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FRIDAY November1,2013
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TODAY'S READERBOARD
ELECTION
Bend citesfire risk in needfor water filtration Hotel tax
Medicare —How will the Affordable CareAct affect cov-
By Hillary Borrud
erage?D1
A large wildfire in the Tumalo Creek watershed west of Bend would kill trees and other vegetationand cause erosion. Depending upon the location and size of the fire, it could send
Natural darriers —Can reefs and wetlands beused to blunt the damagefrom the
The Bulletin
enough sediment into Tumalo and Bridge creeks to MDP force the city to stop On A4 us i ng them as a water source. The Bend City Council is poised to decide next week how to treat drinking water from the
Tumalo Creek watershed, and one of the key issues is the risk that wildfire could shut down the water source. The type of membrane filter the city would likely use can remove sediment from the water, whereas an ultraviolet
light treatment plant would stop working if there were enough debris in the water. Sediment would blockthe light and prevent it from neutralizing the microscopic organism cryptosporidium. SeeWater /A4
next big hurricane?A3
Walk like a dinosaur
4Wii b
By Shelby R. King
— Scientists use computer models to simulate the gait of
Q Time-lapse video of Mirror Pond'sdrawdown
the largest known species.A3
Watch our video of the water level being lowered over three days in preparation for
the inspection of the Newport AvenueDamat bendbulletin.cnm/drawdown
HomelandSecurity — Whistiebiowers say work-
NEWPORT AVENUE DAM
ers pad their paychecks with unearned overtime.A5
Pet memorials —Afinal resting place for more than
40,000 furry friends.D4
And a Wed exclusiveWithout federal aid, Amtrak
•
•
could leave rural areas behind. bendbulletin.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
State social
media rules are lacking, experts say By Melissa Maynard Statetine.org
WASHINGTON — Soon after Indiana Gov. Mike Pence posted a statement on Facebook expressing disappointment in the Supreme Court's ruling on of comments affirming his support for "traditional
marriage" appeared.
challenged for deleting comments. Still, legal experts say a state-sponsored social media site may be considereda "public forum," which could give citizens the right to say almost anything they wanted under the First Amendment, with some exceptions like obscene language and inciting violence. SeeSocial media/A5
The Bulletin
Supporters of increases in Bend and Deschutes County room taxes say the revenue will bring more visitors to the area and help fund public safety. Opponents say the proposed tax increases could actually dissuade people from vacationing here. They argue that relying on tourism for funding marketing and public services isn't a wise choice. Voters have the last say. Ballots are due Tuesday on Measure 9-94 in Bend and Measure 9-96 in Deschutes County outside city limits. About 22 percent of ballots were returned by Thursday, said Deschutes County Clerk Nancy Blankenship. She said she expects about a 30 percent voter turnout, which is average for an off-year election. "Taxing visitors to bring in more visitors, from a principle standpoint, doesn't work for me," said Bend resident Ross Flavel. "Raising hotel tax rates on someplace I was staying maybe wouldn't cause me to say anything, but it would cause a little bit of resentment." SeeTax/A5
Figuresstir debate over drone tolls
gay marriage, a long string
What was missing: comments from people who disagreed with his position, which were promptly being deleted. At first, the governor's officedefended the actions as consistent with its long-standing practice of deleting "inflammatory comments that include name-calling, vulgarity or comments personally insulting to others." But eventually, the governor apologized in a statement on his Facebook page: "On careful review ... some comments werebeing deleted simply because they expressed disagreement with my position. I regret that this occurred and sincerely apologize to all those who were affected." According to a recent report from the National Association of State Chief Information Officers, the courts have not yet addressed a case where a public agency has been
debate down to the wire
By Aoun Sahi and Mark Magnier Los Angeles Times
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Keith Mills, dem safety engineer with Oregon Department of Water Resources, takes e photo while conducting an inspection of the Newport Avenue Dem Thursday afternoon. By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Engineers from PacifiCorp andthe Oregon Water Resources Department began their inspection of the Newport Avenue Dam early Thursday, crawling along the face of the more than 100-year-old dam to search for signs of structural weakness. The inspection comes nearly a month after the discovery of a leak in the dam that quickly dropped water level to about two feet below normal. Dam owner PacifiCorp scheduled the inspection to search for the source of the leak and to determine if other parts of the dam could be on the brink of failure. The OWRD, which
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 58, Low 38
Page B6
"Any sign ofinstability would be picked Up by
