hanc c/ Canyon

ontology Center and the Cant

, j Creek

Ranch to offer visitors ser› vices, and the Painted Hills

Hancock

Unit has a small ranger sta›

’ Field StatiOIT&

tion at the unit’s picnic area. The new ranger station at the Clarno Unit would also be

tr ikead›

small.

"It’s a very, very modest

ine Creek Source: John Day Fossil Beds National Monument

square feet."

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

To commen t

In gathering public com› ment, the national monument

The John DayFossil Beds National Monument is taking public comment on plans for a newranger statIon In the Clarno Unit. Comments can besent by mail to Superintendent, John DayFos› sil Beds National Monument, 32651 Highway19, Kimberly, OR 97848 or by email to joda superintendentonps.gov. For more information go to bit.ly/ClarnoRS.

is preparing to evaluate the potential environmental im›

pact of the building. C onstruction would l i k e› ly start in summer 2016, and

Hall hopes to finish toward the end ofthe summer. De-

signers have yet to d raft sketches. drawings," Hall said. "It is too nWe dOn’t haVe any kind of early in the process."

— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.corn

The rhangindi Dementia Brain, understanding Frontotempora/ Dementia Frontotemporal Dementias (FTDs), an umbrella term for range of disorders affecting the frontal and temporal lobes of the brain, are particularly challenging for families and professional care givers. Odd, often impulsive behaviors and potential loss of language are just a few symptoms causing frustration and anxiety. Join us for this series of presentationsin partnership with Bend Neurology.

"The sitehas also been Used forhazardous

When: September 17th, October 15th and November 19th

and radioactive waste disposal and has been subject to numerous violations of environmental quality regulations."

Time:

6: 0 0I'Ni

Deschutes County staff report

Where: St. Charles Medical Center

area, which was mined for aggregate. County officials noted in

being scattered from develop› ment of the 19 residential lots. their report that th e d iato› Lower Bridge LLC submit› maceous earth mining done ted information regarding the to the west of Lower Bridge issue of dust. The company Way can create cristobalite, a stated it had worked with DEQ known carcinogen. to water and plant vegetation "The site has also been used on 300acres ofthe m ine area for hazardous and radioactive to reduce the blowing of po› tentially hazardous dust.

subject to numerous violations Green visited the site and of environmental quality reg› concluded the dust c ontrol ulatiOnS,n the COunty Staff re› measures didn’t appear to be port also states. effective. Adjoining property owners ... the introduced vegeta› submitted public comments tion has not taken hold, and to the county urging officials as aresult large areas ofthe "

diatomaceous earth r emain

0

49’

City

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Amsterdam Athens

r

About 90 miles from Bend, the Clarno Unit is one of three

to take into consideration dust

64/44

Yesterday Today Thursday Oily Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 92/62/0.00 93/70/pc 95/71/pc Akron 80/56/0.00 83/57/s 82/57/s Albany 81 /53/0.00 83/58/s 84/59/s Albuquerque 85/63/0.04 88/61/pc 87/59/pc Anchorage 50/46/0.56 52/42/r 51/42/r Atlanta 80/59/0.00 79/64/s 81/63/pc Atlantic City 79/60/0.00 82/64/s 81/65/s Austin 91/69/Tr 90/71/t 93/68/pc Baltimore 83/51 /0.00 84/st/s 84/59/s Billings 69/55/0.01 61/41/sh 65/44/pc Birmingham 81 /59/0.00 84/64/s 84/66/pc Bismarck 92/53/0.00 78/54/c 69/42/pc Boise 63/51 /0.14 65/48/sh 61/44/sh Boston 84/62/0.00 80/64/s 83/64/s Bridgeport, CT 81 /56/0.00 83/64/s 84/64/s Buffalo 76/52/0 00 80/60/s 80/61/s Burlington, VT 83/57/0.00 84/61/s 85/61/s Caribou, ME 76/55/0.02 76/61/s 82/60/pc Charleston, SC 83/57/0.00 82/69/pc 80/68/1 Charlotte 81/49/0.00 82/57/s 83/59/pc Chattanooga 83/54/0.00 83/57/s 84/61/pc Cheyenne 80/62/Ti’ 79/48/pc 70/45/1 Chicago 82/64/0.00 82/63/s 82/69/pc Cincinnati 81 /52/0.00 83/54/s 83/58/s Cleveland 79/58/0.00 81/59/s 82/59/s ColoradoSprings 85/59/0.00 84/52/pc 82/Sf/pc Columbia, Mo 84/58/0.00 86/70/s etltl/pc Columbia, SC 84/52/0 00 84/64/s 85/64/pc Columbus,GA 81 /60/0.00 81/67/pc 83/66/pc Columbus,OH 80/50/0.00 81/56/s 83/58/s Concord, NH 82/51 /0.00 84/55/s 86/55/s Corpus Christi 91 n5/0.31 89/75/pc 92/74/pc Dallas 89/69/0.00 93/75/pc 96/76/pc Dayton 80/52/0.00 82/56/s 84/59/s Denver 88/62/0.00 86/52/p c 82/49/t Des Moines 87/67/0 00 87/72/p c 87/62/t Detroit 83/60/0.00 81/56/s 82/62/s Duluth 78/60/0.00 t8/66/pc 77/48/t El Paso 94n3/0.00 94/73/s 94/tl /pc Fairbanks 47/39/0.04 47/40/sh 49/38/sh Fargo 86/67/0.00 80/60/pc 73/45/c Flagstaff 67/54/0.21 66/44/pc 69/39/pc Grand Rapids 83/58/0.00 80/58/s 81/66/pc Green Bay 85/61 /0 00 81/63/pc 82/64/c Greensboro 82/52/0.00 82/57/s 83/59/pc Harrisburg 83/52/0.00 83/56/s 84/57/s Harfford, CT 84/53/0.00 86/56/s 86/56/s Helena 63/50/0.28 54/37/r 56/40/t Honolulu 88/77/0.06 cene/s 87/77/c Houston 91n1/Tr 87/71/t 89/70/pc Huntsville 83/56/0.00 82/60/s 83/62/pc Indianapolis 82/54/0.00 82/57/s 84/64/pc Jackson, MS 87/58/0.00 92/66/pc 93/66/pc Jacksonville 85/66/0.99 82/T1/t 78/70/t

'ca

cal-forest past.

waste disposal and has been

63/46

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Pleasant with sunshine and patchy clouds

59/50/0.48 66/57/r 63/54/sh Boston 88/68/0.00 86/71/s cent/s .» uke /64 Auckland 56/49/0.1 2 59/51/c 63/51/pc 8/ w York Baghdad 11 3/85/0.00 109/81/pc 108/79/pc 01 s /ea Bangkok 84ng/0.80 86/78/t 88/78/r ’ etna ’e X XXX~ / 4 iladelphis Beijing 81 /58/0.00 82/59/s 84/61/c Cof mbu aehtake 6/e3 Beirut 88/81 /0.00 87/80/pc esne/s an ncfvco 81 Omah 8 63 Den 64/53 shl Berlin 68/54/0.00 74/61/pc 73/55/sh 70/59 ' sess us lie LasV ss Bogota 68/43/0.06 70/46/pc 66/51/eh ss/6 Kansas City 51. u’ ae /ea Budapest 86/66/0.03 85/67/pc 89/63/s 87na 86 Buenos Ai r es 77/64/0.00 64/47/pc 67/47/pc M "II Cherie Los An les Cabo San Laces gone/0’.04 91/75/t gonen 85/6 7 8/d5 L’ Cairo 93/75/0.00 93/77/s 93/77/s pbeen Anchorage Albuque ue klshoma Ci At Calgary 54/41 /0.16 51/32/sh 58/39/s 95/73 8 es 9 II 0 ss/61 79/64 Cancun 90n9/0.1 2 90/73/pc 91/75/t uir inuhe 8 Iee ul pa Dublin 61 /50/0.07 57/44/c 60/47/c ’4’ sn Edinburgh 61 /45/0.00 60/45/c 62/46/c 61/47 Geneva 66/55/0.02 76/59/1 61/50/1 Harare 73/41 /0.00 81/49/s 85/54/s Hong Kong 89/79/0.04 87/79/sh cene/t Honofufui ~M Chihuahua Istanbul 79/69/0.00 79/69/s Tgno/s esne 90/e2 Jerusalem 87n2/0.08 85/67/1 84/67/s ea/ae ’e PYe. v Johannesburg 74/48/0.00 81/59/s 83/54/s Lima 68/61/Tr 70/62/pc 70/62/pc Lisbon 72/59/0.54 72/58/sh 72/58/pc Shown are today’s noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 64/50/0.04 64/54/r 64/53/c T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 70/57/0.08 70/51/sh 71/49/pc Manila 88/77/0.02 gent/t 90/78/t

n ational monument. W h i l e

Lower Bridge LLC is work› ing with the state to investi› gate potential health hazards at the eastern portion of the

Burns Juntion

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108 ~ g e

landform created 44 m il› lion years ago by volcanic mudfkrws, according to the

Continued from B1

58/43

BO/45

Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday

The Clarno Unit features The Palisades, a prominent

Development

Jordan Vgey

Frenchglen

Yesterday Today Thursday

Continued from B1

building," Hall said, "some› thing on the order of 400

Lakeview

52/39

Nyssa 66/49

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 61/48/0.06 65/54/sh 65/53/sh L a Grande 63 / 43/0.00 64/44/c 60/37/c Portland 65/5 0/0.0065/56/sh 69/55/ sh 62/37/0.2162/39/c 58/31/c La Pine 54/28/0.00 53/41/c 55/34/r Prinevige 55/ 34/0.0062/44/c 55/38/ sh Brookings 59/48/0.02 60/53/r 65/51/sh Me df ord 6 4/46/Tr 63/50/r 69/46/pc Redmond 57 / 28/Tr 59/42/c 60/33/sh Gums 59/37/0.31 59/36/sh 60/29/pc N ewport 59/4 5/Tr 61 / 55/r 6 2/51/sh Roseburg 66 / 47/Tr 65/54/r 68/49/pc Eugene 65/41/Tr 6 4/53/sh 68/47/sh N orth Bend 6 3 / 46/0.00 66/55/r 66/51/sh Salem 65/45/0.00 63/55/sh 69/52/ sh Klamath Fags 59/32/Tr 52/39/r 6 1/31/pc O ntario 64/52/0.20 67/47/pc 65/40/c Sisters 55/36/0.00 59/44/c 60/36/r Lakeview 61/45/0.05 51/39/pc58/30/pc Pendleton 62/45/0.00 68/51/c 66/47/c The Dages 6 7 /46/0.00 71/52/c 70/49/sh

Station

sagebrush, grass and juniper dot the land nowadays, fossils harken back to a near-tropi›

67 47

Valee 65/48

Burns Juntura 64/45

Ch ristmas alley Silver 57/41 Lake SO/41 54/42 Paisley Chile quin 54/40 51/42 Beaver Marsh

Klamath ’Falls

tario

Riley 59/36 59/41

Greece1 55/41

Roseburg

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62/47

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Fort Rock

65/54

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Grove Oakridge

’Baker C

City Astoria Baker City

Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 266 6 9 4B% EXTREMES (for the Wickiup 21244 11% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 5 2 5 16 60% de contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 11716 26Vo National high: 103 Prineville 52714 35Vo at Hill City, KS River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low: 28 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 137 at Redmond,OR Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1090 Precipitation: 4.19" 143 at Nasa Shuttle Facil› Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1590 ity, FL Little Deschutes near LaPine 122 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 1 S Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 210 92

John Day

Pa line Re d B rothers 6044

64/53

Joseph Grande Union 41

64 44

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62/44

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Reservoir C rane Prairie

C rooked R. below Prineville Res.

pray

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Prineville

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

WATER REPORT

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TRAVEL WEATHER

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63/57

UV INDEX TODAY ~ S

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64 6

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

S

A few morning showers; otherwise, somesun

Hood 5

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CENTRAL:Mostly

YESTERDAY

10 a.m. Noon

~

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SUNDAY

Shown is today’s weather.Temperatures are today’s highs andtonight’s lowe.

ria

EAST:Clouds will limit the sunshine today Seasid with a shower or two 65/57 crossing the area. Cannon

24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace cloudy andcool today Record 0.55" in 19B3 with a couple of Lincoln Month to date (normal) O. OS" (0.21 ") showers, especially in 62/56 Year to date(normal) 6.64 " (6.97") the afternoon. Newpo Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . S2" 61/55 WEST:Cloudy and SUN ANDMOON Tach cool today with 60/ss Today Thu. showers crossing the Sunrise 6:45 a.m. 6:46 a.m. area as another storm Floren e Sunset 7:15 p.m. 7:13 p.m. system moves in from 61/56 Moonrise 9:S S a.m. 10:55 a.m. the Pacific. Moonset S:5 9 p.m. 9:31 p.m. OREGON EXTREME$ Co First Fu l l Last Sep 21 Sep 27

7Q

SATURDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

High Low

ykt Jg

Overcast with a shower in places

ALMANAC

FRIDAY

LOW

Mostly cloudy,cool; a shower in the p.m.

I

THURSDAY

exposed," Green wrote in her decision. Lower Bridge LLC has at›

tempted to get the western part rezoned for residential use. The county offered to

considera zone change ifthe company got DEQ to certify there were no remaining pub› lic health hazards related to the mining.

e

Le usshowyouhow.

County commissioners are

still deciding whether to ex› tend the time frame for the

company to obtain the guar› antee from DEQ. —Reporter: 541-617-782O, tshorackibend bulletin.corn

M T.

(541) 385-8500

AC H E LOR MEMORY CARE Rislurucs

(541) 318-3322


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

THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

COLLEGE

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

GOLF

PREP VOLLEYBALL

FOOTBALL

Report: DucksQB has droken finger Oregon starting quar› terback VernonAdams played Saturday’s foot› ball game at Michigan State with a broken right index finger, and the injury is likely to bother him for several weeks, according to multiple news reports Monday. Ducks offensive coordinator Scott Frost told The (Eugene)Reg› ister-Guard on Monday that Adams "wasn’t at his best" during Sat› urday’s 31-28 loss in East Lansing. Adams left practice Tuesday without the splint on his right index finger that he had after Saturday’ s game, according to The Register-Guard. Comcast Sports Northwest first reported the injury. Adams, a graduate transfer from Eastern Washington, was 22› of-39 passing for 309 yards with one touch› down and two intercep› tions for the Ducks (1-1), who face Georgia State on Saturday. Ducks coach Mark Helfrich would not say if backup quarterback Jeff Lockie was preparing to start, telling TheRegis› ter-Guard, "We’ repre› paring very similar (to) how we have.All those guys are taking reps and out there andwe’ll see how it all shakesout." Lockie, a junior, has played in 20 games during his career at Ore› gon, all in a backup role.

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

George Mack Jr., the director of instruction at Black Butte Ranch, won the Pacific Northwest Section Senior PGA Cham› pionship at the Home Course in Dupont, Washington, on Sept. 3. The win qualifies him for the National Senior PGA Champion› ship in Seaside, California, next month.

Black Butte

Ranch’sMackto play in nationals The resort’s director of instruction won a regional event to qualify for theSenior PGA ProfessionalNational Championship By Kevin Duke

Ride Hard, Finish Thirsty returns

Globe-trotting cyclist to visit Crow’s FeetCom› mons in Bendwill host "intercultural adventure cyclist" Jamie Bianchini and his family Friday as they present photos and videos from the Santa Cruz, California, man’s eight-year journey around the world on a tandem bicycle. The event is oneof the final stops on atour promoting Bianchini’s new book, "A Bicycle Built for Two Billion." The family-friendly event begins at 6 p.m. with happy hour, fol› lowed by amultimedia presentation at 7:30. Live music begins at

Pacific Northwest Section PGA Senior Championship by four shots in his third at›

tions today," Mack said this week. "I’m very excited to go.

tempt at the title.

It’s a nice trip in between my

"I made my hotel reserva›

The 53-year-old pro outdis› two jobs. "Monterey and Carmel tanced the field with a stellar 4-under-par 68 in rainy and (both near the tournament cold conditions at The Home site in Seaside) are awesome Course in Dupont, Washing› and it’s a great place that

CYCLING

— Bulletin staff fep/t

Earlier this month, Mack, the director of instruction at Black Butte Ranch, won the

he is planning a side trip to Seaside, California, where he will play in the Senior PGA Professional National Cham› pionship from Oct. 15-18.

The third time was indeed

a charm for George Mack Jr.

— Bulletin staff report

The third annual Ride Hard, Finish Thirsty cy› clocross festival returns to Tumalo this weekend. The course, located at 19449 TumaloRes› ervoir Road, is openfor inspection from 4 to 7 p.m. Friday, and races begin at10 a.m. Satur› day and Sunday.The course will be altered between the first and second day of racing. Preregistration is available online at www. boneyardcycling.corn and at RechargeSport in Bend until Friday. Ear› ly registration costs $20 for adults and $10for juniors; prices increase by $5 for race-day reg› istration. All participants must be members of the Oregon Bicycle Racing Association, and one› race OBRApasses may be purchased for $5.

return to Arizona, where he teaches in the winter. Now

The Bulletin

ton, near Tacoma. He was the

time of the year."

only professional under par in the tough conditions, and his two-day total of 4-under

Playing through the rain on both days of the Sept. 2-3 sectional championship, Mack drew upon his experi› ence as a junior golfer in wet

140 won the tourney by four

shots. The win means Mack has had to alter plans for his

Photos by Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Ridgeview’s McKenzie Bartlett hits the ball over the fingertips of Burns’ Lindsey Taylor during the

secondsetagainstthe Hilanderson Tuesday in Redmond. The Ravens lost3-0.

Doug Ma›

gee is focused on finding the positives from each match for

his young and inexperienced Ridgeview volleyball squad to build upon. In Tuesday’s match against defending Class 2A state

SOCCER

PARIS

great, if occasionally con› fusing, aspects of European soccer is the sheer number

in 5A Intermountain Confer›

of opportunities that exist

ence play.

for someone anyone to win something. It has not

"We started at the bottom

"As a team, we probably gave them 15 points a game," Magee said. "We just had a lot of errors."

Ridgeview will need to

How many gamescan atop clubplayinaseason?Asmuch as 75 percent more than abad team,C4

One of the

tasted a level of competition that could bode well for them

gins, the Ravens fell 25-17, 25-11, 25-13.

Inside

By Sam Borden New York Times News Service

champion Burns, the Ravens

of the ladder," said Magee, the Ridgeview coach. "But we’ re stepping up slowly and surely." On Tuesday, in their final tuneup before IMC play be›

See Mack/C2

For top c ubs,continent the priority over country

Bulletin staff report REDMOND

conditions.

Ridgeview’s Katie Salka, left, and Brenna Pinkerton make the block Tuesday night against Burns.

Inside La Pine beats Central Linn for first boys soccer win. Prep roundup,C4 clean up those miscues soon, as the Ravens host Bend High on Thursday. "The girls, they’ re com›

ing together," Magee said. "They’ re going to get better. I think we will be a sleeper team in the IMC. I think we’ re

sneaking up. I hope we have a better showing Thursday against Bend. We just have to limit our mistakes. That’s the

key."

you rather be champions of the league or champions of the Champions League? Knowing a team’s priori› ties can be just as difficult as knowing its various

gotten so bad that associa›

tions are handing out par› ticipation trophies (yet), but in many of the big soccer countries thereareso m any concurrent competitions in

schedules since traditional

nationalism (that is, putting the domestic title first) often

any given season that it can

sometimes feel like an exer› cise in memorization to sim› ply keep track of them all. Is this game in the league? The cup? Perhaps the League Cup? And would

clashes with economic real› ity (prioritizing success in Europe). The simplicity of Paris Saint-Germain, then, is a welcome reprieve.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Blind long-snapper impresses at USC By Gary Klein

put in."

Los Angeles Times

So was quarterback Cody Kessler.

LOS ANGELES

Jake

Olson, a blind long-snapper,

"It’s awesome. It’s really

Inside

reporters.

"It was a surreal feeling

being out there at practice," Ol› son told the school’s website. "I

California football team for

cool," Kessler said. "This team can’t thank enough everyone is so welcoming to him, and it’ s who helped make this possible.

8:30.

the first time Tuesday and

great to have him in the lock›

More information is available at www. abicyclebuiltfortwobillion .corn and www. peacepedalers.corn.

impressedcoaches andteam-

er room.... He never makes excuses; he never complains

team inany way Ican and be

about anything. He’s out here working his butt off.e Olson, a freshman walk› on, was not made available to

team and I always have, and now it feels great to be a part

— Bulletin staff report

SeeSoccer/C4

practiced with the Southern

John McGillen / USCTrolans.corn via The Associated Press

Southern California long-snapper Jake Olson, center, is led onto the practice field Tuesday by a teammate. Olson, who completely lost his sight

six years ago, practiced for the first time.

mates with his work ethic and

ability. "He did a good job," USC coach Steve Sarkisian said.

"I’m proud of the work that he

"I’m excited to help this

a great teammate. I love this of it."

SeeOlson/C4

Texas fires embattled AD

Patterson. Sports in brief,C2 Pac-12 standings and schedule. Scoreboard, C2


C2

TH E BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREB DARD

TODAY SOCCER Time TV/Radio Europe, Champions League,Olympiakos (Greece) vs. Bayern Munich (Germany) 11:30a.m. ESPN2 Europe, Champions League, Chelsea (England) vs. MaccabiTelAviv (Israel) 11:30 a.m. Root Europe, Champions League, Roma (Italy) vs. Barcelona (Spain) 11:30 a.m. FS1 Europe, Champions League, Dinamo Zagreb (Croatia) vs. Arsenal (England) 11:30 a.m. FS2 4:30 p.m. ESPN2 MLS, Toronto at NewYork City FC BASEBALL

MLB, ChicagoCubsat Pittsburgh MLB, L.A. Angels at Seattle

4 p.m. 7 p.m.

E S PN Roo t

THURSDAY GOLF

EuropeanTour, Italian Open, first round Web.corn Tour, River Run, first round PGA Tour, BMWChampionship, first round Solheim Cup,Day1

6:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. noon 11 p.m.

Golf Golf Golf Golf

9:30 a.m. 5 p.m.

MLB MLB

BASEBALL

MLB, ChicagoCubsat Pittsburgh MLB, Houston atTexas SOCCER Europa League,

Bordeaux (France)vs. Liverpool (England) Europa League,Borussia Dortmund (Germany) vs. Krasnodar (Russia) Europa League,Tottenham Hotspur (England) vs. Qarabag (Azerbaijian) Europa League, APOEL (Cyprus) vs. Schalke 04(Germany) Women’s college, Wisconsin at PennSt. Women’s college, Georgia at LSU Women’s friendly, United States vs Haiti

10 a.m.

FS1

10 a.m.

FS2

noon

FS1

noon FS2 4 p.m. B i g Ten 4 p.m. SEC 4 :30 p.m. F S 1

FOOTBALL

College, Clemson at Louisville College, Florida A&M atS.C.State NFL, Denver at KansasCity Australia, semifinal, Hawthorn vs. Adelaide

4:30 p.m. ESPN 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5:25 p.m. CBS,NFL 2:30a.m. (Fri) FS2

BASKETBALL

WNBA playoffs, Indiana atChicago WNBA playoffs, Tulsa at Phoenix

5 p.m. 7 p.m.

ESPN2 ESPN2

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TI/for radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF COLLEGESPORTS TexaS PartS waySwith athletiC direCtOr

Theawkward

dismissal of Texasfootball coach Mack Brown camefirst. That was followed by the firings of school President Bill Powers andbasketball coach Rick Barnes. Nowathletic director Steve Patterson is gone, too, after less than two years anabrupt end to his rocky tenure atop the nation’s wealthiest athletic program that remains in turmoil. Patterson, whoseaggressive approach to raising money rankled fans and some major donors, resigned Tuesday inwhat university Pres› ident Greg Fenvescalled a "mutual" agreement. Fenvesrefused to say he fired Patterson but said "this has been a decision that’s been building over recent weeks," and noted hehadheard from "hundreds if not thousands" of Texasfans concernedabout the program. Patter› son was responsible for two popular hires football coach Charlie Strong and basketball coach ShakaSmart but also raised ticket prices after a losing football season, pushedcoaches to raise money for endowed scholarships and created afan "loyalty" program to prioritize ticket purchases.

Report: NCAA investigating San DiegoSt. dasketball

San DiegoState’s basketball program is under investigation by the NCAAfor potential rules violations, according to a report by CBS Sports. Citing unidentified sources, CBS Sports says the potential vio› lations include possible improper benefits to recruits. The school said in a statement that "members of theNCAAstaff confirmed for the uni› versity that they havenot commenced aformal investigation.... San Diego State takesall potential NCAAissues seriously and will cooper› ate fully with the NCAA."Fisher was hired bySDSUin 1999, two years after he wasfired by Michigan because of the program’s involvement with booster EdMartin. Following anNCAAinvestigation, Michigan vacated its participation in the FinalFour in 1992and 1993.

SOCCER Expansionteam namedLosAngeles Footdall Club› MajorLeagueSoccer’s expansion club in Los Angeles finally has an official name: LosAngeles Football Club. LAFChas beenthe informal name of the teamsince its owners wereadmitted to the league nearly a year ago. Theclub finally made it official Tuesday, saying its sup› porters demandedthe name.Thegroup intends to build a downtown stadium on the site of the LosAngeles Sports Arena, which will be demolished. LAFC will join MLS in 2018, ayear later than originally planned.

OLYMPICS 5 cities set to be inrunningfor 2024 Games with Toronto deciding against a last-minute bid, five cities are set to be in contention for the 2024Olympics whenthe race opens officially today: former Olympic host cities Los Angeles, Paris andRome;and first-time candidates Hamburg, Germany,and Budapest. The final vote will be hend in Lima, Peru, in September 2017. — From wire reports

Mack Continued from C1 "I would say I was prepared, but I’m not used to it any› more," he recalled. "I grew up in Portland, so I’ ve had lots of rain experience." Mack said he wore a rain

glove, rather than a leather one, hooked his towel under his umbrella, and wore rain

gear on the second day when players dealt with a strong squall during the middle of the round. nYou have to be prepared

ON DECK Today Boyssoccer:LaPineatCrookCounty,4:30p.m. Cross-country: Ridgeyiew,Madras, Culverat SFOk› toberfestInvitationalin SilverFals, TBD Volleyball:SouthWasco County at Trinity Lutheran, 5 p.m.

the

PGA Tour FedExCupLeaders 1, JasonDay,4,680. 2,JordanSpieth, 4,169.3, Rickie Fowler,3,498. 4, HenrikStenson, 3,352.5, BubbaWatson,3,329.6,CharleyHoffman,2,302. 7, ZachJohnson,2,241.8, Dustin Johnson,2,114. 9,JimFuryk,2,087.10,PatrickReed,2,039. 11, JimmyWalker, 2,020. 12, Robert Streb, 1,958. 13, Justin Rose, 1,956. 14, DannyLee, 1,851. 15, Kevin Kisner, 1,836. 16, Hideki Mat› suyama,1,783.17,RoryMcllroy, 1,729.18,Brandt Snedeker,1,623.19,J.B. Holmes,1,616.20, Matt Kuchar,1,582. 21, BrooksKoepka,1,544. 22,StevenBowditch, 1,518. 23,Sangmoon Bae,1,511. 24, PaulCasey, 1,507.25,BenMartin, 1,407. 26,Daniel Summer› hays, 1,387.27,Bill Haas,1,381. 28,JasonBohn, 1,347. 29,RussellKnox,1,333.30,Louis Oosthui› zen, 1,309. 31, DavidLingmerth,1,305. 32,Harris English, 1,301. 33,MattJones,1,301.34,Kevin Na,1,296. 35,Justin Thomas,1,275.36,Gary Woodland, 1,258. 37, Chris Kirk, 1,249. 38, Sean O’Hair, 1,231. 39, RyanMoore, 1,208. 40, RyanPalmer,

In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick g/15 www.gocomics.corn/inthebleachers

Thursday Boyssoccer.SandyatRidgeview,4:30p.m.;Redmond atBarlow,7 p.m.; TheDales at Madras, 4 p.m.;SistersatSweet Home,4:30p.m. Girls soccer:Ridgeviewat Sandy, 4:30p.m.;Summit at HoodRiverValley, 4:30p.m.; Wilsonville atBend, 4:30p.m.;MadrasatThe Dages,4 p.m.;Crook Countyat LaPine, 3p.m.; Sweet Homeat Sisters, 4:30 p.m. Volleyball: Summit atRedm ond, 6:30 p.m.;Bend at Ridgeview,6:30p,mcMolala at CrookCounty, 6p.m.;Corbettat Madras,6 p.m.; Sweet Homeat Sisters,6:30p.m.; Jeffersonat LaPine, 5:30p.m.; CulveratDufur, 6:15p.m. Girls waterpolo:RidgeviewatMadras, 4 p.m. Friday Football:Bendat EaglePoint, 7 p.m.; Craterat Mount ai nView,7p.m.;RedmondatBaker,7p.m.; Ridgeview at HoodRiverValey, 7 p.m.; Summit at Ashland,7p.m.;Sisters atCrookCounty,7 p.m.;Ma› dras atStayton,7 p.m.;Lakeviewat LaPine, 7p.mc Santiam atCulver,7p.m.;Powersat Gilchrist, 4p.m. Boys soccer:HoodRiver ValleyatSummit, 4 p.m. Volleyball:Trinity LutheranatCentralChristian, 5p.m.

Saturday Boys soccer:LebanonatMountainView,2p.m.;Culver atRiverside,1p.m. Girls soccer: MountainViewatLebanon,2p.m. Volleyball: Summiatt Lakeridge, 8a.m.;Redmondat DallasTournament, 8 a.m.; Bend, Mountain View, CrookCountyatRogueValleyClassic, TBD;Madras, Sisters,RidgeviewatSisters Invitational, 8 a.m.;La Pine atTagmanTournamentin Lakeview,9a.m.; C u› lver St.PaulTournament,10 am.;Central Christian at C.S.LewisTournament, 11a.mc Prospect, Triad at Gilchrist,noon Cross-country: Bend, MountainView,Sisters, Crook County,Madras,LaPineat ThreeCourseChallenge in Seaside, TBD;Summit at OregonCity Xc Invita› tional,10:30a.m.

TENNIS WTA Tour JapanWomen’sOpen Tuesday atTokyo First Round trina FalconiUni , tedStates,def. Naomi Osaka, Ja› pan, 5-7,7-5r6-3. RisaOzaki, Japan,def. BoianaJovanovski, Serbia,

1,202.

41, Tony Finau, 1,199. 42, WebbSimpson, 1,187.43,PatPerez,1,185. 44,Scott Piercy,1,157. 45, Shawn Stefani,1,123. 46,Daniel Berger,1,120. 47,Troy Merritt, 1,114.48, BrendonTodd, 1,095. 49, Brendonde Jonge, 1,084. 50, BrianHarman, 1,073.

51, ZacBlair, 1,064. 52,Hunter Mahan,1,064. 53, JamesHahn,1,058. 54, SergioGarcia,1,051. 55, CameronTringale, 1,050. 56,RorySabbatini, 1,048. 57,KevinChappell, 1,002.58,Russell Hen› ley, 990.59,DavidHearn,986.60,BrendanSteele, 981. 61, Phil Mickelson,947.62,FabianGomez,943. 63,KeeganBradley,937.64,NickWatney,933.65, Jerry Kelly, 932. 66, lan Poulter, 919. 67, Billy Horschel,907.68,Wiliam McGirt, 873. 69,Bryce Molder,865.70,George McNeil, 863.

"OK. The tranquilizer kicked in. Drag him off the mound and call in the lefty."

MO TOR SPORTS College

BASKETBALL WOMEN'S NATIONAL BASKEIBALLASSOCIAllON

AN TimesPOT

CONFERENCESEMIFINALS

NAibCAR Sprint Cup

Pac-12 AN TimesPDT

WNBA playoffs

(Best-of-3;x-if necessary) Thursday’sGames Indiana atChicago,5p.m. TulsaatPhoenix, 7p.m. Friday’sGames 6-1, 6-1. ashingtonatNewYork,4 p.m. ZhengSaisai, China,def.Alison Riske(4), United W LosAngelesatMinnesota,6p.m. States,0-6,6-4, 6-1. Saturday’sGames Johann aLarsson,Sweden,def.WangQiang,Chi- ChicagoatIndiana, 4p.m. na, 0-6,6-3, 6-3. 6p.m. KurumiNara,Japan,def. AndreeaMitu, Romania, PhoenixatTulsa,Sunday’ sGames 6-1, 6-4. YorkatWashington,10 a.m. JarmilaGaidosova, Australia, def. AlexandraPano› New Minne s o t a a t L o s An g e l e s , n oon va, Russia6-3, , 6-4. Monday,Sept. 21 MagdaLinette, Poland,def. LaurenDavis, United x-Indiana at Chicago,5 p.m. States,6-3,6-2. asatPhoenix,7p.m. NaoHibino,Japan,def.HirokoKuwata,Japan,3-6, x-Tul Tuesday,Sept. 22 6-4, 6-4. ngton at NewYork, TBD Zarina Diyas(2), Kaza khstan, def. Kiki Bertens, x-Washi x-Los AngelesatMinnesota,TBD Netherlands, 6-4,6-4. HsiehSu-wei, Taiwan,def. PolonaHercog, Slove›

California Oregon St. Oregon Stanford Washington St Washington Arizona SouthernCal UCLA utah Ariz. St. Colorado

North Cont Overall W L W L P F PA 0 0 2 0 1 0 821 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

1 1 1 1 1

1 1 1 1 1

33 89 37 54 62

42 73 23 58 16

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

2 2 2 1 1

0 0 0 1 1

1 1 41 5 71 1 9 48 3 1 52 5 9 68 42

South Cont Overall W L W L P F PA 0 0 2 0 86 5 2

Friday’s Gama NewMexicoatArizonaSt., 7p.m. Saturday’sGames GeorgiaSt.at Oregon,11 a.m. UtahSt. atWashington, 2p.m. Coloradovs.ColoradoSt., 4 p.m. nia, 6-1,5-7,7-5. CaliforniaatTexas, 4:30p.m. KaterynaBondarenko, ukraine, def.CartaSuarez SanJoseSt.at OregonSt., 5p.m. FOOTBALL Nava rro (t), Spain, 6-4,6-4. Stanford at Southern Cal 5p m Wyoming atWashington St.,5:30p.m. America’s Line CoupeBanqueNationale BYU atUCLA, 7:30p.m. TuesdayatQuebecCity Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog Utah atFresnoSt., 7:30p.m. First Round NFL N. ArizonaatArizona,8 p.m. AmandineHesse,France,def. MariaIrigoyen,Ar› Thursday gentina, 6-3, 6-2. CHIEFS 3 3 42’ / z Broncos NFL PaulaKania,Poland,def. An-SophieMestach(8), Sunday Belgium,6-4,6-3. 3 3 401 / 2 PANTHE RS Texans NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AlexaGlatch,unitedStates, def.TatianaMaria (6), SAINTS t/t 10 1 0 46 Bucs AN TimesPDT Germany, 1-6,6-4, 6-lr 5’It 5 ’I t 4 4 ’/t STEELE RS 49ers JessicaPegula,UnitedStates, def. NicoleGibbs, VIKINGS 3 3 43 Lions AMERICAN CONFERENCE UnitedStates, 1-6,7-6(2), 7-6(4). Patriots 1 1 45 BILLS East Evgeniya Rodina (7), Russia,def. SachiaVickery, Cards 2 t/ 2 44t/ t BEARS W L T Pct PF PA UnitedStates,6-2, 6-2. BROWN S 2’/t P K 4 1 ’/t Titans 1 0 0 1.000 31 10 Samantha Crawford, UnitedStates, def. MandyMi› BENGA LS 3 3 451 / 2 Chargers 1 0 0 1.000 27 14 nella, Luxem bourg, 6-2, 6-1. Rams 3 3 41’ / tWASHINGTON 1 0 0 1.000 28 21 MirianaLucic-Baroni (2), Croatia,def. Francoise GIANTS 2 2 51 Falcons 1 0 0 1.000 17 10 Abanda,Canada,6-3, 3-1,retired. Ravens RAIDER S South Lucie Hradecka (4), CzechRepublic, def. Donna Dolphins 6 6 41t / t JAGUAR S W L T Pct PF PA Vekic,Croatia,6-2,6-4. EAGLES 5 5 55t / t Cowboys Tennesse e 1 0 0 1.000 42 14 PACKES R 3 3t / t 48 t/t Seahawk s Jacksonvile 0 1 0 .000 9 20 Houston 0 1 0 .000 20 27 Monday SOCCER 0 1 0 .000 14 27 COLTS 7 7 46’/ t Jets Indianapolis North W L T Pct PF PA MLS Thursday 1 0 0 1.000 33 13 Clemson 5 6 51 LOUISVILLE MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER 0 1 0 .000 13 19 Friday AN TimesPDT 0 1 0 .000 21 28 8 ’/t 8 ’ /t 49'/ tBOSTON COLL FloridaSt 0 1 0 .000 10 31 ARIZONA ST 28 28 65t/t New Mexico EasternConference West Saturday W L T Pls GF GA W L T Pct PF PA 3 6 4 7’/t ARM Y NewYork 1 3 7 6 4 5 4 6 3 0 WakeForest 1 0 0 1.000 19 13 12 10t/z 55t/z U MASSDenver D .c.united 13 1 0 6 4 5 3 6 35 Temple Kansas Ci t y 1 0 0 1.000 27 20 Univ Columbus 1 2 9 8 4 4 4 7 4 8 MICHIGAN San Di e go 1 0 0 1.000 33 28 6 6 64’/z E MICHIGAN N ew England 1 2 9 7 43 4 1 3 7 Ball St 0 1 0 .000 13 33 ST 18’/t 19 62 C h arlotteOakland T oronto FC 11 12 4 3 7 4 6 4 7 MID TENN NATIONAL CONFERENCE OTA 23 24 46t/t Ken St t Montreal 9 11 5 3 2 3 4 3 7 MINNES East Buffalo O rlando cit y 8 13 8 32 3 6 5 1 FLAATLANTIC W L T Pct PF PA Troy SIN 351/2 35 59’/t P hiladelphia 8 15 6 30 3 6 4 7 WISCON 1 0 0 1.000 27 26 9 ’ / t 63t/t Ig i nois Dallas INA 8 N ew Yorkcity FC 7 1 4 7 2 8 3 9 48 NCAROL 0 1 0 .000 24 26 32’/t 33t/t 66t/t No illinois Philadelphia ST Chicago 7 1 5 6 2 7 3 6 4 5 OHIO 0 1 0 .000 10 17 16 18’/z 59’/z OLD DOMINION Washington Nc State WesternConference N.Y. Gi a nts 0 1 0 .000 26 27 Tuls a MA 32 30’/t 7 1t/t W L T Pls GF GA OKLAHO South SYRACU SE 51/t 61 /t 45 0 Michigan Vancouver 15 10 3 48 40 28 W L T Pct PF PA 3 3 49 Northwestern Atlanta FC Dallas 1 4 8 5 4 7 4 0 3 1 DUKE 1 0 0 1.000 26 24 Ne v ada A&M 32I/2 34 64t/t L os Angele s 13 8 8 47 4 9 3 3 TEXAS Carolina 1 0 0 1.000 20 9 OREGO N 45t/t Tlt/t Georgia St Tampa Seattle 13 13 3 42 35 32 Bay 0 1 0 .000 14 42 Rice 7 P l t 55t/t NTEXAS NewOrleans Sporting KansasCity 11 8 8 41 41 38 0 1 0 .000 19 31 ST 11 9t / t 50 La Tech Portland 1 1 9 8 4 1 2 9 3 2 KANSAS North GIA 17 17 54 S Carolina SanJose 1 1 11 6 3 9 34 3 2 GEOR W L T Pct PF PA 3 ’/t 3 ’ /t 58t/t E Carolina G Houston 9 11 8 3 5 36 37 NAVY reenBay 1 0 0 1.000 31 23 7 7 49t/t Au b urn Minnesota R eal Salt Lake 9 11 8 35 3 2 4 1 LSU 0 1 0 .000 3 20 ALABAMA Bt/t Bt/t 5tt/t Mississippi Detroit Colorado 8 10 10 34 26 30 0 1 0 .000 28 33 Va Tech 5 t/t 6 47’/t P URDUEChicago 0 1 0 .000 23 31 Today’sGames OKLAHOM AST23’/t 25 55t/t utsa West MIAMI-FLA 4 3/I2 57t/t N ebraska NewYorkatNewEngland,4:30 p.m. W L T Pct PF PA 1 ’/t 2 ’ / t TorontoFCat NewYorkCity FC,4:30p.m. Ga Tech 55 NOTREDAME St. Louis 1 0 0 1.000 34 31 Ut a h St Arizona MontrealatSanJose, 7:30p.m. WASHINGTON 51/2 51/2 44’/t 1 0 0 1.000 31 19 2t/t 3 64t/t S o MissSanFrancisco Friday’s Gama TEXAS ST 1 0 0 0.000 20 3 FC Dallasat Sporting KansasCity,4 p.m. Cincinnati 19 19 60 MIAMI-OHIO Seattle 0 1 0 .000 31 34 iow a St Saturday’sGames TOLEDO 7 PI t 58t/t Coloradoat TorontoFC,11a.m. ARKAN SAS 9t/t 1 1 t/t 67t/t Texas Tech Thursday’sGame ColumbusatD.C.United, 4 p.m. Memphis 3 3 79 BOWLGREEN Denverat KansasCity,5:25p.m. SeattleatVancouver,4 p.m. d-Colorado 3 4 59t/t ColoradoSt Sunday’sGames SanJoseatNewYorkCityFC,4p.m. MARYLAN D Bt/2 7 51t/t S F loridaTampaBayatNewOrleans,10a. m. NewEnglandatMontreal, 5 p.m. MISSOUIR 22’/z 21 40 Connecticut Detroit atMinnesota,10a.m. OrlandoCityatChicago, 6:30p.m. Florida 3 3 52 KENTUCKY Arizonaat Chicago, 10a.m. Los Angeleat s Real Salt Lake,7:30p.m. INDIANA 3 2 69t/t W Kentucky Houstonat Carolina, 10a.m. sunday’sGames California 7 6 ’ / t 59’/t TE X AS SanFranciscoat Pittsburgh,10a.m. NewYorkatPortland, 2p.m. OREGO NST 9 P l t 49t/t San JoseSt NewEnglandatBuffalo, 10a.m. HoustonatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. TCU 37 37t/z 67t/t Smu SanDiegoatCincinnati, 10a.m. 4 2 ’ / t 64'/tNMEXICOST utep Tennesse eatCleveland,10a.m. Bt/t 1 0 45t/t Ru tgers AtlantaatN.Y.Giants, 10a.m. PENN ST NWSL playoffs 15 17’/t 48t/t S Alabama SANDIEG OST St. LouisatWashington, 10a.m. S t anfordBaltimoreatOakland,1:05p.m. NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE usc 9 1 0 51t/t 4 5 1 / 2 47 AN TimesPDT IOWA P ittsburghMiami atJacksonvile, 1:05p.m. MICHIGAN ST 2 7 2 7 Air Force DallasatPhiladelphia,1:25p.m. Championship WASH ST Wyoming SeattleatGreen Bay, 5:30p.m. Thursday,Oct.1 UCLA 16 17 60 Byu Monday’sGama KansasCityvs. Seattle, at Portland,6:30p.m. utah FRESNO ST N.Y.JetsatIndianapolis, 5:30p.m.

course in Dupont, but a couple Crosswater, where he had one of practice rounds gave him a round under par, made the cut definite strategy for the tour› and finished in the top 30. nament track. Still, he was not shocked at "I just kept to a really con› his performance in the senior servative game plan for my championship, which includ› approach shots," he said. "I ed the best 50-and-over PGA never aimed at a flag and professionals from the Pacific played 30 feet from the hole. Northwest. "I played to specific areas "I wasn’t really surprised," where I knew I could get it up he said. "I played a couple of and down. There were spots times the two weeks before, around the greens where if and I have been very comfort› you missed, it was impossible able with my putting over the to do that." last six months or so. It was The win came in just his very easy to two-putt and have s econd tournament o f

GOLF

IN THE BLEACHERS

a tap-in most of the time."

His 4-under second round and have the right equip› summer. Mack’s only other of› ment," Mack said. ficial competition this season featured six birdies. He had never played the came in theOregon Open at Scorers on the course kept

him posted as to where he was in relation to the other leaders

in the final round. "I knew I was four ahead on the 13th,e he recalled. "I was

doing well, considering the

ied a couple of the par-5s that

were reachable." His goals for the national championshiparethe sameto finish in the top 20 in order to advance to the Senior PGA

Championship on the Cham› make pars coming in. pions Tour next year. "I knew pars would be good In the meantime, Mack is scores after I saw the setup trying to get in a little more during the practice rounds." golf than usual to prepare weather, so I was just trying to

Mack hit nine of 14 fair›

ways and hit 15 greens in his second round. "I hit some fantastic shots

and got some great bounces that gave me putts shorter than I expected,"Mack recounted. "I got a couple of good breaks there and bird›

for the tournament and will

Points leaders 1 (tie), Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth,2,012.4,JoeyLogano,2,009. 5(tie), Kevin Harvick,DaleEarnhardtJr., KurtBusch,2,006, Carl Edwards,2,006. 9 (tie), Brad Keselowski,Martin TruexJr., DennyHamlin, 2,003. 12(tie), JamieMc› Murray,JeffGordon,RyanNewman, Paul Menard, Glint Bowyer, 2,000. Chaseschedule First round (16 drivers) Sept. 20, Chicago› land; Sept.27,NewHampshire; Oct.4, Dover. Second round(12 drivers) Oct.10,Char› lotte; Oct. 18,Kansas;Oct. 25, Taffadega. Third round (8 drivers) Nov.1, Martins› ville; Nov.8, Texas; Nov.15, Phoenix. Final (4 drivers) Nov.22,Homestead-Mi› ami

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague HOUSTONASTROS — PlacedRHPScottFeldman onthe60-day DL.Selected the contract of INF Matt DuffyfromFresno(PCL). MINNESOT A TWINS Reinstated RHPPhil Hughesfromthe15-dayDL. National League ATLANTA BRAVES Placed1BYonder Alonso on the60-dayDLAssignedRHPsJakeBrighamand MichaelKohnoutright to Gwinnett (IL). PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES Placed SSCesar Hernandez onthe60-dayDL. Selectedthecontract of 28 Chase d’ArnaudfromLehighValley (IL). PITTSBURGHPIRATES— DesignatedRHPRadhamesLiz for assignment. Selectedthecontract of

RHP Vance Worley fromIndianapolis (IL). ST. LOUISCARDINALS Reinstated OFMat Hollidayfromthe15-dav DL. FOOTBAL L National Football League ATLANTAFALCONS Signed OTJake Long. WaivedSCharlesGodfrey. BUFFALO BILLS ReleasedRBBryceBrown. CHICAGOBEARS— WaivedQBDavidFates.

CLEVELANDBROWNS — Signed QB Matt Blanchardto thepractice squad. ReleasedOLErie Ladsonfromthepractice squad. DALLASCOW BOYS Waived OT Darrion Weems.ReleasedS Tim Scott from the practice squad Signed OTCharles Brown GREENBAY PACKERS PlacedLB SamBar› rington on injured reserve.Activated DEDatone Jonesfromexempt status. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— ReleasedWRChris Harper. NEWYORKJETS WaivedGOdayAboushi. OAKLANDRAIDERS— WaivedTEGabeHolmes. Placed SNateAllen oninjured reserve-designated for return.SignedSTaylor MaysandDLC.J. Wilson. WASHING TON REDSKINS Placed S Duke Ihena chooninjuredreserve.ReleasedFBRayAgnew from the practice squad.SignedCBWil Blackmon. SignedCBDashaunPhilips to thepractice squad. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL LW SimonGagneannouncedhis retire› ment. SOCCER Major League Soccer D.c. UNITED Agreed to termswith D Kofi Opareonamulti-year contractextension. COLLEGE MOUNTAIN WESTCONFERENCE— FinedNevada coachBrian Polian$10,000after hewascalled for two unsportsmanlikeconduct penalties during Saturday’slossto Arizona. UAB Agreedto termswith football coachBil Clark onafive-yearcontract. FORDHAM — NamedGabby Luety volunteer assistantsoftball coach,SarahAli women’s assistant tenniscoachandKathleenuywomen’svolunteeras› sistanttenniscoach. IOWA SuspendedRBDerrick Mitchell fromthe football program. TEXAS Fired athletic directorStevePaterson.

FISH COUNT upstreamdadymovement of adult chinook,lack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCo› lumbia Riverdamslast updated Monday. Cbnk Jcbnk sllbd Wstlhd B onneville 28,088 2,723 2,233 6 5 7 The Daffes 20,731 2,722 5,768 1,875 John Day 20,717 1,775 4,522 1,177 Mc Nary 16,687 2,462 5,510 1,555 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 944,598 73,504 226,920 85,238 The Daffes 628,432 62,672 135,829 51,311 John Day 512,713 43,685 94,736 34,334 Mc Nary 418,097 30,714 75,743 28,349

the fall tour (a regional Pro› Am tournament) in a couple of weeks, and that will be a good Warm-up.e

"I’m also going down about four days early to get the lay of the land." W hile M a c k w as

not

shocked that he played well in the section tournament, he

was happy with beating Black Butte Ranch director of golf

arriveearly in Seaside for a Jeff Fought, who also played couple of practice rounds on and finished outside the top the Bayonet and Black Horse

20.

"I’m always surprised when courses. "I’ ve been playing some IbeatJeff...he'sgood,"M ack here and played three rounds laughed. of nine (holes) in the last — Reporter: 541-617-7868; week," he said. "I’m playing fadufae®bendbulletin.COm.


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 THE BULLETIN C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

RANGERS TAKELEAD IN WEST

All TimesPDT

Texas’ Hanser PHILADELPHIA Stephen Stras› burg gave upone hit and tied a Alberto (68) career-best with14 strikeouts, and and the rest Bryce Harper hit two homers to of the team lead Washington. celebrate

AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

Toronto NewYork Baltimore TampaBay Boston Kansas City Minnesota Cleveland Chicago Detroit Texas Houston LosAngeles Seattle Oakland

W L 82 62 79 65 71 73 70 74 68 76

Pct GB .569 .549 3 .493 11 .486 12 .472 14

W L 85 59 75 69 71 72 68 75 66 78

Pct GB .590 .521 10 .497 13’/r .476 t 6’/r .458 19

77 67 77 68 73 71 70 76 62 83

.535 .531 r/t .507 4 .479 8 .428 15’/r

Central Division

West Division W L

Pct GB

with Mitch

. /'+@ +yft'))jig', 0

PctGB 79 65 .549 +2’/r 77 68 .531 75 69 .521 t’/r 73 71 .507 3’/r 7 1 72 .497 5 71 73 .493 5’/r

Tuesday’sGames Baltimore 6, Boston5, 13innings Kansas City2, Cleveland0 Tampa Bay6, N.Y.Yankees3 Atlanta3, Toronto 2 Texas 6, Houston 5 Detroit 5,Minnesota4 Oakland17,ChicagoWhite Sox6 L.A. Angel4, s Seattle 3 Today’sGam es Boston (Owens 2-2) at Baltimore(M.Wright 2-4), 4:05 p.m. Kansas City(D.Duffy 7-7) at Cleveland(Salazar12-8), 4:10 p.m. N.Y.Yankees(Severino 3-3)at Tampa Bay(Archer 12› 11), 4:10p.m. Toronto(Price15-5)atAtlanta(SMiger 5-14), 410pm. Houston(Keuchel17-7) atTexas(MPerez2-5),505pm. Detroit (Da.Norris2-2)at Minnesota(E.Santana5-4), 5:10 p.m. Oakland(Chavez7-15)atChicagoWhite Sox(E.John› son 1-0),5:10p.m. LA. Angels(Weaver 7-10) at Seatle (Iwakuma7-4), 7:10 p.m. Thursday’sGames OaklandatChicagoWhite Sox,11:10 am. BaltimoreatTampaBay,4:10 p.m. Kansas CityatCleveland, 4:10p.m. TorontoatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. Houstonat Texas, 5:05p.m. L.A. Angelat s Minnesota,5;10 p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE

NewYork Washington Miami Atlanta Philadelphia St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Milwaukee Cincinnati

Los Angeles SanFrancisco Arizona SanDiego Colorado

East Division W L PctGB 83 62 .572 74 70

. 514 Br/t

56 90

3 8 4 27r/t

62 83 .428 21 57 88 .393 26

Central Division W L PctGB 90 54 .625 8 7 57 .604 3 8 3 61 .576 7 6 2 82 .431 28 6 1 83 .424 29

West Division W L PctGB 83 60 .580 7 6 69 .524 8 69 76 .476 15 68 78 .466 16’/r 60 84

. 417 23’/t

Wild card W L

PctGB

76 69

. 524 7’/t

8 7 57 .604 +4 83 61 .576

Tuesday’sGames Pittsburgh5, ChicagoCuhs4, 1st game ChicagoCuhs2, Pitshurgh1, 2ndgame Washington 4, Philadelphia0 Miami 9,N.Y.Mets3 Atlanta3, Toronto 2 St. Louis3,Milwaukee1, 10innings

Arizona6,SanDiego4 Cincinnati9, SanFrancisco8,10 innings Colorado at L.A.Dodgers, late Today’sGam es ChicagoDubs(Arrieta 19-6)at Pittsburgh(Burnett 8-5), 4:05 p.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez 10-7) at Philadelphia(Mor› gan 5-6),4:05p.m. Miami (Conley3-1) at N.Y.Mets(B.colon 14-11), 4:10 p.m. Toronto(Price15-5)atAtlanta(SMiger 5-14), 410pm. St. Louis (Jai.Garcia8-5) at Milwaukee(W.Peralta 5-8), 5:10 p.m. San Diego(Cashner 5-15) at Arizona(Ray4-11), 6:40 p.m. Colorado(J.DeLaRosa9-6) atL.A.Dodgers(A.Wood 10-10),7:10p.m. Cincinnati (Lorenzen4-8) at SanFrancisco (Peavy 6-6), 7:15 p.m. Thursday’sGames ChicagoCuhsat Pitsburgh, 9:35a.m. Miami atWashington, 4:05 p.m. TorontoatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. St. LouisatMilwaukee,5:10p.m.

Leaders AMERICANLEAGUE

BATTINGMicabrera, Detroit, .336; Bogaerts, Boston,.321;Brantley,Cleveland,.318;Altuve, Hous› ton, .313;Fielder,Texas, .312;Lcain, KansasCity, .311;Ncruz,Seattle, .310. RBI Donaldson, Toronto, 119; CDavis,Balti› more,107;Bautista, Toronto, 101;KMorales, Kansas City, 101;Encarnacion, Toronto, 99;Ortiz, Boston,96; JMartinez,Detroit, 94. DOUBLESBrantley, Cleveland, 44; KMorales, KansasCity, 41; Donaldson, Toronto,38; Kipnis, Cleyelandz 38; Bets, Boston,35; Cano,Seattle, 34; Dozier,Minnesota, 34;Kinsler, Detroit, 34. HOME RUNG Ncruz, Seattle,42; CDa vis,Balti› more,42;Donaldson,Toronto, 38; JMartinez, Detroit, 36; Trout,LosAngeles, 36;Bautista, Toronto,35;Pu› Iols, Los Angeles, 35. STOLEN BA SES Altuve, Houston, 37; Lcain, Kansas City,27;Burns,Oakland,26;JDyson,Kansas City,25;DeShields,Texas,23; Gose, Detroit,20; Betts, Boston,19;Gardner,NewYork,19; Marisnick, Hous› ton, 19;Pilar,Toronto,19. PITCHINGKeuchel, Houston, 17-7; FHernan› dez, Seattle,17-9; McHu gh, Houston, 16-7; Price, Toronto,15-5; Lewis, Texas, 15-8; Eovaldi, NewYork, 14-3; BuehrleToronto, , 14-7. ERA Keuchel, Houston,2.22; Price, Toronto, 2.46; Price,Toronto,2.46;SGray, Oakland, 2.56; Ka› zmir, Houston,2.63; Kazmir, Houston,2.63; Archer, Tampa Bay, 2.95. STRIKEO UTS Sale, Chicago,250; Archer,Tam› pa Bay,236; Kluher,Cleveland,219;Price, Toronto, 203; Keuchel,Houston,192; Carrasco,Cleveland, 187; FHernadez, n Seatle, 180. NATIONALLEAGUE

Washington Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Rendon2b 5 0 1 0 Sweenylf 400 0 center, after YEscor3b 4 2 1 0 Galvisss 3 0 0 0 Moreland hit Harperrf 3 2 3 4 OHerrrcf 3 0 0 0 a game-win› Werthlf 3 0 0 0 ABlanc2b 3 0 0 0 CRonsn1b 4 0 0 0 Asche3h 3 0 1 0 ning RBI D smndss 4 0 0 0 Ruf1h 3000 sacrifice fly WRamsc 4 0 1 0 Bogsvcrf 3 0 0 0 3000 in the ninth in› M Taylrcf 4 0 1 0 Ruizc 2 0 0 0 DBchnp 1 0 0 0 ning Tuesday Strasrgp dnDkkrph 0 0 0 0 CdArndph 1 0 0 0 Treinenp 0 0 0 0 LuGarcp 0 0 0 0 night against Loewen p 0 0 0 0 Houston in Murrayp 0 0 0 0 Arlington. The Francrph 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 4 7 4 Totals 2 8 0 1 0 Rangers are W ashington 10 1 0 0 0 820 4 in first place P hiladelphia 00 0 0 0 0 800 0 E S w e ene y (2). DP P hiladel p hi a 2. LOB› in the Amer› Washington7, Philadelphia 2. 28 YEscobar (22). ican League HR Harper 2(39). West for the IP H R E R BBSD first time this Washington StrasburgW,9-7 8 1 0 0 1 14 season. Treinen 1 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia Tony Guuerrez/The D.Buchanan L,2-9 6 5 2 2 2 5 Associated Press Lu Garcia 1 0 0 0 1 1 Loewen 2-3 1 2 2 1 2 Murray 11-3 1 0 0 1 2 WP Lu.Garcia. T 2:35. A 15,325(43,651).

Moreland,

ii

Wild card W L

BATTINGHarper, Washington, .338;DGordon, Miami, .331;Posey,SanFrancisco,.329;YEscohar, Washington,.320;Goldschmidt, Arizona,.316; Pol› lock, Arizona,.312;Votto, Cincinnati, .311. RBI Arenado, Colorado, 110; Goldschmidt, Ar› izona,100;Kemp, San Diego, 94; Mccutchen,Pitts› burgh,93;Bryant, Chicago,92;Harper, Washington, 90; Posey, SanFrancisco, 89;Rizzo,Chicago,89. DOUBLESFrazier, Cincinnati, 40; Arenado, Colorado,36; Markakis,Atlanta,36; Mcarpenter,St. Louis, 35;Harper,Washington, 34; Pollock,Arizona, 34; 6 tiedat33. HOME RUNS Harper,Washington,39;Arenado, Colorado,38;CaGonzalez,Colorado, 37;Frazier, Cin› cinnati,34;Rizzo,Chicago,29;Goldschmidt, Arizona, 28;AGonzalez,LosAngeles,27;Stanton,Miami,27; Votto, Cincinnati27. , STOLENBASES BHamilton, Cincinnati, 56; DGordon,Miami, 51;Blackmon, Colorado,38; Pol› lock, Arizona, 35;SMarte, Pittsburgh,26;GPolanco, Pittsburgh, 24; Revere,Philadelphia, 24; Segura, Milwaukee, 24. PITCHINGArrieta, Chicago,19-6; Bumg arner, San Francisco,18-7; Greinke,LosAngeles, 17-3; Wacha, St. Louis,16-5; Gcole,Pittsburgh,16-8; Ker› shaw, LosAngeles,14-6; Bcolon, Ne wYork,14-11. ERA Greinke,LosAngeles,1.61; Arrieta,Chica› go, 1.99;Kershaw,LosAngeles, 2.12; Gcole,Pitts› burgh,2.60;deGrom, NewYork,2.64;SMiffer, Atlanta, 2.86; Harvey, NewYork, 2.88.

Nationals 4, Phillies 0

7

r

American League

Angels 4, Mariners 3

Orioles 6, RedSox5 (13 inn.) Royals 2, Indians0

Reds 9, Giants 8(10 inn.)

BALTIMORE Chris Davis sin› gled in the winning run in the 13th inning to lift Baltimore to its sixth win in sevengames.

SAN FRANCISCO Todd Frazier hit his 34th home run leading off

CLEVELAND Kris Medlen allowed five hits over 6/a innings and Alex Rios connected for a home run to lift KansasCity.

SEATTLE David Murphy hit a three-run homer andMike Trout added a solo shot to lift Los Ange› les. Seattle’s Nelson Cruzhit his Boston Baltimore KansasCity Cleveland ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi 42nd home run in the first inning, B ettscf 6ab 2r hbi 2 0 GParrarf 5 1 1 0 AGordnff 4 00 0 Kipnis2h 4 0 0 0 tying Baltimore’s Chris Davis for Pedroia2h 6 1 3 0 MMchd3b 5 2 2 1 Zohrist2h 4 0 0 0 Lindorss 4 0 2 0 Bogartsss 5 1 2 1 C.Davis1h 6 1 2 1 L.caincf 3 0 0 0 Brantlylf 3 0 0 0 the major league lead. Ortizdh 3 0 0 1 A.Jonescf 5 0 1 0 JDysoncf 0 0 0 0 CSantndh 3 0 0 0

the 10th to lift Cincinnati.

Diamondhacks 6, Padres4 PHOENIX A.J. Pollock hit a three-run homer to leadArizona in the first game atChase Field with an open roof since June6.

Cincinnati San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi Bourgscf-If 4 2 0 0 Pagancf 6 1 1 0 Brucerf 5 1 1 1 Tmlnsn2h 5 1 2 0 Ban Diego Arizona Votto1b 3 2 0 0MDuff y3h 5 2 3 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Phil lips2h 5 2 3 2 Poseyc 4 2 2 4 Myers1b 4 0 0 0 Pollockcf 4 1 1 3 F razier3h 4 2 1 1 Byrdrf 4 1 0 0 S olarte3b 5 0 1 0 Inciartrf 4 1 2 0 D JssJrss 4 0 2 3 Belt1h 5 0 2 1 Kemprf 5 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 1 1 0 0 TShaw1h 4 1 1 2 Wietersc 3 0 0 1 Hosmer1b 4 0 1 0 Chsnhffrf 3 0 0 0 LosAngeles Seattle Duvalllf 2 0 0 0 J.Perezlf 3 0 1 0 U ptonlf 4 2 3 1 DPerltlf 4 0 1 0 Sandovl 3b 5 0 2 1 Schoop 2h 5 0 1 0 KMorlsdh 3 00 0 YGomsc 4 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi MParrp 0 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 Gyorko ss 4 0 1 0 Wcastll c 4 0 2 1 Marrerpr-3h 1 0 1 0 Clevngrdh 5 0 0 0 Mostks3h 3 1 1 0 CJhnsn1h 3 0 2 0 DvMrplf 4 1 1 3 KMartess 4 0 2 0 Rearer ph 1 0 1 2 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 Spngnr2b 3 0 1 0 Drury3h 4 0 1 1 Rcastlllf 6 0 1 0 JHardyss 5 1 1 0 S .Perezc 3 0 1 1 Mrtnzpr 0 0 0 0 Cowgilllf 0 0 0 0 KSeagr3h 3 0 0 0 Lecure p 0 0 0 0 Bmgrn ph 0 0 0 0 Hedgesc 3 1 1 0 Zieglerp 0 0 0 0 Hanignc 6 0 0 0 Pearcelf 5 1 1 2 Rios rl 3 1 1 1 Sands 1h 0 0 0 0 Calhonrf 4 0 0 0 N.cruzdh 4 1 1 1 LaMarr cf 0 0 0 0 Noonan pr 0 0 0 0 Wallacph 1 0 0 0 Owings2h 3 1 0 0 BrdlyJrrf 5 0 0 0 Orlandrf 0 0 0 0 Avilesph 1 0 0 0 Troutcf 3 1 1 1 Cano2b 2 0 0 0 B rnhrt c 5 0 1 0 Hag p 0 0 0 0 Galec 0 0 0 0 Ahmedss 4 1 1 1 47 5 125 Totals 4 4 6 9 5 AEscorss 3 0 00 AAlmntcf 4 0 0 0 Puiolsdh 4 0 0 0 J.Jonespr-cf 0 0 0 0 Totals J oLamp 2 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 T.Rossp 1 1 1 0 Chacinp 1 0 0 0 Boston 001 038 810 000 8 5 urshela3h 4 0 0 0 Cron1b 3 0 0 0 S.Smithrf 4 1 0 0 Matths p 0 0 0 0 Leake ph 1 0 0 0 6 ADckrsph 0 0 0 0 Gosselnph 1 0 0 0 Baltimore 004 018 800 000 1 Totals 30 2 4 2 Totals 3 3 0 6 0 ENavrr1h 0 0 0 0 Trumo1b 4 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Adrianzss 4 0 0 1 No outswhenwinning runscored. Kansas City 8 1 8 8 1 8 OBB 2 Schmkrlf CDeckrph 1 0 0 0 Godleyp 0 0 0 0 A yharss 4 0 0 0 Gutirrzlf 3 1 2 2 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Hestonp 1 0 0 0 E Bets (4). DP Baltimore 1. LOB Boston Cleveland B B BBBB OBB 8 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 JrPrkrph 1 1 1 1 BNorrsp 0 0 0 0 Mtffynlp 0 0 0 0 Freese3h 3 1 1 0 BMillercf-2b 4 0 1 0 9, Baltimore 6. 28 Pedroia (18), Bogaerts(30), DP Cleveland1. LOB KansasCity 2, Cleveland Boeschph 1 0 0 0 Brodwyp 0 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Cowartpr-3b 0 0 0 0 Sucrec 2 0 0 0 R.castillo (8). HR TS ha w (11), M. M ac had o (29), 9. 28 M o us taka s (28), Li n dor (19). HR R ios ( 4). p 0 0 0 0 A.Hig ph 0 0 0 0 C.Perezc 4 1 3 0 Morrsnph 1 0 0 0 J u.Diazp 0 0 0 0 Osichp 0 0 0 0 Rzpczy Pearce (11). SB B og ae rt s (10). CS M ar rero (1). IP H R E R BBSO Vincent p 0 0 0 0 Brito pr 0 1 0 0 Fthrstn2b 3 0 0 0 J.Hicksc 0 0 0 0 Lopezp 0 0 0 0 SF Ortiz, Wieters. KansasCity Benoitp 0 0 0 0 DHdsnp 0 0 0 0 OMallyph 1 0 0 0 Strckln p 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO MedlenW4-1 61 - 3 5 0 0 1 0 UptnJrph 1 0 0 0 JaLam3h 1 0 0 0 Totals 32 4 6 4 Totals 3 2 3 6 3 DeAzalf 3 0 1 0 Boston Madson H,17 2 3 0 0 0 0 2 Jnkwskcf 4 0 2 1 LosAngeles 003 001 800 4 Totals 3 7 9 9 9 Totals 4 28 137 Totals 36 4 10 2 Totals 3 1 6 8 6 J.Keffy 2 1-3 5 4 3 1 4 W .Davi s H,18 1 0 0 0 1 1 Seattle 100 100 100 3 9 Cincinnati 3BB 000 5BB 1 21-3 1 1 1 0 3 G.HoffandS,31-35 1 1 0 0 1 1 B an Diego 0 1 1 0 0 0 110 4 LOB— LosAngeles4,Seattle6.28— C.Perez2 Breslow 8 San FranciscoBBB311 012 0 6 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cleveland 000 001 50x t t)r HR Dav.Murphy (9), Trout(36), N.cruz(42), Hemhree E DeJesusJr. (3)rFrazier(17), Belt(5), Pose y Arizona E Ah m ed (1 3). DP S an D iego 1, Ari z ona 1. No.Rami r ez 11-3 0 0 0 0 3 T omlin L,5-2 9 4 2 2 0 6 utierrez (13). CS Cowart (1), K.Marte(3). (2), Osich(1). DP Cincinnati 1,SanFrancisco 1. LOB SanDiego8, Arizona7.2B Upton(22). 3B› 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 HBP byTomlin(L.cain). WP G.Holland, Tomlin. IP H R E R BBSD Layne LDB Cincinnati 6, San Francisco 8. 28 Pagan Ahmed(6). HR Upton(26), Pollock(17). SB Pol› A.Ogando 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 T 2:34. A 10,516(36,856). LosAngeles (17),Belt2(33), J.Perez (3), DeAza(1). 38 DeJe› lock (35),Inciarte(18). CS Spangenherg(3). 1 0 0 0 0 0 TropeanoW,2-2 5 4 2 2 3 5 Machi sus Jr.(1). HR Frazier (34), Posey(18), Jarre.Parker 2 1 1 1 2 1 IP H R E R BBBD J.Alvarez H,5 1 0 0 0 0 1 Aro L,0-1 National League (1). SB Bourgeois (3). S LaMarre. 0 1 0 0 0 0 San Diego SalasH,15 1 1 1 1 0 0 RossJr. IP H R E R BBSO T.Ross 6 4 1 1 3 9 Gott H,11 1 0 0 0 1 1 Baltimore Cincinnati 5 6 4 4 3 4 B.NorrisL,1-2 0 1 3 3 2 0 J.SmithS,3-7 1 1 0 0 0 3 U.Jimenez Jo.Lamb 4 6 3 3 0 3 Quackenhush Cardinals 3, Brewers 1 (10 inn.) Givens H, 2 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 3 B S, 1 -1 0 2 2 2 1 0 Seattle Mattheus 11-3 1 2 1 0 0 Rzepczynski 1 1 1 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 FHernandez L,17-9 7 5 4 4 2 5 MatuszBS,2-2 2 - 3 M.Parra 2 -3 2 0 0 0 0 12-3 1 0 0 0 3 MILWAUKEE Jason Heyward Vincent 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Zych 2 1 0 0 0 1 O’Day Lecure H, 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP hyFHernandez(Freese). Britton 1 1 0 0 0 2 Benoit 1 0 0 0 0 1 HooverH,17 1-3 0 1 1 2 1 Arizona T 2;40. A 15,365(47,574). Brach 2 1 0 0 1 3 hit a line drive two-run homer in AohapmanW446SSSS12-3 3 2 1 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 the 10th inning to leadSt. Louis, n 5 4 2 2 2 3 RoeW,3-2 Ju.DiazS,1-4 1 1 0 0 0 2 Chaci Aro pitchedto 2baters in the13th. Godley 11-3 2 1 1 0 1 which increased its lead in the NL San Francisco Rangers 6,Astros5 RossJr. pitchedto1 batter inthe13th. Mat.Reynold s 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Heston 5 3 3 3 4 8 DelgadoW,6-4 1- 3 Central to three gamesover sec› HBP hyU.Jimenez(TShaw).WP Breslow. 0 0 0 0 1 BroadwayH,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 D.HudsonH,15 2-3 T 4:20.A 21,260 (45,971). 2 1 1 1 2 ARLINGTON,Texas Texas ond-place Pittsburgh.. OsichH,B 2-3 1 2 0 1 1 ZieglerS,26-28 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 overtook Houston for first place in Lopez 0 0 1 0 0 0 B.Norrispitchedto 3battersin the7th. St. Louis Milwaukee StricklandBS,2-2 0 1 2 2 1 0 Quackenhush the AL West for the first time this Athletics17, WhiteSox6 pi t ched to 3 b att e rs i n the 7t h. ab r hbi ab r hbi Kontos 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 WP TRoss2, Ziegler. season after Mitch Moreland’s hit CHICAGO— JoshReddick Mcrpnt3h 5 00 0 Gennett2h 5 0 0 0 Affeldt 1 1 0 0 0 0 T 3:31. A 17,531(48,519). Piscttylf 4 1 0 0 EHerrr3b 3 0 0 0 Hall 1 0 0 0 0 1 a game-winning sacrifice fly in the homered anddrove in four runs H eywrdrf 4 2 3 2 Braunrf 2 0 1 0 RornoL,0-5 1 2 1 1 0 0 bottom of the ninth inning. J hPerltss 5 0 2 1 Lind1h 4 0 0 0 Lopez pi t ched to1batter h. during a 10-run fourth inning to lift MAdms1b 2 0 0 0 KDavislf 3 1 2 1 Stricklandpitchedto 3baintersthein7tthe Interleague 7th. Oakland. Houston Texas MrRynl1h 2 00 0 Jeff rssp 0 0 0 0 HBP byA.chapman(Adrianza), byStrickland(Fra› ab r hbi ab r hbi Molinac 4 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 zier). WPHoover. Braves 3, Blue Jays2 Oakland Chicago Springrrf 4 0 1 0 DShldscf 5 1 2 0 Wong2b 3 0 1 0 JRogrsph 0 0 0 0 T 4;02.A 41,044 (41,915). ab r h bi ab r hbi A ltuve2b 5 0 1 0 Choorf 4 1 1 0 Jaycf 3 0 0 0 Thrnrgp 0 0 0 0 Fuld cf 7 2 2 1 Eaton cf 5 1 3 1 ATLANTA Andrelton Simmons’ Correass 4 0 1 0 Fielderdh 4 2 3 1 Bour)ospr-cf 0 0 0 0 DoSntncf-If 4 0 0 0 Semienss 4 3 2 1 AIRmrzss-p 3 2 1 1 CMrtnzp 3 0 1 0 Segurass 4 0 0 0 Gattisdh 5 0 1 2 Stubhspr 0 1 0 0 Pirates 5-1, Cnbs 4-2 tiebreaking RBIsingle in the ninth Ldndrfph-ss 1 0 1 0 Ahreu1h 3 1 3 1 CIRsmsff-cf 3 1 1 0 Beltre3h 5 1 4 2 GGarciph 1 0 0 0 Maldndc 3 0 0 0 inning snapped afranchise-worst Reddckrf 4 3 2 4 GBckhpr-3h 1 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Sardinsph 1 0 0 0 Carter1h 4 1 1 1 Morlnd1b 3 0 0 1 PITTSBURGH Jon Lester Pridie ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Mecarr If 4 1 2 3 V illar3b 4 1 1 0 Odor2h 4 0 2 1 12-game homelosing streak for Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 A.Penap 1 0 0 0 Canha1b 3 2 3 1 AvGarcdh 4 0 1 0 Congerc 4 1 2 1 Andrusss 4 0 1 1 Knebelp 0 0 0 0 pitched his first complete gameof Atlanta. BButlerdh 6 2 3 3 Saladin ss 1 0 0 0 M rsnckcf 2 1 1 1 Gallolf 2000 SPetrsn ph 0 0 0 0 theseasontogiveChicagoadouM uncy3h 5 1 0 1 Shuckrf 3 1 1 0 Tuckerph-If 1 0 0 0 Venalelf 1 0 1 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Pheglyc 4 3 2 1 Olt3b-1b 4 0 1 0 bleheader split. Toronto Atlanta Gimenzc 3 0 0 0 LSchfrcf 2 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Totals 36 5 10 5 Totals 3 5 6 14 6 Sogard2h 6 0 3 2 MJhnsn2b 4 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 3 7 3 Totals 3 21 5 1 Reverelf 5 0 0 0 Markksrf 4 1 2 0 Houston 0 30 200 800 5 Smlnsklf 5 1 1 2 Ge.Sotoc 4 0 0 0 3 St. Louis OBB BB1 BBB 2 First Game Dnldsn3h 4 0 0 0 Dcastr2h 3 0 1 0 Texas 4 00 100 801 6 Totals 4 6 171916 Totals 36 6 126 1 Milwaukee OBB 818 BBB 0 Chicago Pittsburgh Oneoutwhenwinning runscored. Bautistrf 4 0 0 0 FFrmn1h 4 0 0 0 Oakland 501 (18)81 BBB 17 E Lind (4). DP St. Louis 2, Milwaukee2. ab r hbi ab r hbi E Col.Rasmus (4), Beltre(15). DP Houston Chicago 200 120 1BB 6 Smoak1h 3 2 1 1 AdGarc3b 4 1 2 0 LOB— St.Louis8,Milwaukee6.28— Heyward 2 Fowlercf 3 1 1 0 GPolncrl 3 1 0 0 2, Texas1. LOB Houston 9, Texas 10. 28 Correa E Olt 2(4). DP Oakland2, Chicago 1. LOB› RuMrtnc 3 0 0 0 Cnghmpr 0 1 0 0 32), C.Martinez (2). HR Heyward(12), K.Davis(21). Schwrrlf-rf 4 0 0 0 NWalkr2b 3 1 1 1 11, Chicago8. 28 Fuld (16), B.Butler (26), Goinsss 3 0 1 0 Przynsc 4 0 3 0 18), Carter(14),Conger(10),Beltre (23).38 Altuve Oakland B Heyward(22). S E.Herrera. Coghlnrf 1 0 0 1 Mcctchcf 4 1 2 1 2). SB DeShields (23), Andrus(18),Gallo (3). S› Phegley(15),Sogard(10), Smolinski (5).38 Sog› ASnchzp 0 0 0 0 Bthncrtpr 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO AJcksn ph-If 1 0 0 0 Kang 3b 4 0 1 0 Marisnick,Gimenez.SF Moreland. Pigarcf 4 0 1 0 Swisherlf 2 0 0 0 ard (2). HRSemien (12), Reddick (18), AI.Ramirez St. Louis Rizzo1h 4 0 0 0 PAlvrz1h 2 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSD (10),Me.c Pnngtn2h-ss 3 0 2 1 Maybinpr-cf 1 0 0 0 ahrera (10).SB Eaton(15). CMartinez 8 4 1 1 2 9 Bryant3b 4 0 0 0 Flormnpr 0 1 0 0 Houston IP H R E R BBSO SiegristW7-1 1 Buehrlep 1 0 0 0 ASmnsss 4 0 1 2 0 0 0 2 2 MMntrc 4 1 2 0 SRdrgz1b 0 0 0 0 32-3 8 5 5 3 4 Oakland McHugh Carrerph 0 0 0 0 Bourncf-If 2 0 0 0 RosenthalS,44-46 1 1 0 0 0 2 Stcastr2h 4 1 1 0 Snider lf 2 0 1 2 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 BrooksW,2-3 6 Thatcher Colaellph 1 0 0 0 Tehernp 2 0 1 0 10 6 6 2 6 Milwaukee Hammlp 1 0 0 0 SMartelf 0 0 0 1 J.Fields 1 1 0 0 0 1 Coulombe 0 0 0 0 McKrhp 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 2 A.Pena 5 4 1 1 3 5 Cahillp 1 0 0 0 Mercerss 4 0 0 0 Cecilp Sipp 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 R.Alvarez Lowep 0 0 0 0 Cunniffp 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 2 Knebel 1 0 0 0 0 1 Rosscpp 0 0 0 0 Stewartc 4 0 0 0 Quails 1 2 0 0 0 0 Barney2h 1 0 0 0 Mrksryp 0 0 0 0 Chicago W.Smith 1 1 0 0 0 1 LaSteffph 1 1 1 1 G.colep 3 1 1 0 Neshek 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 S amardzi)aL,9-13 3 Moylanp 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 10 3 3 Jeffress 1 1 0 0 1 1 S trop p 0 0 0 0 Soriap 0 0 0 0 O.PerezL,0-2 1 - 3 1 1 1 0 0 D.Webb 1-3 3 6 4 3 0 Fr.Rodriguez JPetrsnph 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 Grimm p 0 0 0 0 Watson p 0 0 0 0 W.Harris 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Putnam 12-3 1 0 0 0 2 ThornburgL,0-2 1 Vizcain p 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 J.Baezph 1 0 0 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Texas Totals 32 2 5 2 Totals 3 1 3 10 2 N.Jones 1 1 1 1 1 2 A.Pena pitchedto 2battersin the6th. ARussllss 3 0 1 0 52-3 10 5 5 2 1 M.Albers D.Holland Toronto 0 10 001 800 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 T 3:14. A 30,349(41,900). Totals 3 2 4 6 2 Totals 2 9 5 6 5 Ohlendorf 23 0 0 0 0 1 Le.Garcia Atlanta 0 11 000 801 3 1 1 0 0 0 1 Chicago 1BB OBB 300 4 S.Freem an 1 0 0 0 1 2 AI.Ramirez Oneoutwhenwinning runscored. 1 1 0 0 0 0 PiNsburgh 3 B B 1BB 01x 6 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Samardzija S.Dyson Marlins 9, Nets 3 E Sm o ak (3). DP T oro nto 4. LO B T oron to 8, pitchedto4 batters inthe4th. E M.Montero (11), Stewart (8). LOB Chicago Atlanta 6.28 Markakis (36), Pierzynski(22). HR Sh.Togeson W6-3 1 0 0 0 0 0 Brookspitchedto 2baters inthe 7th. › O.Perez pitched to 1batterin the9th. 4, Pittsburgh 6. 2B L a S tel l a (3), N.Wal k er (29). HBP hy Brooks(Ahreu), hyAl.Ramirez(Smolinski), Smoak (16).SB Pillar (19). S D.castro. NEW YORK Jacob deGrom SB Fowler(19), Mccutchen(8), Florimon(1). SF› HBP hyMcHugh(Moreland), byD.Hogand(Springer). hy Le.Garci(Ca a nha). WP Samardziia, Le.Garcia. IP H R E R BBSD T 3:46. A 26,942(48,114). allowed a season-high 10 hits in Coghlan,S.Marte. T 3:31.A 12,446 (40,615). IP H R E R BBSO Toronto Buehrle 5 6 2 1 1 2 five innings, and Miami stopped Chicago Cecil 1 0 0 0 0 2 Tigers 5, Twins4 New York’s eight-game winning Rays 6, Yankees 3 Hammel 32-3 5 4 4 3 5 Lowe 1 0 0 0 1 0 Cahill 2 1 0 0 0 4 Aa.Sanchez streak. L,7-6 1 1-3 4 1 1 0 1 MINNEAPOLIS Victor Martinez Rosscup 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Atlanta ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Nick Strop 1 0 0 0 0 1 Teheran 52-3 5 2 2 4 7 had three hits and two RBls to lead Franklin hit a go-aheadtwo-run Miami NewYork GrimmL,3-5 1 0 1 0 1 1 McKirahan 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Detroit. Pittsburgh homer in the sixth inning to lift Cunniff 1 0 0 0 1 2 D Gordn2b 5 2 4 2 Grndrsrf 4 1 1 0 61-3 6 4 3 0 8 Marksherry G.cole 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Yelichcf-If 5 2 3 2 Cespdscf 4 0 0 0 Tampa Bay. Detroit Minnesota SoriaBS,3-4 23- 0 0 0 1 1 Moylan 13 0 0 0 0 0 Prado 3h 3 1 1 1 DnMrp2h-1h 5 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi W atson W ,4-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 VizcainoW,3-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Bour1h 5 1 3 2 DWrght3h 3 1 1 1 NewYork TampaBay Gosecf 5 0 1 1 A.Hicksrf 5 1 2 0 MelanconS,46-48 1 0 0 0 0 2 T 2:45. A 16,399(49,586). Ozunarl-cf 4 0 1 1 Confortlf 3 1 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Kinsler2b 5 1 1 0 Dozier2h 4 1 0 0 HBP by H am m el (N.W a lke r), hy G. c ol e (Co ghl a n). E llsurycf 4 0 0 0 Jasodh 4 0 2 0 Dietrchlf 3 0 0 0 TdArndc 4 0 1 1 Micarr1b 4 0 0 0 Mauer1h 3 0 1 1 WP Hammel, Cahil, Soria2. BMorrsp 0 0 0 0 Duda1h 3 0 0 0 Gardnrlf 5 0 0 0 Sizemrlf 2 1 1 0 JMrtnzrf 3 2 1 0 Nunezpr 0 0 0 0 History E ffngtnp 0 0 0 0 OFlhrtp 0 0 0 0 T 2:51.A 31,488 (38,362). ARdrgzdh 3 2 1 1 SouzJrph-rf 2 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 0 3 2 Sanodh 4 0 1 2 Real m tc 3 0 0 1 Parnegp 0 0 0 0 THIS DATE IN BASEBALL BMccnc 4 0 1 0 Longori3b 4 0 1 0 Cstllns 3b 4 0 1 1 Plouffe 3b 4 0 1 0 SecondGame Rojasss 4 1 1 0 Niwnhsph 1 0 0 0 Beltranrf 4 0 1 0 Forsyth2h 4 1 2 1 JoWilsn3h 0 0 0 0 ERosarlf 4 1 1 0 Chicago Pittsburgh Koehl e rp 3 1 1 0 DAlvrzp 0 0 0 0 Sept. 16 Noel pr-rf 0 0 0 0 Acarerss 2 0 0 0 Tycgnslf 2 1 0 0 EdEscrss 4 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi 1960 WarrenSpahn, 39, pitchedano-hitter Bird1h 3 1 1 2 Frnklnss 2 1 1 2 Dunnp 0 0 0 0 Stauffrp 0 0 0 0 JMccnc 4 1 3 0 KSuzukc 2 0 1 1 Fowler cf 5 0 1 1 JHrrsn 2h 4 0 0 0 and setanall-time Braves recordwith15 strikeouts. Headly3h 4 0 0 0 Loney1b 4 1 1 0 ISuzukirf 1 1 1 0 Tejadass 3 0 2 1 AnRmnss 3 0 0 1 KVargsph 1 0 0 0 AJcksnlf 5 1 1 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Milwaukeeheatthe Philadelphia Phiffies4-0. Gregrsss 3 0 0 0 Mahtokrf-If 4 1 3 0 deGrmp 2 0 0 0 Hrmnnc 0 0 0 0 Bryant rf 3 0 0 0 SMartelf 4 0 1 0 1975 ThePittsburgh Pirates routedthe Chi› Drew2h 1 0 0 0 Kiermrcf 4 1 0 0 Goeddlp 0 0 0 0 Buxtoncf 3 1 2 0 Rizzo1h 3 0 1 1 Mcctchcf 4 0 1 0 cago Dubsin Wrigley Field22-0. It wasthe most CYoungph 1 0 0 0 Arenciic 3 0 2 2 KJhnsn 2b 1 0 0 0 DaSntn ph 1 0 0 0 Stcastr2h 4 0 1 0 ArRmr3h 4 1 2 0 one-sidedshutout since1900. RennieStennett had B.Ryan2b 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 9 15 9 Totals 3 3 3 7 3 Totals 3 4 5 105 Totals 3 5 4 104 J.Baez3h 4 0 2 0 Cerveffic 4 0 1 0 Miami sevenhits, includingtwotwo-hit innings. Ackley ph 1 0 1 0 BBB 338 182 9 Detroit 210 001 801 6 ARussl l ss 4 0 0 0 Morse1h 2 0 0 0 1988 Cincinnati’s TomBrowningpitcheda New York 1B B BBB 028 3 M innesota 0 1 0 0 0 0 201 4 Totals 33 3 5 3 Totals 3 5 6 135 D.Rossc 4 1 2 0 SRdrgzrf 2 0 0 0 D P M iam i 1, New Y ork 1. LO B M iam i 4, N e w New York 100 2 0 0 BBB 3 perfectgameastheRedsheatthe LosAngeles Dodg› E Achter (1). DP Detroit 2, Minnesota2.LOB› Bay 1 1 0 8 02 82x 6 York 10. 28 Yelich (23), Bour(16), Koehler(1), Lesterp 3 0 0 0 Flormnss 2 0 0 0 ers 1-0.Browningstruck outeight andallowedeight Detroit 6,Minnesota9.28 J.Martinez(28), J.Mccann Tampa Kang ph-ss 1 0 0 0 E B.Mccann(7), Loney(6), Franklin (5). DP › D.Wright(4), Conforto(11), Teiada(21). HR D.Gor› halls to he hit out of theinfield. 17), Mauer (29),Edu.Escobar (28), Buxton(6)r38 E. Happ p 2 0 0 0 1993 Dave Winfield of theMinnesotaTwins NewYork1. LDB NewYork8, Tampa Bay 8. 28› don (3).CS D.Gordon(17), Ozuna(2). SF Prado, osario(12).SB TyCogins(2). S An.Romine. Cami n rp 0 0 0 0 became the 19thplayer in major leaguehistory to Mahtook (3). HR A .R o dri g uez ( 32), Bi r d (6), Frankl i n Real m uto. IP H R E R BBBD NWalkrph-2b1 0 0 0 get 3,000 hits with a single off Oakland’sDennis (2). SBSouzaJr. (12), Mahtook(2). S Ellshury. IP H R E R BBSO Detroit Totals 35 2 8 2 Totals 3 0 1 5 0 IP H R E R BBBD Miami Eckersley. SimonW,13-9 6 1 - 3 8 3 3 1 4 Chicago 1BB 018 000 2 1996 PaulMolitor got his3,000thcareer hit, KoehlerW,10-13 6 5 1 1 4 4 B.Hardy 0 0 0 0 1 0 NewYork Pittsburgh O B B OBB 100 1 becomingthe21st major leaguerto reachthe mark Warren 4 6 2 2 0 4 Dunn 1 0 0 0 0 3 VerHagenH,1 2 - 3 1 0 0 0 0 E Florimon (2). DP Chicago 1. LOB Chica› and thefirst to doit withatriple. 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 B.Morris 1 2 2 2 1 2 A.WilsonH,7 1 0 0 0 0 0 Pazos 4. 28 Fowler (28), A.Jackson(5), 1997 Philadelphia’sCurtSchiling struckout 3 2 2 0 2 Effington 1 0 0 0 1 0 go 9, Pittsburgh B.RondonS,5-7 1 1 1 1 1 1 RumhelowL,1-1 1 J .Baez (3), D.Ross (9). SB Mccutchen (9). CS J. nine in thePhilies win overtheNewYork Metsto Shreve 1 0 0 0 0 1 NewYork Minnesota B aez (2), S. M a rt e (1 0). S L e ste r . Pinder 2 -3 0 0 0 1 2 deGromL,13-8 5 10 6 6 0 5 become the 13thpitcher since1900with 300strike› PHughes L,10-9 3 6 3 3 1 4 1 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO outs in a 2-3 3 2 2 1 1 Goeddel season. Achter 2 2 1 1 0 1 Mitchell 2086 Washington’s AlfonsoSoriano became Buyer 2 1 0 0 1 1 Ch.Martin 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 O’Flaherty 23 1 0 0 1 1 Chicago L ester W, 1 0-10 9 5 1 1 1 9 May 11-3 1 1 1 1 0 TampaBay Parnell 1 0 0 0 1 0 the fourthplayer inmajor leaguehistory to record40 1-3 3 2 2 0 0 Pittsburgh O’ Rourke 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 OdorizziW,B-B 6 3 3 3 3 5 D.Alvarez homerunsand40 stolen basesin asingle seasonin 52-3 8 2 2 2 8 an 8-4winoverMilwaukee.Soriano whenheswiped Jepsen 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 E.Romero H,1 1 0 0 0 1 1 Stauffer 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 HappL,5-2 21-3 0 0 0 0 4 secondbase,his40thstolen base,to go alongwith Achterpitchedto 2batters inthe 6th. ColomeH,7 1 1 0 0 0 0 Koehlerpitchedto2 batters inthe7th. Caminero B.Hardypitchedto 1batterin the7th. B.Gomes Sr1-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP— by Koehler (Cespedes). WP— Goeddel. Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 1 45 home runs.JoseCanseco(Oakland,1988), Barry HBP byLester (S.Rodriguez). WP Lester. HBP hySimon(Sano, K.Suzuki). WP Odorizzi, E.Romero. Balk D.Alvarez. Bonds(SanFrancisco, 1996)andAlex Rodriguez T 3:29. A 22,963(39,021). T 3:14.A 13,539 (31,042). T 3:16. A 25,633(41,922). T 2:44.A 25,914 (38,362). (Seattle,1998)aretheothers.


C4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

NFL NOTEBOOK

Haw s ic u 1stwino season Rule changealready Boys soccer

Bulletin staff report LA PINE

Ridgeview 1, The Dalles 0:

Wyatt Oldham

scored the only goal of the second half to lift La Pine to

THE DA L LES

a 3-2 Class 3A/2A/1A Special

Carter cross in the 42nd min›

District 3 boys soccer victory Tuesday over Central Linn. La Pine (l-l SD3, 1-2-1 over› all) scored in the fifth minute, taking a 1-0 lead on a goal by

ute to give the Ravens (2-1-2) a nonconference win. McKay 13, Redmond 0: R EDMOND

T h e C l a ss

6A Scotsfrom Salem scored eight goals in the second half in a nonconference victory Cobras answered with goals over the 5A Panthers (0-4). Ian Johnson that was assisted by Justin Petz. The visiting

in the 20th and 36th minutes, Summit 1, Liberty 1: HILLS› but Petz got the Hawks even BORO Summit struck first in the 36th minute with an as› but Liberty knocked in the sist from Johnson. tying goal in the 65th min› The deadlock lasted until ute to hand the Storm their the 63rd minute, when Old› second draw of the season. ham scored on Johnson’s sec› Jack Tyler put Summit (1-0-2) ond assist of the day. La Pine ahead in the 18th minute on a held on for the victory with a through ball from Mack van defenseled by left defender der Velde. Braxton Irvin.

The Hawks can

Girls soccer

e qual

Ridgeview 2, The Dalles 1:

son with a victory today in a

REDMOND

nonleague match at C r ook County.

win scored midway through

Saylor Good›

the first half, and the Ravens

Also on Tuesday:

opener. Madison Kussman and Jennifer Roth both had

(4-1) scored the game winner

eight kills for Crook County, led Ridgeview with six saves. while Cassidy Dill added sev› The Dalles scored on a sec› en more. Meghan Wood was ond-half penalty kick. 27 for 29 serving with nine Bend JV 8, La Pine 0: LA aces, while Abby Smith had PINE Sydney Bright and three aces and 23 assists. K aitlin L i c htenhahn e a ch Culver 3, Irrigon 0: IRRI› m ade five saves for t h e GON Culver opened Co› Hawks (0-3). lumbia B a si n C o n f erence play on the road against Ir› Volleyball rigon, winning 25-13, 25-13, The Dalles 3, Redmond 0: 25-12. Lynze Schonneker had THE DALLES The Pan› 13 kills and four digs for the thers were swept 25-14, 25› Bulldogs, Margie Beeler had 16, 25-12 despite eight kills 30 assists, eight aces and six by Kenzie Jackson. Alyssa digs, and KayLee Aldrich had Fabbrini added five kills for five assists and eight kills. Redmond. Gilchrist 3, Chiloquin 0: Sisters 3, S utherlin 0: CHILOQUIN G i l christ SUTHERLIN The Outlaws grabbed its first Mountain opened up Sky-Em League Valley League win of the sea› play with a 25-14, 25-14, 25-13 son, defeating Chiloquin 25› sweep to remain unbeaten. 7, 25-19, 25-20. The Grizzlies Crook County 3, Madras (1-1 MVL) were led by Cas› 0: MADRAS T h e C ow› sandra Blum-Boles, who had girls swept the White Buffa› two blocks and seven aces; loes 25-8, 25-5, 25-14 in both and Molly Bernabe, who add› teams’ Tri-Valley Conference ed six aces and a block.

yielding missedPATs

M a l achi victory. Erica Nader mann

Stalbergscored offa W estley

their win total from last sea›

in the 87th minute on an own goal for th e n onconference

The Associated Press of Origin series. Tony Rorno dropped the With the world watching low snap, and then snatched him under the lights Monday the ball off the turf in time to night, Hayne fumbled away find trusty tight end Jason

his very first NFL touch›

Witten open at the goal line and there was an eerie simi› with seven seconds left in larity to that moment in 2007 the season opener.

with New South Wales.

still had to kick the extra

recalled. "It was kind of sim›

"I did a similar thing in Touchdown, Dallas Cow› boys. Thedramatic come- Origin in my debut game. I back against the New York gave away a try and I threw Giants was complete. Ex› the ball when I s h ouldn’ t cept, well, it wasn’ t. They have thrown the ball," Hayne point, an afterthought no ilar, like, ’(Shoot), I didn’ t longer in light of the NFL’s want that to happen.’" decision to push it back from

The 49ers rookie could

the 2-yard line to the 15. Dan Bailey ordered the snap on the r ight hash mark, lined up and sent the ball sailing through the uprights. Cowboys 27, Giants 26.

be seen hollering at himself after fumbling his first punt

Only then could the home team and its anxious fans

move on in a hurry as he was

exhale. B ailey’s 33-yard k i ck provedtobe no more memorable or difficult than the rest of the extra points over

return try i n

San Francis›

co’s 20-3 victory against the Minnesota Vikings at Levi’ s Stadium. But the 27-year-old

Hayne had no choice but to forced into backup running back duties in place of the injured Reggie Bush. Hayne wound up with four rushes for 13 yards with a 9-yard gain as his longest run, while also catching a 7-yard pass.

Soccer

the course of league history. But if opening weekend was

Continued from C1 The French champions be› gan their Champions League group stage play against Mal› mo on Tuesday night and, strange as it might sound,

any indication of what is to

Injured Manning

the stadium.

the injury report with a sore

come, these post-touchdown turns tables on media conversions could be must› Still searching for an› watch moments rather than swers and a rhythm on of› the bathroom breaks they fense, Peyton Manning at have long been for viewers least found his funny bone. on thecouch or customers at Asked about landing on

there is no question that vic›

tories like PSG’s 2-0 triumph over its Swedish guest are, in the bigger picture, far more important than any league game they will play over the

Cleveland’s Travis Coons back courtesy of all those made an outlandish 48-yard

next few months.

In many ways, it is the

the weekend in 75 attempts,

"This is not a h ealthy group, by any means," Man› tion to misses for Houston’s ning cracked. Randy Bullock, Jackson› This one surely has gout. ville’s Jason Myers and San Bunions, that one. Diego’s Josh Lambo. That Carpel tunnel over here is already half the amount "from all the texting of his nati’s Mike Nugent in addi›

to Italy’s Juventus. And for Germany’s Bayern Munich, who will play Olympiakos in Greece today. For these three

/

clubs, domestic success would

1/

be great, lovely, fantastic. But this season, for them, will be defined by what happens in Europe.

of extra points that were missed in 2014, when NFL kickers went 1,222-for-1,230

/

fiI

conceded this week that his club needs to have loftier goals. PSG was bought by wealthy Qatari investors in 2011 and, since then, has cap›

there will always be some› thing left behind."

mittee devised the shift for 2015, with a review of the

Edinson Cavani, right, and Paris Saint-Germain have higher ambitions than another domestic title. They started out their Champions League campaign Tuesday with a 2-0 home win over Sweden’s Malmo.

titles, a French Cup and two League Cup trophies. But it has not made it past the quar›

terfinals of the Champions League.

Howmanygames?

Blanc, who has felt pres›

Top Europeansoccer teams havemanycompetitions to play in, and prioritizing can be a challenge. For example, if an English team wins its leagueand the Champions League,and reachesthe finals of all competitions, it can play in asmany as 71games in a season. For acomparison, a team not playing in Europe will play as few as 40. Community Shield 1 FA Cup 10* UEFASuper Cup 1 Premier League 38 League Cup 6 Champions League 13 Club World Cup 2 Total 71

sure from the club’s chair› man, Nasser AI-Khelaifi, was

only stating the obvious when he said: "Paris want to win the

Champions League, as every big club does. Of course, Paris have not won this competition yet, but they will someday. When? I don’t know. But the

Champions League is a cru› cial competition for the club."