brought about by the end of irrigation season has lowthese (lasers), something you couldn't see ered water levels to a lesser with the naked eye." degreefarther upstream, creating exposed mudflats — Bob Gravely, Pecificorp spokesmen throughout Drake Park and above the Galveston Avenue Bridge. regulates dam safety and using hammers and drills Water levels should begin oversees the distribution of to lookforrotand assess returning to about two feet irrigation water in Oregon, the strength of the wooden below normal beginning to"cribs" that hold tons of rock elected to conduct its own day. Before closing the gates inspection outside of its and rubble in place. to refill the pond, PacifiCorp normal inspection schedule In anticipation of the inwill be installing surveying due to the unique low water spection, PacifiCorp opened equipment that will use lalevels. the sluice gates on the dam sers to determine if the dam Inspectors spent most of Monday to lower water levels shifts when water begins acthe day Thursday on the even further. Gravely said cumulating on the upstream downstream sideofthe Thursday that the water had side, Gravely said. "Any sign of instability dam, wading in the water come down approximately and using ladders to closely 7 feet from its normal elevawould be picked up by these, examine the structure. Bob tion at the face of the dam. something you couldn't see Gravely, spokesman for PaciThe combination of the with the naked eye," he said. fiCorp,said inspectors were leak andreduced riverflows SeeDam/A4
INDEX All Ages 01-6 C l assified E1 - 6 D ear Abby 05 Ob i tuaries B5 C1-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope 0 5 Sports Calendar I n GO! Crosswords E4 L o cal/State B 1- 6 r V/Movies D5, GO!
ISLAMABAD — A claim by the Pakistani government this week that 67 civilians died in drone strikes over the last five years, a surprisingly low number given previous casualty estimates, has sparked controversy, skepticism and speculation that American pressure may be behind the
figure. Adding to the debate, a drone strike early Thursday in North Waziristan near the border with Afghanistan — the first in a month — killed three people. Their identity was not immediately known. Pakistan's Foreign Ministry condemned the attack. "There is an across-the-board consensus that drone attacks must end," it said in a statement. Drones are a politically charged issue, viewed by many Pakistanis as inaccurate and a sign of the nation's inability to safeguard its borders. See Drones/A5
4 P We userecycled newsprint AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 110, No. 305, 62 pages, 6 sections O
IIIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329
A2 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
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GENERAL INFORMATION
NATION 4% ORLD
om ein i s a r e a aco e ion
FOOd StampS —More than 47 million Americans who receive food stamps will see their benefits go down starting today, just as Congress has begun negotiations on further cuts to the program. Beginning in November, a temporary benefit from the 2009 economic
stimulus that boosts food stamp dollars will no longer beavailable. According to the Agriculture Department, that means a family of four receiving food stamps will start receiving $36 less a month. The ben-
efits, which go to1 in 7 Americans, fluctuate based onfactors that include food prices, inflation and income.
541 -382-1811 By Ellen Nakashima
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DEPARTMENT HEADS
WASHINGTON The Senate Intelligence Committee voted Thursday to advance legislationthat would endorse a National Security Agency program to collect the phone records of nearly every American while strengthening privacy protections for the Americans whose data is gathered. The bill stands in stark contrast to legislation introduced Tuesday by a different group of bipartisan lawmakers that would end t h e c a ll-records program. The competing approaches ensure a r o b u st c ongressional d ebate o v er the proper scope of NSA surveillance and over reforms to e nhance transparency a n d accountability. The FISA I m p rovements Act, which passed out of committee on an 11 to 4 vote, would also strengthen oversight of overseas intelligence collection conducted under presidential authority. Such surveillance has been inthe news in recent weeks, following leaks of NSA documents by former agency
contractor Edward Snowden. Though targeted at foreigners overseas, that Related c ollection h a s • Snowden r aised qu e s builds life in ttons about how Russia,A6 mu c h data from Americans are captured in the process and how well the data are protected from misuse. "The NSA call-records program is legal and subject to extensive congressional and judicial oversight, and I believe it contributes to our national security," Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., chairman of the Intelligence Committee, said. "But more can and should be done to increase transparency and build public support for privacy protections in place." The bill would write into statute the authority for NSA to collect records in bulk under Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act — with protection for Americans whose records are harvested. The phone data program, onceclassified, gathers in a database billions of call records from U.S. phone companies. The data includes
ISrael aIId Syria —Israeli warplanes attacked a shipment of Rus-
numbers dialed and the calls' time and duration, but not their content. The legislation would retain the current policy of keeping the call records for up to five years but would require the attorney general's approval to query records older than three years. It also would require that each number run against the database be reviewed by the surveillance court that oversees the NSA to ensure that there is "reasonable, articulable suspicion" it is linked to a terrorist. Also, under the bill, the NSA director and i nspector general would be subject to Senate confirmation. Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., who voted against the bill, failed in an effort to supplant it with competing legislation that would halt the call-records program. The USA Freedom Act, which he is co-sponsoring with Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., also would impose shortersunset periods on certain surveillance authorities. A companion bill was introduced in the House by Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner Jr., R-Wis.