Thiago Silva, the team’s captain, was fa r b l unter.

welcomed by Blanc, but it was at least honest; Al-Khelaifi’s installation at PSG came with

an implied mandate for great› er global exposure, and the Champions League is where such stature lies. Manchester City’s situation

is largely the same. Compe› tition in E n gland’s Premier

Counting replays after ties

d r ive-time ra›

dio host, he’s got laryngitis "from ripping me all week" plus "the rash that he has

the Champions League as we have inthe Premier League,

Thibault Camus / The Associated Press

tured three straight Ligue 1

sources." And th e

(99.3 percent). "It’s going to happen," said Myers, whose Jaguars that’s unidentified." "But I never hear you guys lost 20-9 to Carolina. "It hap› pens to the best of them." complain about it, so I’m not O ver th e p r e vious 1 0 going to complain about it. In years, according to STATS many ways, you guys inspire research, the league had an me," Manning dead-panned. average of 10.2 missed ex› "But, no, I was kind of sur› tra points per season. The prised that I was on it, to tell collective success rate over you the truth. But I think like that period was 99.1 per› a lot of guys, it was a pretty cent. Hence the reason why physical game on Sunday." the NFL’s competition com›

Even Laurent Blanc, the professorial coach of P S G,

He was quoted earlier this

questions.

with one blocked for Cincin›

same for M a nchester City in England, which lost 2-1

year by the Italian newspa› per Gazzetta dello Sport as saying, "We want to win Li› gue I as quickly as possible to be able to concentrate on our principle objective: the Champions League." Such candor might not have been

hard hits from the Baltimore

attempt, after a pair of pen› Ravens, Manning decided alties pushed him back. But to deliver his own evalua› four extra points failed over tion of those asking all the

That is the feeling in Mu› nich, too. There, the focus is

more singular Pep Guar› diola, who led Barcelona to Champions League titles in 2009 and 2011, is in his third

season at Bayern Munich af› ter having been routed in the

semifinals of the Champions League the past two springs. Guardiola took over after

ayer n

Jupp Hynckes led B League is certainly on a high› leading up to Tuesday’s Ju› Munich to the Champions er level than that of Ligue I ventus match but Vincent L eague title i n 2 0 13, a nd (making it not nearly as easy Kompany, City’s veteran cap› while his two straight Bunde› to slough off), but the money tain, was less nuanced when sliga trophies are wonderful, poured into City by Abu Dha› asked about how the team for Guardiola this season› bi investors in 2008 came with might react after being elim› perhaps his last with the Ba› a similar demand to PSG’s. inated by Barcelona in the varians is about Europe. City’s players and coaches Round of 16 last season. He has even said as much, "It is not just losing to Bar› telling reporters that "only the have delivered on many levels the club won the Premier celona we have not han› treble counts" in terms of suc› League in 2012 and 2014› dled most of our games in cess in Germany, a reference but the team hasn’t won a sin› the Champions League well," to winning the league, the gle knockout-round match in Kompany said. "It is really German Cup andthe Chamthe Champions League. important we make a state› pions League in the same City’s manager, Manuel ment in Europe." season. Thomas Mueller, the Pellegrini, has generally re› He added: "It is the same t eam’s star striker, said it , fused to acknowledge this people have been saying for too: "The main objective is› d rought he stuck to t h e the last three or four years. As and remains winning the one-day-at-a-time m a n t ra long as we don’t perform in Champions League."

rule before further enact›

Lynch’s momcriticizes offensive coordinator

Marshawn Lynch’s moth›

er called for Seattle Sea› make the change, so the ex› hawks offensive coordinator tra-long extra points proba› Darrell Bevell to be fired in a bly will become permanent. post on Facebook. Delisa Lynch posted her ment. Owners voted 30-2 to

San Diego,St.Louis w on't comments late Monday night make stadiumpitches after her son was stopped on

The NFL’s point man on Los Angeles said he has de› cided that officials from San Diego and St. Louis who are trying to keep their NFL teams will not make pre› sentations on their stadium

a fourth-and-1 run play in overtime as Seattle dropped

its season opener to St. Louis 34-31 on Sunday. Delisa Lynch wrote that

Bevell is the "worst play caller ever," and that the run

play on fourth-and-I against the Rams was called only Eric Grubman said Tues› to justify the fact Seattle did

plans at the owners meeting next month. d ay that a fter t a lking t o

not call a run play from the

owners, he felt the Com› 1-yard line in the Super Bowl mittee on Los Angeles Op› when Russell Wilson’s pass portunities would want to

was intercepted by New En›

speak to the presenters in some detail and the owners might benefit from a back› and-forth discussion about the potential projects. "That kind of dialogue usually doesn’t happen at league meetings when there

gland’s Malcolm Butler. She added that the Sea›

are outside presenters, and

on Tuesday for a condition›

hawks staff "loves" Bevell

"more than a win."

Making moves Dallas acquired receiver Brice Butler from Oakland

particularly when we have a al fifth-round pick in next full agenda," Grubman said. year’s draft. The Cowboys

Olson

"The impact he can have›

just a single person can have Continued from C1 on a team is pretty cool, Olson, who lost one eye and Jake definitely has that." at 10 months and the oth› Olson wore jersey No. 17. er when he was 12 both His jersey was yellow, like to an eye cancer known those worn by quarterbacks, a s retinoblastoma was as a precaution for con› brought into the USC foot› tact. During the workout, ballprogram as a preteen starting long-snapper Zach by former coach Pete Car›

Smith, punters Kris Albara›

roll. He went on to play high do and Reid Budrovich and school football and golf and other special teams players was awarded a "Swim with helped guide Olson, who Mike" scholarship to USC, could not participate until awarded annually from the the NCAA and USC cleared Physically Challenged Ath› him. "It’s a real credit to a lot letes Scholarship fund. He told The Los Ange› of people to get this done," les Times in April that all Sarkisian said. "It’s a credit he wanted was a chance to to our compliance office to prove himself, like any other work with the NCAA, and it’s a credit to the NCAA to player. "That’s how we want him understand that this is a spe› to feel," Kessler said, adding, cial situation."

Grubman said it is likely the NFL will be talking to the cities directly during the next several weeks.

AroundthePac-12 UTAH MAY HAVENEW STARTING QUARTERBACK Utah coach KyleWhittingham won’t name his starting quarterback for Saturday’s gameagainst Fresno State, but several signs point to Kendal Thompson. Travis Wilson won the preseasoncompetition and started the first two games, but he injured ashoulder against Utah State and left in the second quarter. His nonthrowing arm was in a sling with ice afterward. At Tuesday’s press conference, Whittingham thoroughly talked about what Thompsonwould bring to the table› if he plays Saturday. UCLA PREPARINGFOR BYU'S MAIIGUM UCLA coach Jim Mora might not haveknownwho Tanner Mangum wasthreeweeksago,buthesurelydoesnow.Mangum came offthe bench for BYUtwo weeks agoagainst Nebraska, replacing injured starter Taysom Hill, to heave a Hail Mary pass that resulted in a last-second victory. With Hill out for the season, Mangumstarted against Boise State last weekandthrew another final-minute touch› down pass to earn theCougars an upset victory. "He makes plays down the field," Mora said. "He’s got kind of those Johnny Manziel qualities. He runsaround andslings it and they come up with it." UCLA faces Mangumandthe No. 19 Cougars on Saturday night. — From wire reports

"We communicated our

thinking to both cities," he

said. St. Louis Rams o w ner Stan Kroenke has proposed

a $2 billion stadium in the Los Angeles suburb of In› glewood. In response, the San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders normal› ly bitter rivals in the AFC

West have proposed to share a $1.7 billion stadium in Carson.

Hayne disappointed in NFL debut

will be without All-Pro re›

ceiver Dez Bryant for at least a month with a broken right foot.

The Raiders responded to injuries to three defensive starters by bringing back safety Taylor Mays and de› fensive lineman C.J. Wilson on Tuesday. The moves come

less than two weeks after the two were released on cut-down day and two days aftersafetiesCharlesWoodson and Nate Allen, and de› fensive tackle Justin Ellis,

left the season opener with injuries. St. Louis rookie running

back Todd Gurley, rehabbing from left knee surgery, took Jarryd Hayne recalls his snaps with the first-string of› f orgettable debut i n w h a t fense for the first time Tues› is often considered the pin› day, and coach Jeff Fisher nacle of rugby league and a wouldn’t rule out the 10th premier sporting event back overall draft pick for this home in Australia, the State

week at Washington.


C5 THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 16,599.85+228.89 4 DOW ,

S&P 500 1,978 . 09+25.06

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Financial analysts anticipate that 1,880’ " ""’10 DAYS FedEx’s latest quarterly results were better than the same period a 2,160 " year earlier. The package shipping giant is 2,080 " expected to report today that its fiscal first-quarter earnings and revenue 2,000 " improved. FedEx’s results have been dampened this year by the stronger 1,920 " dollar, which cut into the company’s revenue.FedEx is coming offa loss 1 840 M for the quarter ended May 31. Its A M results were dragged down by pension costs. StocksRecap

18,400" 17,600" 16,800"

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StoryStocks Stocks rose on Tuesday ahead of a key interest-rate decision by the Federal Reserve. Stocks rose from the start, then kept climbing in the afternoon in a broad rally that swept up all major industries. Investors are looking ahead to a two-day Fed meeting, which concludes on Thursday, during which policymakers will decide whether to raise rates for the first time in almost a decade. Investors are divided as to what the Fed will do. A strong U.S. job market suggests policymakers may raise rates, but a slowing global economy may force them to hold off. Ag 10 sectors of the Standard and Poor’s 500 index closed higher, led by a 1.7 percent gain for industrial companies.

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Gray Television A

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 16644.11 16382.58 16599.85 +228.89 DOW Trans. 8181.12 8021.25 8163.93 +148.27 DOW Util. 554.66 547.83 553.74 +2.53 NYSE Comp. 10123.28 9996.83 10105.87 +117.28 NASDAQ 4872.35 4802.09 4860.52 +54.76 S&P 500 1983.19 1954.38 1978.09 +25.06 S&P 400 1425.48 1408.78 1424.00 +1 6.07 Wilshire 5000 20899.09 20606.20 20851.74 +245.54 Russell 2000 1165.99 1165.99 1166.00 +1 2.51

DOW

6

%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.1.40% T -6.86% T -10.68% $.1.85% $.0.46% T -10.41% $.1.17% -6.77% T $.1.14% T + 2.63% $.1.28% T -3.92% -1.96% $.1.14% T $.1.19% T -3.78% $.1.08% -3.21% T

North westStocks NAME

SILVER $14.32 -.04

Dow jones industrials Close: 16,599.85 Change: 228.89 (1.4%)

16,320 . ’

"

Vol. (in mil.) 3,188 1,538 Pvs. Volume 2,951 1,424 Advanced 2160 1921 Declined 9 51 8 6 2 New Highs 21 42 New Lows 92 67

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GOLD $1,102.80 -5.10

15,960 ’ ""’ 10 DAYS "

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GTN

Close:$13.30%1.56 or 13.3% The broadcast company isbuying all of the television and radio sta› tions from Schurz Communications for about $442.5 million. $20

LNG

Close:$54.81 %0.67 or 1.2% Activist investor Carl Icahn dis› closed that he boosted his stake in the liquid natural gas company from 8.2 percent tc 9.6 percent. $80 70

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$7.16~

6 $16 .D7

Vol.:4.1m (3.2x avg.) P Mkt. Cap:$879.21 m

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Pebblebrook Hotel

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

Cheniere Energy

PEB

Close:$38.18T-0.38 or -1.0% The hotel investment company ex› pects hotel demand figures tc be weaker-than-anticipated and gave disappointing guidance. $50

P E: .. . Yield: ...

Stone Energy

SGY Close:$5.65 %0.12 or 2.2% The energy company and its peers saw their shares rise as the price of crude oil bounced back, rising about 1 percent. $15

Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ 82.78 79. 7 4 - 1 .00 - 1.2 T T X +33. 4 +7 2 .3 1 570 16 0 . 8 0 Aviate Corp A VA 29.77 ~ 38.34 30. 8 4 +. 2 5 +0.8 X T X -12.8 + 0 . 4 21 4 1 7 1. 3 2 -8.8 -3.8 60966 18 0 .20 Bank of America B AC 14. 60 ~ 18.48 16. 3 1 +. 3 5 +2.2 A T T Barrett Business BBS I 1 8 .25 ~ 57.96 37. 2 3 + 1.22 +3.4 A > A + 35. 9 - 35.8 4 9 d d 0 . 8 8 45 10 Boeing Co BA 115.14 ~ 158. 8 3 13 6.30 +1.87 + 1.4 X T T +4.9 +8.6 37 3 2 1 9 3. 6 4 40 +1.9 58 22 Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .14 ~ 5.69 5.33 -.01 -0.2 T T A +2.7 J J A 8 J J A 8 ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.90 ~ 3 3.7 0 31.31 +.56+1.8 A T T +1 3.4 +20.2 111 20 0.72a Constmction bellwether 52-week range 52-week range ColumbiaSportswear COLM 34.25 ~ 74. 7 2 63.54 +.59 $.0.9 A T A + 42.7 +67.3 118 32 0.60 $34.99 ~ $50 .17 $3.74 ~ $32.85 U.S. homebuilders have been Costco Wholesale CO ST 117.03 ~ 1 56.8 5 14 2.43 +1.28 +0.9 A T A +0.5 +17 .8 1 328 27 1 . 6 0 Vcl.:3.0m (5.1x avg.) PE:4 9 . 9 Vcl.:2.1m (1.1x avg.) P E: .. . feeling more optimistic this cc Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 7.00 ~ 17.89 8.37 +.1 8 + 2.2 A A T -37.3 -35.3 2 7 Mkt. Cap:$2.74 b Yie l d : 3.2% Mkt. Cap:$323.12 m Yield : ... summer about their prospects for FLIR Systems F LIR 26.34 ~ 34.46 28.5 7 +. 3 7 $ .1.3 A T T -11.6 - 14.4 644 1 8 0 . 44 sales. Copa Holdings CPA Mylan MYL Hewlett Packard H PQ 24 . 85 ~ 41.10 27.1 1 +. 0 7 +0.3 T T T -32.4 -24.2 15062 11 0 .70 The National Association of Intel Corp INTO 24.87 ~ 37.90 29. 7 3 +. 3 4 +1.2 A A T -18.1 -12.4 29247 13 0 .96 Close:$45.52%0.52 or 1.2% Close:$49.56 %0.50 or 1.0% Home Builders/Wells Fargo The Dutch drugmaker initiated a K EY 11.55 ~ 15.70 13. 8 2 +. 2 2 +1.6 A T T -0.6 -0.4 6790 13 0 .30 The airline passenger and cargo Housing Market Index rose to 61 Keycorp services company reported a de› $27.14 billion hostile takeover bid -.26 -0.7 T T A +15. 7 +4 5 .9 6 51 3 20 0 .42f Kroger Co K R 2 5 .42 ~ 39.43 3 7 . 1 6 last month, the highest reading in crease in August passenger traffic, for Irish generic drug and ingredi› -.06 -1.5 T A T but a boost in capacity. ents maker Perrigo. Lattice Semi LSCC 3.25 ~ 7.76 4.03 -41.5 -45.6 1109 dd 10 years. Readings above 50 $100 $80 L PX 1246 ~ 18 64 1678 + 3 2 +19 E T T +1 3 +20 4 13 6 7 d d indicate positive sentiment about LA Pacific the housing market. The latest 80 MDU Resources MDU 1 6 .15 o 29. 5 0 1 6 .9 1 + . 44 +2.7 A T T -28.0 - 43.0 806 d d 0 . 73 60 reading is due out today. MentorGraphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 7.3 8 25.20 +.35+1.4 A T T +1 5.0 +13.4 57419 0.22 60 Microsoft Corp MSFT 39.72 ~ 50.0 5 43. 9 8 +. 9 4 +2.2 X T T -5.3 -5.2 28194 30 1 .24 NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing A 6 A 6 J J J J Market Index seasonally adjusted Nike Ioc 9 NKE 79.27 ~ 117. 7 2 11 3.84 +1.95 +1.7 X T X +18. 4 +3 8 .1 3 837 31 1 . 1 2 52-week range 52-week range est. -7.0 + 8 . 0 1 834 2 0 1 . 48 NordstromInc J WN 66.08 ~ 83.16 73.8 3 +. 6 5 $ .0.9 A T T $43.63~ $121.25 $44.60 ~ $76.69 62 61 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 42.00 ~ 52.57 43. 3 7 +. 2 3 +0.5 A T A -13.1 + 2 . 7 79 24 1.8 6 60 60 Vol.: 763.3k (1.1x avg.) PE : 6.6 Vol.:5.8m (0.8x avg.) P E: 2 1.4 Paccar lac P CAR 53.45 ~ 71.15 58.2 7 + 1.21 +2.1 X T T -14.3 -2.0 2040 13 0.96f Mkt. Cap:$1.5 b Yiel d : 7.4% Mkt. Cap:$24.29 b Yield: ... Planar Syslms PLNR 3.02 ~ 9.17 5.65 -.02 -0.4 A T A - 32.5 +24.1 1 0 9 1 9 56 Marlin Bus. Services MR L N Ocata Therapeutics O CA T 56 - 1,3 80 7 3 5 1 , 76 Plum Creek PC L 36,95 0 45,2 6 37. 4 0 +. 0 4 $ .0,1 T T T -12.6 54 Close:$15.57%1.53 or 10.9% Close: $4.50 %0.30 or 7.1% -4.8 -4.4 1286 19 0 . 1 2 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 249. 1 2 22 9.40 + . 12 +0.1 T T A The commercial lender declared a The biotechnologycompany en52 SchoitzerSteel S CHN 1 5.06 o 2 6.0 6 16 . 00 + . 17+1.1 T T T -29.1 -35.5 345 d d 0 . 75 special $2 per share dividend, citing rolled its first patient in a midstage Sherwin Wms SHW 202.01 ~ 294. 3 5 25 0.67 -1.28 -0.5 T T T - 4.7 +18.1 9 6 2 2 6 2 . 68 a strong balance sheet and the study of a potential treatment for 50 macular degeneration. StaocorpFoci SFG 60.17 ~ 114. 8 7 11 4.89 + . 33 +0.3 A X A + 64. 5 +7 9 .0 1 0 8 2 0 1 . 30f company’s earning capacity. M A M J J A $20 $6 Starbucks Cp SBUX 35.38 ~ 59.3 2 56 . 9 1 +. 6 2 +1.1 E T E +38. 7 +5 0 .9 6 680 26 0 . 6 4 2015 5 UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 8.9 2 16.84 +.30+1.8 A T T -1.0 -2.3 1305 17 0.64f source: Factset UmpquaHoldings 15 4 US Baocorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.26 42. 0 0 + 1.08+2.6 X T T -6.6 -0.7 11543 13 1.02f WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.2 5 22.71 +.27+1.2 A T T +2. 5 +6 .2 398 14 0.52 J J A 8 J J A 8 Eye on Oracle -2.5 + 4 .9 14101 13 1 . 50 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 ~ 5 8.7 7 53.47 +.70+1.3 A T T 52-week range 52-week range Oracle delivers its fiscal first-quar› Weyerhaeuser WY 2 6.84 o 37.0 4 27. 37 + . 1 9 +0.7 A T T -23.7 -14.3 3337 27 1.24f $13.63~ $3 1.75 $3.06~ $9.45 ter financial results today. DividendFootnotes:5 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 0 -Liquidating dividend. 5 -Amount declaredor paid in last 12 months. f - Current Vol.:165.9k (4.7x avg.) P E : 11.2 Vcl.:389.9k (0.7x avg.) P E: . . . Wall Street projects that the annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$199.67 m Yi eld: 3.6% Mkt. Cap:$190.02 m Yield : ... dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend software maker’s latest earnings announcement. p Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q Stock is 5 closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. will fall short of its results in the same quarter last year. Like many other companies, Oracle has NET 1YR struggled this year with the effects TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO of a stronger dollar. When the 3-month T-bill . 0 6 .0 4 + 0 .02 A T A .01 Dutch drugmaker Mylan has initiated a $27.14 billion hostile takeover bid for Irish dollar gains ground on other 6 -month T-bill . 2 6 .26 ... T A A .04 currencies, it makes U.S. products generic drug and ingredients maker Perrigo. The company had previously made several bids for Perrigo, which were 52-wk T-bill .46 .38 +0 . 0 8 A A A .08 more expensive overseas. rejected by its board. But the company has now taken its cash-and-stock offer 2-year T-note . 81 .73 + 0 .08 A A A .54 ORCL $37.99 The yield on the directly to Perrigo shareholders. The board of Perrigo has said it is confident its $50 mra$$p 5-year T-note 1.61 1.51 +0.10 X X T 1.79 10-year Treasury $40.50, shareholders will reject the offer. rose to 2.29 per› 10-year T-note 2.29 2.18 +0.11 A X T 2.59 Mylan is offering Perrigo shareholders $75 in cash and 2.3 shares of Mylan $$ $$7647 cent on Tuesday. 40 30-year T-bond 3.07 2.95 +0.12 A A A 3.34 stock for every Perrigo share they hold. That’s a premium of about 4 percent, Yields affect based on Perrigo’s value just before the offer was announced. , ’15 a $57599 C74994 rD rates on mort› NET 1YR Mylan is maneuvering to consolidate its position in the prescription and 30 gages and other BONDS TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO over-the-counter drug market. consumer loans. Operating Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.89 2.78 +0.11 A A T 3 1.7 EPS Mylan (MYL) Tuesday’s close:$49.56 p rice change 1-yr 1Q ’14 1 Q ’15 5-yr’ 3 -yr* Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.48 4.46 +0.02 A A A 4.4 5 52-WEEK RANGE Barclays USAggregate 2.40 2.40 ... A A T 2.40 6.0% 2 6 . 8 22. 4 Price-earnings ratio: 17 Price-earnings ratio: 23 PRIME FED Barclays US based on past 12-month results $45 High Yield 7.16 7.13+0.03 T A A 5.71 $77 ( Based on past 12-month results) RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.04 4.04 ... A L T 4.22 Dividend: $0.60 Div yield: 1.6% AP *annualized Source: FactSet TEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.53 1.45 +0.08 A T T 2.08 source: Factset 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.46 3.45 +0.01 A A A 3.10 1 YR AGO3.25 .13 &md Focus Selected MutualFunds

’::"’""Mylan bid turns hostile

AP

MarhetSummary NAME

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Apple Inc Petrobras Intel

Alibaba n Microsoft FrptMcM Avon

Most Active VOL (ggs) LAST CHG 609660 461354 448435 422534 326196 292473 287319 281940 277047 256260

16.31 +.35 14.31 +.53 25.30 +.53 116.28 +.97 4.54 -.10 29.73 +.34 64.85 +2.25 43.98 +.94 11.29 +.13 3.81 + .30

Gainers NAME

LAST Benitec wt 2.50 Capnia h 2.80 ZionB wt18 2.41 IRSA Prop 31.00 NBGre pfA 6.40 Volition RX 5.25 MaxwellT 6.03 GrayTvA 11.33 Organovo 3.52 API Tech 2.21

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%CHG + 2 3.8 + 2 1.7 + 1 9.3 + 1 9.2 + 18.5 + 1 8.0 + 1 8.0 + 1 6.7 + 1 5.4 + 1 4.8

Losers NAME

L AST 4.84 4.75

XenoPort SitoMobl rs CSVixSh rs 10.66 ArchCoal rs 3.90 PUVixST rs 48.94

C H G %CHG -1.89 -28.1 -1.25 -20.8 -2.63 -19.8 -.95 -19.6 -11.86 -19.5

Foreign Markets NAME

LAST Paris 4,569.37 London 6,137.60 Frankfurt 10,188.13 Hong Kong21,455.23 Mexico 43,269.62 Milan 21,903.63 Tokyo 18,026.48 Stockholm 1,469.08 Sydney 5,046.65 Zurich 8,790.44

CHG %CHG +51.22 +1.13 +53.01 + . 87 +56.39 + . 56 -1 06.67 -.49 +442.27 +1.03 +349.83 +1.62 +60.78 + . 34 + 1.35 + . 09 -73.82 -1A4 +1 04.27 +1.20

American Funds New Economy is in the large-growth category and FAMILY can invest as much as 45 percent American Funds of its assets overseas; it carries Morningstar’s gold-medal analyst rating.

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 23 . 96 +.16 -2.1 +0.7 +9.1+10.7 A A A CaplncBuA m 56.34 +.32 -3.8 -3.2 +5.8 +7.3 8 8 A CpwldGrlA m 44.34 +.33 -2.6 -4.0 +8.9 +8.4 C C C EurPacGrA m 46.65 +.27 -1.0 -5.1 +6.2 +5.3 C B C FnlnvA m 50. 4 1 +.61 -1.5 +0.6 +12.2+12.7 C C C GrthAmA m 43.57 +.46 +2.1 +4.3 +14.4+14.0 O 8 C American Funds NewEconomy A(ANEFX) IncAmerA m 20.31 +.14 -4.4 -3.2 +7.2 +9.1 E C 8 InvCoAmA m 35.28 +.42 -3.4 -1.3 +12.3+12.6 D C C VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m36.98 +.35 +1.9 +2.1 +10.8+10.7 A A A 73› WAMutlnvA m38.56 +.48 -5.0 -2.1 +11.2+13.2 8 C A 03 Dodge &Cox Income 13.5 2 - . 9 4 -0.5 +0 .5 + 2.4 +3.8 D A B CD Dc IntlStk 38.84 + . 41 -7.8 - 14.5 +6.8 +5.6 E A B Stock 169.3 8 +2.20 -4.9 -4.0 +13.9+14.3 D A A 63› Fidelity Contra 100. 3 8+1.10+3.5 + 6 .6 +13.9+14.7 C C C 03 ContraK 100 . 37+1.10+ 3.5 + 6 .7 +14.0+14.8 B 8 B CI LowPriStk d 48.58 +.29 +0.3 + 2 .5 +13.5+14.4 A B A Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg70.93 +.89 -2.5 +1 .7 +12.8+14.3 B 8 A FraakTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 18 . . . -7.2 -10.2 +3.1 +6.0 03 IncomeA m 2. 1 6 . .. -6.5 -9.5 +3.8 +6.6 FraakTemp-Templeton GIBondAdv x 11.52 +.93 -4.9 - 6.8 +1.0 +2.9 D 8 B 47$ Oakmark Intl I 2 2.37 . . . -4.2 -7.7 +8.1 +7.3 MorningstarOwnershipZone Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 19 . 94 +.23 -4.3 0.0 +10.0+11.8 C E D RisDivB m 16 . 80 +.20 -4.9 0.8 +9.1+10.9 D E E OoFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 16 . 67 +.20 -4.9 0.8 +9.2+11.0 D E E average of stock holdings SmMidValA m45.89 +.49 -5.6 1 .5 +13.5+11.1 C 8 E Represents 75% of fund’s stock holdings -6.1 SmMidValB m38.48 +.41 2.2 +12.6+10.2 C C E T Rowe Price BIChpGr 71.6 1 + .95 +6.5 +11.4 +17.0+17.9 A A A CATEGORY: LARGE GROWTH

BIORNINGSTAR

RATING~ ****cr ASSETS $10,252 million EXPRATIO .78% BIIH.INIT.INVEST. $250 PERCEN TLOAD 5.75 HISTORICALRETURNS Return/Rank YEAR-TO-DATE +2.5 1-YEAR +3.0/D 3-YEAR +16.3/A 5-YEAR +14.9/8 3and5-yearretcas aremnualized. Rank:Fund’sletter grade comparedwith others in the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent.

Vanguard

GrowStk 55.9 4 + .71 +7.7 HealthSci 80.1 8 +.92+17.9 Newlocome 9. 4 2 - . 94 0. 0 500Adml 183.34+2.33 -2.5 500lnv 183.30+2.32 -2.6 CapOp 52.85 +.53 +0.2 Eqlnc 29.35 +.37 -4.7 IntlStkldxAdm 24.61 +.14 -4.1 StratgcEq 32.97 +.37 -0.3 TgtRe2020 27.96 +.12 -1.8 TgtRe2025 16.20 +.98 -2.0 TotBdAdml 10.69 -.95 +0.1 Totlntl 14.72 +.99 -4.1 TotStlAdm 50.90 +.61 -2.2 TotStldx 49.98 +.62 -2.3 USGro 31.29 +.35 +4.6

+12.6 +16.7+17.3 A A A +31.4 +32.6+31.2 A A A +1 . 5 + 1 .6 +3.0 C C C +1.7 +12.8+14.3 8 8 A +1.6 +12.7+14.2 8 8 8 +6.2 +20.3+16.8 C A A -1.7 +11.1+13.7 8 C A -11.1 +3.1 NA E D +3.5 +17.2+17.7 A A A -0.4 +6.9 +8.3 A A A -0.8 +7.5 +8.9 8 A 8 +2.1 +1.6 +3.0 A C D -11.2 +3.1 +3.1 E E E +1.8 +13.0+14.5 8 8 A +1.7 +12.9+14.4 8 8 A +11.1 +16.4+16.8 A A A

Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.

SU HIS

Commodities

FUELS

The price of oil rose Tuesday on further signs of declining oil production in the U.S. Natural gas fell. In met› als trading, gold and silver fell, while copper edged higher.

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

Foreign Exchange The dollar gained against the yen. The ICE U.S. Dollar index, which compares the value of the dollar to a basket of several major currencies, was flat.

h58 88

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 44.59 44.00 1.52 1.52 1.50 1.50 2.73 2.76 1.33 1.30

%CH. %YTD +1.34 -1 6.3 -6.5 +0.33 -0.23 -18.8 -1.09 -5.6 +2.19 -7.1

CLOSE PVS. 1102.80 1107.90 14.32 14.36 958.20 955.40 2.44 2.41 599.15 587.35

%CH. %YTD -0.44 -6.9 -0.26 -8.0 +0.29 -20.7 +0.91 -1 4.2 +2.01 -25.0

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.41 1.41 -0.61 -15.2 Coffee (Ib) 1.16 1.17 -1.28 -30.7 -1.6 Corn (bu) 3.91 3.79 -0.79 Cotton (Ib) 0.63 0.64 - 1.09 + 4 . 2 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 252.70 246.30 +2.60 -23.7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.22 1.24 -0.97 -12.7 Soybeans (bu) 8.89 8.83 +0.54 -12.8 Wheat(bu) 4.95 4.86 -1.34 -16.1 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5332 -.0098 -.64% 1.6228 Canadian Dollar 1.3 2 45 -.0014 -.11% 1.1049 USD per Euro 1.1273 -.0041 -.36% 1.2937 JapaneseYen 120.48 + . 4 6 + .38% 1 07.20 Mexican Peso 16. 7409 -.0396 -.24% 13.2430 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8840 +.0002 +.01% 3.6288 Norwegian Krone 8 . 1923 -.0022 -.03% 6.3962 South African Rand 13.4624 -.0447 -.33% 10.9824 Swedish Krona 8.3 0 8 3 + .0566 +.68% 7.1210 Swiss Franc .9745 +.0060 +.62% . 9 355 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.4037 +.0028 +.20% 1.1077 Chinese Yuan 6.3808 +.0126 +.20% 6.1420 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7501 -.0000 -.00% 7.7511 Indian Rupee 66.402 +.072 +.11% 61.095 Singapore Dollar 1.4031 -.0035 -.25% 1.2646 South KoreanWon 1179.99 -3.30 -.28% 1038.65 -.02 -.06% 3 0.17 Taiwan Dollar 32.48


' www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

re on’O eSSrae um S

BRIEFING Workers’ comp

costs todecrease

Workers’ compensa› tion costs in Oregon are expected to decreasean average of 5.3 percent next year, the state an› nounced Tuesday. The Department of Consumer and Busi› ness Services approved the average decrease in what’s called the pure premium, which is the portion of the premium employers pay insurers to cover anticipated claims costs for job-related injuries and deaths, according to a news release. While the pure pre› mium is the keyfactor for annual cost chang› es, it makes up only a portion of the costs of workers’ compensation, which pays lost wages and medical bills for workers injured on the job. It’s the third consec› utive year of average decreases, the news release stated. An individual em› ployer, however, may see a larger decrease, no change or evenan increase depending on the employer’s industry, claims experience and payroll, according to the news release. Also, pure premium doesn’t take into account the expenses and profit of insurance companies. The rate decreasebe› comes effective Jan. 1, but employers will see any changes whenthey renew their policies next year.

The increase comes amid atime of rapid job growth By Steven DuBois

5.9 percent in July. It was 5.2 percent in April. The gradualrise comes at a time of robust hiring. The agency says Oregon’s payroll employmenthas expanded by 60,400 jobs during the past 12

The Associated Press

months. The state hasn’t had a

be growing faster than new gust 2014. ’Ibesday’s employment re› jobsbecause offactorssuch as jobseekers moving to Oregon port shows Oregon added from other states. 4,400 jobs in August, following Another consideration is the a revised gain of 7,400 jobs in joblessrateisbasedonasurvey July.

more money than they did a year ago," Cooke said. "We’ ve had this big drop in gas prices

of about 1,000 households and

restaurants."

has a relatively high margin of PORTLAND A jobs boom run like that since June 1996 to error 0.7 percent. The payroll has not translated to a sharp May 1997. employment figures are based drop in Oregon’s jobless rate. Normally, the unemploy› on alargersurvey ofm orethan The Oregon Employment ment rate wouldn’t rise at a 8,000 establishments. Department said Tuesday the time of rapid job growth. But Though the jobless rate has unemployment rate increased David Cooke, a state econo› jumped in recent months, it has to 6.1 percent in August from mist, said the labor pool might fallen from 6.9 percent in Au›

The leisure and hospitali›

ty industry added 2,100 jobs, making it responsible for near› ly half of August’s gain. "Nationally, there has been a large uptick in consumer spending on restaurants, so

— Bulletin staff reports

earnin en Ie Ieneuzs i w ie in risan in a Ias 4, ee

Vernon G. Breit, P.O.Box 100, Prineville Kevin W. Myers, 20818 Cross Court, Bend Joshua A. andTalitha 0. Woodruff, 2666 Altair Court, Bend

Filed Thursday RaeAnn E. Adams, 1600 NWHickory Place, Redmond Tanya S. Young, 507 SE 11th St., Redmond

one of the main beneficiaries of that extra spending power is Most Oregon industries have shown a healthy uptick in jobs over the past year, with retail

trade joining leisure and hos› pitality at the top of the heap. Only two industries have been

Businesses to compete for slot at

conference Bulletin staff report Ten companies have been selected to compete

for a chance to pitch their businesses to investors next month in the ear›

ly-stage competition at the Bend Venture Conference, Economic Development

for Central Oregon an› nounced Tuesday. Representatives from

the companies will give three-minute presen› tations Sept. 24 during

EDCO’s Central Oregon Pub Talk at McMenamins Old St. Francis School. An

audience vote will deter› mine which five startups

will go on to compete for $15,000 at the BVC. The conference expects to ex› ceed investments levels in

2015 from previous years, according to its website.

The companies and their business models are: Airfit, which places workout and shower fa›

cilities behind security screening in airports. EZ Local Eats, a

StephenHamway/The Bulletin

mobile app for finding and ordering from food trucks. Foodfu, an iPhone app

Inmate Chris Bookhart, who graduated Tuesday from an entrepreneurship program at Deer Ridge Correctional Institution in Madras,

that allows users to create

holds a drawing of the logo for his future business, Fresh Start Cleaning Service.

cooking competitions like those on television. HerbAdvisors.corn, a

By Stephen Hamway The Bulletin

MADRAS

Chris Wim›

berly calls his epoxy-based material used by his most recent venture, Garage Re› naissance Flooring, "the Fer›

rari of garage flooring," due to its resistance to stains and damage. The company is slated to open in Bend in 2018 when

center. Eight of the program’s graduates this year present›

including a lack of access to

using the funds from the

startup capital and an inabili›

ed their completed business

ty to use Web-based learning material in the classes, the

three books he self-published during his time in prison as startup capital. His company,

plans to a panel of three busi› nessmen and women during the program’s graduation ceremony. "We’ re looking for ways to add value for the inmates

here," Curley said. Curley said the program

Filed Friday Hailey R. O’Neil, 957 SW 14th St., Redmond Jack Ceumasand Vivian Garcia-Coumas, 61186 Hilmer CreekDrive, Bend

Filed Monday Jeffrey H. andAlicia D.

na and edible products.

Fresh Start Cleaning Ser›

Outdoor Logic, which develops products to as›

vice, is targeted at hospice

sist in outdoor-activity

preneurs throughout Central Oregon.

services, hospitals and other companies that deal with

participation. QuakeWarn, a busi›

hazardous materials on a daily basis.

ness that provides early

"We’ re limited in some of the tools that we have," Cur› ley said. "But as far as the ap›

"It’s a big market, and

proach to starting a business, I’m not scared to get wet," it’s the same." Wimberly expects to com› minimum-security inmates Bookhart said. plete his sentence at Deer in good standing with the Wimberly, a former busi› Graduate Brian Haggerty, Ridge Correction Institution prison who submit a business ness management student at who plans to start a mobile for convictions on first-de› plan and have it approved. the University of Oregon, said bike repair company with gree robbery and burglary. Three-hour classes, on en› the program’s main advan› his son in Portland in 2017, Wimberly graduated Tues› trepreneurial topics ranging tage over other entrepreneur› said the program helped him day from the fourth annual from how to register a busi› ship classes was the authen› solidify an idea that had been Deer Ridge Entrepreneur› ness to in-depth discussions ticity of the instructors, each bouncing around in his head ship Program, a 10-week on sales and marketing, are of whom had hands-on expe› for a while. "These (instructors) really course held at the prison. It’ s taught once every other week rience with entrepreneurship. operated by the Small Busi› by business advisers from the The proposed business› made it real for me," said ness Development Center at Small Business Development es ranged from a Port› Haggerty, who was convicted land-based healthy food cart Central Oregon Community Center. Curley added that of first-degree encouraging College through a found› the inmates also meet with to a fitness consulting firm child sex abuse. "They helped ing grant from the former business advisers during the in Eugene. Inmate Chris me take it from ’I want this Redmond-based nonprofit off weeks in groups of three Bookhart, who’s serving to happen’ to ’I can make this Partnership to End Poverty, to four. time for robbery, said he was happen.’" according to Steve Curley, While Curley said the in› planning to open a hazardous — Reporter: 480-678-3357, director of the development mates face unique challenges, materials cleaning service shamvsay@bendbulletin.com

Donald Sutherland, 5100 NW FrankWay, Redmond Geraldine 0. Camarero, 2916 SW IndianCircle, Redmond Lynn A. Kraft, 20639 Wild Rose Lane,Bend

website for reviews of dif› ferent strains of marijua›

overall strategy is similar to the center’s work with entre›

accepts applications from

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed Sept. 8

over the year, and it looks like

people are going out to eat flat mining and logging, and more frequently and spending financial activities.

Software company gets Invesbllent Bend software company LeadMethod has received an un› disclosed investment from Texagon Capital, a private equity firm that operates in Bendand Houston, according to a news release issued Tuesday. LeadMethod helps companies automate the way they capture and distribute leads, with the ultimate goal of increasing sales. The investmentbyTexagon is the second invest› mentLeadMethod has landed in less than two months. In late July, Cascade Angels Fund announced a $100,000 investment in Lead› Method. Texagon Capital’s in› vestment was its first in an Oregon-based com› pany, according to the news release. Founders of the firm previously invested mostly in energy companies that provide equipment or services to the oil and gas industry, the news release stated. Brad Goebel, Texagon’s managing principal, lives in Bend part time, and he’s interested in diversifying the firm’s portfolio and exploring investment oppor› tunities in local tech companies, the news release stated.

er

warnings of earthquakes. Radventure, a peer› to-peer marketplace that

connects travelers with locals, who provide the travelers with information

so they can explore their destinations like a local. SnoPlanks, which

makes high performance hand-made bamboo

snowboards specifically geared toward powder and big-mountain riding. StaBallizer, an exer›

cise device designed to improve core strength.

Sunshine Network, which is developing mobile apps to connect

users and allow them to interact.

BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR Burlington, 17842 Bear Paw Lane, Bend Steven T. andJanet S. Johnson, P.O.Box6482, Bend

Chapter 13 Filed Sept. 9 Jay D. andStormy D. Gore, HC63, Box90, Madras

Filed Monday Don P. andLeonaS. Rairigh, 28145 U.S. Highway 20East, Bend

TODAY •LadorandEmployment Law Update:A presentation covering newOregonlabor and employment laws from the 2015 Oregon legislative sessions; $30 for members of the Human Resource Association of Central Oregon, $45 nonmembers; 7:30 a.m.; Shilo Inn, 3105O.B. Riley Road, Bend, 541-408-4557, www.hrcentraloregon.org. THURSDAY BusinessStartup Class:Cover basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for

you;$29;6p.m.;La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St., La Pine, 541-383-7290,cocc.edu/sbdc. Introduction to 30CAD: Class designed to explore and familiarize participants with 30 CAD, starting Thursday with weekly meetings through Oct. 22; $150; 6 p.m.; E::SpaceLabs, 48 SE BrIdgeford Blvd., Bend, www.espacelabs.corn/autodesk› fusion-360.html. FRIDAY ContractorsCCBTest Prep Course:Two-day live class to prepare for the state-mandated

test to become alicensed contractor; $359; 8 a.m.; Central OregonCommunity College Technology Education Center, 2030 SECollege Leep, Redmond, 541-383-7290; www. cocc.edu/ccb. TUESDAY •SCOREBusinessCounseling: Business counselors conduct free one-on-oneconferences for local entrepreneurs; 5:30 p.m.; DowntownBendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend, 541-706-1639. Mid OregonCredit Union

InsuranceWorkshop:Learn how insurance ratesaredetermined and what youcandoto affect those rates; 6p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 NE Gushing Drive, Bend,541-382-1795. Green Drinks: Combined with the BendEnergy Challenge Week presentations, feed, music; free; 6p.m.; BendArea Habitat for Humanity ReStore, 224 NEThursten Ave., Bend, 541-385-6908. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday’sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.corn/bizcal


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Readerphoto, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing Report, D5 THE BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

O< www.bendbulletin.corn/outdoors

WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers,

seeBo

BRIEFING Fishing festival this weekend The Sunriver Fly Fish› ing Festival is sched› uled for Saturday and Sunday in the Sunriver Village Mall. The festival raises money in support of education andfisheries in Central Oregon,accord› ing to a newsrelease. Festival hours are 10a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdayand 10 a.m. to 3p.m. Sunday. The event will include a variety of activities, in› cluding beginning fly-ty› ing classes anddemon› strations from world› class fly-tying experts. Other activities include hands-on fly-casting practice and aworkshop on fly-fishing Central Oregon rivers. A kids’ area will offer fly-fishing lessons and education for youth, as well as a climbing wall and a bouncy house. Vendors and exhibitors will be on hand to offer information on angling accessories andequip› ment as well as local environmental issues. For more informa› tion, visit www.sunriver flyfishingfestival.corn.

Photosby MarkMo rical /The Bulletin

A With the Three Sisters looming, hikers make their way along the summit of Scott

MountainnearMcKenziePass. Y Mount Hood, Mount

Jefferson and Three Fingered Jack, left to right, are also visible from the top of Scott Mountain.

State briefing, D2

TRAIL UPDATE With ChrisSabo Fall weather is ap› proaching fast, with chilly overnight tem› peratures and achance of showers in the fore› cast this evening and Thursday. Snow is pos› sible at higher elevations this time of year, so trail users should watch the weather forecast closely before venturing out and always go prepared for sudden weather changes. Dog leashesareno longer required alongthe Deschutes RiverTrail, Green Lake,Moraine Lake, ToddLakeandBro› ken Toptrails and areas of the ThreeSisters Wil› derness. Dogsmust be on a leash attrailheads and developedrecreation areas year-round. It’ s good trail etiquette to always carry a leashin case of encounters with aggressive dogs. Fire restrictions are still in effect in the De› schutes National Forest. Campfires are prohibited in all areas in theDe› schutes forest, Crooked River National Grassland and OchocoNational Forest as well as on Bureau of LandManage› ment Prineville District lands. Updates to the Public UseRestrictions in the Deschutes Nation› al forest will be posted online at www.fs.usda. gov/deschutes. See Trails /D2

o n co

o u n ain i e

s

MARK MORICAL entral Oregon is home to so many in›

My journey started from the campground at Scott Lake, and the trail, which was firm and

viting trails it can be

downright daunting to determine the best option for a day hike. Criteria usually include level of difficulty, length of time required and scenery. My idea of an ideal hike lies somewhere between an easy stroll along the De› schutes River and climbing

tacky and blanketed by small pine needles, climbed gradually through thick forest. n Tj,. w A s H I N 6 Tj ot N W"I' LL D ER N EII ~

"e

Part of the Hand Lake Trail skirts the vast lava field near McKenzie Pass. The trails off the highway seem to be endless, and now’s the time to explore.

in the "moderate" 6- to 10› mile range that this hardly

best time of year to explore

narrows down the search.

the weather is becoming more mild and McKenzie Pass typically remains open to vehicles until early No› vember, depending on snow.

My suggestion is to pick a that meets your criteria.

the area. Crowds are thinner,

Scott p ~. ~~.+’ Mountain st

6,116 ft . :

a few miles southwest of Dee Wright Observatory and is about a one-hour drive from

ofSisters,isonesuch area. Seemingly endless trails trick› le off of state Highway 242, offering hikers a much more memorable experience than simply climbing the steps to the top of Dee Wright Obser› vatory at the pass summit. And early fall might be the

hikes nearby include 9.2-mile

pales in comparison with the

Black Crater, 6.4-mile Mat› thieu Lakes Loop, and 10.6›

nearby Three Sisters and would offer the chance to

mile Obsidian Falls. A fter some carefulconsideration and map research, I settled on the 8-mile Benson

trek among high mountain lakes,deep subalpineforest, and rocky lava fields with› in the Mount Washington

Lake/Scott Mountain loop.

Wilderness.

Scott Nhhhtolh loop

.

Hand

i ~ L kae

'J4.

Benson " s Lake , ~

The hike would provide the satisfaction of summit› ing a peak though at just

Some of the more popular

The trailhead is located just

Tenas Lakes

Bend.

McKenzie Pass, southwest

Te ucKeaziePass, Sisters

e.o,

10,358-foot South Sister. Still, so many options exist

certain area worthy of explo› ration and then find a hike

"a".

6,116 feet, Scott Mountain

DE’sic&H(U rIG TC Es Lake

,N A TII 0"IN,/A’’L FOR.EST

1

s

SeeScott /D3

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Well shot! Reader photos

Send us your best outdoor photos at buudbulletlu.corn/ readerphotos.Your entries will appear online, and we’ llchoose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible when and where you took a photo, any special technique used as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

(ji ogse hLIntjng jn Imncl’s )clod Ready to hikon e 4 paws’? T

hey called it Imna’s land. The word "ha" indicated

land controlled by a chief.

Thus,Imnaha meant, and

GARY LEWIS

m eans, Imna'sland,andaperson that stands on one of those high ridges gets a sense of what there. He told us that, in all the chief must have felt when his years at the lookout, this he stood on a high place and has been his second-quietest looked out over his domain. fire year since 1993 "which We stood on a high place was a wet year, with a lot of and talked to a fellow who rain through the summer, not mans the fire lookout tower like this year so dry and hot.

It’s been quiet here, in my little

By Craig Hill

corner of Oregon." My friend James Flaherty

The Tacoma News Tribune

and his son Isaac and I were

there to scout for mule deer, to sniff for tracks around water holes and look into the

canyons with the long glass. But deer were hard to find and

there were grouse in large numbers, more grouse than I’d ever seen before.

SeeHunting/D5

My TACOMA, Wash. new best friend has sketchy bowel control and is banned for life from national parks, and I’ ve caught him in bed with my wife, but he’s an ex› cellent hiking partner. Shaped like a loaf of bread, he'stirelessand cruises uphill with ease. But he’ s never too rushed to stop and

smell the flowers right be› fore he pees on them. Largent is a 17-pound part bichon frise, part poodle, who, four months ago, was foundroaming Chicago. October is national adopt›

a-dog month, the perfect time to pick up a new hiking partner. But before you hit the trail it’s vital that you

prepare your pup. SeeDog/D3


D2

TH E BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

Trails

I II’ ’ I

I ’ I

Submit your best work at Q benffbullsfin.corn/rsafferphotos. Your entries will appear online, and we’l choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Also contribute to our other categories, including good photos of the great Central Oregonoutdoors. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible

when and where you took a photo, any special technique used

as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high

resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

Continued from D1 Personal chainsaw use is pro› hibited on forestlands until further notice. Trail conditions are staying rel› atively the same,mostly dry and dusty. Tumalo Falls and its view› point remains closed to all public access until further notice. Phil’s Trailhead is open, but bealert to construction equipment andwork crews. Trail users should beaware bow hunting season is opennow through Sept. 27.Watch for hunt› ers and wear bright colors when using the trails.

BRIEFING Continued from Ot

Wild cohoseason on coastal rivers

l

wr

i /

r e

uitffe.

r'

W ild cohoseasonson many coastal rivers and baysareopen. This year, rivers in11 basinson Oregon’s coast openedTuesday for wild coho harvest, including Tillamook Bay,Nestucca Bay,Siletz, Yaquina, Alsea,BeaverCreek, Siu› slaw, Umpqua,Coos,Coquilleand Floras Creek/NewRiver. In addition, Tenmile, Siltcoos and Tahkenitch lakes will havewild coho seasons. Fishery managerspredict there will be 206,600adult wild coho in the oceanthis summer,most of which will return to Oregon’scoastal rivers andstreams. This is slightly below last year’s predicted return, and significantly lower thanthe 2014 actual return of 359,624fish. "Unlike recent years, this year’s projections arenot asconsistent up and downthecoast, resulting in shorter seasons onsomerivers, while others arevery similar to last year," said MikeGray,fish biologist with the OregonDepartment of Fish andWildlife. On the North Coast, there will be shortened seasons in theTilla› mook and Nestucca basins and, due to poorer forecasted status, the Nehalem will not open for wild coho at all (though it remains open for hatchery coho).

’I

'

36 DEGREES ATOP TUMALO MOUNTAIN Mike Gallagher caught traces of snow and ice in this photograph, looking toward South Sister.

— From staff an wire reports

Find It All Online

OBI’ IA 8 S OLl

bencjbulletin.corn

i e ron anonwaer By Erin Madison

0

Great Falls Tribune

GREAT FALLS, Mont.

Craig Smith had seen videos of flyboarding and thought it looked like fun. However, when he had the chance to try it himself, it was

nh

tQ

way more fun than he ever expected. "It was amazing," said Smith, a 21-year-old student at Montana Tech in B u tte. "It wa s j u s t a n a w e some

experience." F lyboarding looks

like

something out of " T h e Jet›

sons." It involves standing on a board, hooked up to a jet ski. Water shoots out of the board

making theflyboarder hover above the water. "I can’t describe it," Smith

said. It wasn’t like anything he Rick Bowmer / The Associated Press file photo had experienced before. Jordan Wayment demonstrates a Flyboard on the Jordanelle F lyboard of M o n tana i n Reservoir in Utah. Flyboarding a combination of board and jet Whitefish describes flyboard› ski was invented in 2011. ing as "a jet-propelled license to fun." The board is similar

to a wake board, but is hooked by a hose to a jet ski. Smith was with his friend

Lorissa Renfro on their way

Past coverage: Flyboarding on the High Desert: bit.ly/hbflyboard

O

This year’s world cup will be held in Dubai in December, and Heyne plans to attend.

Flyboarding as a sport is "Most people fly in five min› still new and little known but 1s gI’ownlg. utes," Heyne said. "It’s getting really popular Renfro into trying the sport at Before hitting th e w ater, Whitefish Lake. they watch a short safety and and more mainstream," he "It was kind of one of those i nstructional v i d eo. T h e n , sard. spur-of-the-moment things I someone from Flyboard of In addition to offering fly› was really glad I did," Renfro Montana gives them some boarding outings, Flyboard of sard. pointers out on the lake. Montana also sells flyboard› "We’ re with them the whole ing equipment so people can Flyboarding was t otally different from water skiing or time," Heyne said. do it on their own. "We’ ve been selling a ton of "It looks a little scary and wake boarding, she said. "I just kind of felt like Iron intimidating," Smith said. "It’ s boards," Heyne said. Man," Renfro said. "It was really not. It’s easy to pick up." Flyboard of Montana will just a bizarre feeling hovering I t took Renfro five or 10 operate into October, or as above the water." minutes to get the feel for it. long as people want to go "I was surprised by how out, Heyne said. "Flights," as Justin Heyne opened Fly› board of Montana in White› quickly you could pick it up," they’ re called, include dry fish three years ago. she said. suits when needed. A friend of his traveled to Before long, Renfro and Flyboard of Montana lists Costa Rica, tried flyboarding Smith were pulling tricks like its prices as $150 for a 30-min› and brought back a DVD. 360s and dolphin dives. ute flight, $250 for an hour, "I had not seen anything "It looks very intimidating, $750 for four hours or $1,500 like it before," Heyne said. "It but it’s easy," Heyne said. "Ev› for eight hours. looked really fun." erybody gets it." For Renfro, flyboarding After talking to his friend, And most people end up w as d efinitely w o r t h t h e Heyne decided to open a fly› learning to do a trick or two. money. "I would do it again in a boarding business in White› The Flyboard was invented fish. It’s turned out to be a by French jet ski champion heartbeat," she said. "If you’ re a thrill seeker by success. Frank Zapata in 2011. By 2012, "We’ ve flown 4 , 000-plus the first ever Flyboard World any means, this is definitely people," Heyne said. Championship was held in something you need to try," People don’t need any expe› Doha, Qatar, with 50 profes› Renfro added. "It definitely rience to try flyboarding, and sional flyboarders competing satisfies the urge to do crazy it’s much easier than it looks. from 20countries. things." back from a hike in Glacier National Park, when he talked

Get ready for the Bend Whitewater Park and be in the know before you go. Floaters Channel: For flatwater boats, paddleboards and

inflatables; bepreparedfor gentle turbulence. Whitewater Channel: For experiencedwhitewater usersonly; sorry, no tubes or non-whitewater specific equipment. Flows and conditions will vary in the Deschutes River.

Think safety first - plan your route, wearalife jacket and follow therules. • Be sure to wave as you floaton through with

that big grin onyour face. Visit bendparksandrec.orfj to learn abOutOPening,

access anduse. Like BendWhitewater Park on FaCebook

forconditionsandupdates.

p(~

or ’ e.


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 THE BULLETIN

Scott

D3

Scott Mountainhike

Continued from D1 My journey started from the

campground at Scott Lake, and the trail, which was firm

and tacky and blanketed by small pine needles, climbed gradually through thick for›

Directions:From Sisters, drive 16 miles west on state Highway 242 to the Scott LakeRoad, FS260. Turn right and continue to the trailhead at the road’s end Distance:8 miles Rating:Aerobically strenuous and technically intermediate

est. Benson Lake came into

view about a half-hour into the craggy, rocky peaks of the The trail skirted the edge walk. Cascades to the rolling green of the lava field as the Three Near the lake I could hear slopes of t h e W i l lamette Sisters came back into view. the constant humming of in› Valley. Finally, four hours after be› sects the numerous small After spending 20 min› ginning, I made it back to the lakes in the vicinity make it a utes or so on the summit, I trailhead. The 8-mile trip offered a haven for mosquitoes, but they descended the trail and then are less noticeable in the fall came to a junction with Trail bit of everything lakes, and luckily I remembered to No. 4345. The trail would loop peaks, lava rock and was layer on the bug spray before me back clockwise to Scott just difficult enough to make leaving the trailhead. Lake, where I had started the me somewhat exhausted by p’ -; - =’ Eventually I a r r ived at a hike. the end. junction where a left turn On my way back I passed The Scott Mountain route would lead to Tenas Lakes Hand Lake, or at least where met all of my criteria for the .~r'~s:4’"rt’g-’ +Q5~ ’ W"’"’" ’ ’~ g Wg r 0%s<. just a tenth of a mile down the Hand Lake was supposed to perfect day hike in Central trail. I arrived at the biggest be but on this day appeared as Oregon. Photosby MarkMo rical /The Bulletin of the lakes, a turquoise body only a dry lake bed of dirt and — Reporter: 541-383-0318, Views from the summit of Scott Mountain include the vast lava rock field near McKenzie Pass and of water that reminded me grass. mmorical@bendbulletin.corn Mount Washington, left. of Devils Lake off Cascade Lakes Highway. Several hik› ers were rounding the rocky shoreline of the lake as the C

› .

-

,

-

-

"

:

.›

:

.›

: .

surrounding trees were re›

flected perfectly in the calm water. After heading back to the main trail, the path soon be›

gan to climb steeply up Scott M ountain. I

fo l l owed t h e

switchbacks and soon Mount Washington, Three Fingered Jack and

M o unt J efferson

popped into view through the trees to the northeast. After several more switch›

backs, the trail becoming in› creasingly steep, I finally ap› proached the summit of Scott

Mountain. Long yellow grass covered much of the summit as the trees thinned out, mak›

ing room for sweeping, unob› structed views of the Three Sisters just a few miles to the

southeast. Receding glaciers clung desperately to N o rt h

S i ster

and Middle Sister, and a dust› ing of early September snow sprinkled the tops of all three peaks. Snowless Mount Washing›

f

ton towered over the vast lava

rock field to the northeast. On the clear, cloudless day, even Mount Hood was visible to the

Mn ’

north, just beyond the shoul›

i

der ofMount Jefferson.

h

While views of Cascade peaks abound on many hikes

y

s

in Central Oregon, one aspect that sets Scott Mountain apart

is its ample vistas of the rug› ged, green hills of the western side of the Cascades. The nearly 360-degree pan› orama atop Scott Mountain

revealed the wide variety of terrain in Oregon, from the

ik rl’

One of the Tenas Lakes near McKenzie Pass in the MountWashington Wilderness.

You' ve heard the disclaimer: "Consult a physician before starting an exercise program." That's good advice for Fido, too.

Dog

Lindner said.

Continued from D1

ting wet

My wife was smitten from

the moment she spotted a pic› ture of the I-year-old dog on the website of a rescue orga› nization. After a ream of pa› perwork and phone interviews

(we did this, not him), Largent was jetting west. When I first saw Largent in

action, a white streak blitzing up and down our street, I im› mediately envisioned us tak›

ing long, challenging hikes. And while I was excited to

get going, instead we started with a simple 5-mile stroll in Pack Forest near Eatonville,

Washington. A test hike. He passed, and now we’ re on to something a little tougher.

This, said Puyallup, Wash› ington, veterinary physician Coe Lindner, is a good ap› proach. "You need to bring them along slowly," Lindner Craig Hill /The Tacoma News Tribune sard. Kenzie Hill feeds Largent a bacon strip atop Tatoosh Peak, Washington, with Mount Rainier looming Not only do dogs need to on the horizon. Largent passed a test hike before we took him on bigger and better hikes. get into shape they need to toughen up their feet to handle the rigors of longer and tough› enough for exercise. suitable for dogs. Scrambling and a thermometer can tell "We can say, ’Hey the dog is up rocky slopes can tear up you how much your dog is er trips. Your dog probably loves about 10 pounds overweight their paws. And while you suffering. playing in the outdoors as and is not ready for certain don’t have to look any far› A temperature of 102-103 much as you do, but just like athletic activity," Lindner said. ther than the South Sound’s degreesisnormal for a dog, hiking with your two-legged "We can listen to its heart. We numerous multiuse trails to Lindner said. If the tempera› friends, things can get ugly if can check for arthritis. We find somebody riding a bike ture climbs to 105 or higher, you aren’t prepared. can talk to you about how far while tethered to a dog, Lind› you need to get your dog to the Here are some you plan to go and whether or ner says this is a recipe for nearest vet, he said. recommendations: not your dog can handle that disaster. Dogs transfer heat by pant› "If you need to get some› ing and through their foot distance." Consult a vet place quicker with your dog pads. Walking on a hot sur› You’ ve heard the disclaim› Choose the right location use a (bike trailer)." Lindner face like asphalt or rock could er: "Consult a physician before Bnd spoft sa1d. cause your dog to overheat. starting an exercise program." There are some places you Lindner said look for signs Pack a thermometer That’s good advice for Fido, just can’t go with a dog. that your dog is distressed, too. National parks don’t allow The hiking safety "10 Essen› panting excessively or drool› A visit with the vet can help dogs outside of its parking tials" don’t say anything about ing from its nose and mouth. on many fronts. The vet can lots, and most wildlife refuges a rectal thermometer, but if The dog may also become un› help you compile your emer› also ban pets. But state parks you’ re hiking with your dog steady on its feet. gency kit, talk to you about in Washington and national it’s a must. Check your dog’s gums. If what your dog’s actions mean forests allow dogs. Overheating can be a prob› they are blue, purple or bright and determine if your dog is fit And not all activities are lem when your dog is hiking red, the dog i s overheated,

help protect paws while they Cool the dog down by put› toughen up. But don’t try to ap› but not ice cold›

ply this after the dog hurts its

towels behind its neck and on pads or it will sting, Lindner its paws, groin and armpits. sa1d. Get the dog in the shade and Not all dogs like wearing off of hotsurfaces such as as- coats while they’ re moving. phalt. Give the animal water

If they don’ t, on cold days it’ s

and electrolytes to drink.

good to bring the coat anyway for when the dog isn’t moving. Bright colors are good for both you and the dog during hunt› ing season.

Emergencykit In addition to your own first aid kit, there are certain things

you should carry for your dog. Lindner recommends Steri› Strips, antibiotic ointment and

And a

p e rsonal flotation

device should be a must when heading out on the water,

bandage material in case the Lindner said. "For you and the dog cuts itself. dog. Ask your vet about an anti› histamine to use in case of bee Be prepared stings and an anti-inflamma› In addition to carrying an tory. A squeeze bottle with wa› emergency kit, food and water ter is helpful for cleaning your for your dog (or having them dog’s eyes. carry it themselves. Dogs can A flea and tick collar can carry 25-33percent of their help keep ticks away, but car› body weight), you should rying a tick puller, especially know how your dog is going to eastofthe Cascades,also isa react to your commands. "If you are going to take good idea, Lindner said. And don’t forget the sun› your dog off leash, that’s fine screen. SPF 30 should be ap› but the dog has to be obedi› plied any place where you can ent," Lindner said. "They bet› see skin and on the nose if the

dog has a pink sniffer.

Gear up

ter know to come when you

say ’come.’ If not, that’s when they get lost, fall off the cliff or tangle with a raccoon."

Down jackets, booties and personal floatation devices Start slow aren’t just cute accoutrements, You might be hitting the they can help your dog stay gym to stay in shape during comfortable and safe. the winter, but odds are the "If you can think of it, it’ s dog isn’t doing exercise videos probably out there," Lindner while you are gone. said. Be mindful that your dog There is a plethora of op› needs to get back into shape tions for booties and they’ re when you head back outside in worth exploring for your dog the spring. if you plan to take it hiking, Lindner says to keep walk› Lindner said. Not only do they ing your dog through the win› protect the feet, but they help terso they get some exercise. the pet from getting too hot or It’s good for both of you. too cold. Then when it’s time to hit Lindner sometimes recom› the trails, he said, "you’ re both mends a product called Pad› in good shape and you are go› Tough, essentially a l iquid ing to have the time of your skin for dogs’ pads. This can life."


D4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

UrDOORS CYCLING

E AD

Tosubmit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylifeibendbulletin.corn,541-383-0318.

month; Abby’s Pizza, Redmond;

sunriveranglers.org.

www.cobe.us.

THECENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m.;m eets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.

DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeach m onth at6 p.m.; 50 SW Bond Street, Bend, Suite HIKING 4; 541-306-4509, deschutestuO 6 p.m.; entry feesare$10for ages hotmail.corn; www.deschutes. FULL MOON HIKE:Join a Sunriver 12 to 18 and $20 for adults; course tu.org. Nature Center Naturalist for a guided is a mix of grass, dirt, sand and full moon hike along LakeAspen, pavement; OBRA license is required BEND CASTINGCLUB:Agroup the Deschutes, and through a to race; registration is available at of fly anglers fromaround Central meadow; listen and look for nocturnal www.mbsef.org/login-sign-up; day› Oregon who are trying to improve creatures; registration required; 8-9 of-race registration begins at 3:45 their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday p.m. on Sept.28,0ct.27; $6for p.m.; contact molly'mbsef.org, adults, $4 for kids; kirstinrea'gmail. 541-388-0002, or www.mbsef.org. of each month; location TBA; 541› 306-4509orbendcastingclub@ corn or 541-593-4394. gmail.corn. DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS FISHING + HIKES:Ledby skilled volunteer THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB:7 CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of naturalists, these outings explore New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; each month; Sunriver Homeowners new hiking trails, observe migrating meets on the first Tuesday of each Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www. songbirds, and take in spring MBSEF THRILLACYCLOCROSS SERIES:Wednesday nights through Sept. 30 at the Athletic Club of Bend; variety of categories for ages 12 and older; 30-minute race starts at 5:15 p.m., 45-minute race starts at

wildf lowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.

HUNTING CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION:Meetings are scheduled for 6:30 p.m. on select Wednesdays, including today, Oct. 21, Nov. 18, and Dec. 2; meetings are held at the VFWHall in Redmond; contact Dave Fuller at 541-447-2804. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meetsthesecondWednesday ofeachmonth; King Buffet, Bend;

ohabend.webs.corn. THE OCHOCOCHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall;

541-447-5029. THE REDMOND CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.

and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www.

PADDLING PICKIN’ ANDPADDLIN’. Sept. 19 from 4 to 9 p.m. at Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe in Bend; boat demos from 4 to 7 p.m. and live music from 5 to 9 p.m.; $10 per person, no charge for children 12 and younger; bands include Renegade String Band and Franchot Tone; proceeds support the Bend Whitewater Park; visit www.tumalocreek.corn.

pinemount ainposse.corn. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns;10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www. hrp-sass.corn.

SHOOTING COSSAKIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear

BEHIND THE BIKE CRAZE

cesan

eri e omo em merica

By Natalie Angier

long skirts were a tangling hazardand that corsets compromisedtheir aerobic capacity. Some began wearing split skirts or bloomers and loos› ened tops, while others short›

New York Times News Service

On May 10, 1884, midway through his 48th year, Sam› uel L.

C l emens reluctantly

"confessed to age" by wear› ing glasses for the first time. That sameday,the celebrated

ened their hems.

Bicycles allowed young men

writer better known as Mark Twain sought to reclaim his

and women to tool around the

countryside u n supervised, and relationships between the sexes grew more casual and spontaneous. With a bicycle at her disposal, a young wom›

youth by mounting a bicycle for the first time. Only one of these first tries

succeeded. "The spectacles," Twain later recalled, "stayed

an could also venture forth in

on."

search ofwork. Small wonder that Susan B. Anthony said of cycling,

Bodily contusions notwith› standing, Twain promoted the new sport of cycling with characteristic rhubarb tart› ness. "Get a bicycle," he urged

"I think it has done more to

emancipatewomen than any one thing in the world."

readers. "You will not regret it,

if you live."

The future

r,

Today, bicycles are viewed

Over the next decade, mil›

lions of Americans of all ages, trades and visual acuities would heed the pedaler’s cry.

as a solution to a host of so›

,k

cial ills: air pollution, global warming, obesity, traffic jams.

They would not only live but

According to Statista, an on›

also would learn to stay ma› jestically, propulsively upright, too. They would start cycling clubs, collect cycling para› phernalia, compose cycling songs, silk-screen cycling art, overhaul female fashion

line data repository, 67 million

and rewrite the rules of social

Americans said in 2014 that they had ridden a bike at least

once in the past year, up from 47 million in 2008. Almost 5 percent of A m ericans com›

conduct. depict bicycles and cyclists. Tires and tubing, mass production, The en d -of-the-century highways and gas stations all were influenced by the bicycle. bicycle craze also greased the gears of industrial ge› nius, as manufacturers here "I have a deep question about the bicycle. Was and abroad scrambled to de›

vise new ways to speed up and standardize production, to lighten the bicycle frame without compromising its strength, and to make the ride

the bicycle invented or discovered? It's such a pure concept, it seems like it existed in the

universe even before people thought of it, like the wheel itself, or a prime number." Andy Ruina, professor of mechanical engineering

cushier through the addition

of a radical new invention, the pneumatic tire. The full-bore bicycle fever was brief, and by the early ing stations, and a number of 20th century it had given way pioneers in the auto industry, to fascination with the auto› including Henry Ford and mobile. Yet, as a new exhibit at Charles Duryea, started out as the Smithsonian Institution’s bicycle mechanics. So, too, did National Museum of Ameri›

can History makes clear, the impact of the bicycle on the nation’s industrial, cultural,

turns the rear wheel, while the

steering column rises up from the axle of the front wheel›

all just as they are on today’ s bicycles.

"The pre-story is so import› Uphill battle

ant," said Eric Hintz, a histo› rian with the Smithsonian’s

In a ddition t o a i r - filled of "From the American Sys› rubber tires, we can thank tem to Mass Production: 1800› the bicycle for essential tech› 1932," described the bicycle as nologies like ball bearings, "one of the classic artifacts of

spin at different speeds.

at Cornell University

the Wright brothers.

emotional and even moral Lemelson Center for the Study landscape has been deep and of Invention and Innovation. long-lasting. "You don’t get automobiles un› less you first have bikes." Beyond the bike David Hounshell, the author

originally devised to reduce friction in the bicycle’s axle and steering column; for wire spokes and wire spinning gen› erally; for differential gears that allow connected wheels to

industrial civilization," adding that "it still prevails, and there are billions of them around

the world. It’s a universal technology."

An old bicycle

The evolution of the bicycle

was long, complex and multi› national, and spattered with

squabbles over provenance and patent rights. Early versions like the high wheeler, in which the pedals were attached directly to the large front wheel, were clum› sy, heavy, difficult to ride, easy to topple and expensive. Few beyond rich young men made a sport of them. But with the advent of the crank, sprocket and c h ain

system, small rotational move› ments of the pedals could be translated into large rotations

And where would our air› The bicyde has prideofplace of the rear wheel, and in the planes, tent poles and lawn at the Smithsonian as part of a late 1880s, the safety bicycle furniture be without the metal

larger interactive exhibit called

tubingdeveloped to serve as Object Project, which features the bicycle frame? "The hol› everyday objects we often take low steel tube is a great form," for granted, induding refrig› said Jim Papadopoulos, an as› erators, ready-made dothing sistant teaching professor of and home heating systems. mechanical and industrial en› The Depression-era refrig› gineering at Northeastern Uni› erator on display looks like a versity in Boston. "It’s tremen› kitschy Hollywood prop, and dously structurally efficient, the hulking proto-bike called light and strong, and it came the high wheeler with its into being for the bicycle." 60-inch front wheel and little Bicycles also gave birth to cellular bud of a rear balancing our national highway sys› wheel looks strictly Barnum tem, as cyclists outside major & Bailey. Intriguingly, though, cities grew weary of rutted an early "safety bike" of the col› mud paths and began lob› lection, from 1896, looks almost bying for the construction of contemporary and fit for a spin. paved roads. The car connec› Its wheels are of equal, hip› tion goes further still: Many high size and girdled in natty of the bicycle repair shops white rubber, and its pedals that sprang up to service the are attached at the bottom of wheeling masses were later the seat column to a toothed converted to automobile fill›

mute to work by bike, com› pared with 1 percent in 2000. Bike sharing and hop-on› and-drop-off programs are proliferating in cities here and abroad. In W ashing›

Photos from the National Museum of American History via The New York Times

A new Smithsonian exhibit displays portraits from the 1890s that

crank that turns a chain that

was born

A woman and her bicycle

"I think lt has done more to eman›

cipate women thanany one thing in the world," said Susan B. Anthony, the suffragette.

minds of their own. Though

t he safety bike one of t h e

ton, where the nation’s first

often mistakenly considered

first mass-produced items in history.

bike-sharing program was startedfive years ago, "we just hit 10 million trips," said

inherently unstable, bike s can balancethemselves. "It’ s women called ghost riding," Ruina Top customers: said. "We don’t really under› Among the most exuber› stand why, but all bicycles are ant customers were women, close to stable." who discovered in the bicycle If you push one on level a sense of freedom they had ground at a fast enough clip, it rarely experienced before. "Myself plus the bicycle will just keep going, balancing itself en route just as a bike rid› equaled myself plus the world," er does. When it starts to fall to wrote Frances Willard, a the left, it automatically steers founder of the Women’s Chris› to the left; when it leans right, it tian Temperance Union. self-corrects by turning right. As women took to the activ› Learning to ride a bicycle, ity, they quickly realized that then, may be less a matter of taking charge than of letting go, of suppressing the impulse to overcorrect the bicycle’s in› SUN FoREsT herently stable momentum. By the m i d-1890s, some

300 U.S. companies were churning out well over a mil› lion bicycles a year, making Weekly Arls & Entertainment InSIde

James Sebastian of the Dis› trict of Columbia Department

s Policy, of T ransportation’ Planning and Sustainability Administration.

Sebastian said bicycle crash› es were rising with ridership, which is why he and others are pushing for solutions like ded› icated bike lanes, physically separatedfrom car traffic,so people can bike to work with› out regrets. And live.

WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066

CoNSTRVCTION

~e<"'6 \ DESIGN 1 BUILD 0 REMODEL PArNT $INCS

e03 sw Industrial way, Bend, OR

I58’TREss

MaaanJ

G allery-Be n d 541-330-5084

The Bulletin

THIS WEEKEHD’S ISSUE

safer than the

shake-and-break high rollers, that is, and possibly one of

MODERN

the most perfect machines the

world has ever known. "I have a deep question about the bicycle," said Andy Ruina,aprofessorofm echanical engineering at Cornell University who studies bicycle dynamics. "Was the bicycle

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invented or discovered? It’ s

such a pure concept, it seems like it existed in the universe even before people thought of it, like the wheel itself, or a prime number." The bicycle certainly is among the purest means of transportation. It’s roughly 50 times more energy-efficient than driving and four times more efficient than walking. Bicycles also seem to have

FEEL GOOD

u

EVERY DAY


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 THE BULLETIN

D5

FISHING REPORT

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4

James Fl aherty/ Submitted photo

Isaac Flaherty, 13, took his first ruffed grouse with a little help from Liesl, the pudelpointer.

Hunting Continued from D1 I mentioned it to the lookout

and he pointed at his truck. "See the droppings’? That’ s just from today. The grouse like to roost on the cab."

to the wickiup, they’d graduate the hand. to bigger game deer and elk. When James and I were 30 Isaac’s first bird came easy. yards down the trail we heard We arrived in late afternoon and had time for a quick hunt

the bird fl y

with this one, we heard them beat their way up into trees. grouse with slings and stones When I was ready to walk

and bows and arrows. Once away, Isaac said he’d hang they had success and h ad back. He figured two in the brought some tasty birds back bush might be worth one in

FLY-TYING CORNER

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Coal Car, courtesy Confluence Fly Shop. The Lower Deschutes wastamed bythe railroad and even today, those twin shining rails define the canyon. TheCoal Car is one of several patterns namedafter railroad components. With a strong black profile, this pattern is a great choice either morning or evening whenthe water is low andthe temps are reasonable. Throw it on afloating line or a sink-tip. Look for water that moves atabout walking speed. Start at the top of the run, cast quartering downstream, then throw an upstream mendand hold the rod high, slowing the fly’s down› stream swing. At the grab, let the fish turn with it then raise the tip to set the hook. It’ ll run like a train.

Hitch the CoalCar on aNo. 6 steelhead hook. For thetail, use black calf tail. Tie in gold oval for the ribbing. Build the rear of the body with one turn of fine orangedubbing andoneturn of fine pink dubbing. Finish the body with black mohair dubbing, then evenly spacethe ribbing. For the wing, use black calf hair and three strands of black crinkle mylar. Finish with a spray of black soft hackle at the throat. — Gary Lewis, for The Bulletin PAULINA LAKE: Anglers report fair fishing for trout. Unmarked rainbow trout must be released. PINE HOLLOW RESERVOIR: Water levels are dropping considerably due to drought conditions, and irrigation demands. We have been getting reports that many of the trout have copepods, which are tiny parasites on their bodies and gills. These are not harmful to humansandthe lesionscan be removed, but the meat should be thoroughly cooked. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR: The water level is low. All boat ramps at the Reservoir are now closed. Crappie and smallmouth bass opportunities are excellent. ROCK CREEKRESERVOIR: Anglers

should be prepared that low water conditions due to irrigation withdrawals will limit success in Rock Creek reservoir. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Open to fishing all year. Limit is two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to juvenile anglers17-years-old and younger. WALTONLAKE:Anglers will have the most success fishing early in the morning when the temperatures are cooler. As a reminder, the bag limit includes only one trout over 20 inches per day. WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Closed upstream of ODFWmarkers located near West South Twin boat ramp.

a n d h eard the

sound of the shotgun as Isaac made a difficult shot through

through a stand of alder at the head of a spring. Liesl, my the trees. He wa s p r oving young pudelpointer, locked up himself. The boy and the dog They must have been blue as soon as she approached the made the retrieve together. grouse. Ruffeds, in my expe› tree line. Isaac spotted the bird That evening, Isaac missed rience, are usually found a bit and walked it up and pointed a difficult going-away shot on lower, down in the canyons. his Remington 870. When the a blue grouse. By the time we’d talked to gun spoke, the dog dashed in Stiff and sore from walk› the lookout, both Isaac and I and Isaac had his first grouse. ing all day, we worked our had three grouse apiece for It was the first grouse for the way back to the cabin where I the day. This was the 13-year› pudelpointer as well. cooked seven birds over a pro› old’s first grouse hunt and it I had my chance to shoot a pane stove. I wrapped three of was shaping up to be one to ruffed grouse over her in the the breasts in thin sliced ham, remember. morning. There were at least folded a r ound m o z zarella Grouse huntsare not in- three in the covey and the big› cheese. significant in my l ife. The gest one blew out of a patch of The rest of the grouse we first time Dad allowed me berries. The bird crashed to a ate the way nature provided to tag along on a hunt, it was load of No. 7-1/2s at 35 yards. them, a taste Imna’s people for grouse, and I was 3. The Liesl and I waded in to the knew well, up in those quiet first game I ever cooked was head-high bushes and this time mountains in th e n ortheast grouse. I found the bird before she did. corner of Oregon. It must have been this way There were two other birds — Gary Lewis is the host of in Imna’s time. The kids in the tribe would have hunted

ANTELOPEFLAT RESERVOIR: The water remains dirty and low. Sampling indicated many trout available in the reservoir, but fishing effort remains low. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: Anglers report fair fishing for rainbow trout. Trout daily catch limit may include one rainbow trout over 16 inches and one non-fin› clipped (unmarked) rainbow trout. CRESCENTLAKE:Anglers report fair fishing for lake trout. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM:Fishing for trout and whitefish has been good. Fish that are being released should not be removed from the water. CULTUSLAKE:Anglers report fair fishing for lake trout. EAST LAKE:Anglers report good fishing for kokanee and trout. Unmarked rainbow trout must be released. FALL RIVER:River was recently stocked with rainbow trout. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. HOOD RIVER:Steelhead fishing on the Hood will be slow through the summer and early fall. Anglers can expect a few fish in November and December. HOSMERLAKE:Anglers report good fishing for all trout species. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK:Fishing for 11-to 13-inch kokanee has been excellent. Fish are beginning to concentrate in the upper end of the Metolius Arm. LAURANCELAKE:Should provide excellent opportunities, anglers fishing early in the morning will find best success. LOST LAKE:Lost Lake offers great fishing at one of Oregon’s most scenic lakes. METOLIUS RIVER:Special fishing regulations apply to the Metolius River. All tributaries except Abbot, Lake and Spring Creeks are closed to fishing. Opportunities for challenging catch-and-release fly-fishing for native redband trout and bull trout in a pristine mountain stream are excellent. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day with an 8-inch minimum length. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: The water level is low. The boat ramp is closed. ODELL LAKE:Closed to fishing for bull trout and any incidental caught bull trout must be released unharmed. All tributaries to Odell Lake are closed to fishing.

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Weekly Arts 5 Entertainment Fridays In TheBulletin

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"Frontier Unlimited TV" and author of "John Nosier — Going Ballistic," "Fishing Mount Hood Country," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at

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Albacore fishingwith a teenagegirl By Pat Wray For the Corvallis Gazette-Times

"Your arms can't hurt

Take a pitching charter boat deck on a rough sea with 8-foot

yet. They can hurt at the end of the day.

swells, 16 knots of wind and

plenty of salt spray, add a bit of fish slime and blood on the deck, hook a 25-pound alba› core tuna and put the attached rod in the hands of a 15-year› old girl on her first ocean fish› ing trip. Then stand by for fun.

Now they are just a

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Once she adjusted to the rhythm of fighting a powerful fish, Maddy brought the alba› core in like a pro and it was soon gaffedand bled and put

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on ice. With that experience

little tired. Think about

behind her she was able to

how good this fish is going to taste."

the drama of nearly pitching

ps,,THIS +O~NIRO ~.„<, I ]s ypUg S ’

bring in the next tuna without over the stern.

All too soon our fishing day was over and we retired to the

good this fish is going to taste. cabin for the two-hour run Seared on the outside and red back to the bay. The young like work. My first job was to on the inside, with " deckhand soon joined us. "Papa, please. I’m a l i ttle "Is this the first time you stop the youngster from con› tinuing her sternward slide seasick." and your father have fished for "OK, OK. Pull up and reel tuna?" he asked her, ensuring over the transom and into the ocean. This I accomplished down. a hefty tip. "Yes," Maddy answered quite well, thank you, despite Madison is my oldest grand› her complaints about hair loss child and as such she’s had the with a grimace, but he’s not and pain. I may have pulled opportunity to accompany me my father. He’s my grand› out a few strands of hair while on many outdoor excursions, a father. In fact, he’s my great grabbing for her coat collar singular honor, as I explained grandfather." but there was still plenty left to her earlier that morning as Her emphasis on the word for her to comb. She just gripes we crossed the bar at Newport. great left no doubt that she "You’ ve been very lucky, w as emphasizing my a d› because we’ re related. "Papa, that hurt!" Madison," I said. "You’ ve been vanced age and not my rela› "Pay attention to the fish, camping,chukar hunting,dog tive worth. "And this," I said, not to be Madison. Pull up and reel training including snake aver› down. sion, deer hunting, goose hunt› outdone, "is my marginally "Is my head bleeding?" ing, trout fishing, bass fishing, acceptable g r anddaughter. "Is that what all th e r ed crawdadding, crabbing, ca› My occasionally satisfactory, stuff is? No, Maddy, it’s not noeing and now, albacore tuna sophomore-in-high-school bleeding. Now, focus. You are fishing." granddaughter." "I think it is more accurate hooked up to one of the finest Madison just smiled. She game fish in the world!" to say that I have been subject› knows better. "I am focused. My arms ed to those things with you," "Wow!" the deckhand said, hurt. This fish is strong!" she said. still addressing Madison. "I "Your arms can’t hurt yet. "Ha ha!" I said, which is my thought you were in college." They can hurt at the end of go-to phrase when I can’t real› And just like that, in one the day. Now they are just a ly think of anything smart to fell swoop, his tip all but little tired. Think about how say. disappeared. To be honest, it didn’t seem like fun at first. It seemed a lot

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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

’ ou’re ermina e ’

’ ou’re ire ’?

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports Sp.m.on2,9, "The Middle"

TV SPOTLIGHT By Mary McNamara

Meet the new host of NBC’s "Celebrity

Los Angeles Times

Apprentice":

Maybe Arnold Schwarz› enegger is going to run for

Arnold

Schwarzeneg› ger, movie

president after all.

In the wake of Monday’s an›

star and two-term

nouncement that the film star/

bodybuilder/serial womaniz› er/former governor of Califor› nia would be replacing Don›

governor. Invision I The Associated Press

ald Trump as the host of "The Celebrity Apprentice," Tt/vitter

all but imploded with potential replacements for the show’s

tagline of dismissal. Trump’s "You’ re fired!" was re-imagined as "Hasta la vista,

baby" or "You won’t be back."

As fun as it was to salute

NBC for finding an even-larg› er-than-life-and-twice-as-or› and narcissistic attempt to re› ange replacement for Trump, gain his place in the spotlight. the political symmetry was But still he thought he could too alarming to overlook. be president! And perhaps he A s r e c ently as 201 3 , could have, if only he hadn’ t Schwarzenegger spoke open› been born in Austria. The ly about his presidential am› Constitution requires the pres›

Not just running, but lead›

but is undone after a live mi› Adkins, Arsenio Hall, John crophone allows his followers Rich and Leeza Gibbons. "I am thrilled to bring my ex› to hear what he really thinks about them. perience to the boardroom and Ronald Reagan was the first to continue to raise millions for professional actor to become charity," Schwarzenegger said president, and the ability to in a statement. "Arnold play well on television has had Schwarzeneg› a huge impact on every presi› ger is the epitome of a global dent since John E Kennedy. brand in entertainment and Trump’s 2016 presidential business, and his accomplish› campaign swung the hammer ments in the political arena at whatever wall r emained speak for themselves," Paul between fame and national Telegdy, president of alterna› leadership, and by naming tive and late night program› Schwarzenegger as his re› ming at NBC Entertainment, placement, NBC kicks away said in the statement. any remaining rubble. Mr. Universe can become an "The Celebrity Apprentice" action movie star and then the returns to the network for the governor of California. The 2016 television season. former governor of California Trump made the show a can then wind up the host of a success, with first regular reality program. A New York folks and then celebrities real estate scion can go from competing in business-related being a symbol of crass com› tasks. In seven seasons, NBC mercialism to one of the most said "The Celebrity Appren› famous brands in the country tice" has helped raise more and the host of a reality tele› than $15 million for charity. vision program. The host of a In June, NBC said it was reality television program can ending its business relation› then run for president. ship with Trump, citing "recent But only if he is a natu› derogatory statements" about ral born citizen. That wall immigrants during a speech still stands, so far. But if announcinghiscampaign as a Schwarzenegger kills in the GOP presidential candidate. ratings, who knows? The Con› In "Celebrity Apprentice," stitution was written on paper, well-known contestants com› and who reads anything on pete to win money for a char› paper anymore?

ing in many polls. The borders between ce› lebrity and politics have al› ways been porous John Adams complained about the image-driven popularity bitions, even in the wake of a ident be a natural born citizen, of George Washington and less-than-stellar term as gov› which was, if you remember, Thomas Jefferson before there ernor, many charges of sexual quite a thing with Trump as even was a presidency and misconduct and the revelation well. television has made it even that he was the father of his Instead, Schwarzeneg ger more so. former housekeeper’s child› will become the next best Andy Griffith, who stood for a secret he had kept from his thing: a TV host, replacing a good old American values as wife, Maria Shriver. man who, though also beset much as any one person ever The c o u pl e se p arat›over the years by personal has, made his film debut play› ed in 2 0 11; a y e a r l a t er, scandal and a nasty habit of ing a manipulative but charm› Schwarzeneg ger’s memoir denigrating women, is unen› ing drifter who becomes a ity of their choice. Past win› "Total Recall" was universally cumbered by issues of citizen› television host. He then uses ners include Joan Rivers, Piers panned for being an oblivious ry and running for president. the job to gain political power, Morgan, Bret Michaels, Trace

en ois in oursocia s is, racticein ee ma es erect Dear Abby:I’m 13 years old, and

to be the kind of person others find face, I have gotten close to him as attractive, interesting and worth well. knowing. His relationship with Mom end› I have a lot of friends at school, but Achieving it isn’t always easy ed badly. They were very young, of course they’ re not popular either. because social skills don’t come and he takes all the blame. Mom I want to know how I can make my life easier and not be as shy as I am. I want to still have those friends,

naturally to everyone. My booklet

but I’d like to be able strike up con› "How to Be Popular" contains tips versations with other on how to approach people. When I try, others, and what to I get nervous and say and NOT say OPER chicken out before I when trying to make can get a word out. I want to improve

ABBY

my communication skillsand come across as more

friendly and natural. My aunt told me you have abooklet that can help. If you do, how do I get one? —Nicole from Nevada Dear Nicole:Everybody wants to be well-liked, accepted, feel need› ed, appreciated and of course, loved. It’s essential to a person’ s self-esteem to know other people

c onversation.

You

can order one by sending your name and address, plus check or money order for $7 (U.S. funds), to Dear Abby Popularity Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.

Shipping and handling are includ› ed in the price. When you get it, don’ t just read it once. Keep it on hand for reference because it con› tains many helpful suggestions for polishing social skills which, like any other skills, takes time, ef›

has always said that if I have a rela› tionship with Frank, she wants no

part of it. After I told her I have been talking to him for two years, she became upset and has been short with me and my wife ever since. I want to continue to develop

what I have with my biological fa› ther, but I’m not sure how to handle

Mom if she’s going to be so hurt and upset over it. Can you advise? —Andy in Georgia Dear Andy: Tell your mother you have noticed a change in her behavior and feel she is punish› ing you for having an interest in knowing your biological father. If that’s the case, in the future do not discuss anything about Frank with her sinceshe has made clear that

think they’ re worth having as a friend. fort and practice. she doesn’t want to hear it. If you think you’ re alone in be› Dear Abby:I have recently be› If you haven’t discussed this with ing shy, let me assure you you have gun a relationship with my biologi› your stepfather, please consider lots of company. No one emerges cal father, "Frank," after not seeing enlisting his help because he may from the womb knowing how to him since I was 4. My mother and be able to explain your feelings to be social. It’s a skill that has to be stepfather raised me, and I am very your mother better than you can. developed. Like you, many others close to them. But after talking to — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.corn could use a little coaching on how

Frank and meeting him face to

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNES› DAY, SEPT.16, 2015:Thisyearyou discover thatyourmoods canchange rather quickly. The source of your emo› tional swings tends to be money-related. You might have decided that you want to build a stronger financial base. In the next two years, you will see the rewards of this goal. If you are single, you could

meet someone Starsshow the kind sensational.To› ofdsyyon'0have gether, you'llmake ** * * * D ynamic a great pair. If you ** * * p ositive are attached, the ** * Average two of you often ** So-so react strongly to each other. If * Difficult your sweetie can’ t handle your mood swings, your changeability in the next12 months will be a source of trouble. SCOR› PIO tends to be a mystery.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

lem.Yourschedule becomes busierand busier. Be ready for a pleasant diversion or

some interference,depending onyour out› look. Tonight: Squeeze in someexercise.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * Extend yourself, and be open to a different approach, especially regarding a domestic matter. You will be the one in

charge whohasthe final say onwhat goes on in your home. Relaxing your boundar› ies might be difficult. Tonight: Add some spice to the mix.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * You might not realize that you often come off as pushy.Today,someone could start backing away because of what he or she perceives your attitude to be. A con› ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * * You could be dragging far more versation is likely to be melodramatic later in the day. Tonight: Have a long-overdue than you realize. Motivate yourself by working on a project that has been on the talk with a family member. back burner. Be willing to ask a partner to VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) pitchinand helpyou.You havedoneplen- ** * * You might be at the point of ty of favors for this person in the past. changing direction, but try to hang in Tonight: Chill out at home. there a little while longer. With Jupiter, the TAURUS (April 20-May20) planet of luck, in your sign, there could be ** * If you are angry with someone, do a sudden shift in what is going on. Com› yourself a favor and opt for a discussion munication brings better results in the rather than holding in your feelings and afternoon. Tonight: Say what you feel. exploding. You might be surprised how LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oot.22) much can be handled calmly in this situa› ** * * You could become the office tion. Tonight: Let someone explain where cheerleader this morning, as you seem he or she is coming from. to express so much positive energy and GEMINI (May 21-June 20) enthusiasm. Be aware of the costs of ** * * Clear the air in a sensitive way. choices you make in the afternoon. Listen You will be surprised by what you can ac› to what is being said, but clarify where complish once you haveaired out a prob› you stand. Tonight: Make it your treat.

or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

— The Associated Press and Bloomberg News contributed to this report.

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0 and /MAX movies • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. t

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Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ANT-MAN (PG-l3) 12:l5, 3, 6:05, 9:20 • DOCTOR WHO 3-0:DARK WATER/DEATH INHEAVEN (No MPAArating) 7:30 • UN GALLOCON MUCHOS HUEVOS (PG-13)1:15,3:45, 6:35, 9:20 • THE GIFT (R) 3:35, 6:20, 9:10 • INSIDE OUT (PG)12:40 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) l2:15, 9:45 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-0 (PG-13) 3:15, 6:50 • MAD MAX: URY F ROAD IMAX3-0 (R)1,4,7:30,10:20 • THE MANFROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)1:05,3:50,6:35, 9:25 • MINIONS (PG) 12:15, 2:35 • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROGUENATION(PG-13) I2:35,3:40,7:25, IO:30 • NO ESCAPE (R) 12:50, 3:25, 7:35, 10:10 • THE PERFECT GUY(PG-13) 12:30, 3:05, 7:15, 9:45 • RICKI AND THEFLASH (PG-13) 6:25, 9:15 • STRAIGHT OUTTACOMPTON(R) 12:05, 12:10, 3:15, 3:20, 6:30, 7:20, 9:50, 10:35 • TRAINWRECK (R) 12:55, 3:55, 10:40 • THE TRANSPORTER REFUELED(PG-13) 12:20, 2:45, 5:15, 8, 10:25 • THE VISIT(PG-13)noon, 2:30, 7, 9:30 • A WALKINTHEW OODS (R)12:05,3:20,7:20,10:35 • WAR ROOM (PG)12:45,3:30,6:45,9:40 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THE END OFTHETOUR(R)6 • MERU (R) 8:30

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * You might be baffled by a boss’ response to you. Clearly, this person has an issue w ithsomethingyou havedone. In a discussion with him or her, make an attempt to clear the air without getting personal. Neutralize any negativity. To› night: Join a friend.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You will be on top of a project and have the perspective needed to bring it to fruition. How you see apersonal matter could change after a conversation. Please confirm what you have heard before react› ing. In the long run, verifying is the smart thing to do. Tonight: A force to behold.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * You might be able to visualize a better interaction with someone who is key to your life. Sometimes you get in a tangle with this person. Neither of you is comfortable with the situation. Have this discussion in a good moment. Tonight: Say "yes" to a fun invitation. ' King Features Syndicate

making

her fear it will be memorable for all the wrong reasons in "The Graduate." Frankie and Mike (Patricia Heaton, Neil Flynn) are

tom over theprospect of letting

Brick (Atticus Shaffer) skip a grade and go right on to high school. Axl (Charlie McDermott) is worried by his girlfriend’s so›

cial-media posts.

8 p.m. on10, "MasterChef"› There’sa whole lot of cooking going on in the season’s two›

hourconclusion,"Team Gordon Ramsay/TheFinale."Thethree finalists get assistance from others in preparing a meal for 30 guests who have much more than a passing culinary knowl› edge. Then, the two remaining contestants will be tasked with

prepping athree-course meal›

and the person who impresses Gordon Ramsay, Graham Elliot and Christina Tosi the most will win $250,000 and more. 8:30 p.m. on 2, 9, "The Gold›

bergs" Erica’s (Hayley

Orrantia) imminent departure

for a summerprogram at anarts school draws different reactions from her parents in "Goldbergs Feel Hard." An overly effusive Beverly (Wendi M cLendon-Cov-

ey) wants to giveher abig going-away party, while Murray (Jeff Garlin) struggles with the more basic aim of sharing his feelings with Erica. Barry (Troy Gentile) wants to be the school mascot. Sean Giambrone also stars. 9 p.m. on 2, 9, "Modern Fam› ily" Phil (Ty Burrell) is both absent and not from Alex’s (Ariel Winter) graduation party in "American Skyper." He’s stuck in Seattle on business, so he Skypes into the festivities. Among the things he may miss by not being there physically: Jay’s (Ed O’Neill) discomfort over a relative of Gloria’s (Sofia Vergara) who stays too long; and

Mitch (JesseTyler Ferguson) trying to hide job news from Cam (Eric Stonestreet). Horatio Sanz guest stars. 10 p.m. on 2, 9, "Nashville"› Juliette’s(Hayden Panettiere) total focus on completing her album has personal conse› quences, particularly where Avery (Jonathan Jackson) is

concerned, in "BeforeYouGo

Make Sure You Know." Series creator Gallic Khouri co-wrote and directed the tale. O Zap2it

• DOPE (R) 9 • FANTASTIC FOUR(PG-l3) 6 • SHAUN THESHEEP MOVIE (PG)2:30 • Younger than 21 may attend at/ screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.

** * You might wonder why you have experienced such extremes lately. You seem to go from wanting to cocoon at home to feeling ready for nearly anything. Do not get into someone else’s conflict, even if you are vested in the outcome. Tonight: Whatever suits your fancy. ** * You could be in a situation where you would prefer to share more of what is happening within you. Do this in the morn› ing, as others are likely to be more recep› tive then. All you need to do is observe and listen. Cut off someone who is being sarcastic. Tonight: Take apersonal night.

unforeseenhurdles

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

Sue’s (EdenSher) biggest

day as a student is fraught with

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • INSIDE OUT (PG)3:45 • THE MANFROM U.N.C.L.E.(PG-13)8:I5 • NO ESCAPE (R) 4,6:15, 8:30 • SHAUN THESHEEP MOVIE(PG)6 • STRAIGHTOUTTA COMPTON (R)5:15,8:30 • THE TRANSPORTER REFUELED(PG-13) 3:30, 5:45, 8 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • BEST OF ENEMIES(R) 6:30 • MERU (R) 6:45 • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROGUENATION(PG-13) 6 • MR. HOLMES (PG) 6:15 Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • AMERICAN ULTRA(R) 4:50, 7:05 • NO ESCAPE (R) 4:45, 7:15 • STRAIGHTOUTTA COMPTON (R)3:25,6:30 • THE TRANSPORTER REFUELED(PG-13) 5:05, 7:20 • WAR ROOM (PG)4:15, 7

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • RICKI AND THEFLASH (PG-l3) 6:30 • SHAUN THE SHEEPMOVIE (Upstairs PG) 6:15 • The upstairsscreening room has limited accessibility.

O

Find a week’sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday’s 0 GO! Magazine

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Place, cancel or extend an ad

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Pets & Supplies

Pets 8 Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Furniture 8 Appliances

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Computers

Fuel & Wood

Hay, Grain 8 Feed

German Shorthair The Bulletin recom› pups AKC Champ mends extra caution line, fern. $800; males when purc h as› $700. 541-306-9957 ing products or ser› vices from out of the Labrador pups AKC, area. Sending cash, yellow, black, $300 checks, or credit in› -$400. 541-954-1727. f ormation may b e subjected to fraud. Maremma guard dog purebred, $350 For more i nforma› pup, tion about an adver› 541-546-6171 tiser, you may call Pit puppies, 5 F, blue the O regon State and red on site, first Attorney General’ s ready Sept. Office C o n sumer shots, 1 9th. $ 30 0 e a ch. Protection hotline at 541-410-0209 1-877-877-9392.