sian missiles inside a Syrian government stronghold, officials said Thursday, a development that threatened to add another volatile layer
to regional tensions from the Syrian civil war. AnObamaadministration official confirmed the Israeli airstrike overnight, but provided no details. Another security official said the attack occurred late
Wednesday in theSyrian port city of Latakia andthat the target was Russian-made SA-125 missiles.
TeXaS adortiOII laW —A federal appeals court on Thursday ruled that most of Texas' tough new abortion restrictions can take effect immediately — a decision that means at least12 clinics won't be
able to perform the procedure starting as soon asFriday. A panel of judges at the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans said the law requiring doctors to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital
can take effect while a lawsuit challenging the restrictions moves forward. The panel issued the ruling three days after District Judge Lee
Yeakel said the provision serves nomedical purpose. Stop-and-friSk —A federal appeals court on Thursday blocked a judge's ruling that found the New York Police Department's stop-and-
frisk policy discriminated against minorities, and it took the unusual step of removing her from thecase,saying interviews she gaveduring the trial called her impartiality into question. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals said the ruling by U.S.District Judge Shira Scheindlin will be on hold pending the outcome of an appeal by the city. But it may be a nonissue after next week's mayoral election: Democrat Bill de Blasio,
who's leading in polls, has said hewould drop objections to the ruling. NOmineeS dlOCked —Senate Republicans Thursdaythwarted the confirmation of two of President BarackObama's nominees,
setting up a confrontation with Democrats that could escalate into a larger fight. The refusal to consider the nominees, one to a powerful
appeals court and another to a home-lending oversight post, could affect debate over limiting the filibuster and restricting how far the
minority party can go to block a president's agenda. Drug tunnel —A tunnel designed to smuggle drugs from Tijuana,
FLOODING HITSCENTRAL TEXAS
Mexico, to San Diego was equipped with lighting, ventilation and an
electric rail system, U.S.authorities said Thursday, making it one
Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 Circulation andOperations ............................................541-385-5805 Finance Holly West ...........541-383-0321 Human Resources
of the most sophisticated secret passages discovered along the U.S.-Mexico border. Authorities seized 8/~ tons of marijuana and
327 pounds of cocaine in connection with the tunnel's discovery, according to court records. Three men who authorities say worked
as drivers were chargedThursday with possession of marijuana and
Traci Donaca ......................
cocaine with intent to distribute.
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WreStling mat death —The U.S. Department of Justice said Thursday that it had opened formal a review of the death of a17-year-
TALK TO A REPORTER
brought on behalf of two students killed in the attacks. The families of the students, Julia Pryde and Erin Peterson, sought damages of $10 million, asserting that the university had delayed a campuswide alert that might have saved lives.
old boy found in a rolled-up wrestling mat at his Georgia high school in January. The death of the student, Kendrick Johnson, has been
the subject of questions since his bodywas found in the upright blue mat in Valdosta, Ga., on Jan. 11, a day after his mother reported him missing. Although the state and local authorities determined that
Johnson's deathwasanaccidentalonecausedbypositionalasphyxia, his parents disagreedandcalled for a renewed inquiry. Virginia Tech lawsuit —Virginia Tech's warnings to students as a mass shooting began in 2007 were not negligent, the state's
Supreme Court ruled Thursday, ending awrongful-death lawsuit
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Thursday in Austin, Texas.