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r e › All Year Dependable Looking for your quires computer ad› Firewood: dry next employee? vertisers with multiple Lodgepole split del ad schedules or those 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . Place a Bulletin selling multiple sys› Multi-cord discounts! help wanted ad tems/ software, to dis› cash, check, Visa, MC today and close the name of the 541-420-3484, Bend reach over 202 business or the term 60,000 readers "dealer" in their ads. Ponderosa pine fire› Want to Buy or Rent each week. Private party advertis› wood split, $160 or trade. 541-419-1871 Your classified ad ers are defined as Cash dressers, table & will also those who sell one chairs, dead washers. 269 appear on computer. 541-420-5640 bendbulletin.corn Gardening Supplies 260 which currently & Equipment USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI receives over Misc. Items 1.5 million page Door-to-door selling with Buying Diamonds BarkTurfSoil.corn views every fast results! It’s the easiest month at no Queensland Heelers /Gold for Cash way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Standard 8 Mini, $150 Saxon’s Fine Jewelers PROMPT DELIVERY extra cost. 503-781-5265 > Serving The Bulletin > & up. 541-280-1537 541-389-6655 Bulletin Cencref Oregon since l903 541D89-9663 The Bulletin Classified www.rig htwayranch.wor Classifieds 2 nice canaries w/cage, BUYING 541-385-5809 dpress.corn Howa 15 0 0 30 0 Lionel/American Flyer Get Results! $350 value, sell for 211 Win. Mag. New, never For newspaper Call 541-385-5809 trains, accessories. Wanted: $Cash paid for $95. 541-420-2220 Springer Spaniels AKC Children’s Items fired. W ood stock, delivery, call the 541-408-2191. or place your ad J vintage costume jew› s. 1 male, 1 fern. $850 stainless barrel and Circulation Dept. at on-line at elry. Top dollar paid for 541-665-2012 Dollhouse Ryan’s solid action. Great deer or BUYING & SE L LING 541-385-5800 bendbulletin.corn Gold/Silver. I buy by the All gold jewelry, silver wood, 3 story, fully elk gun , b a rgain To place an ad, call Yorkie AKC pups, 3M, Estate, Honest Artist COFFEE TABLE. furn. with 2 doll fami› priced-wife says sell and gold coins, bars, 541-385-5809 adorable, tiny, UDT Elizabeth,541-633-7006 rounds, wedding sets, nice wood, $400 lies. $100; Radio Flyer :-) $6 5 0 . Call class or email shots, health guar., pics, 341 rings, sterling sil› 805-720-3515 w agon w it h w o o d classified@bendbulletin.cern 541-389-3694, leave ver, coin collect, vin› 205 Dachshundsminilong- $750/up. 541-777-7743 Horses & Equipment bottom and remov› message. tage watches, dental The Bulletin Items for Free haired AKC. $500 & up able sides, exc. cond., 210 gold. Bill Fl e ming, rervrngCentral Oregon sinceSggg 541-598-741 7 $25 541-382-3900 John Wayne com› 541-382-9419. Furniture & Appliances Deere Chihuahua/Pom Notice to our memorative holster 212 270 Like new Christmas mix, wellness exam + and gun belt set, valued readers! Antiques & decorations, call for Lost & Found f irst s h ots, $ 3 5 0. Model JW81, unit „ prices. 541-408-0846 541-550-0933 Collectibles DINETTE -seats 6, 711 of only 3,000. For newspaper good condition. $400 Oneida King C e dricFOUND at W e ndy’sH orse T r ailer 1 6 ’ New in box w/ all delivery questions, Deposit c a n s/bottles 805-720-3515 The Bulletin reserves sterling silverware, 30 North on Sept. 7th, a Gooseneck 1 9 8 9 orig. printed mate› please call the needed for local all the right to publish all p ieces. $1400 . ring w/ 1 small stone. dual axle donated to rial incl. certificate Circulation Dept. volunteer, non-profit Dining room set, ebony ads from The Bulletin signed by Michael Call to iden t ify. 541-475-4618 Equine Ou t r each. at 541-385-5800 cat rescue. Donate: 3-piece hardwood wall table ha s b e veled newspaper onto The Wayne. Perfect con› 541-771-2345 ’I 2,000 GVW, 7X16, Jake’s Diner, Hwy 20 unit, 91 nLx79nH, glass glass cover, 36" high, Bulletin Internet web› dition. $ 695 . FOUND: One rosary, 23’ overall length, 6 To place an ad, call Bend; Petco, Red› shelves, $400 obo. x41n widex57" long. site. 541-420-5184 outside Michelle’s on 1/2’ tall, slider/swing 541-385-5809 mond; Smith Sign, 541-526-1879 shelf under table for American Ln. Call to rear door, tack shelf, or email 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; storage o r kn i ck› The Bulletin ID. 541-383-9056 mid-swing door, pad› classified @bend› serving Central Oregon sincefgsa Para Ord P-14-45 w/3 CRAFT in T u malo. FIND ITlg knacks 4 upholstered ded walls with new PT bulletin.corn clips, $700. AMT 45 C an pick u p Ig . stools. Almost new, Wonderful BLTY (Tg ba s e ball Stainless, $500. Colt BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS deck. $$3,995 Call Classical p aid $900 sell f o r card SELL IT! colle c tion! A naconda 44 M a g Beautiful The Bulletin amounts. Search the area’s most Gary 541-480-6130 541-389-8420. Persian rug from ServingCentralOregon since Sgie $450. 541-953-9256 1978-91. Topps, full Stainless, $2200. Colt The Bulletin Classifieds comprehensive listing of www.craftcats.org Original Karastan sets, + many other Woodman Match Tar› collection, 9’x5.9", classified advertising... 383 sets, individual cards et 3rd Series 22 LR, real estate to automotive, exc. condition. of Mantel/Mays, Ar› Produce & Food merchandise to sporting 400. Uberti 4 5 LC A $2000 value, ron + o t her stars. Single Action, $250. goods. Bulletin Classifieds selling for $1000 $950. Call S&W 357 Mag, mod appear every day in the 541-788-4229 541-729-1677 or 28-2, $250. InterArms FRESH print or on line. Albacore Tuna and Frigidaire- Gallery Se› email Virginian Dragoon 44 Call 541-385-5809 Chinook Salmon ries gl ass-t op self dbwassom I g mail.corn. Mag stainless, $300. Stow Master 5000 by www.bendbulletin.corn Weekly delivery cleaning range, like Colt 1911 45 eSpirit of Tow Master. $350. 215 straight from the new $300. America" Special Edi› Generator exhaust The Bulletin ServsngCentral Oregon smceisle boat! Call to order Coins & Stamps Whirlpool refrigerator, tion by America Re› system, Gen Tun, 541-961-5683 282 284 286 cubed or crushed ice members, issued for with case $75 Lost: Aug. 8 from Em› Sales Northwest Bend Sales Southwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend and water in the door, Private collector buying Sept. 11 Terrorist At› 503-936-1778 pire near OB Riley like new, $5 50 . In postagestamp albums & t ack „ 107 o f 91 1 peach-faced Lovebird, ORCHARDS Estate size garage & DESCHUTES RIVER Moving Sale, 1188 NE Madras, please call collections, world-wide m ade, $3200 . 261 looks like small parrot, THOMAS and U.S. 573-286-4343 Kimberly,Oregon shop sale! Gal pals COMMUNITY SALE! 27th St., „ 28, Sat., 541-419-8035 541-389-6024 green body, answers Medical Equipment (local, cell phone). thinning decades of Friday & S a turday, 8-3. Wide variety of G ENERATE to "Wednesday". U-PICK SOM E WANTED: Collector collections & a c cu› 18th & 19th, 10 AM-4 items in good cond. 541-385-8367 Asian pears; Bartlett 241 Pronto Sure-Step elec› EXCITEMENT in your seeks high quality fish› mulation. Don’t miss PM. Furniture, arts, ing items & upscale fly tric scooter, Irg, w/ LOST RC AIRPLANE pears; Gala apples; Bicycles & this sale! 18th 8 19th, misc. State Rec. road Sale Saturday the 19th neighborhood! Plan a Golden Delicious garage sale and don’ t rods. 541-678-5753, or fold up car carrier. White/Blue Near Miller 8 -4. 6 4 3 8 0 Hig h I F oster Rd., follow from 8:00-3:00 Accessories $300. 541-548-5238 apples; Nectarines. forget to advertise in 503-351-2746 Elem. 541-408-4949 Mowing Ln., off Tu› the signs. 21425 Bradetich Loop READY-PICKED: 263 malo Res. Hwy. An› Raleigh 26" w omens Winchester 70XTR 338 cases, tools, golf classified! Honey Crisp apples, 18 & 19, 8-3, no Gun 541-385-5809. tiques 8 collectibles, Sep. clubs, patio set, etc. mtn bike, $75. exc, Win Mag w/sling & Tools Jona-Gold apples, birds! M ajor furniture, household, early cond. 541-385-8049 scope, $700. Win› Brooks prunes. Find exactly what REMEllllBER:If you exercise equip., bikes, downsizing. A multi› chester 19 0 22LR Argon tank with of items large Tour Easy recumbent semi w/scope, $130. have lost an animal, BRING CONTAINERS! Bose sound system, tude you are looking for in the regulator, $40. don’t forget to check Open 7 days a week, b ike, s i z e med . Remington Mod 8 25 i rrigation pipe s , and small! Antiques, Sales Southeast Bend 541-310-0343 horse tack, 8 a.m.to 6 p.m.only $ 2,500, f a i nng & Cal, $1000. Ru ger The Humane Society washing machine, lots gardening, mesh seat. M77 stainless 7 MM 541-934-2870. Bend more misc.! Come rugs. 19598 P o nd 9-18 & 19, 9AM, 1654 SE Ramsay, N. off of Jenn-Aire glasstop slide 541-536-7619 541-382-3537 yyeare at the Bend a nd set u p yo u r Meadow Ave., Bend w /sling 8 sco p e , 15th: 2-party; hunting range/self clean oven, Redmond house! See pictures Farmer'sMarket 286 $500. Mossberg 500 242 camp items, mtl beds, $50. 541-389-0936. 541-923-0882 on craigslist. on Wednesdays. 12 gauge, $250. Win› Sales Northeast Bend etc; men’s golf shirts, Exercise Equipment Madras Visit us on Facebook chester Ranger 120 child car seats, toys, Maytag 5 cycle washer, 541-475-6889 for updates! 12 g a uge, $ 1 5 0. MARK V SHOP› computer cha i rs, exc. condition, 4 yrs, Elliptical, Pro-Form Prineville 541-389-6024 ** FREE ** $200; Kenmore huge SMITH Model 510 electronics, and more. 541-447-71 78 500F, $125. Find It in capacity dryer, $100; bandsaw, scrollsaw, FIND YOUR FUTURE Garage Sale Kit 949-584-2695 or Craft Cats 247 b oth f or $250 . The Bulletin Classifieds! Place an ad in The strip sander, thick› 541-389-8420 HOME INTHE BULLETIN 290 Sporting Goods 541-595-2294 ness planer, dust col› 541-385-5809 245 B ulletin fo r yo u r Sales Redmond Area - Misc. lector, support table, Your future is just apage sale and receive a Golf Equipment lathe chisel set, ring› away. Whetheryou’re looking G arage Sale K i t Moving Sale: 18th & 1970 Pool table, like master, wall mount› for a hat or aplace to hangit, FREE! CHECK YOUR AD 19th, 9-4. 3741 SW ing brackets for stor› new. Balls and 4 cue The Bulletin Classified is 30th Ct. , S u mmer MOVING SALE sticks included. Slate a ge, s et-up a n d your best source. KIT INCLUDES: Creek Sub. C a nal operation m a nuals. top, felt is in new 4 Garage Sale Every daythousandsof ’I 027 Blvd., turn on Zenith condition. $750. $2,500. 541-383-7124 Signs buyers andsellers of goods to 30th Ct. Furniture, NW Stonepine Dr 541-388-6910 $2.00 Off Coupon Queen bed, Serta OxyaceTylene Welding and services do business in Bend patio & yard, clothes, To Use Toward mattress, headboard, on the first day it runs Deer or Elk cart, exc. ouffit w/tanks, $150. these pages.Theyknow miscellaneous. Your Next Ad very clean $1200. 541-310-0343 design and cond. $65. you can’ t beat The Bulletin Saturday 9-19, to make sure it is cor› 10 Tips For 805-720-3515 326 541-382-8973 Classified Section for 8:00am - 1:00pm rect. nSpellcheckn and 266 "Garage Sale 292 Hay, Grain & Feed selection andconvenience human errors do oc› Scaly pillow top Success!" Building Materials 249 Sales Other Areas Twin -every item isjust a phone Kitchen items, Xtra long mattress, cur. If this happens to call away. Art, Jewelry First Quality green grass lassware, china, box springs, frame, your ad, please con› PICK UP YOUR La Pine Habitat Community Sale and hay, no rain, barn stored, The Classified Section is hristmas dishes, & Furs GARAGE SALE KIT pristine cond., $200; tact us ASAP so that RESTORE Fall Fest Sat. 9/19 $250/ton. yard art, teacups, Mini-fridge with t op corrections and any at 1777 SW Chan› easy to use.Every item Building Supply Resale 8:30-3:00 Powell Call 541-549-3831 Fiestaware mugs, freezer, exc. cond., adjustments can be Desperately Seeking dler Ave., Bend, OR is categorizedandevery Quality at Butte Community Patterson Ranch, Sisters table linen, baking made to your ad. Missing 1940s dia› cartegory is indexed onthe 97702 LOW PRICES Center, 8404 SW Reif $40. 541-382-3900 items, candles & 541 -385-5809 m ond ring sold a t 541-385-5809 Second c u t ting o r› sectiods front page. 52684 Hwy 97 Road. Family Funl WHIRLPOOL CABRIO The Bulletin candleholders, train Classified Bend Pawn approx. 541-536-3234 chard grass mix, small Whether youare lookingfor washer and d ryer, set, bike rack, gar› The Bulletin Sept.13-17, 2014 has bales, $220/ton, no a home orneeda service, Serving Central Oregon since 1903 den items, Buyers Sunriver home down› never used, still in "LIKE NEW" Adam’ s central diamond and 2 Open to the public . 5 4 1 -420-9736your future is inthepagesof sizing. Crafts, cloth› boxes. $1000 for both. Idea Combo irons. little side stones, one Wanted: new or used rain. Carolers, artwork, Madras, Oregon The Bulletin Classified. chargers, picnic Furniture and More! ing, ice chest, 8 much Antique wicker baby 3 -4-5 H . B . 6-P W is missing. Sz. 7.5. concrete roof t iles 1253 NE Thompson. more. Fri. 18, & Sat. bassinet/buggy, $100. GRPH S R sh a fts, 541-213-1221 Please 17’x12.25n grey with Wheat Straw for Sale. baskets and ’Lifetile’ embossed on more..... Friday and Saturday 19, 9-2. 19560 Sager Call 541-408-9813, or $360 obo. keep trying! Will pay Also, weaner pigs. The Bulletin SernngCentralOregonsince Sae 9am-3pm. Lp. in River Rim. 706-851-7881 951-454-2561 any reasonable price. back. 541-728-0672 541-546-6171 "

7 piece be droom The Bulletin CASH!! recommends extra ’ set, $350. 1 roll top For Guns, Ammo & desk & chair, $300. l caution when pur› Reloading Supplies. 1 hall tree, $200. 2 chasing products or 541-408-6900. services from out of I leather chair reclin› GUN SHOW e rs, $ 30 0 bo t h . 8 the area. Sending 8 541-504-9945 cash, checks, or Sat. Sep. 19, 9am-5pm l credit i n f ormation Sun. Sep. 20, 9am-3pm may be subjected to Douglas County Fair› l FRAUD. For more grounds 541-530-4570 information about an e Need help fixing stuff? advertiser, you may e t call t h e Ore g ont Call A Service Professional ’ State Atto r ney ’ find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.corn Beautiful designer l General’s O f f i ce Consumer Protecsectional tion h o t line a t i Excellent condition i 1-877-877-9392. $850

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T HE B U LLETIN


E2 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.corn

Roc@

Noon Wed. Friday. Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

. 3:00 pm Fri. 5:00 pm Fri Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 intotal merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

*fllfust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

Employment Opportunities

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General

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/ * Great Supplemental Income!! * /

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Schools & Training

I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI HTR Truck School currently have openings all nights of the week. REDiviOND CAMPUS / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts Our Grads Get Jobs! start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and 1-88~38-2235 / endbetween 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoWWW.HTR.EDU sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI 470 I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of Domestic & In-Home Positions / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack› ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and Do you need help with / other tasks. light domestic duties, errands, misc...? IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl Please call Carol at / including life insurance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. 541-480-0263

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/

I~ Please submit a completed application . .

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TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin ~

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ture experience and demonstrated success at developing and leading a technical team, managing budgets, and delivering projects on time and on budget.

Ideal candidates will have a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science, Information Systems, Engineering, or a related field and at least seven years’ IT experience, with 2+ years’ experience managing people. Please visit www.lesschwab.corn/careers to view a full job description and apply. This position is located at Les Schwab’s Headquarters in beautiful Bend, Oregon. For more than 60 years, Les Schwab Tire Centers has taken Pride in Performance, p roviding superior customer value a n d building customers for life. People choose Les Schwab because they trust our service and our values. We don’t just sell tires; we do the right thing.

PLACE’

Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.corn).

MY PLACE HOTEL BEND, OREGON

No phone calls please.

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* No resumes will be accepted *

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Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE. .

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The Bulletin servingcentral oregonsince r90r

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We offer competitive wages and vacation benefits.

emailed: BEND My Place Hotel Attn: Tara 550 SW Bond Street Bend, Oregon 97701 OI’

bendtihlegacymgmt.org

MAINTENANCE ELECTRICIAN

Bright Wood Corporation, a 50+ year old wood remanufacturer located in Madras, Oregon is looking for a maintenance Electrician report› ing to the Maintenance Supervisor. The shift Electrician is a key member of the Mainte› nance team which is responsible for repairs and maintenance for all machinery and equip› ment such as conveyor systems, hydraulic components, machine control,and much more. These positions are for swing and grave shifts and may include weekends.

MY PLACE Hotel is an

RESPONSIBILITIES to include repair, main› O p p ortunity tain, and troubleshoot electrical and mechani› cal equipment such as AC motors, DC motors and servo motors, servo controllers, variable frequency drives, AC and DC control circuits, PLC communications networks, pneumatic Journeymen components,hydrauli c components, conveyor systems, and o ther i nterrelated process Needed for New equipment. Equal

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Co nstruction. I Start immediately! Good pay/ benefits.

Shall perform a variety of electrical/mechani› cal tests to determine exact cause of issue; Performs unscheduled maintenance to the equipment and machinery to repair or replace defective parts; Perform adjustments and calibration proce› Company Van. i dures on various forms of process equipment; Call54 I3855801 topromote your service• Advertise for 28deft startingat'le pta assi frrctrtr t na tsiirbir onourvrfstrf Call Gary at Perform scheduled maintenance as in› structed on all equipment/machinery/facility; Summit track labor, parts, and machine history i P l umbing i inShall plant CMMS; Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care g541-410-1 655g Make necessary temporary or permanent electrical installations, repairs, or modifica› NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land› Taxi Drivers Needed! tions in line with plant policies; law requires anyone scape Contractors Law Full time day s hift, Works with each department providing nec› who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all a pply at 1 919 N E essary support to ensure day-to-day mainte› construction work to businesses that ad› nance issues are resolved. be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Maintain a written log of any highlights occur› Construction Contrac› /~de Z dffieP Landscape Construc› The Bulletin ring during shift coverage in conjunction with Qa tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: proper CMMS entries. active license Za~<C’a r,, p lanting, deck s , caution when pur› means the contractor fences, arbors, Full Service products or I The position responsibilities outlined above are is bonded & insured. water-features, and in› chasing Landscape no way to be construed as all encompass› Verify the contractor’s stallation, repair of ir› services from out of a in ing. Other duties, responsibilities, and qualifi› Management COB l i c ense at rigation systems to be i the area. Sending cations may be required and/or assigned as www.hirealicensed› l icensed w it h th e c ash, checks, o r contractor.corn Fire Protection Landscape Contrac› i credit i n f ormation necessary. or call 503-378-4621. and Fuels Reduction tors Board. This 4-digit i may be subjected to EDUCATION/EXPERIENCE AS SHOWN BEThe Bulletin recom› Tall Grass number is to be in› FRAUD. mends checking with Low Limbs cluded in all adver› I For more i nforma- I LOW IS REQUIRED: the CCB prior to con› Brush and Debris tisements which indi› ’ tion about an adver- ’ Must have Oregon Electrician license, Gen› tracting with anyone. cate the business has i tiser, you may call eral Journeyman or Limited Manufacturing Some other t rades Protect your home with a bond, insurance and the Oregon State Plant Journeyman; also req u ire addi› defensible space workers c ompensa› i Attorney General’s At least 3 years Industrial Electrical experi› C o n sumer t tional licenses and tion for their employ› Office Protection hotline at l ence or equivalent combination of education cert ifications. ees. For your protec› Landscape and experience; tion call 503-378-5909 I 1-877-877-9392. Maintenance Allen-Bradley PLC and automation experi› or use our website: Full or Partial Service ence a plus; Have an item to www.lcb.state. or.us to gThe Bulleting Mowing ~Edging check license status Proven experience and ability in mechanical, sell quick? Pruning .Weeding electrical and electronic troubleshooting and before contracting with Sprinkler Adjustments If it’s under the business. Persons Looking for your next maintenance techniques; lan d scape employee? Must have the ability to demonstrate working ’500you can place it in Fertilizer included with doing maintenance do not Place a Bulletin help knowledge of mech anical/electrical monthly program The Bulletin r equire an LCB l i › wanted ad today and principles/concepts; cense. reach over 60,000 Have the ability to read and comprehend in› Classifieds for: Clean-V ps readers each week. structions given via OEM or third party opera› Its not to late to have a Your classified ad tion and/or technical/installation literature. ’10 - 3 lines, 7 days Beautiful Landscape will also appear on ’16 -3 lines, 14 days bendbulletin.corn We offer a competitive compensation plan that WeedFree Bark which currently includes medical, dental and vision benefits; (Private Party ads only) & FlowerBeds receives over 1.5 profit sharing plan; Paid vacation and holidays; Personal Services million page views Life insurance; Disability Income Protection; Lawn Restoration every month at Flexible Spending Accounts; Employee As› Handyman Af Your Service no extra cost. sistance Program. Experienced Errands& Notary Bulletin Classifieds I DO THAT! Commercial I stand in line so you Get Results! If you meet the above qualifications please ap› Home/Rental repairs & Residential don’t need to. Call 385-5809 ply in person in the Personnel Dept. to: Bright Small jobs to remodels Free Estimates errandsandnotary or place Wood Corporation, 335 NW Hess St., Madras Honest, guaranteed Senior Discounts ' gmail.corn your ad on-line at OR 97741. Pre-employment drug testing 541-390-1466 work. CCB„151573 541-815-4731 required. bendbulletin.corn Dennis 541-317-9768 Same Day Response

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Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don’t let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin’s "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

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PUBLISHER’ S NOTICE

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All real estate adver› tising in this newspa› per is subject to the F air H o using A c t 750 which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any Redmond Homes preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, Looking for your next employee? religion, sex, handi› Place a Bulletin help cap familial status mantal status or na› wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 tional origin, or an in› tention to make any readers each week. such pre f erence, Your classified ad will also appear on limitation or discrimi› ben dbulletin.corn nation." Familial sta› which currently re› tus includes children ceives over under the age of 18 1.5 million page living with parents or legal cus t odians, views every month at no extra cost. pregnant women, and people securing cus› Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! tody of children under Call 385-5809 or 18. This newspaper will not knowingly ac› place your ad on-line at cept any advertising bendbulletin.corn for real estate which is in violation of the law. O ur r e aders a r e hereby informed that Manufacturedl all dwellings adver› tised in this newspa› Mobile Homes per are available on an equal opportunity List Your Home basis. To complain of JandMHomes.corn d iscrimination ca l l We Have Buyers HUD t o l l-free at Get Top Dollar 1-800-877-0246. The Financing Available. toll f ree t e lephone 541-548-5511 number for the hear› ing i m p aired is Look at: 1-800-927-9275. Bendhomes.corn for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

The Bulletin a

JANITOR Night Shift, Facilities In this full-time, position you will be responsible for all janitorial services at our Headquarters building.

~To ualif: Previous janitorial experience is preferred. Must be able to work 40 hours per week Sunday thru Thursday Hours 10:00 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. Ability to lift 35 pounds Pre-employment drug testing is required

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. .

If you are an energetic self-motivated, dependable individual with a proven history of success at your previous jobs NlE WANT TO TALK TOYOU! For immediate consideration please apply in person at THE BULLETIN, 1777 SW Chandler Avenue, Bend, Oregon No agencies or telephone calls please

We’ ve grown from one store and o ne employee our founder, Les Schwab to Now accepting applica› more than 450 stores and over 7,000 employ› tions. Full & Part-time ees today. Our secret? Success is a two-way street. Our employees deliver World Class positions Customer Service. In return we provide them with generous compensation and benefit Front Desk programs. Everyone wins. Representatives Night Auditors Room Attendants Les Schwab is proud fo be an equal opportunity employer. Maintenance

pplications can b e L +**** * * * * * * * * * * AyAmailed, picked up, or

Seeking info. pertaining to the affair between BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Have an item to Richard Cloud, a di› Search the area’s most v orced man, & J i ll sell quick? comprehensive listing of Sauter a mar r ied If it’s under classified advertising... women. Info. p r o› real estate to automotive, v ided will b e k e p t ’500you can place it in merchandise to sporting strictly c o nfidential. The Bulletin goods. Bulletin Classifieds One’s time & efforts appear every day in the Classifieds for: will be compensated. print or on line. Please respond to Call 541-385-5809 truthandlight2014O ’10 - 3 lines, 7 days www.bendbulletin.corn gmail.corn ’1 8 - 3 lines, 14 days The Bulletin (Private Party ads only) Thank you Jesus serving centraloregonsince t9ts and St. Jude. L.R.V.

Only a few left! Two & Three Bdrms with Washer/Dryer and Patio or Deck. (One Bdrms also avail.) Mountain Glen Apts 541.383.9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

IBSSINIB

the company’s mission critical technology plafforms. This is a new position requiring a highly motivated leader with robust infrastruc›

attention Kevin Eldred.

Employment Opportunities

Add your web address to your ad and read› ers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bend› bulletin.corn, will be able to click through automatically to your website.

.

/ I

634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Bsdl 5aRmRs Vm 'nljII

Enterprise Platforms Supervisor

Les Schwab Tire Centers is seeking an Enter› prise Platforms Supervisor responsible for design and implementation of enterprise-wide, scalable technologies to support overall corpo› rate IT operations and ensure the stability of

GUTTER INSTALLER EXPERIENCED ONLY NEED APPLY. Are you great at what you do? Want to be proud of your work? If this is you, ~BSR wants to talk to you. Work with the best and hone your skills. Good pay and group insurance. 541-480-7823.

* ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * I

The Bulletin Circuiation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. Strong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. Computer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:

g

476

’IP P

Home Delivery Advisor

c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller@bendbulletin.corn No phone calls, please. The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE Pre-empioymenf drug screen required.

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based oft the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.

Employment Opportunities

BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real es› tate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mort› LOCAL MONEY:Webuy gage 541-388-4200. secured trust deeds & 632 note, some hard money Apt JMultiplex General loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13. People Look for Information Senior Apartment› About Products and Independent Living Call The Bulletin At Services Every Daythrough ALL-INCLUSIVE 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Claesifieds with 3 meals daily Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 2 Bedrooms Available At: www.bendbulletin.corn NOW. Check it out! Call 541-460-5323

The Bulletin

MX

Employment Opportunities

Houses for Rent General

p p

5:00 pm Fri .Noon Mon. Noon Tues.

Saturday Sunday.

648

Loans & Mortgages

fi l3z@zm

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday Tuesday. Wednesday Thursday

528

The Bulletin PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT

a

a

In this position you will play a vital role on our Sports Staff!

The successful candidate will work weeknight and Saturday shifts. Totaual r,

Proven interpersonal skills Professional-level writing ability and sports background a must Working knowledge of traditional high school sports Proven computer and proofreading skills Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadline› oriented environment Must be able to successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen If you are a sports-minded journalist and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!

Please send your cover letter, resume, and a work sample attention: sportsassistant@bendbulletin.corn No agencies or telephone calls please

The Bulletin NIGHT DOCK ASSISTANT

a

a

Circulation This position will start at 24 hours per week. You will be responsible for handling all dock issues, including sorting, distribution and loading, all WesCom products to haulers and carriers.

› -

TOIDUTlllfr,

Knowledge of packaging and distribution methods preferred Transportation and logistics experience preferred Inventory control experience a plus Proven customer service skills required Ability to lift 50 pounds required Available to work the night shift required Valid driver’s license and insurability required.

If you are a results-oriented professional who enjoys working with people and providing a wide variety of assistance to others NlE WANT TO TALK TOYOU!

For Consideration, please apply in person: M-F, 8-5 at 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702 or on-line: sending your resume and cover letter to mewing'bendbulletin.corn Western Communications, inc. and their affiliated companies, is proud fo l>ean equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-free workplace

-



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TH E BULLETINoWEDNESDAY, SEP 16, 2015

DAILY B R I D G E

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED 541-385-5809

NEW YQRK TIME5 CRQ55WQRD will sbprtz

C L U B w ednesday, september 16,2015

Cy takes a hint

ACROSS 1 Word after which a parent might interrupt a child 4 Peter Parker’8 aunt in "Spider-Man" 7 Branchlet 11Grimy abode 14Card game call 15"Rules r u l es" 16 "Not that!" 17Before, in poetry 18Turntable measure, in brief 19Wifey, with "the" 20 Scaly anteater 22 Unpleasant atmosphere 24 Leaves in a hurry 25 Subject-changing word 26 Letters on a wanted sign 27 Cartoonist’s work 30 Curry of "The Rocky Horror Picture Show"

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Cy the Cynic says he can take a What do you say? hint, as long as it’s subtle. ANSWER: You have no attractive When C y w a s t o d ay’ s W e st, action. You have enough values to defending against South’s f our invite game but not to commit to hearts, he led the ace of spades. East game. A jump to three spades would followed with the three, presumably invite, but I w ould be reluctant to saying that he didn’t like spades (or jump in a ragged six-card suit. Bid maybe saying that he thought Cy had 2NT. I f p a r tner n ext b i d s t h ree picked a lousy opening lead). diamonds, showing a minimum hand The Cynic shifted to the queen of with five cards in each red suit, pass. clubs: not a success. South took the West dealer king, drew trumps with the ace and Both sides vulnerable queen, threw two diamonds on the K› Q of spades and wound up with an NORTH overtrick. 41KQ2

9 Q6 5 0863 47642

FIRST TRICK East knew he wanted Cy to shift to a diamond. East’s three of spades hinted at a shift, but Cy needed more than a hint; he couldn’t be sure which suit to shift to. To get a diamond shift, East must produce a striking signal at the first trick: the jack of spades. An unusually high spade serves as a suit-preference signal. It asks West to shift to the higher-ranking of the other two suits. If West leads a low diamond at Trick Two, the defenders get the four tricks they are due.

WEST

EAST

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9 AK J 1 08 3 2 0 Q105 4AK East 2 4I

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Y ouhold: 4 A 9 7 6 5 4 9 7 0 K J 2 4 Q J 10 . Y our partner Opening lead 4A opens one heart, you respond one spade and he bids two diamonds. (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

SOB LY ADL SH I

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org.

STE

BIZARRO

42 Southeast Asian language 43 Be there for 45Tankard contents 46Was furious 49" bite" 50 Something just under one’ s nose, slangily 53 Not much 55 sau c e 56 Fish also known as a dorado 58 Big mouth 59 Glass of "This American Life"

MA N

NS S OT T NE P P EO P US H O PO S B O NE S Y AC H B R O M OUT I B N P U 0 I N T N O

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DOWN 1 "The Bridge on the River Kwai" locale 2 Remove from a bulletin board, say 3 *"Same difference" 4 ’Musicalthat includes the song "Take a Chance on Me" 5 Panoply 6 Encouraging word 7 19th-century Midwest rail hub 8 ""That sure was funny!" 9 Overnight stops on the road 10Group with the 1981 „1 album "Beauty and the Beat" 11Activity on Lent or Yom Kippur ... or a quality of every letter in the answer to each starred clue 12Start for cycle

2

3

4

5

6

7

14

15

16

18

19

20

22

23

9

10

11 1 2

13

17 21

26 30

28 29

27

32

31

36

34 35

38 39

37

40

41

42

43

46

47

48

53 56

8

24

25

67 Bill in a bow tie

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

SOUTH

W est Nor th 1 49 Pass All Pass

DAILY QUESTION

60 Have a part (nickname of 61 City of NW Warren Buffett) Pennsylvania 33 Org. whose 62 15-Across resources partly backward go to waste? 63 Roman 34Adjective for equivalent of North Korean Rhea leader Kim tong-un 64 Classical start? 37 Picks 6S Match makeup 40 Stay longer than 66 Encouraging word 41 Points of entry 31The Wizard of

No. 0812

44

49

50

54

52

55

57

60

51

61

64

58

59

62

63

66

67

PUZZLE BYTOM MCCOY

13 Nikkei 225 unit 21 Frequently 23 Feature of a

50 Rock’8 All›

34 See 29-Down 35 Party with poi 36 Spanish she-bear 38 "Where "they went," in old westerns 39 pow e r 41 Bananagrams game piece 44Axis foe 47 Giant Manning 4$ Smallest coins

soft-serve ice cream cone 24 Predicaments 28Apple’5 Touch 29 Some scores in 34-Down 31 * "Stop hemming and hawing!" 32 Copycat

Band 51 Monster encountered by Aeneas 52 Wipe out 54 Scale deduction 56 "Wow!" 57 Hotshot

5$ Came across

Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.corn/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.corn/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.corn/studentcrosswords.

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1 Respecfful title 4 Gnocchi sauce 9 First occurrence 14 Keats’ " t o a Nightingale" 15 Stay away from 16 With 61-Across, Sri Lankan product 17 Pool user’s unit 18 Sweet sherry, e.g 20 " Road to Glory": Arthur Ashe history 22 Lip 23 Unbeatable hand 27 Hat worn with a kilt 30 "Romeo and Juliet" city 31 Laundry slide 33 S p u mante 36 Here, to Henri 37 Album array 38 It happens four

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and also in this puzzle’s circles 41 Comes to the point? 42 Have title to

5 Night before 6 Distress

signal 7 ’Whether nobler ... ": Hamlet 8 Ukrainian port 9 Stops wavering 10 Dinnertime TV fare 11 Snow runner 12 Ages and ages 13 Place to start a hole 19 Cheer from the CI’owd 21 Steep-sided

valleys 24 Wendy’s side

25 Maniacal 26 Military outfit 27 Private instructor 28 Square things 29 Like many a dorm room 31 Half a dance 32 Party organizer 33 Did one’s part? 34 Admonishing

response to

43 Long basket, in hoopslingo 44 Clear the board 45 Daze 47 Only article in a U.S. state capital

name HERMAN

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME CI

Oy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one letter to each square,

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to form the surprise anowoo ao suggested by the above cartoon. HERMAN 0 Laughingstock ocenono Ino, 086 by Universal Uchco 2015

(Anoworo tomorrow)

"Okay, now shift your weight onto the left leg during the follow-through."

4~ Yesterday

SPURN D O O D L E I G U A NA Answer. Ho wao explaining to the climber that being a sherpa had ito LIPS AOID DOWNS Jomblot S W O ON

18

DOWN 1 Like some eclipses 2 One of three Hells Canyon states

35 Spanish finger food 37 Tubular pasta 39 MBA hopeful’s test 40 Took a dip 45 Struggle 46 Old-time

complaint

R A J A H A R E S H O O F E V I L A C U RA RA Z E M O V I E D E B U T O T O E O NE A L L S P Y S E ND B UM T R E S S E S T I F F A N Y S S A P T O R I CL E W RE L A Y O W E S H E A R T R O M O P A T H S S L O W O K O K F R A S N O W T I R E P ER I O D S G T O RE E L A T V O !VI E G A S A R A L G R E E N B E R E T W I P E E A T ME L I R A N E S T S T ODD S MOG xwordeditor(Naol.corn 09/16/15 5

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10

11

12

13

27

28

29

4

50

51

16

22 2

26

31

se

35

38

58 Handle without care’? 59 Reuben bread 60 Slogan ending?

ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:

2

34

o n e ’s time: wait 53 Soda machine inserts 55 Nocturnal flier 56 NATO founding member 57 Chihuahua

broadcasters

30 33

52

48 Crone 49 Extreme 50 Some execs 51 Passport image

2i

32

37

39

41

42

45

44

47

48 52

55 s e

RI56 BUl THEN IT›

OIow arrange the circled letters

17

23

63 Piece of cake 64 Tach reading 65 Package sealers 66 Decorative pitchers 67 Critter in Egyptian art

4 15

54 Dot on a map 55 Pre-holiday mall

wHAr TII4E THE sUN woLILP

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52 Burlesque wraps

remark

ooolo Tooune content Agency, LLc Ao Riohls Reeenred.

2

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48 Square-bodied family autos

indulgence

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3 Square things 4 Kayak mover

53

57

5

62

63

65

66

By C.W. Stewart O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

5

60

61

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09/1 6/1 5


THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809 880

870

Boats & Accessories

16’ Seaswirl Tahoe with trailer, 50 HP Evinrude, bimini top, excellent condition. $3,500 541-647-1918

850

Snowmobiles

4-place enclosed Inter› state snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $7500. 541-379-3530

16’ Smoker Craft f ishing boat, 50 H P

860

Yam aha o u tboard

otorcycles & Accessories

motor w/electric tilt & electric trolling motor w/remote control mounted on bow, walk through w i ndshield, exc. cond. $8,500.

2014 Sport 150 Tao› Tao Scooter, Almost New. $995. 541-548-0345

541-233-6223

Harley 2003, Dyna wide glide, 100th An› n iversary mod e l . 13,400 orig. mi., cus› tom paint, new bat› tery, lots of extras, show cond. Health f orces s ale. W a s $11,000 OBO, now $8,000 firm. 541-633-7856 or 360-815-6677

Moto r homes

Allegro 32 ft. 2005. Must see to appreci› ate! Only 12,500 mi., less than 100 miles on new tires, always stored under cover, hydraulic leveling, 2 slide outs, 2 TV sets, 2 air conditioners, rear camera, plus awnings! Call 541-447-8054 or 541-480-1419 *** *** MUST SELL! Only $32,500! Call today!

880

882

908

932

932

933

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Winnebago Journey

Laredo 31’2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,

2001 36’ 2nd owner, 300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 80k miles. D r iver s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat screen TVs, refer, generator, inverter, King Dome, tow bar. N on-smoker, n o pets, no c h ildren. C lean, an d w e l l maintained, $43,000 541-390-1472. 881

Travel Trailers

19’ Ampex. 2011. Slide out and other extras. Beaver Contessa 40’› Tows well $12,500. 2008, four slide die› 541.316.1367

Hangar for saleat Redmond Airport - not a T Hangar - $28,000. 541-420-0626

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

glass top, 31k miles, all original, silver 8 maroon. $12,500. 541-388-9802

541-815-8147 933

Pickups

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own air› c raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.

885

Canopies 8 Campers

C A L LW

TODAY%

Ford Mustang

ChevyPickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmis› sion w/overdrive low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or

Hard top 1965, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condi› tion. $12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

541-420-621 5.

17’ SunCraft, 2 motors. $1,400. 541-593-7257

I I I i

I Has only been used I i a handful of times & i has been in covered Ask ingi Fleetwood D i scovery K i ngi storage.

Rare 1983 SB 1100F, 19K mi., red, white and b lue, p r istine cond. Call for details. 541-279-7092

541-410-5649

VW Beetle c lassic 1972, Exc. shape, no rust, very clean, fully restored, has had 2 o wners. $4,0 0 0.

CORVETTE 1979,

sel pusher. Loaded, great condition. War› ranty. Pictures/info at www.fourstarbend.corn

I+ I -› I,

Moto Guzzi Breva 1 100 2007, o n l y 11,600 miles. $5,500. 206-679-4745

Tom, 541.788.5546

541-548-5254

r› - - - a

Honda Trai l 1 10 1985, 1200 m i l es excellent c o ndition $2000. OBO 541-280-0514

hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500.

hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or refinance. Call

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

541-647-’I 236 g B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ’ , one slide, low mile› age, very clean, lots 34’ Winnebago One of storage, $28,500. 2013 30RE. 541-639-9411 $25,000. Two slides. = Duncan motorhometow Fully loaded. bar, $100. in Bend. Full photos and info sent upon request. call (360) 481-3020 Family illness 18’ 2 003 S u n requires sale. i Cruiser - pontoon 541-923-2593 boat, fully equipped.

H arley Road Classic 2003, 100th Anniversary Edition, 16,360 mi., reduced $9,999. 541-647-7078

HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T

40’ 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV’s, W/D, etc., 34,000 miles. Wintered in h eated shop. $78,995 obo. 541-447-8664 Itasca 2003 31’ Class C MH. Great cond., 31K miles, slider, $32,000. 19’ Bayliner 1998, I/O, 541-508-9700 great shape, call for info. $68500. In Bend 661-644-0384.

Superhawk N7745G Owners’ Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touch› screen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available. Call 541-815-2144

Northlander 1993 17’ camper, Polar 990, good shape, new fridge, A/C, queen bed, bath› room, indoor/out› door shower, lots of storage, custom› ized to fit newer pickups $4500 obo. 541-419-9859.

FORD TAURUS SHO 1992show car, rare 5 s pd., loaded, l o w miles, second owner, have all receipts, only Chevy S-10 1988 4.3L $ 4,500.00. Crai g V-6, sunroof, many 503-849-7571 custom features, su› per clean, always ga› raged. $3200 obo. 541-388-0811.

916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

0

Ja Fli ht

264 BH 2011. like new, sleeps 9, self contained, 1/2 ton towable $13,900 OBO (541) 410-9017 RV CONSIGNMENTS

WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

Jeep CJS 4x41967, first year of the orig. Dauntless V-6, last 1997 Utility 53’x102" dry year of the "All metal" freight van. S liding body! Engine over› axles, leaf springs, hauled: new brakes, good tires, body & fuel pump, steering swing doors in exc. gear box, battery, al› cond., has no dings, ternator, emergency road ready! $7500 brake pads, gauges, o bo. S isters, O R . warn hubs, dual ex› 541-719-1217 haust, 5 wide traction tires, 5 new spoke, 925 chrome wheels. NO rust, garage stored. Utility Trailers $7,495 OBO! (775) 513-0822

Qoo 908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

T oyota Taco m a 2 006, r eg . c a b , 4x4, 5 sp d s tan› dard 4 cyl engine, 22+ mpg, one se› nior owner, n on-smoker, w e l l maintained, nearly new tires, original s pare near n e w, runs exce l lent. $14,750. 541-633-9895 935

Sport Utility Vehicles

BMW X3 Sl 2007, Low Miles - 68,500 mi., AWD, leather

Interior, su nroof, b luetooth, voi c e command system, and too much more to list here. $15,900. Please call Dan at 541-815-6611

Chevy Tahoe 1995 4x4 4 dr. auto, tow pkg, new brakes and ro› tors, g r ea t ti r e s, leather, power, runs

g reat, very g o o d cond., $4800. Chevy Sil v e rado 541-385-4790 2 500HD 2002, 4 x4 Crew cab, canopy, 85K original miles, loaded. $17,500 OBO. 541-647-0565

Ford Explorer Sport 2011, 6 cyl. auto., 4WD, 3rd seat, $21,995. 541-598-5111

Dodge Big Horn Ram 2500, 2005, 6

speed manual. Ex› tra tires and rims, canopy goes with. BIG COUNTRY RV 1/3 interest in Bend: 541-330-2495 Excellent condition, Ford Explorer XLT Redmond: Columbia 400, well mai n tained, 19’ Classic 1 9 90 2013 7 f t .X18 ft. 1991 r eliable w e l l 541-548-5254 Financing available. runs great. 1 6 0K Mastercraft ski boat. Carry-On open car cared for, clean, non› Mercedes 450 SL miles. $2 8 ,500 Pro-star 190 conven› $125,000 hauler trailer. Used smoking, incl. 4 stud› 1979 Roadster, soft 541-620-1212 tional in-board, cus› (located @ Bend) only three times to ded winter tires, new & hard tops, always 541-288-3333 tom trailer, exc. cond. haul my 1967 Ca› H D b a ttery, 1 9 0 k garaged, 122k mi., $8,995. 541-389-6562 Ford F-150 4x4 1992 miles, 20k towed be› maro, and looks like new tires, shock and 10k mi., ext. c a b hind new. I had the front moto r home b reaks, $79 0 0 . 1 $2800. 541-420-3734 barrier made and in› FUN & FISH! $1500 obo Message 541-548-5648 stalled and added 541-241-4896. RVision C r ossover GMC Pickup 1983 w/ the tool box. It also 2013, 19ft, exc. Well topper, 4 wheel drive, Hyundai Santa Fe has a mounted new equipped, $11,500. Say "goodbuy" r uns good, go o d 2012, 4 cyl., 4 door, spare tire. $3995 541-604-5387 winter truck. $1,500 GLS, 2WD, kayak car› 1/5 share in very nice obo . 541-876-5375 to that unused obo. 907-310-1877 rier, new tires, 150 HP Cessna 150; or cell: item by placing it in 51K mi., $15,500. 1973 Cessna 150 with 503-701-2256. 2006 Smokercraft 541-419-7960 Lycoming 0-320 150 The Bulletin Classifieds Sunchaser 820 hp engine conversion, model pontoon boat, Good classified ads tell 931 4000 hours. TT air› 75HP Mercury and the essential facts in an 541-385-5809 frame. Approx. 400 Automotive Parts, electric trolling mo› interesting Manner.Write Silver Streak Sabre hours o n 0- t imed Service & Accessories tor, full canvas and from the readers view - not 17’ 1963 beautifully 0-320. Hangared in many extras. Monaco Monarch 31’ restored, vertical grain nice (electric door) Toyota Tacoma the seller’ s.Convert the Stored inside 2006, Ford V 10, fir cabinets, shower, city-owned hangar at Michelin studdless 2006 crew cab facts into benefits. Show $19,900 215 / 6 5R16. 28,900 miles, 4 dr. 4x4 pickup, the reader howthe item will kitchen sink, the Bend Airport. One tires, 541-350-5425 auto-level, 2 slides, toilet, 130k hwy miles, help them insomeway. stove & refrigerator. of very few C-150’s $160. 541-408-8137 runs excellent, new queen b e d & Better built than an that has never been a This Check out the tires, V-6, auto, TRD hide-a-bed sofa, 4k advertising tip Airstream! $ 10,500. t rainer. $4500 w i l l Chevy El Camino 1973, ciassifieds online pkg $15,400. gen, convection mi› 541-350-4077 consider trades for brought toyou by Manual trans.’ 928-581-9190 b e ndbuffefin.corn RARE. crowave, 2 TVs, tow whatever. C all J im ~. 4 spd, Exc. Cond. La Pine Frazee, 541-41 0-6007 The Bulletin package. Updated daily Serving CentralOwensince19N $7500. 541-389-1086 PRICE REDUCTION! $59,000. 541-815-6319 23’10" S R 2 3 0 0, ’95, own with pride, always compliments, Unique R-Pod 2013 no salt, head never trailer-tent combo, used, due for 5 year f ully l oaded, e x › c ooling main t . , tended service con› $9500 firm. Extras. W eekend only . Pace A r row V i s ion tract and bike rack. 541-678-3249 1997, Ford 460 en› $16,000. or gine w/Banks, solar, 541-595-3972 503-780-4487 walk-around queen Ads published in the bed, 2 door fridge, mi› "Boats" classification include: Speed, fish› cro-convection oven, for your WiFi, 1 00 k m i l es, Looking ing, drift, canoe, next employee? house and sail boats. needs work, (photo Place a Bulletin help For all other types of similar to actual rig) wanted ad today and $9,500. 541-280-0797 watercraft, please go reach over 60,000 to Class 875. readers each week. RV 541-385-5809 Your classified ad CONSIGNMENTS will also appear on WANTED bendbulletin.corn Servin Central Ore on since 1903 We Do The Work ... which currently re› You Keep The Cash! ceives over 1.5 mil› 875 On-site credit lion page views ev› Watercraft approval team, ery month at no web site presence. extra cost. Bulletin ds published in "Wa We Take Trade-Ins! Classifieds Get Re› tercraft" include: Kay sults! Call 385-5809 aks, rafts and motor BIG COUNTRY RV or place your ad Ized personal Bend: 541-330-2495 on-line at waterc rafts. Fo Redmond: bendbulletin.corn "boats" please se 541-548-5254 Class 870. L

Lexington 2006 283TS class B+mo› tor coach, full GTS pkg, 19,352 miles. 3 burner range, half time oven, 3 slides w/awnings, Onan gen., King Dome sat› ellite system, Ford V10 Triton, auto-lev› eling system, new tires, Falcon tow bar. Non-smoker, main› tained in dry storage. Can email additional pictures.$55,000. 541-520-3407

Q a~›

V-Max 2009 Yamaha Lots of factory extras: windshield, saddlebags, back rest, rear cargo rack, bike cover, motorcycle hoist, alarm system, also set of new tires. $11,000 541-508-1554

Yamaha V Star 1100 Classic, year 2004, -Many extras. 17K miles. $4800 . 541-548-2109 870

Boats & Accessories

12’ Alund fishing boat, EZ-Loader tra i ler, Johnson 9.8 HP mo› tor, Minn Kota trolling m otor, ne w H u m › mingbird Fish Finder, seats, battery & more! All safety equipment. $2500. 541-504-3386 The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.corn 12’ V alco alum. on trailer 9.9 J o hnson 0/B, plus amenities, 541-385-5809 exc. shape. $1250. 541-549-8126 14’ aluminum boat w/ Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 trailer. Trailer has 2 880 brand new tires Motorhomes wheels. Trailer in exc. cond., guaranteed no leaks. 2 upholstered swivel seats, no mo› tor. $2,900.

I

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

541-410-4066

16’6" 2005 Tracker Targa V16 boat. 60

HP 4-stroke Mercury motor & 8 HP 4-stroke motor, Minnkota fowl mounted, foot c on› trolled motor, Low› ranges fish finder, top & fold and close top. $17,500. Ask about extras. 541-632-2676.

2009 Skyline Park Model Beach Cottage, see Bend Craigslist, type 5204278937 in search bar o r c a ll Benjamin 541-390-9723

Do you LOVE your job? Most people don't. OUR INDEPENDENT SALES REPS DO!

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Fifth Wheels

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S outhwind F o r d Fleetwood motor› home, 19 9 4, 3 2’, asoline, 82K miles, ood con d ition, $7,000 obo. 503-807-5490

Cameo LX1 2001, 32 ft. 5th wheel, 2 slides, A/C, micro, DVD, CD p l ayer, conv. and i n vert. New batteries, tires

and shocks. Quad carrier. Quad avail. $11,900 OBO. 541-390-7179

So get excited, give Your Neighborhood Publications, LLC. a call and start a prosperous career in sales today by promoting THE BULLETIN (the most trusted media source in the region).