Flooding across Central Texas inundated roads and buildings, stranding residents and prompting dramatic rescues after storms dropped up to a foot of
rain in places. Since midnight, emergency crews hadresponded
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opened for those displaced, fire officials said.
pulled over for speeding Tuesdayevening, when aCalifornia Highway
One of the most dramatic rescues Thursday morning involved a woman in labor.
Patrol officer noticed she was wearing Google Glass and tacked on a citation usually given to drivers who may be distracted by a video
The womanwasstranded in "a notorious flood
or TV screen. Achallenge to what may beafirst-of-its-kind citation could force authorities to re-examine laws and consider how best to
cut off by two low-water crossings. Rescuecrews were able to reachand rescueher by boat.
regulate evolving gadgetry that mayone day becomemainstream. — From wirereports
DeViCeLISe
throughout flight OIC'd New York Times News Service WASHINGTON — Airline passengers can use electronic devices to listen to music, read of flight," the Federal Aviation Administration said Thursday, but using a cellphone to talk and text will still be banned. T he changes w il l m o s t likely take effect before the end of the year, the FAA said, after airlines determine that their aircraft can tolerate the interference. Passengers will still be prohibited from browsing the Web and checking email once the plane's doors have been closed and until its Wi-Fi network has been turned on, usually above 10,000 feet. Rules for cellphone use aresetby the FederalCommunications Commission and are unlikely to change soon. T he administrator of t h e FAA, Michael Huerta, said he expected that, with rare exceptions, airlines would allow the use of tablets, MP3 players and smartphones in "airplane mode," with their cell network connections turned off. The airlines will have to conduct tests on their equipment and submit the results to the FAA for approval, he said.
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while driving in San Diego, saying the technology makes navigation easier than smartphones and GPS devices. Driver Cecilia Abadie was
surrounds Austin. Those included 32water rescues and 46 flood assistance andbarricade calls, Austin
and play games in "all phases
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Hundreds of homes in Travis County have been affected by floodwater, and several shelters have been
area," Austin Fire Battalion Chief Thayer Smith said,
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GOOgie GlaSS Citatiell —An early adopter of Google's lnternetconnected eyeglasses plans to fight a citation for wearing the device
to 81 flood-related incidents in Travis County, which
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fire officials said.
Deborah Cannon /The Austin American-Statesman
A man walks with two dogs through floodwaters
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013•THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Friday, Nov.1, the 305th
day of 2013. Thereare 60days left in the year.
SCIENCE HAPPENINGS Footl StamPS —More than 47 million Americans will see their benefits go down.A2
Iraq —Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki will meet with Presi-
dentBarackObama,seeking aid against terrorists.A6
HISTORY Highlight:In 1950, two Puerto Rican nationalists tried to force
their way into Blair Housein W ashington, D.C.,to assassinate President Harry S. Tru-
man. Theattempt failed, and one of the pair was killed, along with a White House police of-
ficer. In1512, Michelangelo finished painting the ceiling of the Vatican's Sistine Chapel. In 1765, the Stamp Act went into effect, prompting stiff
resistance from American colonists. In 1861, during the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln
named Maj. Gen.GeorgeMcClellan General-in-Chief of the
Union armies, succeeding Lt. Gen. Winfield Scott. In1870, the United States
Weather Bureaumadeits first meteorological observations. In1936, in a speech in Milan, Italy, Benito Mussolini described the alliance between
his country and NaziGermany as an "axis" running between Rome and Berlin.
In1944, "Harvey," a comedy by Mary Chaseabout a man and his friend, an invisible 6-foot-tall rabbit, opened on
Broadway. In1949, an Eastern Airlines DC-4 collided in midair with a Lockheed P-38 fighter plane
near Washington National Airport, killing all 55 people aboard the DC-4 and seriously injuring the pilot of the P-38. In1952, the United States
exploded the first hydrogen bomb,code-named "Ivy Mike," at Enewetak Atoll in the Mar-
shall Islands. In1968, the Motion Picture Association of America unveiled its new voluntary film rating
system: Gfor general, M for mature (later changed toGP, then PG), R for restricted and
X (later changed toNC-17) for adults only. In1973, following the "Saturday Night Massacre," Acting Attorney General Robert Bork
appointed LeonJaworski to be the new Watergate special
prosecutor, succeeding Archibald Cox. In1979, former first lady Mamie Eisenhower died in Washington, D.C., at age 82. In 1989, East Germany reopened its border with Czecho-
slovakia, prompting tens of thousands of refugees to flee to the West.