AVERAGE PAY IS $300-$500 A WEEK KIOSKS LOCATED IN HIGH TRAFFIC LOCATIONS AROUND TOWN.

CHECK YOUR AD

Sunseeker 2500 T S 2005 by Forest River on the first day it runs Take care of triple slide Class C. to make sure it is cor› your investments Purchased Jun e rect. "Spellcheck" and 2015, used twice (wife human errors do oc› with the help from became ill) F ULLY cur. If this happens to The Bulletin’s Loaded with Platinum your ad, please con› Full Body paint, auto tact us ASAP so that "Call A Service level system, Arctic corrections and any Pkg, rear c amera, adjustments can be 16’ Lowe, fi t 605 Professional" Directory B luetooth. Also i n › made to your ad. deep water, four-man cludes NEW Adco all› 541 -385-5809 bass boat with dual weather coach cover. The Bulletin Classified Cannon down-riggers $78,900. Call Jim cell for trolling to 100 feet. 209.401.7449 (can Excellent c o n dition email addt’I photos) with f as t 40 HP Johnson ou t b oard 32’ 2007, like with automatic oil in› Allegro only 12,600 miles. jection. E a g le-Elitenew, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 , eae ›= fish finder and GPS to transmission, dual ex› Cougar 27.9 RKS locate the "big ones". haust. Loaded! Auto-lev› 2015 5t h W h eel. New trolling kick plate eling system, 5kw gen, Like new, loaded, + Minn Kota electric power mirrors w/defrost, Winnebago 22’ automatic l e veling trolling motor. New 2 slide-outs with aw› 2002 - $28,000 jacks, Polar pack› 2-way radio. Water› nings, rear c a mera, Chevy 360, age, everything you proof cover, life-jack› trailer hitch, driver door heavy duty chassis, need to take on a ets, bumpers, and ex› w/power window, cruise, cab 8 roof A/C, trip, hitch included. tras. All tuned and exhaust brake, central tow hitch w/brake, $33,900 or best rea› ready to go. $4,500. vac, satellite sys. Re› 22k mi., more! sonable offer. Phone (541) 593 7774 duced price: $84,950. 541-280-3251 541-815-3076. - NW Bend. 503-781-8812

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E6 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2015 THE BULLETIN 935

Sport Utility Vehicles

Auto m obiles

Honda Accord 2005, V6, f ully l o aded, Nav, Moon roof, CD, Bose sound sys, 20" perfect leather inte› alloy whls. Nav sys. rior, one owner, full Dlx tour, premium and maintained, always tow pkgs. Most op› garaged, never tions included. Al› wrecked, 143K road ways maintained and miles, $8,899. Great g araged. Just d e › car ready to drive. tailed, non s moker. Mike 541-499-5970 Midnight Mocha color, tan leather int. Exc. HUNTER S P E CIAL: cond. in & out. Clean Jeep Cherokee, 1990, title. $26,950. OBO 4x4, has 9 tires on 541-647-2257 wheels. $2000 obo. 541-771-4732 '70 Impala, $3000. ’76 Nova, $2000. ’03 H onda 700cc M C , $2000. 541-410-5349

I nfiniti F X3 5 AW D 2009 Sporty 3.5 V6, 7 spd auto, 40K miles,

Jeep Grand Chero›

Kia Forte SX 2012

hatchback, $15,800, 32,015 miles, still under 60k warranty, exc. condition, see craigslist for full de›

kee Overland 2012, 4x4 V-6, all options,

running boards, front guard, nav., air and heated leather, cus› tom wheels and new tires, only 49K miles, $29,995

tails. 541-948-7687

Advertise your car!

541-408-7908

Add A Picture!

Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classiffeds

Lincoln Nav i gator 2 003 A WD , or i g . owner, local vehicle, always gar a ged, auto., navigation, sun› roof, DV D p l ayer, heated & A/C seats, custom g r i ll , all records, new Michelin t ires. $10,0 0 0 . 541-815-5000.

Lexus ES350 2010, Excellent Condition 32,000 miles, $20,000 214-549-3627 (in

Bend)

Illlercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft 8 hard top, exc. cond., always ga› raged. 155K miles, $6,500. 541-549-6407

Mercedes ML350 2004 3.7L V-6, auto trans., 4-wheel traction con› trol, sunroof, w hite with java leather. One o wner l o ca l ca r . 9 0,100 miles. E x c condition. $ 1 0,500. 541-593-2053

Mercedes-Benz SLK230 2003, exc. cond., auto, convertible retract› able hard top. 54,250 miles, carfax available.$13,000.

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, never been off road or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, very clean. $26,000. Call or text Jeff at

541-389-7571

541-729-4552

Toyota Corolla 1999 4 cyl. 5 spd, 200K mi., new tires last spring. studs incl.!! A/C, cas› sette, headliner needs help. Runs G reat!! $1800 541.480.9327

1977

F J40 Toyota Landcruiser with winch, $21,000. 541-389-7113, Michelle

Toyota Corolla S 2007, 93 k m i l es, automatic, s i l ver.

940

Vans

New brakes and

Dodge Grand Caravan 1999, heated leather seats, good c ond., green, 159k m i les. Asking $2, 5 00. 541-388-2049 or

battery. Super clean, no smoking. Cruise control, CD player, c loth seats, A C . Price: $6500. Call 541-480-2700

to view. NO T E XTS PLEASE! pattym51'q.corn

text 541-647-8016

Just too many collectibles’ ?

Looking for your next employee?

Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 541-385-5809 readers each week. Your classified ad 975 will also appear on Automobiles ben dbulletin.corn which currently re› ceives over 1.5 mil› lion page views every month at no extra cost. Bulle› tin Classifieds Get Results! Call Acura TL 06, 3.2L V6, 385-5809 or place auto, F WD , b l a ck your ad on-line at color, A/C, 115,971 bendbulletin.corn miles, clean title and carfax. Call or t ext 541-834-8469 I The Bulletin recoml mends extra caution ~ when p u rchasing

I

f products or servicesf from out of the area.

ash ,f checks, or credit in› I formation may be I Buick LaCrosse 2006 f S ending c

Very Clean, mid-size [ subject to FRAUD. 6 c y l , au t omatic, For more informal› $5650 obo - trade? f tion about an adver› tiser, you may call 541-419-5060

f

I the Oregon State(

g Attorney General’s g I Office C o n sumer I

f Protection hotline atf 1-877-877-9392.

~ Th.Bu.t ~ Cadillac CTS 2010, V 6 I n j ection, 6 Speed A u tomatic. Luxury series. Exte› rior Black Raven, Interior: Light Tita› nium/ E b o ny 2 2,555 m i les. 4 door. Excellent con› dition all a r ound. Has Arizona plates. This is car is a great mix of luxury, com› f ort, s t y le , an d workmanship. $24,000.00 Call 541-408-3051

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

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809

975

ServingCentral Oregon since 1%8

FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN

Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou’re looking for a hat or aplace to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. Every daythousandsof buyers andsellers ofgoods and services dobusinessin these pages.They know you can’t beatTheBulletin Classified Section for selection andconvenience - every item isjust a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy to use.Everyitem is categorizedandevery cartegoIy is indexed onthe section’s front page. Whether youarelooking for a home orneeda service, your future is inthepagesof The Bulletin Classified.

The Bulletin Sernng CentralOregonsince AN

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

to Deschutes County LEGAL NOTICE Ally Bank, Plaintiff/s, Sheriff’s Office will be v. Kingdon P. Palmer, accepted. P ayment JR., Cindy A. Palmer, must be made in full D efendant/s. C a s e immediately upon the No.: 1 4 C V0847FC. close of the sale. For N OTICE OF S A L E more information on g o to: U NDER WRIT O F this s al e EXECUTION - REAL http: //oregonsheriff› PROPERTY. Notice is ssale.org/ hereby given that the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff’s Office will, on Thursday, October 22, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the LEGAL NOTICE Deschutes C o u nty CIRCUIT COURT OF Sheriff 's Office,63333 OREGON FOR DES› W. Highway 20, Bend, CHUTES COUNTY. Oregon, sell, at public THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA o ral auction to t h e highest bidder, f or THE BANK OF NEW cash o r ca s hier’ s YORK, AS TRUSTEE check, the real prop› FOR THE CERTIFI› erty commonly known CATEHOLDERS OF as 60872 Defiance THE CWABS INC., Rd, Bend, Oregon ASSET-BACKED 97702. Conditions of CERTIFICATES, SE› 2005 - BC5, Sale: Potential bid› RIES ders must arrive 15 PLAINTIFF, VS. DAVID MIC H AEL minutes prior to the auction to allow the B EARDSLY; CI T I › Deschutes C o u nty MORTGAGE, INC.; Sheriff’s Office to re› EMPIRE CROSSING view bidder’s funds. HOMEOWNERS ASOnly U.S. currency S OCIATION IN C . ; and/or cashier’ s MID OREGON FEDchecks made payable E RAL CREDI T to Deschutes County UNION; MORTGAGE Sheriff’s Office will be ELECTRONIC REG› SYS › accepted. P ayment I STRATION must be made in full TEMS, INC.; PLAZA immediately upon the HOME MORTGAGE, close of the sale. For INC.; THE ESTATE OF M O R RI S L. more information on this s al e g o to: CASE, DECEASED; UNKNOWN H EIRS http://oregonsheriffs› sales.org/ AND DEVISEES OF MORRIS L. C A SE, LEGAL NOTICE DECEASED; ; THE Bank of A merica, ESTATE OF B E N› N.A., its successors J AMIN WOOL D › in interest and/or RIDGE, DECEASED; assigns, Plaintiff/s, UNKNOWN H E IRS v. David Puckett; AND DEVISEES OF Oregon Telc o BENJAMIN WOOLD› Community Credit RIDGE, DECEASED; U nion; John a n d AND PERSONS OR Jane Does I through PARTIES UN› V, Occupants of the CLAIMING subject p r operty, KNOWN ANY RIGHT, TITLE, and all other Per› LIEN, OR INTEREST sons or Parties un› IN THE PROPERTY known, claiming any DESCRIBED IN THE right, title, interest, COMPLAINT lien or estate in the H EREIN, DEF E N › property herein de› DANTS. NO. scribed, 15CV0135FC. Defendant/s. Case PLAINTIFF’S S U M› No.: 13C V 0510. MONS BY PUBLICA› NOTICE OF SALE T ION. TO:THE E S › UNDER WRIT OF TATE OF MORRIS L. EXECUTION CASE, DECEASED; REAL PROPERTY. H E IRS Notice is h e reby UNKNOWN AND DEVISEES OF given that the Des› L. C A SE, c hutes Cou n t y MORRIS DECEASED; THE Sheriff’s Office will, E STATE OF B E N› on Thursday, No› J AMIN WOO L D › vember 5, 2015 at RIDGE, DECEASED; 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e UNKNOWN H E IRS main lobby of the AND DEVISEES OF Deschutes County BENJAMIN WOOLD› Sheriff’s Off i c e, RIDGE, DECEASED; 63333 W. Highway AND PERSONS OR 20, Bend, Oregon, UN› PARTIES sell, at public oral KNOWN CLAIMING auction to the high› ANY RIGHT, TITLE, est bidder, for cash LIEN, OR INTEREST or cashier’s check, THE PROPERTY the real p roperty IN DESCRIBED IN THE commonly known as COMPLAINT 19161 S h oshone HEREIN. IN THE R oad, Bend, O r › NAME OF THE egon 97702. Condi› STATE OF OREGON: tions of Sale: Po› You are hereby re› tential bidders must to appear and arrive 15 m inutes quired defend against the prior to the auction allegations contained to allow the Des› the Complaint filed c hutes Cou n t y in a gainst you in t h e Sheriff’s Office to above pro› review bi d der’s ceedingentitled within thirty funds. Only U . S. days from the currency a n d/or (30) of service of this cashier’s c h e cks date Summons upon you. made payable to If you fail to appear Deschutes County and defend this mat› Sheriff’s Office will ter within thirty (30) be accepted. Pay› days from the date of ment must be made publication specified in full immediately herein along with the upon the close of required filing fee, the sale. For more THE BANK OF NEW information on this YORK MELLON FKA sale go to: http: //or› THE BANK OF NEW egon sheriffssales.or YORK, AS TRUSTEE g/ FOR THE CERTIFI› LEGAL NOTICE CATEHOLDERS OF Bank o f A m e rica, THE CWABS INC., ASSET-BACKED N.A., successor by merger to, BAC Home CERTIFICATES, SE› Loans Servicing, LP RIES 2005-BC5 will FKA Cou n trywide apply to the Court for Home Loans Servic› the relief demanded in ing, LP, Plaintiff/s, v. the Complaint. T he Donald P. Byrne; Su› first date of publica› san Byrne; Donald P. tion is A ugust 26, Byrne, Trustee of the 2 015. NOTICE T O Donald P. and Susan DEFENDANTS: Byrne Living Trust, READ THESE PA› Dated April 29, 1999; PERS CAREFULLY! Susan Byrne, Trustee You must "appear" in of the Donald P. and this case or the other Susan Byrne Living side will win automati› Trust, Dated April 29, c ally. T o "appear" 1999; Unknown Suc› you must file with the cessor Trustees of the court a legal paper Donald P. and Susan called a "motion" or "answer." The "mo› Byrne Living Trust, Dated April 29, 1999; tion" or "answer" must and Persons or Par› be given to the court ties Unknown claim› clerk or administrator ing any right, title, lien, w ithin t h irty d a y s o r interest i n t h e a long with the r e › property described in q uired filing fee. I t the complaint herein, must be i n p r oper D efendant/s. C a s e form and have proof No.: 1 4 C V0271FC. o f service on t h e N OTICE OF S A L E plaintiff’s attorney or, U NDER WRIT O F if the plaintiff does not EXECUTION - REAL have a n a t t orney, PROPERTY. Notice is proof of service on the hereby given that the plaintiff. I F YOU Deschutes C o u nty HAVE ANY QUES› Sheriff’s Office will, on TIONS, YOU Thursday, November S HOULD SEE A N 5, 2015 at 10:00 AM, ATTORNEY I M M E› in the main lobby of DIATELY. If you need the Deschutes County help in finding an at› Sheriff’s Office, 63333 torney, you may call W. Highway 20, Bend, the O r egon S t ate Oregon, sell, at public Bar’s Lawyer Referral o ral auction to t h e S ervice a t (503) highest bidder, f or 684-3763 or toll-free cash o r ca s hier’ s in Oregon at (800) check, the real prop› 452-7636. The object erty commonly known of the said action and as 19947 Antler Point the relief sought to be Drive, Bend, Oregon o btained therein i s 97702. Conditions of fully set forth in said Sale: P otential bid› complaint, an d is ders must arrive 15 briefly stated as fol› minutes prior to the lows: Foreclosure of a auction to allow the Deed of Trust/Mort› Deschutes C o u nty gage - Grantors: Mor› Sheriff’s Office to re› ris Case. Property ad› view bidder’s funds. d ress:63177 B o y d Only U.S. currency Acres Road, Bend, and/or cashier’ s OR 97701. Publica› checks made payable tion:The Bend Bulle›

erty commonly known review bi d der’s Loop, Bend, Oregon deliver to the address as 19635 SW Har› funds. Only U . S. 97701. Conditions of above. Hand vard Place, Bend, Or› c urrency an d / or Sale: Potential bid› deliveries can occur egon 97702. Condi› cashier’s c h e cks ders must arrive 15 between 8:00 AM and tions of Sale: made payable to minutes prior to the 4:30 PM , M o nday Potential bidders must Deschutes County auction to allow the through Friday except arrive 15 minutes prior Sheriff’s Office will Deschutes C o u nty legal holidays. to the auction to allow be accepted. Pay› Sheriff’s Office to re› Objections may also the Deschutes County ment must be made view bidder’s funds. be faxed to F orest Sheriff’s Office to re› in full immediately Only U.S. currency S upervisor, Attn : view bidder’s funds. upon the close of and/or cashier’ s 1570 Objections at Only U.S. currency the sale. For more checks made payable (541)383-4755. and/or cashier’ s information on this to Deschutes County Objections must be checks made payable sale go to: http: //or› Sheriff’s Office will be postmarked or to Deschutes County egonsheriffssales.or accepted. P ayment received b y the Sheriff’s Office will be g/ must be made in full Reviewing Off i c e, BANK, N.A., P ayment immediately upon the Regional F o r ester, P LAINTIFF, V. J U › accepted. LEGAL NOTICE must be made in full close of the sale. For within 45 days from DITH J. MANN; BEN› upon the Green Tree Servicing, more information on the date of publication JAMIN N . P E ETZ; immediately LLC, its successors this s al e g o to: of n o tice o f the close of the sale. For RUSS ELLIOTT; AAA more information on and/or assigns, Plain› http: //oregonsheriff› o bjection period i n CONTRACTING, s al e g o to: tiff/s, v. George W. ssale.org/ The Bulletin, Bend, LLC; AND PERSONS this Kennedy; George W. //oregonsheriffs› OR. The publication OR PARTIES UN› http: Kennedy, Trustee of date is the exclusive LEGAL NOTICE KNOWN CLAIMING sales.org/ the George and Ar› means for calculating Notice of ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LEGAL NOTICE lene Kennedy Trust Opportunity to Object t he time to f ile a n LIEN, OR INTEREST Estate of Donna Lee Dated 06/01/1992; 1st o bjection. Thos e Flat Vegetation IN THE PROPERTY Rackley. Notice to Security B an k of w ishing to f i l e a n Project DESCRIBED IN THE Interested Persons. Washington; and all Management objection should not National COMPLAINT Case No. other Persons or Par› Deschutes rely upon dates or Forest, Bend-Fort H EREIN, DE F E N › 15PB03041. In the ties unknown claim› Rock timeframe information Ranger District DANTS. NO. Circuit Court of the ing any right, title, lien, provided by any other 15CV0268FC. State of Oregon for or interest in the Real This legal notice an› source. P LAINTIFF’S S U M› the County of Des› Property commonly nounces the availabil› MONS BY PUBLICA› chutes. In the Mat› known as 51494 Riv› ity of t h e E nviron› Issues r a ised in TION. TO:BENJAMIN ter of the Estate of erland Ave., La Pine, mental Assessment o bjections must be N. P E E TZ , AND Donna Lee Rackley, OR 97739, D efen› and Draft Decision based on previously PERSONS OR PAR› deceased. Notice is dant!s. Case N o .: Notice for th e F l at submitted sp e cific TIES UNK N OWN hereby given that 1 3CV1247FC. N O › Vegetation Manage› written com m ents CLAIMING ANY Amber Goulart has TICE OF SALE UN› m ent Project. T h e regarding the RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, been appointed as DER WRIT OF EX› is now subject proposed project or O R I NTEREST I N the personal repre› ECUTION › REAL project a 45-day objection activity and attributed THE PRO P E RTY sentative o f the PROPERTY. Notice is to A draft Deci› to the objector, unless DESCRIBED IN THE a bove estate. A l l hereby given that the period. Notice, which ac› the issue is based on COMPLAINT persons ha v i ng Deschutes C o u nty sion the EA, new information that HEREIN. IN THE claims against the Sheriff’s Office will, on companies escribes the p r o› arose a f t e r the NAME OF THE estate are required Tuesday, November d for posed decision to se› opportunities STATE OF OREGON: to present them to 3, 2015 at 10:00 AM, Alternative 2 and comment. The burden You are hereby re› the un d ersigned in the main lobby of lect for the deci› is on the objector to quired to appear and personal represen› the Deschutes County reasons sion. Bo t h d o c u› demonstrate compli› defend against t he tative in the care of Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 ments are available ance wi th this allegations contained the undersigned at› W. Highway 20, Bend, on the Deschutes Na› requirement for in the Complaint filed torney: Kristin Lar› Oregon, sell, at public tional Forest project objection issues. a gainst you in t h e son, OSB „023639, o ral auction to t he website at: above entitled pro› Hansen & Larson, h ighest bidder, f o r http: //www.fs.usda.go An objection must ceeding within thirty LLC, 698 NW York cash o r ca s hier’ s v/project/? project=432 include a description (30) days from the D rive, Bend, O r › check, the real prop› 89 Hardcopies can of those aspects of date of service of this egon 97703 within erty commonly known be requested by call› the proposed project Summons upon you. four months after as 51494 Riverland ing Anne Trapanese a ddressed b y th e If you fail to appear the date of first pub› Avenue, La Pine, Or› at 541-383-4028. The objection, i n cluding and defend this mat› lication of this no› egon 97739. Condi› EA describes the en› speafic issues related ter within thirty (30) tice, as stated be› tions of Sale: Poten› vironmental effects of to t h e pr o posed days from the date of low, or such claims t ial b i dders m u s t three different vegeta› project; if applicable, publication specified may be barred. All arrive 15 minutes prior tion ob j ector man a gement how t h e herein along with the p ersons who s e to the auction to allow scenarios, believes the environ› required filing f ee, rights may be af› the Deschutes County No Action. including mental analysis or W ELLS FARG O fected by the pro› Sheriff’s Office to re› draft decision specifi› BANK, N.A. will apply ceedings in this es› view bidder’s funds. The Flat project area, cally violates l a w, to the Court for the re› tate ma y o b t ain Only U.S. currency 20,224 acres, is lo› regulation, or policy; lief demanded in the additional informa› and/or cashier’ s approximately suggested remedies Complaint. The first tion fr o m the checks made payable cated 30 air miles south of that would resolve the date of publication is records of the Court, to Deschutes County the city of Bend, Or› objection; supporting September 16, 2015. the personal repre› Sheriff’s Office will be the and 2 miles east reasons f o r NOTICE TO DEFEN› sentative or the at› accepted. Payment egon reviewing officer to DANTS: READ torney for the per› must be made in full of La Pine, Oregon. consider; a n d a T HESE PAP E RS sonal immediately upon the that overall objective statement CAREFULLY! You representative. Date close of the sale. For The for this project is to 1) demonstrates the must "appear" in this of First Publication: more information on improve forest health connection between case or the other side September 2, 2015. this s al e go to: to increase stand pro› prior specific written will win automatically. http: //oregonsheriff› ductivity; and 2) re› comments on the LEGAL NOTICE To "appear" you must ssale.org/ particular p r oposed duce the threat of file with the court a le› Estate of Michael A. large scale w ildfire project or activity and Graham. Notice to LEGAL NOTICE gal paper called a pe o ple, t he content o f t h e "motion" or "answer." Interested Persons. N ationstar Mo r t › effects t o property, and impor› objection, unless the No. LLC, The "motion" or "an› Case gage tant ecosystem com› o swer" must be given 15PB03282. In the Plaintiff/s, v. R. Co› ponents, in c l uding rey Egner; Wash› to the court clerk or Circuit Court of the habitat for interior for› ington Mutual Bank; administrator w i thin State of Oregon for est wildlife species; 3) RHW Enterprises, thirty days along with the County of Des› provide r e storation Inc.; Occupants of the required filing fee. chutes. In the Mat› w ork, u t ilizing t h e the property, Defen› It must be in proper ter of the Estate of wood commodity that dant/s. Case No.: form and have proof Michael A. Graham, contributes to the lo› 12CV1025. NO› o f service o n t h e deceased. Notice is cal a n d re g ional T ICE O F SAL E plaintiff’s attorney or, hereby given that economies. G r a ham UNDER WRIT OF if the plaintiff does not Carolyn EXECUTION have a n a t t orney, has been appointed Connected actions in› p e r sonal REAL PROPERTY. proof of service on the as t h e Notice is h e reby clude maintenance of plaintiff. IF YOU representative of the project area roads, given that the Des› HAVE ANY Q UES› a bove estate. A l l and temporary road ha v i ng c hutes Coun t y TIONS, YOU persons d evelopment. Re › Sheriff’s Office will, S HOULD SEE A N claims against the source pr o t ection on Tuesday, Octo› A TTORNEY I M M E - estate are required measures are also in› b er 20, 2 0 1 5 a t DIATELY. If you need to present them to cluded in the project un d ersigned 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e help in finding an at› the design to reduce or main lobby of the torney, you may call personal represen› eliminate u nwanted Deschutes County the O regon S t ate tative in the care of effects to soil, protect S heriff’s Of fi c e , Bar’s Lawyer Referral the undersigned at› visual quality, and S ervice a t (503) torney at: K r istin 63333 W. Highway minimize disturbance OSB 20, Bend, Oregon, 684-3763 or toll-free Larson, to wildlife. sell, at public oral in Oregon at (800) „023639, Hansen & auction to the high› 452-7636. The object L arson, LLC, 6 98 During the objection of the said action and NW York D r ive, est bidder, for cash period, only those in› Oreg o n or cashier’s check, the relief sought to be B end, dividuals or organiza› 97703 within four the real p roperty obtained therein is tions that submitted commonly known as fully set forth in said m onths after t h e specific written com› 53140 Bridge Drive, complaint, an d is date of first publica› ments during a desig› La Pine, O regon briefly stated as fol› tion of this notice, as nated opportunity for 97739. Conditions lows: Foreclosure of a s tated below, o r p a r ticipation of Sale: P o tential public Deed of Trust/Mort› such claimsmay be (such as scoping or barred. All persons bidders must arrive gage. Grantors: JU› the 4 5 -day p u blic 15 minutes prior to DITH J. MANN. Prop› whose rights may comment period on be affected by the the auction to allow erty address:16048 the Desc h utes the Draft EIS) may CASCADE LANE, La proceedings in this object ( 36 C F R County Sheriff’s Of› Pine, OR 97739. Pub› estate may obtain 218.5). O b j ections f ice to revi e w l ication: The Ben d additional informa› m ust meet the r e› fr o m the bidder’s funds. Only Bulletin. DATED this tion quirements of 36 CFR U.S. currency 23 day of June, 2015. records of the Court, and/or ca s h ier’ s 218.8(d); incorpora› Brandon Smith, OSB the personal repre› tion of documents by checks made pay› „ 124584, Emai l : sentative or the at› reference is permitted able to Deschutes bsmith ' robinsontait.c torney for the per› only as provided for at County Sheriff’s Of› om, Robinson Tait, sonal representative. Date f ice will b e a c › 36 CFR 218.8(b). P.S., Attorneys for cepted. P a yment Plaintiff, Tel: ( 2 06) of First Publication: Objections may be must be made in full 676-9640, Fax: (206) September 2, 2015. m ailed to: For e st i mmediately u p on 676-9659. LEGAL NOTICE Supervisor, Objection t he close o f t h e LEGAL NOTICE Federal N a t ional sale. For more in› Reviewing O ff i cer, CP-SRMOF 11 2012-A Mortgage Associa› Deschutes National f ormation on t h is Trust, U.S. Bank Trust tion, its successors F orest, Attn. 1 5 7 0 sale go to: http: //or› National Association, in interest and/or Appeals and egonsheriffssales.or not in it s I ndividual assigns, Plaintiff/s, O bjections, 63 0 9 5 g/ v. Ben Carmichael; capacity but solely as Deschutes M a r ket Trustee, Plaintiff/s, v. RBS Citizens, N.A. LEGAL NOTICE Road, B e nd , OR The rese A. M eyer; dba Citizens Bank, Nationstar Mortgage, 97701. Ob j ections Kevin P. O’ Rourke; National A s socia› LLC, its successors delivered by mail must State of Oregon; Vol› tion; an d O c c u› and/or assigns, Plain› be received before the unteers in Medicine pants of th e p re› t iff/s, v. J a son M . c lose o f t h e fi f t h C linic of t h e C a s› mises, Defendant/s. H jgham; Angle K . business day after the c ades; Cany o n Case No.: Higham; LibertyBank objection filing period. Breeze Homeowners 14CV0619FC. NO› NKA Home Federal For e mailed Association; Capital T ICE O F SAL E Bank; Mark Higham; objections, p l e a se One Bank (USA), Na› UNDER WRIT OF Ruby Higham; and All email to: objections› tional As s ociation; EXECUTION Other Persons or Par› pnw-deschutes Ofs.fe U nited S t ates o f REAL PROPERTY. ties Unknown claim› d.us America, other Per› Notice i s h e r eby ing any right, title, lien sons or Parties, in› given that the Des› or interest in the Real Please put cluding O c cupants, c hutes Coun t y Property c ommonly OBJECTION and the unknown clai ming any Sheriff’s Office will, known as 21417 Bra› project name in the right, title, lien, or in› on Tuesday, No› detich Loop, Bend OR subject line. terest in the Property vember 3, 2015 at 97701, Defendant/s. Electronic obfections described in the com› 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e Case No.: must be submitted as 1 3CV1219FC. N O › part of an actual e› plaint herein, Defen› main lobby of the dant/s. Case N o .: Deschutes County TICE OF SALE UN› mail message, or as 12CV0128. NOTICE S heriff’s Of fi c e , DER WRIT OF EX› a n a t tachment i n OF SALE U N DER 63333 W. Highway ECUTION › REAL Microsoft Word (.doc), WRIT O F E X ECU› 20, Bend, Oregon, PROPERTY. Notice is rich text format (.rtf), TION - REAL PROP› sell, at public oral hereby given that the or portable document ERTY. N o tice is auction to the high› Deschutes C o u nty format (.pdf) only. For hereby given that the est bidder, for cash Sheriff’s Office will, on electronically mailed Deschutes C o unty or cashier’s check, Tuesday, October 20, objections, the sender Sheriff’s Office will, on the real p roperty 2015 at 10:00 AM, in should norm a lly Tuesday, November commonly known as the main lobby of the receive an automated 10, 2015 at 10:00 AM, 2661 SW 27t h Deschutes C o u nty electronic a c knowl› in the main lobby of Street, R edmond, Sheriff’s Office, 63333 edgement o f the the Deschutes County O regon 977 5 6 . W. Highway 20, Bend, receipt of the Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 Conditions of Sale: Oregon, sell, at public o bjection; it i s t h e W. Highway 20, Bend, Potential b i d ders o ral auction to t h e sender’s responsibil› h ighest bidder, f or ity to ensure timely Oregon, sell, at public must arrive 15 min› o ral auction to t h e u tes prior t o t h e cash o r ca s hier’ s r eceipt b y oth e r h ighest bidder, f o r auction to allow the check, the real prop› means. If you choose cash o r ca s hier’ s Deschutes County erty commonly known to hand deliver your as 21417 Bradetich objections, check, the real prop› Sheriff’s Office to p l e ase tin. DATED this 19

day of August, 2015. Brandon Smith, OSB „ 124584, Emai l : bsmith @ robinsontait.c om, Robinson Tait, P.S., Attorneys for Plaintiff, Tel: ( 206) 676-9640, Fax: (206) 676-9659. LEGAL NOTICE CIRCUIT COURT OF OREGON FOR DESCHUTES COUNTY. W ELLS FARG O


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in the main lobby of DANT/DEFENDANTS est thereon at the the Deschutes County READ THESE P A› rate of 4 . 00000% Sheriff’s Office, 63333 PERS CAREFULLY. per annum f r om W. Highway 20, Bend, You must "appear" in June 1, 2014 until Oregon, sell, at public this case or the other paid; plus all ac› oral auction to t he side will win automati› crued late charges h ighest bidder, f o r c ally. T o "appear" t hereon; an d a l l cash o r ca s hier’ s you must file with the Trustee’s fees, fore› check, the real prop› court a legal paper closure costs and ssale.org/ erty commonly known called a "motion" or a ny s um s ad › as 69347 Silver Spur, "answer". The "mo› vanced by the Ben› LEGAL NOTICE S isters, Oreg o n tion" or "answer" must eficiary pursuant to T he Bank o f N e w 97759. Conditions of be given to the court the terms of said York Mellon FKA The Sale: Potential bid› clerk or administrator Trust Deed. Bank of New York, as ders must arrive 15 within 30 days (or 60 Wherefore, notice is Trustee for the Certifi› minutes prior to the days for Defendant hereby given that, c ateholders of t h e auction to allow the United States or State the un d ersigned CWABS, Inc., Deschutes C o u nty of Oregon Depart› Trustee w il l on Asset-Backed Certifi› Sheriff’s Office to re› ment of R e venue) January 4, 2016 at cates, Series view bidder’s funds. a long with the r e › the hour of 11:00 2006-18, Plaintiff/s, v. Only U.S. currency quired filing fee. It A M, Standard o f Floyd Newton; The and/or cashier’ s must be i n p roper Time, a s e s t ab› Estate of Ella Newton, checks made payable form and have proof lished by S e ction deceased; Unknown to Deschutes County o f service o n t h e 187.110, O r e gon Heirs and Devisees of Sheriff’s Office will be plaintiff’s attorney or, Revised Statues, at E lla N ewton, d e › accepted. Payment if the plaintiff does not the Bond Street en› ceased; Am e rifirst must be made in full have a n at t orney, trance steps to the Home Improvement immediately upon the proof of service on the Deschutes County Finance Co.; and Per› close of the sale. For plaintiff. If you have Courthouse, 1 164 sons or Parties Un› more information on questions, you should NW Bond St, Bend, known claiming any this s al e go to: see an attorney im› OR 97701 County of right, title, lien, or in› http://oregonsheriffs› mediately. If you need Deschutes, sell at terest in the property sales.org/ help in finding an at› public auction to the described in the com› torney, you may con› highest bidder for LEGAL NOTICE plaint herein, Defen› tact the Oregon State cash the interest in dant/s. Case N o .: The Residence Club Bar’s Lawyer Referral the said described 1 4CV0362FC. N O › at Pronghorn Villas S ervice o nline a t real property which TICE OF SALE UN› Condominiums www. statebar. the Grantor had or DER WRIT OF EX› Owners’ Association, org ororegon by calling (503) had power to con› ECUTION › REAL an Oregon non-profit 684-3763 ( in t h e vey at the time of PROPERTY. Notice is corporation, Plaintiff/s, Portland metropolitan t he execution by hereby given that the v. John Pressley and area) or toll-free else› him of the said Trust Deschutes C o u nty Valerie Pressley, indi› where in Oregon at Deed, together with Sheriff’s Office will, on viduals, and Any Par› (800) 452-7636. any interest which Tuesday, October 27, ties in possession or the Grantor or his claiming any right to 2015 at 10:00 AM, in successors in inter› LEGAL NOTICE the main lobby of the possession, D efen› TS No. est acquired after Deschutes C o u nty d ant/s. Case N o . : OR05000138-14-1 t he execution of Sheriff’s Office, 63333 15CV0116. NOTICE APN 2 5 0 86 6 / said Trust Deed, to W. Highway 20, Bend, OF SAL E U N DER 181202CC05503 satisfy the forego› Oregon, sell, at public WRIT O F E X ECU› TO N o 8 5 0 0332 ing obli g ations o ral auction to t h e TION - REAL PROP› T RUSTEE’S N O › thereby secured and ERTY. N o t ic e is T ICE O F h ighest bidder, f o r SAL E the costs and ex› cash o r ca s hier’ s hereby given that the Reference is made penses of sale, in› check, the real prop› Deschutes C o u nty to that certain Trust cluding a r eason› erty commonly known Sheriff’s Office will, on D eed made b y , able charge by the a s 15964 Bull B at Tuesday, October 13, TIMOTHY Trustee. Notice is J Road, La Pine, Or› 2015 at 10:00 AM, in BOOHER further given that egon 97739. Condi› the main lobby of the KIMBERLY AND M any person named Deschutes C o u nty BREHM as Grantor tions of Sale: Poten› in Section 86.753 of yers.corn. 's Office,63333 to AMERITITLE as t ial b i dders m u s t Sheriff Oregon R e v ised W. Highway 20, Bend, arrive 15 minutes prior LEGAL NOTICE S tatutes has t h e Trustee, in favor of Oregon, sell, at public to the auction to allow NOTICE TO INTERMORTGAGE r ight to h ave t h e ESTED P ERSONS. the Deschutes County o ral auction to t h e f oreclosure pr o › ELECTRONIC h ighest bidder, f o r Sheriff’s Office to re› Estate of Dorothy E. REGISTRATION ceeding dismissed cash o r ca s hier’ s view bidder’s funds. R obberson. Ca s e and the Trust Deed S YSTEMS, I NC . Number 15PB04092. Only U.S. currency check, the real prop› ("MERS"), as desig› reinstated by pay› cashier’ s erty commonly known nated nominee for Notice: Th e C ircuit and/or ment to the Benefi› Court of the State of checks made payable as 65690 Adventure OREGON CORPOciary of the entire Court, Bend, Oregon Oregon, f o r the to Deschutes County 97701. Conditions of RATION, B e n efi› amount then due Sheriff’s Office will be County of Deschutes, ciary of the security (other than s u ch has appointed Chris› accepted. P ayment Sale: Potential bid› instrument, its suc› portion of said prin› ders must arrive 15 must be made in full tine A. Lovlien and c essors and a s › cipal as would not minutes prior to the immediately upon the Jeffery L. Robberson then be due had no signs, dated as of as co-Personal Rep› close of the sale. For auction to allow the November 3, 2006 default o c curred), Deschutes C o u nty and recorded on r esentatives of t h e more information on t ogether with t h e g o to: Sheriff’s Office to re› November 9, 2006 Estate of Dorothy E. this s al e costs, Trustee’s or view bidder’s funds. Robberson, de› http: //oregonsheriff› attorney’s fees and as Instrument No. Only U.S. currency ssale.org/ ceased. All persons 2006-74653 and the curing any o t her and/or cashier’ s having claims against default complained beneficial i n terest LEGAL NOTICE checks made payable said estate are re› T he Bank of N e w of in the Notice of was assigned to to Deschutes County quired to present the York Mellon FKA The Sheriff’s Office will be BAC HOME LOANS Default by tender› same, with p r oper Bank of New York, as SERVICING, LP ing t h e per f or› vouchers to the Per› Trustee for the Certifi› accepted. P ayment FKA NTRY› mance required un› must be made in full WIDE C O UHOME sonal Representative, cateholders der the obligation or of immediately upon the c/o Neil R. B ryant, CWALT, Inc., Alterna› LOANS S E RVIC› Trust Deed, at any close of the sale. For B ryant, Lovlien & t ive L o a n Tru s t ING LP, C/0 BAC time prior to f i ve more information on Jarvis, PC, 591 SW days before the date H OME LOAN S 2005-84, M o rtgage this s al e go to: Mill View Way, Bend, Pass-Through Certifi› SERVICING, LP last set fo r s ale. http://oregonsheriffs› Oregon 97702 within Without limiting the and recorded Janu› Series sales.org/ four months from the cates, Trustee’s disclaimer ary 12, 2010 as In› Plaintiff/s, v. date of first publica› 2005-84, of r epresentations strument N u mber K. G r u m; LEGAL NOTICE tion of this notice as Sonya This is an action for 2010-01562 and the or warranties, Or› Countrywide B a nk, stated below, or they N.A.; Mortgage Elec› Judicial Foreclosure beneficial i n terest egon law requires may be barred. A ll of real property com› was assigned to the Trustee to state tronic R e g istration persons whose rights Systems, Inc.; State monly k n own in this notice that a s MORTGAGE may be affected by some r e s idential Oregon; Depart› 16301 Whitetail Lane, ELECTRONIC this proceeding may of property sold at a REGISTRATION of Human Re› Bend, OR 97707. A obtain additional in› ment a n s wer S YSTEMS, I N C . Trustee’s sale may and Persons motion o r f ormation from t h e souces; ("MERS") SOLELY have been used in Parties Unknown must be given to the records of the court, or manufacturing court clerk or admin› AS NOMINEE FOR claiming any r i ght, the Personal Repre› title, lien, or interest in istrator within 30 days NORTHWEST methamphetamines, sentative, or the At› t he p r operty d e › of the date of f irst MORTGAGE the chemical com› torney for the Per› scribed in the com› publication specified GROUP, INC. ITS ponents of w hich sonal Representative. plaint herein, Defen› herein along with the SUCCESSORS a re known to b e Dated and first pub› dant/s. Case N o .: required filing fee. IN AND ASSIGNS and toxic. P rospective lished September 16, 1 4CV0946FC. N O › THE CIRCUIT recorded November purchasers of resi› 2015. Personal Rep› TICE OF SALE UN› COURT O F dential pro p erty THE 9, 2006 as Instru› resentative: Christine DER WRIT OF EX› STATE OF OREGON m ent Numb e r should be aware of A. Lovlien, 1293 NW this potential dan› › REAL FOR THE COUNTY 2006-74653 and the Promontory D r i ve, ECUTION OF DES C HUTES beneficial i n terest ger before deciding PROPERTY. Notice is Bend, Oregon 97701 hereby given that the BANK OF AMERICA, was assigned to to place a bid for and Jeffery L. Rob› Deschutes C o unty N. A., Plaintiff, v. EVERBANK and re› this property at the berson, 8 9 1 NW Sheriff’s Office will, on JOHN VANDER SYS corded September Trustee’s sale. In Stone Pine D r ive, Thursday, October 15, a nd A L L OT H E R 10, 2013 as Instru› construing this no› Bend, Oregon 97703. 2015 at 10:00 AM, in PERSONS OR PAR› m ent tice, the masculine Numb e r Attorney for Personal the main lobby of the TIES UNK N OWN 2013-38628 and the ender includes the Representative: Neil Deschutes e minine and t h e CLAIMING ANY beneficial i n terest C o u nty R . B r yant, OS B Sheriff’s Office, 63333 RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, was assigned to neuter, the singular „730417, Bryant, Lov› W. Highway 20, Bend, O R I NTEREST I N includes plural, the GREEN TREE lien & Jarvis, P.C., Oregon, sell, at public THE REAL P ROP› S ERVICING L L C word "Grantor" in› 591 SW M il l V i ew cludes any succes› and recorded July 7, ral auction to t h e E RTY C O M M O N LY Way, Bend, Oregon o KNOWN AS 1 6301 2014 as Instrument sor in interest to the ighest bidder, f o r 97702, T e l ephone: h Grantor as well as cash o r ca s hier’ s W HITETAIL L A N E , Number (541) 382-4331, Fax: check, the real prop› BEND, O R 9 7 7 07, 2014-21664 and re› any other persons (541) 389- 3 386, erty commonly known Defendants. Case No. corded August 3, owing an obligation, Email: b r y antobl›as 20296 Silver Sage 15CV0300FC SUM› 2015 as Instrument the performance of jlawyers.corn. which is secured by Street, Bend, Oregon MONS BY PUBLICA› Number - ALL OTHER 2015-31718 and re› said Trust Deed, the Just bought a new boat? 97702. Conditions of TION words "Trustee" and Sale: Potential bid› PERSONS OR PAR› corded August 25, Sell your old one in the "Beneficiary" in› UNK N OWN 2015 as Instrument classifieds! Ask about our ders must arrive 15 TIES cludes their respec› ANY Number Super Seller rates! minutes prior to the CLAIMING tive successors in 541-385-5809 auction to allow the RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, 2015-035171 of offi› i nterest, i f any . cial records in the Deschutes C o u nty O R I NTEREST I N LEGAL NOTICE Dated: First Ameri› Sheriff’s Office to re› THE REAL PROP› O ffice of the R e› can Title Company Provident Funding As› view bidder’s funds. E RTY C O M M O N LY c order o f Des › By: Authorized Sig› sociates, L.P., Plain› Only U.S. currency KNOWN AS 1 6301 chutes County, Or› natory First Ameri› t iff/s, v. Nanc y and/or cashier’ s W HITETAIL L A N E , egon to-wit: APN: O’ Connor; C e n tral checks made payable BEND, OR 97707. TO 250866 / can Title Company c /o T RUS T E E Oregon Intergovern› to Deschutes County D EFENDANTS A L L 181202CC05503 mental Council; and Sheriff’s Office will be OTHER P E RSONS L OT T W O C ORPS 1710 0 (2), Gillette Ave, Irvine, Persons or P a rties accepted. P ayment O R PARTIES U N › WESTBROOK VIL› unknown c l a iming must be made in full KNOWN CLAIMING LAGE, PHASE 11, CA 92614 949-252-8300 FOR any right, title, lien, or immediately upon the ANY RIGHT, TITLE, DESCHUTES interest in the prop› close of the sale. For LIEN, OR INTEREST COUNTY, SALE I N FORMA› OR› T ION PLEA S E erty described in the more information on IN THE REAL PROP› EGON. Commonly complaint her e in, this s al e g o to: ERTY C O M M O N LY known as: 6 1652 CALL: In S o urce Logic at D efendant/s. C a s e http: //oregonsheriff› KNOWN AS 1 6301 KACI LANE, BEND, 702-659-7766 Web› No.: 1 5 C V0002FC ssale.org/ W HITETAIL L A N E , OR 97702 Both the site for T r ustee’s N OTICE OF S A L E BEND, OR 97707: IN Beneficiary and the U NDER WRIT O F LEGAL NOTICE THE NAME OF THE Trustee have Sale I n f ormation: www.insourcelogic.c EXECUTION - REAL T he Bank o f N e w STATE OF OREGON: elected to sell the PROPERTY. Notice is York Mellon fka The You are hereby re› said real property to o m. Order N o . OR15-000077-1, hereby given that the Bank of New York, as quired to appear and satisfy the obliga› Deschutes C o u nty Trustee for the Certifi› defend the action filed tions secured by Pub Dates 09/02/2015, Sheriff’s Office will, on c ateholders of t h e against you in t he said Trust Deed and CWABS, notice has been re› 09/09/2015, Tuesday, November Inc., above-entitled cause 09/1 6/2015, 3, 2015 at 10:00 AM, Asset-Backed Certifi› within 30 days from corded pursuant to in the main lobby of cates, Series 2006-7, the date of service of Section 86.735(3) of 09/23/2015 the Deschutes County Plaintiff/s, v. Melody this Summons upon Oregon R e v ised Sheriff’s Office, 63333 Dou glass; Stephen you; and if you fail to Statutes. The de› LEGAL NOTICE W. Highway 20, Bend, Dou glass; T o llgate appear and defend, fault for which the TS No. Oregon, sell, at public Water Company; Toll› for want thereof, the foreclosure is made OR09000009-15-1› o ral auction to t h e gate Property Own› Plaintiff will apply to is the Grantor’s fail› FT AP N 1 3 0876/ h ighest bidder, f o r 151130C001100 TO ers Association; and the court for the relief ure to pay: failed to cash o r ca s hier’ s Persons or P a rties demanded t h e rein. pay payments which No 8570207 check, the real prop› unknown clai ming any Dated: 9/9/ 2 015. became due T RUSTEE’S N O › erty commonly known right, title, lien, or in› A LDRIDGE PIT E , Monthly P a yment T ICE O F SAL E Reference is made a s 950 N E L e n a terest in th e c o m› L LP. By: Sarah M . $1999.29 Monthly Place, Bend, Oregon plaint herein, Defen› Mathenia, OSB „1206 Late Charge $0 By to that certain Trust 97701. Conditions of dant/s. Case N o .: 81, (858) 750-7600, this reason of said D eed made b y , Sale: P otential bid› 1 4CV0819FC. N O › (858) 412-2639 (Fac› default the Benefi› M URL C HOL M TICE OF SALE UN› simile) ciary has declared AND MARY F ders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the DER WRIT OF EX› smathenia©aldall obligations se› H OLM, AS T E N › auction to allow the ECUTION › REAL r idgepite.corn A l d › cured by said Trust ANTS BY THE EN› Deschutes C o u nty PROPERTY. Notice is ridge Pite, LLP 621 Deed immediately TIRETY as Grantor Sheriff’s Office to re› hereby given that the SW Morrison Street, due and payable, to NO R THWEST view bidder’s funds. Deschutes C o u nty Suite 425, Portland, said sums being the TITLE AGE N CY Only U.S. currency Sheriff’s Office will, on OR 97205, Of Attor› following, to-wit: The INC as Trustee, in and/or cashier’ s Thursday, November neys for Plaintiff. NO› sum of $366,001.88 f avor o f MO R T › GAGE ELEC › checks made payable 5, 2015 at 10:00 AM, TICE T O D E F EN› together with inter› LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO INTERESTED P ERSONS. Estate o f Is a belle Eichner. Case Num› ber 15PB04128. No› tice: The Circuit Court of the State of Or› egon, for the County of Deschutes, has ap› pointed Fredy E. Jen› kins a s Pe r sonal Representative of the Estate o f Is a belle Eichner, d eceased. All persons having claims against said estate are required to present the s a me, with proper vouchers to the Personal Rep› resentative, c/o Mel› issa P. Lande, Bryant, Lovlien 8 Jarvis, P.C., 591 SW M il l V i ew Way, Bend, Oregon 9 7702 w i thin f o u r months from the date of first publication of this notice as stated below, or they may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by this pro› ceeding may obtain additional information from the records of the court, the Per› sonal Representative, or the Attorney for the Personal Representa› tive. Dated and first published September 16, 2015. Personal Representative: Fredy E. Jenkins, 1108 NW Knoxville Court, Bend, Oregon 97703. Attor› ney f o r Pe r sonal Representative: Mel› issa P. Lande, OSB „913493, Bryant, Lov› lien & Jarvis, P.C., 591 SW M ill V iew Way, Bend, Oregon 97702, T e lephone: (541) 382-4331, Fax: (541) 389- 3 386, Email: landeobljlaw›

to Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: http: //oregonsheriff›

TRONIC R E G IS› satisfy the forego› ing obli g ations TRATION S YSTEMS, I N C . thereby secured and

review bid d er’s REAL PROPERTY. funds. Only U . S. Notice is h e reby c urrency an d / or given that the Des› ("MERS"), as desig› the costs and ex› cashier’s c h e cks c hutes Cou n t y penses of sale, in› made payable to Sheriff’s Office will, nated nominee for cluding a r eason› Deschutes County on Tuesday, No› TAYLOR, BEAN & WHITAKER able charge by the Sheriff’s Office will vember 10, 2015 at Trustee. Notice is be accepted. Pay› 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e MORTGAGE CORP., Beneficiary further given t hat ment must be made main lobby of the any person named in full immediately Deschutes County of the security in› strument, its suc› in Section 86.753 of upon the close of Sheriff’s Off i c e, Oregon R e v ised the sale. For more 63333 W. Highway c essors and a s › S tatutes has t h e information on this 20, Bend, Oregon, signs, dated as of right to have t he sale go to: http: //or› sell, at public oral January 12, 2 009 and recorded on f oreclosure pro › egonsheriffssales.or auction to the high› ceeding dismissed est bidder, for cash January 26, 2009 as g/ Instrument No. and the Trust Deed or cashier’s check, LEGAL NOTICE reinstated by pay› the real p roperty 2009-03420 of offi› Wachovia Mortgage cial records in the ment to the Benefi› commonly known as Loan Trust, Mortgage ciary of the entire 20393 Ahha Lane, Office of th e R e› Pass-Through Certifi› a mount then d u e B end, Ore g o n c order o f Des › cates, Series 2005-B, 97702. Conditions (other than s uch chutes County, Or› U.S. Bank National egon to-wit: APN: portion of said prin› of Sale: P o tential Association, as bidders must arrive cipal as would not 130876/ Trustee, b y PNC 151130C001100 A then be due had no 15 minutes prior to Bank, National Asso› the auction default o ccurred), TRACT OF LAND ciation as S e rvicer IN THE S O UTH› t ogether with t h e with delegated au› costs, Trustee’s or WEST Q UARTER t hority u n de r th e (SW-1/4) OF SEC› attorney’s fees and do c u › curing any o t her t ransaction TION THIRTY (30), ments, Plaintiff/s, v. TOWNSHIP F IF› default complained The Estate of R ay of in the Notice of TEEN (15) SOUTH, Keith Johnson; the RANGE E L EVEN Default by tender› ing t h e pe r for› Unknown Heirs and (11), EAST OF THE assigns of Ray Keith WILLAMETTE ME› mance required un› J ohnson; th e U n › der the obligation or RIDIAN, DES› known Devisees of CHUTES COUNTY, Trust Deed, at any Ray Keith Johnson; time prior to f i ve OREGON, DE› and all other Persons SCRIBED AS FOL› days before the date or Parties unknown LOWS: BEG IN› last set fo r s ale. claiming any r i ght, NING A T THE Without limiting the title, lien, or interest in Trustee’s disclaimer WEST Q UARTER the R ea l P r operty (W-1/4) CORNER of r e presentations commonly known as or warranties, Or› OF SAID SECTION 56125 Snow Goose THENCE egon law requires 30; R oad, B end, O R the Trustee to state S OUTH 89’ 3 4 ’ 97707, Defendant/s. EAST ALONG THE in this notice that No.: some r e s idential Case N ORTH LINE O F 1 4CV0863FC. N O › T HE SW-1/4 O F property sold at a TICE OF SALE UN› Trustee’s sale may SAID SECTION 30, DER WRIT OF EX› 1 511.96 FEET ; have been used in ECUTION › REAL manufacturing THENCE S O UTH PROPERTY. Notice is 0’13’ WEST PAR› methamphetamines, hereby given that the the chemical com› ALLEL WITH THE Deschutes C o u nty EAST LINE OF THE ponents of w h ich Sheriff’s Office will, on a re known to b e S W-1/4 OF S A I D Tuesday, November SECTION 30, toxic. P r ospective 3, 2015 at 10:00 AM, purchasers of resi› 1 610.0 FEET T O THE TRUE POINT dential pro p erty in the main lobby of the Deschutes County OF BE G INNING; should be aware of Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 THENCE S O UTH this potential dan› W. Highway 20, Bend, 89’34’ EAST PAR› ger before deciding Oregon, sell, at public ALLEL WITH THE to place a bid for o ral auction to t h e this property at the N ORTH LINE O F h ighest bidder, f o r T HE SW-1/4 O F Trustee’s sale. In cash o r ca s hier’ s construing this no› SAID SECTION 30, check, the real prop› 520.0 tice, the masculine FEET; erty commonly known gender includes the THENCE S O UTH a s 5 6 12 5 Sn o w 0’13’ WEST PAR› f eminine and t h e Goose Rd., Bend, Or› neuter, the singular ALLEL WITH THE egon 97707. Condi› EAST LINE OF THE includes plural, the tions of Sale: Poten› word "Grantor" in› S W-1/4 OF S A I D t ial b i dders m u s t SECTION 30, cludes any succes› arrive 15 minutes prior sor in interest to the 6 20.51 FEET T O to the auction to allow THE NORTHERLY Grantor as well as the Deschutes County any other persons R IGHT OF W A Y Sheriff’s Office to re› LINE O F S T A TE owing an obligation, view bidder’s funds. the performance of HIGHWAY 20; Only U.S. currency THENCE NORTH which is secured by and/or cashier’ s 5 3’26 1/2’ W E ST said Trust Deed, the checks made payable ALONG THE words "Trustee" and to Deschutes County "Beneficiary" in› NORTHERLY Sheriff’s Office will be R IGHT OF W A Y cludes their respec› accepted. P ayment LINE O F S T A TE tive successors in must be made in full HIGHWAY 20, interest if any immediately upon the Dated: First Ameri› 645.63 FEET; close of the sale. For THENCE NORTH can Title Insurance more information on 0’13’ EAST PAR› Company By: Au› this s al e go to: ALLEL WITH THE thorized Signatory http: //oregonsheriff› First American Title EAST LINE OF THE SW-1/4 OF S A ID I nsurance C o m › ssale.org/ pany c/o TRUSTEE SECTION 30, LEGAL NOTICE ’I 7100 2 39.70 FEET T O CORPS Wells Fargo Bank, Gillette Ave, Irvine, THE TRUE POINT NA, its successors OF B E G INNING. CA 92614 in interest and/or 949-252-8300 FOR Commonly known assigns, Plaintiff/s, SALE I N FORMA› v. Albert Vanderho› as: 67216 HWY 20, T ION PLEA S E BEND, OR 9 7701 even; Ros a nna Both th e B e nefi› CALL: I n S o urce Vanderhoeven; Logic at ciary a n d the Bank of A merica, 702-659-7766 Web› Trustee have N.A., successor by site for Trustee’s elected to sell the merger t o BAC said real property to Sale I n f ormation: Home Loans Ser› www.insourcelogic.c satisfy the obliga› vicing, LP fka tions secured by o m. O r de r No. Countrywide Home OR15-000076-1, said Trust Deed and Loans S e r vicing, notice has been re› Pub Dates LP; River Canyon 09/02/2015, corded pursuant to Estates 09/09/2015, Section 86.735(3) of Homeowners’ Asso› Oregon R e v ised 09/1 6/2015, c iation, Inc.; a n d Statutes. The de› 09/23/2015 O ccupants of t h e fault for which the premises, D e fen› LEGAL NOTICE foreclosure is made dant/s. Case No.: is the Grantor’s fail› U.S. Bank National 13CV0754. NO› ure to pay: failed to Association, as T ICE O F SA L E pay payments which Trustee, successor UNDER WRIT OF in interest to Bank of became due EXECUTION Monthly P a yment America, N ational REAL PROPERTY. Association as suc› $1819.15 Monthly Notice is h e reby Late Charge $76.78 cessor by merger to given that the Des› By this reason of LaSalle Bank NA as c hutes Cou n t y s aid d efault t h e Trustee for Wash› Sheriff’s Office will, Beneficiary has de› ington Mutual Mort› on Tuesday, No› clared al l o b liga› age Pass-Through vember 10, 2015 at tions secured by ertificates WMALT 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e s aid Trust D e ed Series 2006-5, its main lobby of the i mmediately d u e successors in inter› Deschutes County and payable, said est and/or assigns, S heriff’s Offi c e, Plaintiff/s, v. B rett sums being the fol› 63333 W. Highway lowing, to-wit: The Donald M o r elock 20, Bend, Oregon, sum of $363,294.11 aka Brett Morelock; sell, at public oral together with inter› Kimberly J. C o le; auction to the high› est thereon at the JP Morgan Chase est bidder, for cash rate of 4 . 00000% Bank successor in or cashier’s check, interest to W a sh› the real p roperty per annum from Au› gust 1, 2014 until ington Mutual Bank; commonly known as U nited States o f paid; plus all ac› 19795 Dry Canyon crued late charges America; T i l licum Avenue, Bend, Or› t hereon; an d a l l Village Homeown› egon 97702. Condi› Trusteels fees, fore› ers As s o ciation, tions of Sale: Po› closure costs and Inc.; Occupants of tential bidders must any s u m s ad› the Premises; and arrive 15 m inutes vanced by the Ben› the Real Property prior to the auction eficiary pursuant to located at 6 1 3 33 to allow the Des› the terms of said Yakwahtin C o u rt, c hutes Cou n t y Trust Deed. B end, Oreg o n Sheriff’s Office to Wherefore, notice is 97702, Defendant/s. review bid d er’s hereby given that, Case No.: f unds. Only U . S. the un d ersigned 12CV0973. NO› currency an d / or Trustee will on De› T ICE O F SAL E cashier’s c h e cks cember 28, 2015 at UNDER WRIT OF made payable to the hour of 1 1:00 EXECUTION Deschutes County REAL PROPERTY. AM, Standard of Sheriff’s Office will Time, a s es t a b› Notice i s h e r eby be accepted. Pay› lished by S ection given that the Des› ment must be made 187.110, O r e gon c hutes Coun t y in full immediately Revised Statues, at Sheriff’s Office will, upon the close of the Bond Street en› on Thursday, Octo› the sale. For more trance steps to the b er 22, 2 0 1 5 a t information on this Deschutes County 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e sale go to: http: //or› main lobby of the Courthouse, 1164 egonsheriffssales.or NW Bond St, Bend, Deschutes County g/ OR 97701 County of S heriff’s Of fi c e , Deschutes, sell at 63333 W. Highway LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, public auction to the 20, Bend, Oregon, highest bidder for sell, at public oral N.A., its successors cash the interest in auction to the high› in interest and/or the said described est bidder, for cash assigns, Plaintiff/s, real property which v. Timothy J. Un› or cashier’s check, the Grantor had or the real p roperty derwood aka Timo› had power to con› commonly known as thy Jay Underwood; vey at the time of 61333 Y a k wahtin Tillicum Village Ho› the execution by meowners Associa› Court, Bend, O r› him of the said Trust egon 97702. Condi› t ion; a n d O c cu› tions of Sale: Po› Deed, together with pants of the any interest which tential bidders must premises, D e fen› the Grantor or his arrive 15 minutes dant/s. Case No.: successors in inter› prior to the auction 14CV0913FC. NO› est acquired after to allow the Des› T ICE O F SA L E t he execution o f c hutes Coun t y UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION said Trust Deed, to Sheriff’s Office to


ES WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 16 2015

NOTICE

THE BULLETIN

BOYD NANCY D BOYLE CHRIS D BOYLE ROBERT J BOZARTH JOHN N BRADBURY HAROLD W BRADBURY LOIS BRADFORD CAROL A

Central Electric Cooperative, Inc., gives BONNIE notice that unclaimed capital credit pay› BRADLEY BRADLEY FLINT A BRADLEY KEVIN K ments havebeen available sinceDecember BRADLEY MICHAEL E 10, 2010 at the office Qf the CooPerative, BRAINARD JERRY BRAKEMAN MINNIE at 2098 N. Highway 97, Redmond, Ore› BRALY DAVID V MALCOLM L gon tothe member's names hereunder Qf BRAND BRANDER ALEX G memberShiP alld PaymentS WhiCh haVe BRANDT ARNOLD F BRANDT CLOVIS

been authorizedfor more than 4 years. BRANDT ERNEST R BRANDT FORREST Unless said members pr heirs claim said BRANHAM TERESA ANTHONY payments not later than Jan 1, 2016, they BRANICKI BRANNON LOUIS L Will be fOrfeited tp the COOPeratiVe. TheSe BRANSTETTER VIRGINIAM BRATLEY C M payments are retired capital credits for BREADON CHRIS G JULIE patronage for the years: 1985 and 1986. BREADON BREADON ROBERT W ENTERPRISES TQ claim the caPital credit Payment Please BREND BREND INC phOne pr Write Our OffiCe. 69550 HOLMES/WELL A BAR D PINTORANCH ABBOlT OLETHA M ABBY JOHN D ABRUZZO FRED ABRUZZO PEGG ACORD DONALD L ADAIR RICHARD R ADAMS BOYD W ADAMS FRANK R ADAMS GLENN R ADAMS JACK R ADAMS JOEY L ADAMS KENARD

ADAMS KENNETH D ADAMS LEWIS E ADAMS NORMAN ADAMS TED G ADDINGTON ROBERT L ADDISON STEVE ADKISSON SpplT R ADUDELL KENNETH S AFFORDABLEFURNITURE AGEE CHUCK M AIRHART CHARLES S AITKEN JIM N AKERS JOYCE W AKIN DAVID H AKINS GIFFORD J AKINS JAY L ALBERTINI ALAN F

BARTO CRAIG A BARTON GARY A BARTON RICK M BARTSCHER LYLE BARWIS LEON BASSETT CHARLES S BASSFORD PAUL S BASZLER ROSE M BATEHAM KELLEN A BATEMAN DALE L BATES CARYL B BATES DAVID L BATES DOROTHY D BATES EUGENE W BATES JEAN F BATES KAREN J BATES RAY B BATEY IAN BATEY MARIA

BATTY THOMAS L BAUER KEITH J BAUMAN JAMES M BAUMAN JOHN S BAUMANN RODDY K BAUNACH FRANCES V BAXTER JOHN T BEALL PAULINE BEALS JEANNE A BEAN LOIS M BEARD JOHN R BEARD PAUL D ALDOR KATHRYN BEATY PAT M ALDOUS EDGAR J BEAUDIN DENNIS ALDOUS JOHN E BEBB EDWARD E ALEXANDER DAVID J BECHTELL CHARLES D ALEXENKO CURTIS R BECK GARY M ALFONSO RICKE M BECK JOHN E ALFORD DELAINE U BECK MARGARET ALFORD FRANK E BECKER DOUGLASL ALGER RICHARD B BECKElT GERALD N ALLAN FRED W BECKMAN I KENT ALLBEE WILLIAM J BECKWITH JEFFERY D ALLDREDGE LLOYD G BECQUET GARY D ALLDRIDGE JEAND ESTATEOF BECRAFT HARRY R ALLEN ARNOLD BEEBE PRESTON L ALLEN DENNIS L BEEBE WILLIAMA ALLEN KENNETH V BEEK CHARLES J ALLEN MARJORIE S BEELER DR.WM J ALLEN ONETA BEFUS ALICE G ALLEN REBECCA D BEGA JOSEPH R ALLEN STEVE R BEISLEY CLYDE T ALLEN WILLIS E BEITZ TRUDI C ALLISON JACK BELCHER LINDA E ALLISON JOHNA BELEFSKI STAN G ALMASIE LARRY P BELL ARTHUR T ALTIG SUZANNE M BELL DANIEL C AMARAL JOEL J BELL JOHN C AMERICANFED SAVINGS BELL MIKE S AMES A GARY BELL RANDALL N AMUNDSON JOHN BELLEFEUILLE PHILLIP C ANCELL CELESTE C BELLEMORE PAUL H ANDERHO INC BELLINGER GROVER L ANDERSEN STEPHANIE L BEND REDI-MIX CONCRETE ANDERSON B P BENDELE MARK A ANDERSON BEN L BENDELE PAUL A ANDERSON BOB J BENDIS HOMES ANDERSON BRUCE P BENHAM GORDON T ANDERSON CARL BENJ FRANKLIN ANDERSON CHRISTOPHER BENJ FRANKLINSAVINGS ANDERSON DARRELL D BENJAMIN ROBERT M ANDERSON DEAN BENNElT JULIE A ANDERSON DEL R BENNElT MARJORIE ANDERSON DON B BENNElT ROBERT L ANDERSON JACK L BENSON CECIL G ANDERSON JAMES W BENSON GARY G ANDERSON JENNIFER I BENSON HELEN M ANDERSON JOHNNA K BENSON RON L ANDERSON KELLY BERG CHARLES E ANDERSON LILYAN G BERG GARY M ANDERSON LLOYD W BERG ROBERT M ANDERSON MARY E BERG STEVEN ANDERSON RICHARD F BERGER CHARLES D ANDERSON RON BERGER DAVID ANDERSON RUTH F BERGER DON D ANDERSON SCOTT D BERGMAN LINDA R ANDERSON STAN H BERGSMA GEORGE ANDERSON WM R BERGSMA RODDY G ANDRE THOMAS E BERKSON EVE C ANDREASEN STEVEN R BERLAND KENNETH ANDRESEN DARVONM BERNDT MERLE H ANDREWSAUDRE C BERNERT DIANNE ANDREWS BRIAN W BERNHARDT RONALD R ANDYKE LEANN M BERRY CAROL E ANGELL MILLARD BERRY DAVID A ANGLER KATHRYN M BERRY GEORGE S ANSTElT GARY F BERRY HERSCHAL A ANTHONY PAUL M BERRY RONALD L APOSTOLAKIS PETER P BERTHIAUME STEVEN L APPLEGATE LOUIS A BERTRAND EDWARD P ARCH PAGING BERTSCH JUNE ARCHER WALTER BERY KATHY S ARENZ JOHN BESS GREG S ARIZZIERMANNO BESSEY KURT L ARMITAGE JANET E BEST ROBERT D ARMSTRONG J W BElTUCCI FRANK A ARMSTRONGWILLIAM C BETZER NIKI ARNETT NANISCHA BEVER JUDY R ARNOLD BERNICE BIDIMAN ORRIN W ARNOLD JUNE A BIDIMAN VIRGINIA ARNOLD MIKE C BIERMAN CLARENCE H ARNOLD RAYMONDC BIG HORNTAXIDERMY ARONSON DAVID J BIG SUMMITPRAIRIEINC ARREDONDO CHRISTINE BIG W RANCH ART MERCHANTGALLERY BIGHAM ELIZABETH A ARVIDSON CARL G BILLHYMER HELEN J ARVIDSON G MICHAEL BILLINGS DAN M ASH MARY E BILLINGS SHEOLA J ASHBY LORI A GINA VICTORIA A ASHER J FRANK BINAM CLAUD ASHLEY M GEORGE BINFORD LINDLEY ASTON EDWIN L BIRCH JOHN M ATENCIO PATRICIA M BIRKENFELD HEINZ ATKINSON DANIEL L BISHOP FRED H ATKINSON JEFFREY L BLACK DICK R ATKINSON JUDY A BLACK JAMES E AlTIG RICK E BLACK THOMAS I AUBREY LINDA M BLACKBUlTE GENERALSTORE AUFRECHT RICK D BLACKBURN HELEN M AUGUSTINE FRANK E BLACKER LINNEA AUGUSTYNOVICH RON BLACKWELL HENRY B AURDAL MARTIN K BLACKWOODJEFF D AUSTIN GERALD BLAGG-HAWES ELLEN A AUZENNE ALLEN J BLAIR GARY L AUZENNE RONALD J BLAIR MIKE M AVERILL JOANESTATEOF BLAIR ROSE AYERSRICHARDK B&KFARMS BLAKE NANCY A B L ANDERSONCONST BLAKE SHARON S BABBITT ANDREW E BLANCHARD FRANK BABBITT JAMES M BABCOCK NORMAN P

BABCOCK CONSTRUCTION BABLER CHUCK BACHELOR BROADCASTING BACHMEIER MICHAEL S BACKUS GREGORY BAGLEY ROBERT R BAILEY MIKE BAILIN RICHARD A BAKER ALICE M BAKER CAROL BAKER DOUGLAS BAKER EDWIN M BAKER HARVEY W BAKER JAMES C BAKER MARCY A BAKER NANCE C BALDRIDGE ROGER H BALDWIN DANA W BALES ANNA L BALES ARLEEESTATEOF BALL DON

BALLARD SARAH A BALLARD THOMAS E BALLENGER COLLEEN BALLIN RUTH E BALMER DONALD G BALTZOR ARTHUR L BANFIELDMICHAEL G BANKERSREALTY BANKS ROBERT M BANKS SUSAN J SANTA OREN C BAPTISTE JOE E BAR NONERANCH BARBER MURL S BARBOUR LESLIE A BARBOUR STEPHEN BARCLAY JOSEPH J BARCLAYCONTRACTORS BARIL JANE E

BARKDOLL AGNES I BARKER DARRELL W BARKER KAREN L BARKER LEROY E BARKER PATRICIA B BARKER REED A BARKER ROBERT R BARLUP GERALD L BARNARD ROBERT BARNES EDWARD E BARNES GAYLA A BARNES MARIE S BARNES MINNIE L BARNES R E BARNES WILLIAM T BARNETT ERIC S BARNETT LOU E BARNETT WILLIAME BARNEY KENNETH W BARRETT BONNIE J

BARRElT CHARLES BARRElT KAY W BARRElT KEN BARRElT RODERICK D BARRY OLIVE M BARTH HERBERT E BARTLETT FRANK W BARTLElT YERN R

BRENDLE HARRY L BRENIMAN LARRY D BRENIMAN S KEYES L BRESHINI CHRISTINA A BREWER DENISE A BREWER DONALD L BREWER ROY B

BREWER SHARONJ BREWER TOM BRIDGES MARIE BRIGGS DOLORES A BRILES JUDITH M BRINKLEY THOMAS H BRISLIN JOHN A BRllTSAN RUSSELL BROADDUS ROBERT S BROADDUS RONALD L BROOK BARBARA K BROOK JOHN BROOK TERRY V BROCKElT DONALD V BROEKER RICHARD L BRONSON ROBERT P BROOKHART TIMF BROOKS &SHERMAN BROSE DANIEL J BROSTROMTRACY D BROSWICK BRUCE I BROTHERS PAUL BROTHERSSTAGESTOP BROUGHTONHAL F BROW UNA W BROWN ALICE A BROWN ALVIN R BROWN BARBARA M BROWN CHARLES BROWN CRAIG E BROWN DIANE M BROWN DONALD BROWN DONNALE E BROWN ERIC M BROWN HAZEL F BROWN J SCOTT BROWN J W BROWN LESLIE A BROWN MICHAEL D BROWN PAUL BROWN RICHARD BROWN ROBERT BROWN RON L BROWN SpplT R BROWN SHAWN BROWN STUART M BROWN SUSANNA M BROWN TAMMY L BROWN TEREASE K BRUCE ARDELL J BRUCKER M BRUINGTON ANNA M BRUMBAUGH F JOE BRUNE LEROYA BRUNER GARY G BRUNMEIER R J BRUNS SHARON S BRUTSCH DOUGLAS J BRYAN JOYCEA BRYAN KENNETH M BRYAN TIM G BRYANT WILLIAM M BUCHANAN L A BUCHANAN LEWIS L BUCHMAN ED H BUCKENDORF PAT BUCKLE HARVEY H BUCKNER AUGUSTA BUCKNER GRACE BUCKNER ROBERT D BUCKNER VIRGINIA A BUCKNER W A BUDKE DALE G BUEHLER KARL BUEHLER ROY E BUERMANNWILLIAM L BUIGI THOMAS J BULGER JOSEPH E BULLOCK GARY R BUNCH DAN BUNDY DENNIS J BUNDY DOROTHY M BUNDY WINNIFRED M BUNGER LOREN E BUNNELL LOREN K BURCELL TRACY L BURGH JAMES A BURCOMBE DAVE BURDICK JOYCE G BURDICK ROBERT R SURGE THOMAS L BURGER BETH BURGESS DALE E BURGESS LEONARD L BURING RICHARD M BURING ROBERTAA BURK ROBERT B BURKE MARGIE BURKHART EVERElT B BURKHART GEORGE BURKHART RAYMONDH BURKHOLDER SELA B BURKS JOHN BURLESON ROBERT W BURMEISTER VIRGINIA BURNS ALLEN K BURNS DERALD W BURNS JANET M BURNS JOYCE J BURNUM DOROTHY BURRELL JAMES H BURT MARIE M BURTIS RAY BURTON JEFFREY S BURTON MICHAEL A BUSS RONALD M BUSSE GREG D BUTLER BEVERLYA BUTLER EUGENE

CARTER GEORGE W CARTER SONIA M CARTER STEWART L CARTER WILLIAM E CARTWRIGHT DONNA L CARUSO JOHN R CARVER CHERI CARY MARIE N CASCADEDEVINC CASCADEPINESPECIALITES CASCADERENTALS CASE JUDSON E CASEY KATHY A CASEY OTIS J CASEY R YERN CASEY VIRGINIA E CASLER BEATRICE P CASSEL JOSEPH W CASSELS SpplT L CASTEEL SID M CASTO SHARON J CASWELL BURNEY CASWELL JOSEPH H CASWELL SYLVIA R CATER MICHAEL E DATES EDWIN C DATES MARY A CAUDILLO LUCY CAUDLE CAROL L CAUFIELD JOSEPH CAULFIELD EDWARD CAVES BYRON D CENARRUSA JOE E CHADWICK DIANA CHAMBERLAIN CRAIG D CHAMBERLAIN FRANCIA CHAMBERS DWIGHT L CHAMBERS MONTE H CHAMBERS SCOTT D CHANCE R E CHANEY NATHAN CHAPLIN ELIZABETH W CHAPMAN DENNIS R CHAPMAN HOWARDC CHAPMAN PAT CHAPMAN ROY CHAR-BARBRANCH CHASE DEBRA J CHASE JAMES R CHASE NINA M CHASE PHIL W

CROWE DAVID V CRUSE DAVID L CRUZ GILBERT CTRL ORSUNCOUNTRY INC CUBERO MARIO CUBERO TONYAA CUELLAR JUDY K CULLER LETA M GULLEY KEVIN R CULVER CHARLIE A CULVER JOSEPH G

CHATFIELD DEE A CHAVEZ MANUEL

DAVIS ANDREA P

CHAVEZ TOMMYJ CHENEY JIM W CHENEY MARY CHESHIRE MICHAEL N CHEWNING CONSTANCE V CHIAPUZIOROBERT CHICHENOFF GERALD P CHILDERS ALBERT D CHILDERS RONALD E CHILLESS TEDD CHILSON DONALD W CHISHOLM RONALD R CHOPPING ROBERT CHOTARD MARILYN L CHRISMAN ROBERT E CHRISMAN ROSS C CHRISTENSENARTHUR G CHRISTENSEN CHARLES S CHRISTENSEN GERALD M CHRISTENSEN MELANIE A CHRISTENSON MARLENE CHRISTIAN DANIEL T CHRISTIANSEN RUBY EESTATEPF CHRISTIE ALEXANDER V CHRISTOPHERSONARLENE H CHUBB H L CIRCLE 5TRAILER PARK CISNA JOSEPH A CLAES THOMAS E CLAPP MARTIN A CLAREY DUVEEN 0

CUMBERLAND PAMELA J

CUMINS JAMES E CUNNINGHAM JOHN S CUNNINGHAM MINNIE CUNNION JOHN J CURRIE JAMES A CURRY DARRELL D CURTIS MARCELLA R CURTIS MICHAEL J CURTIS MIKE C CURTIS ROBERT D GUSHING DONALD CUTANEO EUGENE C CUTSFORTH DAVID H CUTTING PAT J D H M DEVELOPMENTCp D&M ENTERPRISES DACHENHAUSENROBERT D DAHL CLYDE DAHL KEITH W DAHLEN R S DAHLSTROMVIRGINIA M DAILEY JAMES B DALEY DOUGLAS G DALTON CHRISTINE DALTON MILTON C DALY-RUNGECONST Cp DAMMANN CARL L

DAN DEWITTDRYWALL DANIELS ELAINE F DANLEY JAMES H DANNEN W E DARMS DONALD P DARR COREY J DAUGHERTY ELDRED D DAUGHERTY J R DAVENPORT DAN S DAVIDSON GERALD 0 DAVIDSON SHARON E DAVIES JULIE A DAVIS BRENDA G DAVIS COLEMAN E DAVIS DEE R DAVIS DICK DAVIS DON L DAVIS FREDERICK A DAVIS HARRY L DAVIS JAMES R DAVIS JOE W DAVIS JOHN DAVIS KENNETH DAVIS LARRY A DAVIS MARK A DAVIS MICHAEL A

DAVIS RICHARD E DAVIS ROBERT E DAVIS TED G DAVIS THOMAS L DAVIS WES DAVIS CARMEN ESTATE OF DAVISON BILLIE DAVISON ROBERT L DAVISSON RHONDA DAWSON E F DAY DREENA C DAY FLOYD D DAY GERALDINE B

DAY LESTER A DAY MICHAEL H DAZEY LEON R DE BEAUMONTJAMES DE KONING EDWIN DE MERCADOKEN DEAN DENNIS E DEAN FRANK L DEAN HOWARD R DEASCENTIS JOSEPH DEASCENTIS PATRICIA DEATS JERRY R

DYKEHOUSE ROD D EAGLESON HERITAGELTD EAKIN HAROLD D EAKINS CHARLES H EANNI SAM F EARL CLAYTON C EARL RAY J EARLYWINE WILLIAM E EARWICKER JON A EASLON GERTRUDE EASTPORTLANDINVESTMENT EASTERBROOK JANE W EASTERBROOKS SKIPW EASTMAN DARWIN C EASTON CHERYL EASTON DENNIS K EASTON KENNETH C EATON SHERRILL L EATON TAMMY G EBNOTHER CARL L ECKBERG CHRIS J EDDINGS GARY R EDENS GLEN L EDGINGTON JESSEC EDMUNDS WALTER I

EDWARDS C B EDWARDS DONNA M EDWARDS EUGENE L EDWARDS H A EDWARDS J NELSON EDWARDS LEE E EDWARDS MARY J EDWARDS MIKE EDWARDS T RANDY EDWARDS WILLIAM J EGAN VIRGINIA G EGGLESTON GERALDINEF EHNI ROBERT B

EICHLER E L EIDE MELVIN D EIDEMILLER DOROTHY D EISELE RICK W EKLER SISTER M EKLUND WALTER E ELBERS JULIANNE M ELLER WENDELL L ELLINGBOE BARBARA D ELLINGSON RANDY D ELLINGSON SUSIEE ELLIOTT CHARLES R ELLIOTT CUE W ELLIOTT DARLENE E ELLIOTT DONALD P ELLIOlT JAMES S ELLIplT JOE E ELLIplT ROBERT L ELLIOTT RONALD W ELLIS EDMUND ELLIS LUCINDA A ELLIS ROBERT D ELLISON CARL H ELLISON DAVID G ELLISON JOHN C ELLSWORTH RUSSELL J ELMER CHARLES T ELSKAMP GLENDA ELSTON JEFFREY J ELSTON JUDY K ELY JOSEPH B EMARD ANNElTE L EMMONS NEIL L EMRICK AL ENDICOTT CHARLES ENEBO J K ENGLE GLADYS ENGSTLER GARGLE L ENNIS JEFF 0 ENDS LEWIS W ENTLER RANDY S EPPERSON GEORGE T ERCOLIN DIANE E ERDMAN HENRY M ERICKSON K GLENN ERICKSON LORIA ERICKSON RICKM ERIKSSON CYNTHIAM ERVIN EVERLY B ERVIN JERRY D ESKELSON DANNY A ESQUIRO RICARDO L ESSIG WILLIAM C ESTABROOKJOY ESTERBY JEANA R ESTERGREENALICE ESTES RAY ESTRADA JESS ETHREDGE LOISM EVANS REUBEN W EVANS ROBLEY C EVANS ROSE M EVANS RUBE W

FREEDOMFEDERALSVS& LN FREEMAN JACK N FREEMAN ROBERT J FREEMAN VIRGINIA E FRENCH HAROLD FRENCH MURREL M FREY PHILIP E FRIDLUND MIKE C FRIEND BENITA L FRIEND DEL FRITZGEORGIA FROLICK PATRICIA M FROMME DAVID W

FROMONG GILBERTE FRYE DELMER E FRYE MARGARET E FRYER C WAYNE FULFORD MARY E FULLERTONWENDELL C FULS CHARLES FULS OMER L FULTON IZElTA L FUNK ROBERT D FUNKHOUSER DONALD R FUQUA DONALD K FUQUA GREGORY L FURMAN LOUISE Y G & R RANCH GG PAPERCp GABEL CHRISTOPHERJ GABRIEL SHERRI D GAGE DAVIDW GAGE LORI L GAGE SUSAN E GAGE THOMAS M GALE WESTON W GALES COLLENA M GALIFARO SAM GALL RONALD M GALLAGHER NELLIE J GALLO CLAIRE C GANGER LAWRENCE GANN GINGER A GANT MARYANN GARCIA ADOLFO GARCIA LOLA GARDEN HOME PROPERTIES GARDENHIRE TANYAD GARDINER GAIL GARDNER DONALD L GARLAND RICHARD D GARNER C A GARNER RALPH J

GARRETT DALE GARRIS DONALD E GARRISON CALEEN A GARRISONJAMES ESTATE OF GASCON JOSEPH F GAST MICHAELG GASTON DAVID 0 GASTON DOLLY GASTON LEO W GATCHET GEORGE E GATES J D GATES LUCIUS A GAUT BAZIL W GAYLORD EDSON C GEHRKE CLARENCE A GEIGER GREGORY P GENTRY BRADFORD R GEORGE DAVIDR GEORGE ERNEST GEORGE MELODY L GERBER ElTA L GERBER GARY R GERBER JOHN C GERBER ROBERT D GERBER THERESA L GERKE EUNICE GERMAN LARRY L

GERRY ANDREWJ GERVAIS WALLYA GERVING DON GESIK KELLEY A CLARK DARWIN H GESSNER RAY A CLARK DAVID L GElTMANN JEFFREY P GHIRARDO LOUIS J CLARK MAlTHEW C GIANNETTINONICHOLAS J CLARK PATRICK M GIBB TOM R CLARK RICHARD I GIBBONS JAMES H CLARK ROBERT D CLARK RUSSELL B GIBSON KENNETH D DEBERNARDI GARY L CLARK TERRY L GIBSON STANLEY M DEBLANDER ED CLARK THOMAS L GIBSON TAMMY K CLARK VIOLET E DEBOER STEVE E GIBSON WARREN N CLARKE EDWARDW DECKER PENNY A GIEFFELS MONTE J CLARKE JAMES H DEERY PAMELA J GIENGER JEFFERY A CLAYCOMBJOHN K DEFREMERYMARY S GIERKE JAMES T CLAYPOOL DIANE K DEGARMO MELVINM GILBERT DORATHY CLEAVES WINIFRED DEGERMAN KENNETH GILBERT TED D CLECKER MARIA P DEGNER GLADYSR ESTATEOF GILCHRIST EDITH CLEMENS CECILE DEGREMLIAMELIA L GILL LARRY M CLEMENS MARY V DEJANIKUS MIMI S EVERED MARGARET J GILL WILLIAM B CLEMENT BRAD D DEKAY CHARLES W EVERGREE NDANCE&EXERCISE GILLElTE A H CLEMENTS IRWIN E DELAMATER ROBERT E EVERGREENFAMILYTRUST GILLILAND GLORIA J CLEMMONS RUTH DELANEY PATRICK A EVETT ROBERT E GILMAN TIM B CLEVELAND DONALD E DELEO JOHN A EWING LEON GILMER JERRY L CLINE FALLSOASIS IMPDIS DELFS JEANElTE D FAGG FRED D GILMORE BERNADETT L CLOSE DANIEL A DELL GERALD C FALK DELMER GILMORE VIRGLE F CLOSE JOHN P DELLER DAVID J FALLERT EVELYN L GILPIN EILEEN CLOSE MARLYCE DELONG DENNIS G FALLON DAN J GINTHER JOHN B CLOTHIER JUDITH L DELUCIA ROBERT A FANNING CURTIS H GllTINGS EMMA H CMC CONSTRUCTION DEMARIS MARTY A FAR WESTFEDERALBANK GllTINS BILL J CNOSSEN OWEN P DEMENT HELEN FARIA LEE C GLASCOCK GARY COBB DAVID R DEMENT WAYNE I FARIS JAMES C GLASPELL BRIAN COBB RICKY DEMING MARTINR FARLEY C MARSHA GLASPEY SUSAN L COBINE JULIE A DEMORAN KENNETH J FARLEY DANIEL C GLAZIER HOWARD L COBLANTZ RAY J DENISON SHARON L FARLEY DANNA GLEASON TAFFY S COCHRAN LESLIE A DENNEY R B FARLEY JOHN L GLIEBETHOMAS E COCKBURN TIM DENNIS RONALD D FARLEY PAUL GLOVER BILLIEK CODDINGTON CLARENCE C DENSTEDT WALTER L FARLOW GLENDA GLOVER MARY A COE CHARLIE DENTON WAYNE E FARMERS HOMEADMIN GLOVER REX F COEY KATHLEEN R DEPOT BUILDING FARNEY JAMES M GOBLE WILBUR M COFFEY KATHRYN N DERBYSHIRE DON FARR LEONARD C GODAT CARYL E COFFEY LEONA D DERIEUX LARRY E FARRA JAMES S GODBY RUEBENB ESTATE COFFMAN PAULINE T DERRICK FLOYD J FARRIERVIOLES W GODDARD LAVONNE G COLDWELLBANKER DERSHAM RANDY M FARRIS SHARON GODFREY PAUL B COLE GARY D DESCHUTES FRIENDSCHURCH FARROWWILLIAM GOERTZEN WALTRAUT K COLE HAROLD E DETERS DANIEL E FAST JEFFREY A GOETZ R L COLE MARY A DEVINE PEGGY FEARRIEN BARBARA L GOLD RENA COLEMAN LOIS DEVITO PAUL A FEDERALSAVINGS& LOAN GOLDBERG SARA G COLEMAN LULA I DEVORE LILLIAN FEHLMAN AVALYN L GOLDMAN PAUL COLEMAN TROY DEWOLF THOMAS N FELCIANO JERRY J GOLDSMITH RICHARD E COLLEARY JIM F DEXTER DAVID R FENNELL DENNIS E GOLDSTRAND LUCY COLLIER JERRY W DIBBLE JANET E FENNIMORE MICHAEL J GONSER DONALD D COLLIER LORRI DICKENS DAVID L FENTON KYLE E GOOD LARRY W FERGUSON SAMUEL E GOODLING RICHARD D COLLIER ROBERT L DICKERSON HENRY C FERINI RICHARD C GOODMAN JOHN J COLLIER WILLIAM L DICKINSON C D GOODRICH THORPE D COLLINS CHERYL D DICKINSON JESSICAR FERRERA BART R GOODRIGHT JERRI V COLLINSGEORGE A DICKSON DALEE J FERTSCH ARON W GOODWIN TED W COLLINS PATRICIA A DIEDRICH STEVEN T FIELDING BARTONT GORDON EVELYN COLVARD GLENDA S DIGIORGIO PHILIP P FIELDS CYRUS L GORDON HARRY A COLVIN DAVID P DILKS BOBBY D FIELDS THERESA L GORDON JOHN R COLVIN GREG M DILLEY PATRICK W FIENE EDMOND GORDON ROBERT C COMBS DAVIDW DILLIN CHARLIE R FINCHER HAROLD M GORDON SCOTT D COMBS PAUL W DILLMAN JUDY M FINCH-GRANQUISTDELLA GORDON WAYNE L COMBS RONALD E DILLON JOYCE G FINDLAY HUGH G COMBS WARRENV DISCHER WESLEY D FINDLEY COLLEN GOBS JAMES L COMPTON RONALD D DITMORE DEAN FINDLING TERRY J GOSSEN DIANE C COMSTOCK DOUGLAS D DIULIO GERTRUDE FINEGAN LESLIEM GOSSIN FRANK R COMSTOCK ROBERT DIXON FLOYD L FINK ALVIN H GOTCHER KAREN L CONANT EATON H DIXON JERRY 0 FINK ANNE H FINLEY GARY GOTCHY CLARENCE E CONANT JOYCE L DIXON LILLIAN 0 FINN CATHY S GOUDY ANGELA M CONBOY MELVINH DIXON MIKE L FINNESTAD CHRIS A GOUDY RANDY D CONKLIN EVELYN M DIXON ROBERT G FINNESTAD DWIGHT F GOUGE HAROLD I CONLEY MARGUERITE DIXON W B FIRMAN LAWRENECE C GOULD ALTA M CONNER BERKLEY R DLUEHOSH MIKE FIRST INTERSTATE BANK GOULD C RAY BUTLER MARY F CONNER LINDA J DLUGOSCH CARROL L FISHER FRANK A GOURLEY ROBERT H BUTLER ROBERT D CONNERS THOMAS E DOAN MACHELLE L FISHER MARK R GOURMET GOODIES BUTTE VIEWMEADOWS CONNOLLY MICHAEL J DOBKINS JOHN V FISHER OLIVE E GO BUTTERFIELD PATRICK L CONRAD KIT S DOCKRELL VIRGINIA FISHER RODGERA BUTTKE CARL H CONRAD RONALD J DODD KATHYRN FISHER SHARON K BUZBY BRIAN J CONTI GLORIA M DODSON JAMES B FISHER THOMAS C BUZZARD WILLIAMG CONTRERAS RICHARD M DOE NEVA I FITCH HARRY L BYERLY FORREST G COOK DENNIS D DOGGElT WAYNE M FITZGERALD MICHAEL BYERS GEORGE J COOK SANDRA J DOHERTY RAY E FITZGERALD THOMAS F BYRD A MICHAEL COOK WINONA DOLLARHYDE KEVIN D FITZGERALD TIM L BYRD JOHNNIE COOKE BERNARD E DOLLIVER MARCIA M FIVECOAT GLADE R BYRUM BETSY J COONCE LEE F DOMES TERRI A FIX JANET L C & L RANCH COOPER EDWARD L DOMINGUES PAULH FLAIG KELLY B CAIN TILLIE COOPER JACK DONACA RAYMONDC FLANARY SHAWNW CALDWELL EDWARD P COOPER JAMES H DONALDSON JIMMIE P FLECK MYRON J CALDWELL FRANKLIN H COOPER ROBERTT DONNELL MIKE S FLEGEL WINSTON M BLANCHFIELD FRED J CALDWELL LOUIS COPELAND MARIE J DONNELLY ALLEN W FLEISCHMAN HORST G BLASDELL WALTER G CALDWELL SYLVIA M COPLEY JULIE R DONOHO WOODROW W FLEMING ALLISON J BLATCHLEY KENNETH C CAMACHO RAYMOND R COPP ROBERT S DONOVAN ROYDAL F FLEMING BONNIE M BLEVINS DOROTHY J CAMARILLO THOMAS L CORBARI ROBERT S DOOLIN FRED FLEMING JOHN W BLISS BETTY E CAMERON JOHN R CORDELL SAM W DORAN MILO A FLESHER RICK A BLISS DIXON L CAMERON SHARON CORDES CONNIE S DORIGAN FRANCIS FLETCHER DAVID L BLOCH BONNIE J CAMERON WILEY CORDON DONALD W DOSSER DARRELL E FLETCHER H K BLOCH KEITH W CAMMACK LOIS I CORDON MARIE DOTSON ERIC R FLETCHER KEVIN M BLOCH MARIANA T CAMOMILE BETTY CORNELIA DOROTHY J DOTY THOMAS R FLETCHER &FITCHASSN BLODGElT JOHN T CAMP SHERMANSTORE CORNELL ROBERT D DOUGHERTY JILL E FLINT BETSY A BLONSKI ARTHUR S CAMPBELL ANNA M CORNER BERNICE DOUGHERTY LESLIE 0 FLINT JACK L BLOODWORTH CGENE CAMPBELL BOB C CORNO MICHAEL L DOUTHIT PAULA M FLORANCE JOHN D BLOOM DEBBIE CAMPBELL CHRIS T CORNOG CHESTER DOWD ROY B FLOYD JAMES S BLOOM WILLIAM H CAMPBELL DARBY A CORRIGAN PATRICIA A DOWELL LARRY G FLOYD JEFF H BLOSS LOIS J CAMPBELL GARY R CORUM ALLEN DOWERS DESI K FLOYD JENNY L BOARDMAN PHYLLISM CAMPBELL GLADYS COSCIA ANDREW P DOWERS RODNEY L FLOYD PAUL M BOCCI ROBERT L CAMPBELL KIM L COSGRIFF JOHN E FLURIE BETTY BOCHSLER SYDNE K DOWNER KENNETH A CAMPBELL KIRK R FLYNN L SUE BODDA CHARLOTTE F COSSElTE JACK T DOYLE MARK W CAMPBELL LLOYD BODDA HARVEY 0 COSTELLOE JOSEPH E DR TURNER-SPRANGETAL FNMA CAMPBELL MALCOLM L BODWIN WAYNE J COUNTRY COLLECTIONS DRAHEIM BETH A FOLEY ROBERT H CAMPBELL VALERIE J BOE MARY A COUNTRYSUNSET MOBILEPARK DRAKE CHARLES W FOLK JACK L CAMPER TRAILERMFG BOEDER LEONARD COURSEY LINDA M DRAMEN BRIAN FOLLElT LYNN P CANDY RICHARD L BOGART RAYMOND W COWAN DONALD E DRAPER A D FOLSTON LYLA M CANEPA CRAIG D BOGGESS MARK COWAN RICK W DRAYER DAVID M FOOTE DEBBIE S CANNON KYLE L BOHANNON WILLIAM E COWELL KRISTA L DREW DAVID L FOOTE ROBERT C BOHN MARY A CANNON RICHARD R COWLES JOHN N DRINKER SHIRLEY E FORBES CINDY BOLCE ELLA M CANNON ROBERT C COX DARSEL L DUDA MIKE J FORD EVELYN E BOLCE NANCY M CANOY ELIZABETH A COX GREGORY D DUFF GREG R FORE STEVEN E BOLEYN ESTHER M CANTOR ARTHUR S COX JAN G DUFFY TOM FOREMAN C J BOLLARD TERESA A CANTRELL VIRGINIA J COX LENZIE R DUKE WILL D FOREMAN LYLE G BOLLMAN WILLIAM A CANTU EVELYN M COX RICHARDS K DULIN GLENN FOREMAN MARTHA B BOLSER JAMES E CANYON COURT COX ROBERT E DULLEY GARY L FORESTER PATRICK L BOLT RUSS CAPPS MICHAEL G COX SANFORD S DULONG JACK FORRESTER RICHARD W BOLTINGHOUSEWILLIAM A CAPTAIN ROY R COX SHARON R DUNAWAY 0 E FORSMAN RICK BOND THOMAS CARBAUGHPAUL B COXEY H ALAN DUNCAN DAVID L FOSBACK CORKY BONFIGLIO RONALD L CARDWELL J L DOYLE MIKE B DUNCAN DENVER FOSTER A L BONHAM HARRY S CARDWELL JOHN D COZBY BETSY E DUNCAN EDWARDN FOSTER GRANT BONIFACERICHARD M CARDWELL LESTER T CRABS RUSSELL J DUNCAN HELEN FOSTER JAY A BONKOSKY AMY CAREY ANDREW G CRABER DALLAS H DUNCAN LARRY FOSTER JULIE D BONNIEVIEWRANCH INC CAREY LUCILLE E CRAFTON DANIEL J DUNCAN N B FOSTER KEN R BONS KRIS CARGO KARINE CRAIG DALE D DUNCAN NANCY FOSTER RICHARD H BONS REBECCA N CARLEY MARGARETV CRAIG DONNA L DUNCAN PATTY FOUCAULT JAMES BOODLE TOM J CARLSON A B CRAIG STEVE L DUNCAN ROBERT E FOUNTAINTIM N BOONE ERICA A CARLSON ANN L CRAKES GEORGE G DUNCAN WILLIAM L FOWLER DONALD B BOONE KAY H CARLSON APRIL S CRAM ANDRHOADS DUNLAP NORMAN J FOWLER STEVE C BOONE MICHAEL S CARMICHAEL RALPH C CRAMER WALDO H DUNN GENE FOX RODNEY G BOOTH LORAN E CARMICHAEL VERNON D CRANDALL SHARON L DUNN HOWARD FOX STEPHEN P SOOTHE RONALD G CAROLUS VIRGIL L CRANDELL HARLEY L DUNN JULIUS H FOY DWIGHT D BORDEN CLARA CARPENTER ANDREW CRANE IVA A DUNN PHILIP G FRADES LES S BORDERS EDGARW CARPENTER JOHN R CRATER JOHN S DUNN ROBERT M FRALEY KATHRYN E BORST JOANN D CARPENTER LARRY K CRAVENS JAMES A DUNN SHIRLEY A FRAMBES PENNE E BOSTIC JOHN E CARPENTER ROBERT B CRAWFORD ILA L DUNN STEVEN W FRANC RANCH BOTTS JAMES R CARR CATHY J CRAWFORD STEVE D DUNN WILLIAM C FRANCE ALLEN H BOUBEL RICH W CARR MICHELLE CRAWLEY ROBERT D DUNNE ERIC N FRANK MICHAEL E BOUCHE PARRIS CARRIAGETRADEAPARTMENTS CREASEY OPAL 0 DUNNE RICHARD D FRANK RICHARD L BOWE CHRISTOPHER T CARRICK MARVIN R CREASON TED D DUPONT CHARLENE R FRANKE HERBERT P BOWEN AVERY C CARRIERE ROBERT D CREE DEBBIE DURAN MONSE FRANKFURT RICHARD E BOWEN JEAN E CARRIGAN CARROLL E CRESCENZI EDGAR J DUREN GERALDINE R FRANKLIN EDITH M BOWEN LADONNA B CARRINGTON DENNISR CRESS LINDA E DURETTE MELVIN FRANKS DON E BOWEN LINDA M CARROLL BONNIE S CRESS SCOTT P DURFEE RICHARD B FRASCA ROBERT J BOWEN PAUL CARROLL JAMES D CRISAFULLI LINDY W DURFEE WILLIAM W FRASER PAUL CARROLL JOHN E CRISMAN WILLIAM G DURHAM WILLIAM C FRATZKEFERNESTATEOF BOWER DOUGLAS H CARSON CHARLENE R CRISP JACK L DURR CORA M FRAZEE D BRUCE BOWER JAY L CARSON LEWIS E CRITZ JAMES A DURR RALPH E FRAZEE NONA ESTATEOF BOWERS JAMES S CARSTENSEN LEROY CROFTS FRANKLIN P DUTCHER ROBERT D FRECHElTE JOSEPH D BOWERS MARION E CARTENSEN MIKE B CRONIN GEORGE R DUVAL MICHELLE D FREDERICK JENNIFER J BOWSER CHRISTINER CARTER ALBERT L CROOK CpIMP DWYER MICHAEL D FREDERICK LEONARD D BOWSER DONALD L CROSS KEYTVASSN DYE ROY E FREDERICKS RICHARD R BOYANOVSKY-KUTSCH RON CARTER BEULAH M CARTER BILLY J CROSSElT ADA J DYER MARK D FREDRICKSON DONALD R BOYD JEFF