Natural storm barriers, like reefs and marshes, are being restored along the East Coast. But how much protection they can offer, especially from a major hurricane, is still in question.
Moines Register hewanted to be "the candidate for guys with Confederate flags in their
pickup trucks." (The former Vermont governor explained that he intended to encourage
the return of Southern voters who had abandoned the Demo-
crats for decadesbut weredisaffected with the Republicans.) Five yearsago:Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCainplunged through the final weekend of their
marathon race for the White House;McCain poked fun at
his campaign's financial shortcomings and his reputation as a political maverick in an ap-
pearance onNBC's "Saturday Night Live."
One yearago: President Barack Obama returned to the campaign trail, after canceling
campaign appearances to focus on Superstorm Sandy.
BIRTHDAYS Magazine publisher Larry Flynt is 71. Country singer-humorist
Kinky Friedman is 69.Country singer Lyle Lovett is 56. Rock
musician Rick Allen (Def Leppard) is 50. Actress Toni Collette is 41. — From wire reports
By Dennis Overbye New Yorh Times News Service
By Henry Fountain New York Times News Service
The floodwaters from Hurricane Sandy had barely receded in New York last fall when the suggestions started coming for ways to keep the city and other low-lying areas safe in future storms. Higher flood walls and more bulkheads were needed, some experts said. Others called for
even biggerengineering projects, like storm-surge barriers, to keep the water at bay. But the most intriguing suggestions involved natural approaches. Why not return New York to its glory days as an oyster capital, some argued, and build reefs in the harbor that could help beat down a storm's waves? Why not turn L ower M anhattan i nt o a n aquatic Shangri-La, fringing it in marshland that could reduce surging storm waters? "A lot of people want wetlands to be a solution, instead of walls," said Philip Orton, a research scientist who studies storm surges at the Stevens I nstitute o f T e chnology i n Hoboken, N.J. "It's a warm and fuzzy thing." But natural features are, at best, an uncertain solution. While some natural barriers like dunes have been shown to be very effective at absorbing much of a storm's energy — during Sandy, shore towns with dunes suffered less damage generally than those without — it is less clear that marshes, oyster reefs, kelp beds or the like provide much protection. Interactions between a storm and natural features are complex, and the dynamics of every storm are different, scientists say, making protection difficult to quantify. "There'sa lot of people saying that wetlands can reduce storm surges," said Rusty Feagin, an ecologist at Texas A8 M University. "There isn't a lot of empirical evidence on it." Proponents of a na t u r al approach say their research shows that wetlands and reefs can offersome protection, especially from waves. They note that engineered solutions like sea walls have their own problems — for one thing, they can worsen flooding and erosion
lN
'I'
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Nicole Bengiveno/ New YorkTimes NewsService file photo
Shewen Bian, of the Army Corps of Engineers, walks near Jamaica Bay in New York, where wetlands are being re-created that could offer some storm protection. elsewhere. And marshes and oyster beds provide other benefitsto ecosystems. Marshes, for example, can keep up with rising sea levels brought on by climatechange, because as the marsh grasses slow down water, sediment carried by the water settles out, building up the soil. And oysters filter impurities, improving water quality. But even the strongest proponents of natural defenses acknowledge that they are no match for a storm like Sandy, which produced a record storm surge of more than 13 feet in New York Harbor. "All of these have their limitations, but they can provide some riskreduction, said Nicole Maher, senior coastal scientist with the Nature Conservancy on Long Island who studies Jamaica Bay in Queens and other wetlands. "But once you get really deep water, it doesn't matter if it's a parking lot or an oysterbed or a saltm arsh." In the year since Sandy, the thinking about the use of natural defenseshas evolved. On Monday, the day before the first anniversary of the storm, 10 design groups showed off their ideas in Manhattan as part of a competition sponsored by Rebuild by Design to make the region more resilient in the face of future storms and climate
change. While there was plenty of talk of the need for salt marshes andoysterreefs,many ofthe groups took a hybrid approach — combining vegetation with engineered berms,for exam-