JOHNSONPARKWAYREALTY

JOHNSTON MICHAEL G JOHNSTON ROBERT JOHNSTON SANDRA JOKELA BRIEN A JOLLY KAREN V JOLMA KEN JONAS DANIEL T JONES ARVIN L JONES DAVID L JONES DON C JONES DOUGLAS JONES FAITH N JONES GLENN E JONES HANNAH E JONES ILSE JONES JAMES H JONES JERRY M JONES KATHLEEN JONES LUELLA K JONES MEREL V JONES PAULElTE A JORDAN GENE L JORDAN JOSEPH H JORDAN KELLY L JORGENSEN IRENE H JOSEPH-ARNTSON JUDKINS KEN L JUDY LORI E JUHOLA JAMES JUNGWIRTH JOHN P JUSTICE RICHARD W K C K PROPERTIESINC KACZMAREK RICHARD A KALEIALOHA ANNE KANDEL THELMA KANE JOHN J KANE MICHAEL J KANGAS J M KARLEN CHERYL K KARLEN TOM H KASIAK EDWARD G KASZA IMRE KAUFFMAN KEN H KAUFFMAN WALTER I

KAUFMAN GERMAINE E KAVANAGH DEVEREUX L KAVONIUS ARNE KEALIHER KEATHLEY SCOTT W KEATHLEYENTERPRISES KEEBLE RICHARD H KEELE W SCOTT KEETON DENNIS L KEETON THOMAS D KEGLE RAND W KELLAR JAYN KELLEHER DELORE E KELLER SUSANNE R KELLEY JOHN E KELLEY LORRAINE M KELLEY ROBERT T

KELLEY WILLIAM J KELLY DOROTHY E KELLY LAVERNE

KELLY MICHEAL J KELLY PATRICK M KELLY RAYMONDL KELSEN STEVEN KEM HARRY H KEMPTON JERRY A KENDALL DOUGLAS D KENDRICK CHARLES P KENDRICK MICHAEL M KENNEDY FRANK W KENNEDY H LEON KENNEDY LOUIE L KENNEDY ROGERA KENT ALAN R

KENT HARRIET J KENTNER GLORIA L KENTNER L JOE KENTNER VIOLA M KENYON STANLEY J KEPHART HORACE KERBS ADELE P KERCHMAN JERRY R KERESZTURY ROXANNE KERN HAROLD KERN PATRICK W KERNS ROBERT E KESSEL DON W KESSEL JOYCE KESSLER CRAIG J KESSLER DOUGLAS C KESTELL OLIVER J KETCHUM RICHARD KETO HJALMER E KEYES WALTER E

KIEWIT PACIFICCp KIGHTLINGER HUGH KILLIANGEORGE KIMBALL EDWARD L KIMBALL GLORIA M KIMBOKO ANDRE KIMMEL C E KINCH PHYLLIS KING DEENA L KING PAUL E KING ROBIN K KINGREY CHESTER S KINGSBURY DOROTHY W KINGSTON LORENA R KINNEY GLEN M KINNEY VELMA KINTZ JOE T KIRK NANCY M KIRK RICHARD L KIRKBRIDE GORDON V KIRKPATRICK GLADYSJ KIRKWOOD JOE E KIRKWOOD MARIETTA L

KISSLER GREGG D KITCHELL LONNY S KITZMANN STANLEY R

KJOS DALE A KJOS OLGA KLAHN HORACE M KLEAVER KENNETH K KLECKER H ALTA KLEIN DAVID A KLEINHEINZ MAXINE E KLINE TRACY L

KLINGBEILROBERT F KLOCK C E KLOCK CHESTER KLOCK MAY KNECHT CARL H KNICK ARNOLD L KNICK FERN H KNICKERBOCKER M E KNIGHT GLADYS KNOLL TOM A KNOPSNYDER LARRY R KNOUSE IRENE KNOWLES MICHAELT KNOX BUCKLEY G KNOX PAMELA C KNUDSON KENNETH E KNUPP DONALD E KNUTZEN DON H KOCER BUILDERS KOCH DANIEL W KOCHER JOHN W KOCHERA JACK C KOCIS SUSAN M KOEHLER PETER H KOEPKE TERRY R KOHFIELDROBERT M KOHLER JACK L KOLDE JAMES KOON KEN KOORS STEPHEN M KOPLAU DONNA L KOPLAU ROBERT 0 KORB WALTER KOSINSKI GLADYS KOTILA LINDA KOUTSOURIS PETER T KOVACH ROBERT S KOVACHEVICH LARRY KRAJCIK MAX J KRALOVEC WILLIAM P KRAMER ARNOLD R KRAMER BETTY KRAMER DONNA M KRANTZ LOUIS L KRAUSE MICHAEL D KRAUTH CHRIS KREBS ROGER M KREHBIEL NORM G KREUTZ RONALD R KRIEVES LOREE


THE BULLETIN 0 W

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED 541-385-5809 MANNING JOHN KROMPEL NANCY R KROPF LAWRENCE MANOS U E MANSFIELDROBERT W KROSKE GARY L MANZANARES DIANA R KUBISHTA ANTON F KUEHN ROBERT 0 MARCUM JOYCE K KURLNNALBERTL SMALLESTATEOF MARCUS ASHTON D KUHN CHRISTIAN MARKEY BRIAN L KUMLEY IRA G MARKS BEN N KUNOWSKY CHARLES J MARKS RUSSELL J KURTZ NANCY MARKS SHERRY L KYLE CHARLES D MARKS CREEKLODGE INC KYLLO ANN M MARLOW RONALD D LAVEAU BRUCE MARQUARDT GARY A LAFFERTY L F MARSH LEORA F LAFON R E MARSTON GILBERTM LAKESHORELODGE MARTEL CHERYL A LALICKER EVERETT MARTENS BRUCE R LAMBERTONLOWELL H MARTENS THOMAS J LAMKIN GLORIA MARTIN BYARD S LAMPHERE DONALD H MARTIN C DENNIS LANCASTER NEVA E MARTIN FRANK T LANCASTER RICHARD A MARTIN GARY A LANCE DENNIS R MARTIN INESS LANDRUM DARRELL MARTIN JOSEPH H LANDRY CINDY S MARTIN MERLE LANDS JIM MARTIN RALPH W LANDS RONALD C MARTINTAMMY G LANE TOM MARTIN WILLIAM G LANGENDOERFERARNOLD L MARTINEZ CRISTINA LANGFIELDFARM MARTINEZ ELIAZAR LANGLEY TRAVIS E MARYBROOKCORP LANNUM JAMES MASCIARELLIGEORGE D LARA ELZIE MASON BETTY S LARISCH RUDY MASON DALLAS J LARKIN KENNY M MASON LAURA A LAROQUE PAUL MASON NORMAN C LARSEN AGNES F MASSEY BURL V MAST JOHN R LARSEN MARK S MASTERS DONALD M LARSEN SHIREEN M MATHENA RALPH L LARSON EUGENE A MATHENY RONALD G LARSON RICHARD A MATHER DEMING P LASHBROOK CLAIRE H MATHES ADOLPHE J LASHBROOK HAROLD R MATHEWS CRAIG C LATHROP EDWARD M ATHEWS LEO R LATOURETTE FRANCESS MATHEWS VALERIEG LAUW HIANG MATHIESONWALTER D LAVELLE ADELINE L MATHISON JAMES A LAVENDER JANICE M MATHSEN RAYMONDM LAVOIE MARK E MA TSON J W LAWRENCE RAYMONDG MATSON JIM LAWRENCE RITA MATTHEW JAMES W LAWTON WILLIAM C MATTHEWS EMORY A LAYTON FRANK P MATTHISCRAIG B LAYTON GLEN R MATTSON FLOYD G LBK RANCHES MATTSON LYNNE LEADER ESTHER W MATUJEC MARY J LEAF EMIL C MAUPIN JOHN H LEAF LYNETTE M LEAVELL GARY W MAXWELL ARTHUR L LEAVllT TERRIE L MAXWELL DONALD A LECK RUSSELL G MAY A DANIEL LECKBAND EVA MAYES HUBERT LECKBEE MERVIN MAYES MARTA M LEDBETTER GARY A MAYFIELD ELDRED LEDBETTER T NORMA MAYFIELDROBERT M LEDFORD RONALD F MAYFIELD RON LEDGERWOODLADONNA J MAYHUGH TIMOTHY L LEE DOREEN STAPLE MAYO SANDRA L LEE JOHN W MAYS HENRY J LEE MONROE A MCALLISTER JEANNETTE L LEE TERRI J MCALLISTER ROBERT J LEE WILLIAM F MCALLISTER TODD LEFORS LAURIE J MCAULAY ROBERT C LEGG GALEN L MCBETH ROBERTT LEGGETT NORMA J MCBRIDE CECILIA J LEGORE DARILYN P MCBRIDE MAY M LEHMAN A SCOTT MCBRIDE WILLIAM F LEHMAN ROBERT L MCCABE JOHN LEHMAN WILBUR G MCCAHAN ESTHER LEISEK JULIA B MCCAIN ELVA G LEITH ADELAIDE F MCCAIN GARY A LEITH ANNA E MCCALEB J FRED LELACHEUR TIM E MCCALL RICHARD L LEMASTERS STACIA A MCCALLISTER BUD LEMSKE RUBEN G MCCALLUM MARK R LENGELE JANIE A MCCALLUM SYLVIA M LENGELE LYNDON C MCCALVY DALE LENSKI RICHARD W MCCARTHY T M LENT GARY A MCCARY J C LENTZ HAROLD C MCCAULEY PAT E MCCAWCABLEVISION LENTZ JOHN W MCCAY DENNIS M LENZ ROSEMARY H MCCAY JAMES W LEONARD JAMES N MCCLAIN RUSTY L LEROUE TIM J MCCLAUGHRYLYLE LESLEY ROBERT MCCLELLAND MARJORIE J LESLIE BILL R MCDONNELL COLVIN S LETZ ROY MCDONNELL MARION G LEVEILLE WILLIAM D MCDONNELL NANCY R LEVENSON SUZANNE MCCONVILLE LAVERNA L LEVI COLIN T MCCORMACK G M LEVI FLOYD MCCORMACKTERESA L LEVY BRAD M MCCOY DAWN LEWIN JULIE A MCCOY ROY D LEWIS MICHAEL L MCCOY SAM P LEWIS R L MCCRARY PAMELA C LEWIS RHONDA R MCCREA GRACE M LEWIS RICHARD D MCCULLEY TERRI L LEWIS STEPHEN L LEWIS WILLIAM E MCCULLOUGH JOHN D LIBOLT RICHARD E MCCULLY PHILLIP E LIEN JEANNE D MCCUSKER GRACE L LIGHT ROBERT C MCCUTCHEN MARK LILJEBERG RALPH MCDONALD B K LILLEBO CHRIS H MCDONALD D B LILLIG EVERETT H MCDONALD KATIE E LILLYWHITE HEROLD S MCDONALD PATRICK LINCOLNSAVINGS & LOA N M C DONALD RANDY L LIND HILL A MCDONALD RONALD H LINDAHL DENNIS L MCDONNELL JAY R LINDE DAVID J MCDOUGAL MELODY L LINDH RONALD MCDOWELL CALVIN L LINDLEY EARL F MCDOWELL MARTIN L LINDSAY C R MCDUFFIE &YORK LINDSAY DON R MCFADDEN JAMES H LINDSAY ROY G MCFADDEN WILLIAM M LINDSEY JERRY L MCFARLAN STEVEN D LINDSEY MARILYN F MCFARLANE JOHN W LINDSTROM THOMAS C MCGIBBEN PATRICK J LINK DONALD A MCGILLAN JANET L LINVILLE MABELL L MCGINNIS MORRIS B LIPPINCOTTMICHAEL R MCGINNISTHOMAS E LISIUS JOSEPH P MCGRATH BETH LISIUS MAlT MCGRAW CHARLES A LISKA BARBARA J MCGUIRE DARCY J LIST VIRGINIA E MCHENRY-HOLLAND MARIE LllTLE JEFFREY S MCHUGH ELAINE C LllTLE RICHARD D MCI TELECOMMUNICATION LllTLEDEER ROY MCINTOSH DONAL W LIVINGSTON RUTH F MCINTOSH HAROLD L LLOYD HERBERT G MCINTOSH J STUART H LLOYD LOUISE P MCKAY ANNE LOAR LAWRENCEW MCKAY CHARLES B LOBUE MILDRED V MCKAY JAMES R LOCHEN EUGENE J MCKAY JEFF A MCKECHNIE ROBERT P LOCKER JAMES R MCKEMIE BERT D LOCKREM SHELDON R MCKENZIE EARLINE L LOCKWOOD ROBERT R MCKENZIE GEARY L LOEB ALFRED A MCKENZIEMARK W LOEB MARTI J MCKENZIE ROGER T LOEKS RICK E MCKERN ROY G LOGAN KENDALL J MCKIBBIN JOHN S LOGAN NORMAN D MCKINNEY C EARL LOMBARDO JOSEPH T MCKINNEY GARY F LOMBARDO KEITH MCKINNEY MERLAND F LONBORG KENNETHA MCKINNEY RAY LONEY LARRY V MCKITRICK BARBARA L LONG PEGGY L MCLAIN ALFRED H LONG WENDELL L MCLAIN DOUGLAS LOOP LOREN LOPER JAMES R MCLAIN SUZANE M LOPEZ PETE G MCLANE ORVILLE J LORENZ EUGENE R MCLAREN JOHN J LORENZ RUTH M MCLAUCHLIN RUTH S LORETZ LEE G MCLAUGHLINANDREW C LOVE HOMER L MCLEAN DONALD T LOVE LEO F MCLEAN NANCY M LOVEGREN GRANT A MCLINN DIANA L LOVEJOY KAREN A MCMICKEN MARGARET L LOVETT ROGER W MCMILLAN JUDY A LOVRIEN JAMES L MCMILLAN ROBERT C LOWE LEON A MCMURRAYLYNN L LOWE ROBERT I MCNABB JUDITH M LOWE WYNONA M MCNAIRY MORRISE LOWERY MYRA L MCNEIL JIM E LOWTHER HUGH MCNELLIS LILLY 0 LUCAS WILLIAMA MCPHEETERS DENNISE LUCKENBACK DONALDJ MC P HERSON ALAN R LUCKMAN DENNIS G MCPHERSON DONALD LUCKMAN MARJORIE S MCSHATKOHAROLD F LUDEMAN SHIRLEY MCSWAIN MARY E LUDEMANWAYNEW MCVAY SHAWNT LUDWICK ALAN L MEADE JOE L LUDWIG BRUCE D MEADOWS BYRON D LUDWIG KATHRYN L MEADOWS LARRY J LUDWIG MARVIN L MEDEIROS LOUIS J LUDWIG ROWLAND J MEDLYN DOUGLAS R LUEDERS MARLENE L MEEKS LUCILLE M LUFF EVERETT MEHURON FRANK L LUGO MARCIA MEIER JOHN T LUNAK FRANK E MEIER ROBERT F LUND KENNETH M MELCHERT BILL LUNDGREN FERN L MELHASE DEBORAH K LUNDGREN GARLAN R MELHORN THOMAS D LUNDY DAVE MELTON JEFF K LUSK CHERYLL MELTON WILLIE R LUTON ROBERT C MELVIN RICHARD L LUTTRELL JIMMY E MENDENHALL ELBERT H MENG KENNETH A LUTZ ELLEN K MENZIES ROB R LYBARGER W RAY MERCER D E LYLE JAMES A MERCIER C E LYMAN MARIE F MERILO OLAV LYMAN STEVE K MERIWETHER AL LYNAM ZYLPHA MERLICH STUART K LYNCH BARBARA A MERLIN JOHN B LYNCH GARY S LYON LEON MERRICK STEVEN LYTLE E JOANNE MERRILL MAX LYTLE JIM P MERRILLLYNCH RELOCATION MAAHS LEONARD W MERTSCHING GALEN L MABEE LINDA J MESTON SHARON W MACBEAN DONALD E METCALF MARY E MACDONALD GERALD D METKE J PAT MACDONALD JOHN METOLIUS INN MACKAY JUDY M METTEER L CHRISTOPHER MACKAY KATHY J MEYER ARTHUR B MACKENZIE HUGH MEYER C FRED MACLEAN JOANNA MEYER JOHN R MACY JAMES D MEYER THEODORE 0 MADDOX ROBERT H MEYERS BARBARA J MADRASVETCLINIC MEYERS VIRGINIA MADRON MICHAEL J MEYERSDONETRUST ’B" MAGARE M L MEZZANATTOJACK A MAGBY JULIET V MICHAEL THOMASW MAGEE DOUGLAS R MICHALSEN ROGER C MAGEE RONALD S MICHEL LOREEN P MAGGIORA KEVIND MIDDLEBROOKOPAL L MAGILL PATRICK M MIDWAYPLUMBING MAGNUSON DAVIDE MIKKELBORG BRIANA MAHONEY AL F MILES ARTHUR D MAHONEY JOHN A MILES DALE W MAINE ROY J MILES VADA L MAJOR DAVID L MILLAR BRANFORD P MAJOR PATRICIA A MILLER B R MALIN JERI L MILLER BENNETT B MALLINE LINDA MILLER BILLIE M MANES MARK E MILLER DON M MANESS DEBBIE MILLER EDNA R MANN A R MILLER EMILY J MANN GLENN MILLER FRANK E MANN HARLAN A MILLER GARY MANN PATRICIAM MILLER GLEN

MILLER GLENN MILLER HARLAN R MILLER HELEN A MILLER JEFFERY C MILLER JOHN A MILLER KENNETH MILLER L VIVIAN MILLER LEE E MILLER LINDA L MILLER MICHAELE MILLER MORRIS M MILLER PAUL F MILLER RALPH E MILLER RANDALL P MILLER RHONDA S MILLER ROBERT L MILLER RUTH MILLER STANLEY F MILLER STEVE M MILLER CLARENCETRUST MILLIS MAX R MILLS REBECCA S MILLS WILLARD C MIMLER GABRIELK MINAHAN ROBERT D MINMAC CO MINNICK PAULINE MIRROR PONDMGMT MIRSKY ROSALIND MISCHEL ROD D MISNER BRIAN L MITCHELL JOELLEN MITCHELL JOHN R MITCHELL KATHLEEN A MITCHELL RUTH M MITTS JOHN MITTS LINDA MIZELL WALLACE C MOBIK-VANNI GLORIA J MODDERMANJACKIE L MODE ALLAN D MOELLER DEBRA A MOHNEN GREGORY J MOLLENHAUERRUTH E MOLNAR JON C MONAHAN BEVERLY K MONDAY MILTONG MONDOY BRAD P MONFILS DON G MONICAL OLIVEG MONROE BARBARA MONROE MARK E MONSON CHARLES A MONTAGUE RICHARD 0 MONTEL DONALD R MONTGOMERYDEAN L MONTGOMERYEVANS MONTGOMERYTHOMAS R MOODY RICK MOOERS CLINTON R MOON RONALD E MOORE DELLA M MOORE FRANCES N MOORE GARY T MOORE GEORGE H MOORE GERTRUDE A MOORE LIN G MOORE MICHAELT MOORE PANSY L MOORE RANDY H MOORE SHARON K MOORE SHERMAN B MOORE CLEARCO MOORMAN JEANNETTE M MORAN CLIFFORD MORAN LYNNETTE A MORE JOHN H MORELAND MATTHEW J MORGAN BOB J MORGAN C MORGAN CARL E MORGAN HAZEL L MORGAN HOWARD E MORGAN REVA L MORGAN RUSSELL G MORGAN TERRY L MORGAN VALERIE L MORILON R D MORITZ DAVID MORKIN MARY A MORLEYMARGARET BESTATEOF MORRELL RICHARD L MORRIS ARCHIE J MORRIS BARBARA MORRIS C L MORRIS COLLEEN MORRIS EVERElT R MORRIS GEORGE J MORRIS JOHN W MORRIS LYDIA C MORRIS MURRAY D MORRISON CLARENCE L MORRISON HARRY A MORRISON JAMES MORRISON MILDRED M MORRISON NANCY J MORRISON ROBIN R MORRISON SHARON MORRISON STAN M MORRISON WAYLAND E MORTENSON DENISJ MORTENSON NEIL E MORTON DANIELE MORTON FRANK E MORTON MARSHALL J MOSER KAREN J MOSER TOM 0 MOSES 0 PATRICK MOSIER JERRY E MOSS CHARLES L MOSS DIANA L MOSS SHELDON D MOSS TIFFANY MOTTNER JOHN E MOULDER JOHN M MOUSER GLEN J MOWDAY RICHARD W MOWLDS J D MOYE ADRIAN A MOYLAN MICHAEL D MT CABLETELEVISION INC MUD SPRINGSRANCHES MUELLER FRED A MUELLER ROBERT J MUIR EUGENE MUIR MICHAELW MULDER GILBERT C MULE SHOECATTLECO MULLENS MICHAEL L MULROONEY MICHAEL E MUMMERT A EUGENE MUNKRES-ALLSTOlT JUDY MUNN GARTH T MUNSON W E MURDOCH THOMAS L MURPHY MIKE G MURRAY ARTHUR E MURRAY JAN MURRAY JOHN J MURRAY STANLEY R MUSENGOJEANElTE ESTATEOF MUSTARD A C MUZGAY PERRY MYERS BRENDA L MYERS D MICHAEL MYERS HANNAH MYERS JOE C MYERS LYNN MYERS MONTE K NAEGELIDONALD M NAFFZINGER DEBRA K NAGEL JOHN K NAIRN RAY NANCE FRED W NANCE GENE NANCE KELLY NANNETTI BETTY NAPOLIMICHAEL P NASH FRANK E NASH JOHN J NASON D SCOTT NASON DENNIS R NATL HOMEEQUITY NAVARRO JOHN D NAYLOR ROBERT M MEAL ELIZABETH C NEALEIGH JIM NEFF KENT E NEILL WAYNE A NEILSEN DEANNE M NEILSON JOHN R NEILSON WILLIAM A NEITZGEORGE E NELMS WOOD SIGNS NELSEN JOHN W NELSON A TED NELSON DAVID W NELSON DONALD A NELSON E ALAN NELSON ELDON J NELSON ELWIN W NELSON ERIC D NELSON GARTH NELSON HARRY NELSON JOE F NELSON JOHN R NELSON LYLE C NELSON NED NELSON ROBERT D NELSON STAN NELSON WENDYJ NESBIT FRANK MESTATEOF NESS STEVEN A NETH SANDRA L NEUMEISTER VERA NEUN BEVERLY P NEVILLS RALPH E NEVILS ALBERT F NEWBY LESLIE R NEWELL DENNY NEWKIRK LINDA K NEWMAN JIMMIE F NEWMAN SONDRA J NEWTON MARVINM NEWTON THEODORE E NICHOLAS NORMAN H NICHOLS BETTY J NICHOLS FREDA E NICHOLSON GARY A NICHOLSON KIM A NICHOLSON NORTONJ NICKERSON SHARON L NICKESON SCOTT L NICKOLAS KAREN M NICKS GARY N NICOLAI THEODORE NICOSON WILLIAM L NIELSEN RANDY L NIELSON ELSA M NIELSON ERWIN NIENDORF JOHN E NIENDORF RICHARD W NIERMANN ALVIN H NIESS DAVID R NIX STEPHEN P NMS FINANCE NOAH G KENNETH

NOBLE DONNA M NOBLE MARGARET NOLAN DANIEL D NOLAN KEN P NOLEN EDWARD C NORDBY ROBERT H NORDEN ARO L NORDEN NOREEN J NORDMEYER MICHAELS NORMAN GORDON A NORMAN TELFER E NORRIS CLIFFORD J NORRIS MICHAEL R NORRIS WALTER J NORTH NANCE F NORTH SHOREDEVELOPMENT NORTHAM MICHAEL B NOVOTNY MARIANNEY NOWAK DONNA J NOWLIN TAMI L NOWLIN TAMMY N-THREECORPORATION NUGENT THOMAS F NUNNELLY RODNEYW NYDEGGER DEBORAH J NYSTROM RICHARD S NYSTROMYVONNE L OAKLEY KEITH OATMAN ROY D OBENDORF THERESA OBERG RANDALL T OBRIEN PATRICK F OBRIEN ROBERT M O'BRIEN DOUG S O’ BRIEN JOHN S O’ BRIEN PATRICK J OCHOCO TELECASTERSINC OCONNELL MICHAEL OCONNER SHANNON L OCONNOR DONAL ODENTHAL JO M O'DOHERTY DOUGLAS ODONNELL GERTRUDE OFFICER GENE OFFICER JIM OGLE THOMAS F OHLUND GAIL E OHOLLAREN JOHN ESTATE OF OHRN DONALD B

PFLUGRAD W L PHEIFER KATHLEEN R PHELPS HENRY J PHELPS KRISTY L PHILLIBER WILLIAM R PHILLIPS BARBARA C PHILLIPS BEVERLY PHILLIPS DIAN L PHILLIPS LESLIE C PHILLIPS MICHAEL D PHILLIPSPEGGY A PHILLIPS RON PHILLIPS RUBY H PHIPPS SAM R PICARD PAUL D PICKARD BOB N PICKENS JOSEPH PICKETT JAMES F PICKETT ROBERT E PICKLES DAVID W PIEPER DEAN M PIEPER HERMAN J PIEPER ROBERT L PIERCE DERRY L PIERCE DONALD E PIERCE JAMES H PIERCE JOHN D PIERCE PATRICIA J PIERCEY JACK E FIFER VERNON E PILAND JOE C PILLION PAT PIMPELL J ALLEN FINA DAVID A PIONEERINDUSTRIES PllTS CARROLL E PIUBENI HARRIElT PLANT CHARLES PLATT PATTY A PLETSCH JAMES E PLUNKETT MARIA A POINDEXTER JEFF T POKOYOWAY RENEE POLLARD CURTIS L POLLY LOIS C POMEROY CORBYN PONTON KENNETH F POOLE ALBERT R POOLE BOB W OLDHAM ALLEN P POOLE DAVID W OLDS MRSKEN C ESTATE POOLE FLORENCE E OLIVER GARY E POOLE KATHY M OLIVER JAMES A POOLE STANLEY D OLIVER LEOTA F POOLER DUANE R OLMSTEAD PAUL E POPE C EVERETT OLMSTED VERNON POPE ELEANOR I POPE TIM L OLSEN BRENT T OLSEN DAVID S PORTER DARREN W OLSEN STANLEY R PORTER DOUGLAS D OLSON CORA E PORTER KIM J OLSON LOUIS M PORTER PAULA S OLSON MARCY M PORTER TRACIE R OLSON PATRICK K PORTER WINIFREDM POST ANDREW M OLSON TED B POTTER FRANK OLSONOWSKI EUNICE L OMAN GEORGEA A POTTER WAYNEA OMLEY DAVID A POTTS RICHARD OMLEY KEN B POVEY HAROLD B OMOHUNDRO PAUL H POWELL DEBBIE S ONEEL WESLEY G POWELL GARY E ONEIL LESTER H POWELL JAMES W ONEIL RICHARD D POWELL MARVIN R O’ NEIL BUTCH L POWELL MICHAEL L O'NEIL HOWARD F POWELL SHERRYA O’ NEILL DANIEL POWELL-PLUMLEESANDRA P O'NEILL SHARMON POWERS GENE F OPAL PARRLOVING TRUST PRALL DOUGLAS S OPIE HAZEL PRATHER ELEANORA ORBANCOREALESTATE PRATHER WILLIAM C OREGON SUN RANCH INC PRATZ WARRENW ORLANDO JOHN S PREMSELAAR EVELYN ORR E F PRESLEY LEONARDA ORRELL JAMES D PRESTESATERDARWIN D ORTHOPEDICASSOCIATES PRICE JACK M ORTLOFF ROD PRICE JERRY D OSBORN MARJORIE J PRICE JOHN E OSBORN RICHARD M PRICE LINDA D OSBORNE BILL R PRICE RHODA S PRICE STEVE D OSBORNE JAMES C OSBORNE VIOLElTA R PRICE TRACEY E OSKO GEORGE E PRICE WILLIAM V OSTER EDWARDJ PRIEST KARL J OSTROM DENNISF PRINEVILLEHIGHLANDS LTD OSUNA KAREN M PRITCHETT JOHN W OSWALD MAGEE J PRITCHETT ROBERT J OlTER HELENA PRIVETT CLAUDE OlTLINGER JOHN J PRO QUALITYBODY SHOP OlTOMAN LOU A PROPHET JESSE L OVENBURG ELAINM PROSSER DAVID E OVERBAY ROBERT J PROSSER FRED L OVERBY H E PROUGH WILLIAM W OWEN ANN PRO-VENDSERVICES OWEN GENE PROVINCE E C OWEN KELLI L PRUITT LARRY R OWEN KELLY PRUNER JAMES C OWEN MICHAEL T PUCKETT DONALD OWEN MILDRED L PUCKETT R JIM OWEN RACINGSHELLS PUETT MARVIN L OWENS E L PUGH RONALD W OWENS GARY D PUNCHES WILLIAM A OWENS NEIL D PUSHEE VIRL E OWENS WILLIAM B PUTNAM GARY D OWINGS LEONARD V QUAILE FRED E OXBORROW KATHRYN L QUEARY LOUIS B PACIFIC I STFEDERAL QUEEN KENNETH E PADGET RAYMOND E QUEENER JAMES L PAGE DONALD L RAND TTRUCKING PAGE ERNEST J RAASINA K DIANA PAGEL ALBERT F RABY MARGARET L PAGET AILEEN A RADA TOM R PAGET ALAN A RADER 0 CARL PAHL CLIFFORD E RAEBURN TOM J PAINTER BUDDENE E RAILSBACK JANET E PALADIJCZUK GORDON S RAILSBACK WILLIAM F PALANDRI JERRY RAINBOW COIN-OPLAUNDRY PALERMO JANIS E RAINBOWSENDRANCH PALFY STEVE P RAINEY DIANA H PALLIN SUSAN L RAINS PATTI A PALMER E EUGENE RAMBERG CAROL A PALMER MICHAEL R RAMGE RUTH J PALMER NANCY RAMSAY GARY PALMER NATHANIEL A RAMSEY BUD L PALMER TAMMIE J RAMSEY LLOYD F PALMER VERNONW RAMSEY WILMA E PALMER WILLIAM W RAMUS TERRY D PANAGES CLIFF K RANCHAFAR PARAMORE DAVIDW RANCH HOUSEDELI PARDO SHARONY RANDOLPH STELLA A PARK ED RANKIN JOHN A PARK RONALD A RANTSCHLER JOHN F PARKER ELEANOR C RANYARD BONNIE R PARKER EMERY E RAPACZ MARION PARKER GARY W RAPP STEPHEN M PARKER GEORGEA RASK KENNETH R PARKER IRENE R RASMUSSEN ALBERT F PARKER JANICE M RASMUSSEN KRISTEN L PARKER LES D RASMUSSEN ROD D PARKER THOMASA RASMUSSENWESLEY B PARKS BYARD W RASTERGRAPHICS INC PARKS ERNEST RATHBUN LELAND R PARKS GARY A RATTER ROBERT R PARKS RICK E RAU BRENDA L PARKS VALERIE A RAU GEORGE A PARRISH R BRUCE RAWLINSON RONALD F PARRY JAMES W RAWLS CRAIG A PARSONS S D RAY C N PASCHALL GARY W RAY CHERYL L PATRICK JUNIOR T REA KEVIN E PATT RALPH 0 READ &OHLDEFARMS INC PATTEE GLEN REAL ESTATELOANFUND PATTEE MARY E REAM DAN PATTERSONALMA L REAM H PRESTON PATTERSON LOWELL L REAMS STEPHEN R PATTERSON WAYNEEESTATE OF REARDON JEANNE PATTON LOWELL E REAVES WARREN PAUL HANS D RECLA SUSAN R PAULL ERNIE L RECTOR AUDREY PAULSON DONALD M REDDICK MARK G PAULYRANCH REDDING RAY D PAXTON C R REDFIELD PATRICIA REED FRANK A PAYNE CURTIS W PAYNE HAROLD REED FRED D PAYNE MARTHA K REED JOSEPHINE K PAYNE WILMA L REED LLOYD PEARCE CARMAN REED SANDRA A PEARSON DAWN B REED WADE J PEARSON IVAN J REED WILLIAM PEASE MARK W REEVE FARIL REEVE WILLARD G PEASLEY ROBERT N PECK TOM H REGISTER MARLENE G PEDDICORD DENNIS REHERMANN NORBERT PEDERSEN MELVIN SU G REID TERRY L PEDERSON GERALD R REIGLES JOHN L PELETT THOMAS P REILLY KIM K PELKEY FRED A REITZ DAVID K PELL VICTOR T RELCO BUILDERS PELLANDINI DAVID L REMPELOS MARY J RENFRO JOE PENCE LORETTAJ PENDERGRAFT ERNEST D RENFROW DEAN L PENDLEY JOSEPH RENKEN GLEN P PENNAVARIA RUSS J RESPINI D RACHAEL PENNEY ARTHUR W RETZLAFF SANDRA PENNINGTON DANIELC REX JOHN M PENNINGTON DAVIDN REYES ROBERT R PEOPLES MORTGAGECO REYNEKE ROBERT PEPITONE ANDY J REYNOLDS ANN L REYNOLDS DON R PEPPERLING GARY W PEREIRA ALFRED REYNOLDS GEORGE PEREZ RICK J REYNOLDS MIKE D PERIN BETTY H REYNOLDS TRACY PERIN LARRY A RHEINHOLDT MARVIN PERKINS KIM A RIC CONST CO PERKINS NORMAN G RICE J E PERON LARRY M RICE RICHARD A RICH CHARLES R PERRElT MARK J PERRY JOAN A RICHARDS BERTHA J PERRY MELINDA A RICHARDS WILLIAM M PETE WILSONREALTY RICHARDSONCLYDE R PETERS CHARLES W RICHARDSON LINDA J PETERS RICHARD L RICHARDSON RICHARD L PETERSEN GARY RICHARDSONWILMA PETERSEN JACK 0 RICKARD WILLIAM F RICKMAN ABE PETERSEN LAWRENCEW PETERSEN MICHAEL S RICKMAN STEVE PETERSEN MORRIS J RICKNER RICHARD H PETERSEN RICHARD L RIDENOUR DONALD R PETERSON ALETHA E RIDENOUR JANE E PETERSON BETTY L RIDENOUR LORIL PETERSON HOWARDM RIDGESTONEWATER SYSTEM PETERSON JACK B RIEDEL ROBERT H RIERSON ELIZABETH PETERSON KEN PETERSON LOUIS F RIGNEY R LEE PETERSON MARK R RILEY ERROLL F PETERSON ROBERT R RILEY MAX E PETERSON ROLF R RING DON L PETERSON THELMA RISTAU WARD W PETERSON THOMAS RISTE GERALD A PETRIE TOM RITCHEY RAYNA RITCHIE FERN M PETROVICH JOSEPH A PETTERSON LTCOL RITCHIE PROPERTIES PETTNER CHARLES A RITZENTHALER JOE R PETTY MARY RIX RICHARD A PETTYJOHN MARILYN ROACH KENNETH W PFAFF HENRY V ROADENBAUGHJOE PFAFF KAREN E ROADENBAUGHJOHN A PFEFFER EDITH ROAN A W PFLAUM MICHAEL L ROBART GREGORY P

ROBB BETTY J ROBBEN JACK ROBBINS LAURA D ROBERTS A WILLIAM ROBERTS BURTONW ROBERTS CHARLES V ROBERTS DEL S ROBERTS L ROBIN ROBERTS MICHAEL E ROBERTS PHILLIP F ROBERTS TIM P ROBERTS WAYNE R ROBERTSON GLENNA M ROBERTSON JOHN W ROBERTSON GRAN B ROBIDEAU RON R ROBINS DON ROBINSON DONALD D ROBINSON JAMES L ROBINSON MARLYN E ROBINSON PAMELA R ROBINSON RICHARD H ROBINSON RITA ROBINSON SUSAN J ROBISON DARLENE ROBISON PAUL T ROBY VICKI E ROCHEFORT JOSEPH R RODGERS BETH A RODGERS CHARLES L RODGERS GARY S RODGERS GORDON D RODGERS NEIL H RODGERS ROY H ROELKE JOHN D ROGERS BEVERLY ROGERS CHUCK E ROGERS DOUGLAS L ROGERS GEORGE L ROGERS LELAND T ROGERS RAYMOND E ROGERS STEVE M ROGERS TERRY L ROGERS WILLIAM E ROGERS CONSTRUCTIONINC ROHAN JAMES B ROLFE JEANETTE G ROLFE R E ROLL DAVID A ROLLEY ROBERT C ROLLINS EDWARD D ROMBOUGH RUSS C RONCERAYMAURICE RONFELD ELOISE RONNE HARVEY D ROOT GAILH ROSE DOROTHYA ROSE GARY C ROSE LANCE ROSE MICHELLE ROSE WILLARD P ROSENBERG GARGLE W ROSENBERG GLENN ROSENOW BARRY L ROSENSTIEL DENNIS R ROSENTHAL JOHN C ROSES DELMAR R ROSIN MAUDIES ROSS GEORGE W ROSSA BRAD L ROSTAD MICHAEL P ROTH RUEBEN ROUND RICHARD P ROWELL WALTER

ROWLAND JERRY ROWLAND JOSEPH M ROWLAND MARGARET A ROWLES GARY E ROYDON 0 M RUDD JOSEPH H RUDDELL BILL RUDDIMAN R W

RUE MAXINE B RUEGG F CHARLES RUEGG FRANK C RUFENER DAN F

RUFENER JOHN F RUFKAHR ROSEMAE B RULE CHESTER RUNDELL RON A RUNK LARRY R RUSH DEBBIE J RUSHER GERALD C RUSHING CHARLES R RUSHING JON A RUSLING LEE J RUSSELL BARBARA A RUSSELL GAIL RUSSELL MARK V RUSSELL MICHAEL RUSSELL RETHA M RUSSELL RONALD L RUSSELL THOMAS V RUSSELL VERNETA M RUSSELL VICKIE A RUST GALE A RUTHERFORDJOHN A RUTHERFORD ROBERT C RUTLEDGE CHIP A RUTSCHOW CHARLES 0 RUX DENNIS W RYAN ANDREW B

RYAN MICHAEL E RYSDAM FRANCIS E S & B FARMSWEST S AND H TIMBERCO S T B RETREATCO S&W FARMS INC SABIN PENNY M SADER SUSAN A SAGE KATHLEEN J SALES RONALD D SALINAS TOM G BALING R L SALLEE GLENNA L SALOMONE KAREN J SALT LINDA D SAMUEL STEVE SAMUELS R R SANDBERG TED J SANDER C V SANDERCOCK PHYLLIS A SANDERS DAVID A SANDILANDS JOHN R S

STADUM STEVEN D STAFFORD JAMES G STAGECOACH PRINTING STAHL LEO G STAHLMAN FRED W STANGLE GREG STANLEY ANDREW H STANLEY NATHAN C STANLEY TERRY L STANTON MARJORIEP STANTON RICHARD K STAPLES GEORGE D STAFF WILLIAM B STARR EMILLIE M STARR JERRY L STARTINGOVER STATON ROBERT W STEED RALPH H STEEGE ELMER H STEELE DAVID W L S T EELE TIM W STEELY BRIAN R STEEVENS B L STEFFEY CAROL C STEFFEY ROLAND STEINBRING DAVID N STENKAMP DIANE M STENNES LAURIE J STENZEL EUGENE STEPHENSON BRUCE D STEPHENSON GUY E STEPHENSON MARK E STERKOWICZ MIKE STERNBERGWANDA L STEVENS AVA L STEVENS DAVID A STEVENS DEBBIE J STEVENS JANET C STEVENS JIMMY D STEVENS RONALD W STEVENS WILLIAM K STEVESON ELIZABETH L STEWARD C S STEWART KAREN M STEWART KATHERINE STEWART KENNETH J STEWART ROBERT R OF STEWART ROGER STEWART VIRGINIA L STEWART WILMA A STICKNEY JON R STIDHAM BETTIM STIGALL VICKI R S STILLSON JAMES E STIVERS TIMOTHY W STOFFEL SCOTT STOGSDILL WILMA M STOKES KATHY P STOLIAR RON STOLL MANUEL STOLZBERG STEPHEN STONE DONALD R STONE ERIKA M STONE LORETTA N STONE R 0 STONER FRANK E STONES ROGER K STOREY DUANE L STORRS A H STOVALL DAVID STOVALL EDWARD C STRAlTON J R STRATTON LYLE M STRAlTON WILLIAM D STRAUGHAN JIMW STREBINGER JOHN INC STRICKLAND CYNTHIA E TER STRIDE JON P STROBEHN CLIFFORD M STROMME ERNEST H STROUP CAROL N STRUCK MARGARET LY STUART CHARLES 251 STUMP DEAN STUMPH’S WELDING SUITER JERRY W SULLIVAN DELOS ERV SULLIVAN J KEVIN SULLIVAN JAMES P SUNBURSTHOMES SUNCRAFT MOLDINGSINC SUNDANCELND& LVSTCK SUNDERLIN CHARLES E SUNDIGNEHOMES SUNDSETH GERALDINE T SUNNES MARTIN P SURGEON CHRISTOPHER SURGEON MARY KAY SURLOFF RICHARD M SUSAN RODNEY L SUTTON VAN L SVOBODA OLEO SWANK HERBERT F SWANSON DIANE SWANSON EARLE R SWANSON GARY E SWANSON JOHN S SWANSON WILLIAM E SWARTZ ELMER I SWEARINGEN DAN D SWEENY GORDON F SWEET RICHARD C SWEIDER I SUE SWENSON OSCAR L SWINDLEHURST CAROL A SY KENNETH J SYPE JOHN E SYSLO ARTHUR C SYVERSON RODNEY L TIC CONSTRUCTION TABER RON F TACKMAN WM H ESTATE TAFALLA ERNEST F TAFTE JANICE M TAIT WILLIAM L TALBOT C LYNN TANINO MICHAELEN S TANNER GERALD E TANNER RONALD D TASKINEN BEN 0 TASKINEN FLORENCE M TATE ELAINE M TATUM HOWARD L TATUM TED TAYLOR BETTY L TAYLOR CLAIRE R TAYLOR DAN 0 TAYLOR FOREST G TAYLOR GAYLE A TAYLOR JAMES K TAYLOR JEFF TAYLOR L A TAYLOR PAULINE G TAYLOR ROSS H TAYLOR SIDNEY R TAYLOR TALONA I TAYLOR TAMI R TAYLOR TODD M TAYLOR WANDA L TAYLOR WARRENG TAYLOR & TENNANT TEACH ROBERT S TEACH RON B TELECOMM SYSTEMSINC TENER JESSIE R TENNANT MARGARET C TENNIS JUANITA M TERRILLGEORGE A TERRITO C J TERRY FRANK A TESDALE THOR TEYS BONNIE L THE BLUNTTRUST THE CRAFTINGPATCH THE SANESI GROUP THEDORFF L P THENELL SHARRON E THEOBALD FRED J THEOBALD KENDALL THIEDE DEENA R THIELE PAULINE M THIEM ADA B THIEMAN NELLIE B THIETJE RUDOLPH N THOMAS CRAIG L THOMAS DEANE F THOMAS DONALD A THOMAS GARY J THOMAS JAMES P THOMAS JOHN E THOMAS CONSTRUCTION THOMASON SCOTT L THOMMEN RONALD L THOMPSON BRUCE D THOMPSON DONALD THOMPSON DOUGLAS W THOMPSON GElTA F THOMPSON JEANNEY THOMPSON JULIE THOMPSON KENYON 0 THOMPSON KIM THOMPSON LOUIS E THOMPSON PRESTON K THOMPSON RILLA THOMPSON STANLEY A THOMPSON TERRIS THOMPSON THOMAS D THOMSEN ALLEN R THORN STAN A THORNE RICHARD M THORNTON JACK B THORPE JAMES R THRASHER MARY B THREE CRICKS INV THREESISTERSBOOKKEEP THURSTON CARLA THURSTON R SAM TIDLAND MAE E TIERNEY ROBERT B TIFFEE MICHAEL L TILE KIBAK TILSON ROBERT J TIMBERS AMY J TIMMONS EDWARDS D TIMOTHY CALVIN R INC TINKER MARY L TIPTON DONALD E TIPTON LARRY M TIPTON WILLIAM W TODAHL RITA B TOLLS R EUGENE TOMBLESON RICHARD G TOMLINSON W H TOMORUG EUGENE P TOMPKINSJON D TONGE TONYA R TONISSEN NORMAN E TORKELSON R EDITH TOURNAMENTCITY TOWNSEND MARGO B TRACY TOM TRANTHAN ROY R TRAPMAN GARY A TRAPMAN MARK C TREEBY COLIN TREEBY PENNY TRENDWEST DEVELOPMENT

WILES DONALD R WILES PATTY S WILHELMI WALTERW WILHOUR RAYMOND G WILKINSON ANNE S WILKINSON MICHAEL K WILKINSON WILLIAM J WILLETTE JUDI L WILLIAMS AUDREY M WILLIAMS BESSIE L WILLIAMS CLIFFORD A WILLIAMS DONALD L WILLIAMS ELMER F WILLIAMS GARRY A WILLIAMS GINA K WILLIAMS HELEN WILLIAMS JAMES E WILLIAMS JOHN F WILLIAMS JUANITA G WILLIAMS KEITH WILLIAMS LARRY J WILLIAMS LONNIE D WILLIAMS LORELEI P WILLIAMS MICHAEL WILLIAMS RAY WILLIAMS ROBERT WILLIAMS SANDRA J WILLIAMS SHARON WILLIAMS THERESA WILLIAMS TONY A WILLIAMS WILLARD C WILLIAMSON RALPH WILLIAMSTON GRACE B WILLIE LAVERN J WILLINGHAM LETHA P WILLIS JAMES R WILLS MICHAELL WILSON ALEX M WILSON ALICEF WILSON ALVIN P WILSON BARBARA J WILSON BOBBIE WILSON BRENDA WILSON CHARLES WILSON DAN WILSON DANA F WILSON DARLE C WILSON DENNIS D WILSON DICK R WILSON DOUGLAS H WILSON E E WILSON EARL WILSON GEORGE WILSON HARLAN L WILSON HAROLD W WILSON JACALYNNS WILSON JACKIE WILSON JAIN WILSON JAMES WILSON JON T WILSON JULIETC WILSON KITTYL WILSON LEONARD H WILSON LOIS E WILSON MAX B WILSON NEVADA WILSON PEGGY C WILSON RICHARD E WILSON ROBIN WILSON ROY N WILSON STEVE WILSON VERAESTATE OF WINDOLPH JAMES H WING WALTER E WINGER JEFF S WINN CHARLES R WINN MICHAEL E WINSLOW ISABELLA WINSLOW JOHN B WINTER JOE J WINTERBURN ROBERT G WINTERS CARL T WINTERS CAROLINE L WINTERS EVERElT L WIPF JAKE A WIRTH GEORGE WISBECK STEVEN W WISE MOLLY A WISHERD KIMBERLYA WITHYCOMBE ANN L WITKOWSKI STEPHEN L WllT GORDON E WOHL MARK A WOJTOWYCHJULIAN WOLCOTT BETTY G WOLF LINDA L WOLF TONIA K WOLFE FLORINE M WOLFE LAUREL S WOLFE LEONARD J WOLFF ROBERT WOLFSEHR CLIFFORD P WOMACK SHANNON M WONSER DONNA R WOOD BETH M WOOD MICHAEL W WOOD RANDY WOOD ROBERT W WOOD SCOTT H WOOD WANDA M WOODBRIDGE RANDYW WOODCOCK ZORA M WOODS PAUL M WOODS RICHARD C WOODWARD WILLIAM R WOODWORTH R MARK WOOLLEY MICHAEL J WORCESTER JAMES A WORKMAN HAROLD WORKMAN WILLIAM A

WORSHAM CURTISD WOTTA SIEGFRIEDH WOZNIAK TERRY B WRAY ORVILLE L WRIGHT BARBARA WRIGHT CAROL WRIGHT DWAINR WRIGHT GARY WRIGHT JEFFREY D WRIGHT JOHN F WRIGHT LENA D WRIGHT LORNA J WRIGHT MADELAINE C WRIGHT ORVILLE L WRIGHT RICHARD S WRIGHT SUSAN P WRIGHTMAN FRANK T WRISTON HALTON L WUERFEL TIMOTHY D WYE LOIS B WYLLIE DAVID WYNGARDENJAY A WYNIA VIRGIL R WYNVEEN WILLIAM G YAHR VIC R YANCEY JEANNE E YATES E T YATES RICHARD A YEARLYTRADITION YOCOM GEORGE W YOHN JERRY YORK KENNETH A YOUNG BROOKS F YOUNG DONALD E YOUNG G VANCE YOUNG KATHIE P YOUNG KATHLEEN A YOUNG LISA L YOUNG PHILIPA YOUNG ROBERT F YOUNGBERG WAYNE E YUKL CHARLES W ZAGARELLA GRIS N ZAHL NANCY L ZAHLER RICHARD ZAPF ERNEST ZAVACKI MYRA J ZEHNER PAUL C ZEILER JOHN E ZEITLER EDGAR A ZEKO STEVEN P ZEMKE JOYCEY ZERKLE DANA L ZIEBART ROGER A ZIKA JAMES W ZIMMER ROBERT E ZIMMERLY ROY P ZIMMERMAN JOYCE F ZIMMERMAN THOMAS W ZIMNY JOHN S ZINGG TOM ZINIKER ED ZINN GENE G ZIRKLE DENNY R ZIRKLE NANCYESTATEOF ZNEROLD R MICHAEL ZOLLNER KENNETH E ZUFELT DONALD L ZULA E G ZUPAN JOHN J ZYBACH JAMES J ZYLEWITZ BETTY


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