ple, or oyster reefs with larger submergedstructuresdesigned to reduce wave energy. "Natural defenses are kind of the lure — everybody likes them," said Edgar Westerhof, a planner working with one of the competing groups, WXY/ West8. "But in the end, it's not the whole solution." If a marsh orreef is effective in reducing storm surge, it is because it dissipates energy as water moves over grasses, roots, oyster shells and other materials, generating friction. But friction has an effect only up to a point, said Joannes Westerink, a civil engineer at the University of Notre Dame who has developed modeling software that is used to simulate surges and other effects of storms. "If the storm structure is such that the water has enough time to get in, then the frictional resistance will slow it down, but it won't stop it from getting there," he said. Westerink has found that s lower-moving s t orms a r e less affected by marshes than faster-moving ones. He h as run simulations of past slowmoving hurricanes — Ike, for instance, which hit the Gulf Coast in 2008 — and found that surges insome areas actually increase as the storm travels over marshes. Those results run counter to what had long been considered a rule of thumb about wetlands and storms: that for every three miles of marsh, storm surge is reduced by about one foot. That rule wa s d eveloped
by researchers for the Army Corps of Engineers in 1963, who looked at only nine storms, all on the Gulf Coast. Although it is still cited in some literature, many researchers now largely discount it and view the impact of wetlands as highly variable. It also helps if there are dozens of miles of them, as there are around New Orleans and in other parts of the Gulf Coast. "It's definitely out there that wetlands are barriers," said Orton of the Stevens Institute. "But that's really only true if you have a lot of space." But even if a narrow strip o f marshland w ould h a v e little impact on storm surge, it could reduce wave energy in a storm, said Westerink of Notre Dame. "The scales of motion are much smaller" with waves, he said, and even if the wetland were overrun by storm surge, it would "attenuate waves very effecti vely,"he added. "And waves can knock the socks off your infrastructure." Oyster reefs could have the same effect on waves, particularly smaller ones in less severe storms, said M ichael Beck, lead marine scientist with the Nature Conservancy. The conservancy has oyster reef development projects on the East and Gulf coasts, in which large quantities of shells, placed in shallow water, serve as a place for oyster larvae to settle. "This is a pretty standard coastal engineering problem," Beck said. "They're designing these allover Europe. We're taking those designs and applying them to oyster reefs."
By reducing wave energy, the reefshelp reduce erosion in nearby marshes or other shoreline areas. That makes the marshesstronger and more resilient, he said.
"What you're really hoping
is that those natural habitats overall are contributing to reduced erosion and fl ooding from smaller, higher-frequency events," he said. "It's important to recognize that all of the actions we're talking about are steps in risk reduction," Beck c o ntinued. "There's no one solution. Natural habitats are contributing a part to that reduction, and that's really important."
Ten yearsago: Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean stirred controversy within his party by telling the Des
No dark matter foundat least notyet
Scientists simulategait of biggest dinosaur By Brady Dennis
rus was a "perfectly competent dinosaur," Sellers said. "There's nothing m e chaniUsing laser scanning and sophisticated computer modelcally that would stop you having, scientists in England and ing an 80-ton dinosaur built Argentina have simulated the like this," which he said could l ikely lumbering gait of t he have trudged across the landlargest-known dinosaur, acscape foraging vegetation on cording to a new study. the ground or from the tops of "It's really spectacular," said trees. Bill Sellers, a University of B ut i t w a s n't a n e a s y M anchester professor and lead existence. "It was a r e latively slow researcher of the study published this week in the journal beast," Sellers said, noting that PLOS ONE, which examines the dinosaur's top speed was how and whether the enorprobably about 5 mph. "As you mous Argentinosaurus could get bigger, you start running have roamed the South Ameriout of the force you need to can landscape more than 90 move. This animal would find million years ago. Argentina began by using a la- things like getting up off the The Argentinosaurus was ser scanner to create a detailed, ground very difficult. I hate to the largestof the sauropods, 3-D image of th e d inosaur. think how it would do things dinosaurs with long necks and They then used computer-mod- like mate. That would be a tails, relatively small heads eling software designed by very delicate operation for it, and thick, stout legs. It weighed Sellers to reconstruct how the because it was so large." more than 80 tons and was 100 giant animal probably moved Sellers and his team are the feet long. along the earth. The modeling latest in a long line of researchGiven its massive size, there took into account factors such ers, experts and animators have long b ee n q u estions as body mass, muscle size, and who have tried to solve the ridabout whether the dinosaur shape and bone structure. dle of how dinosaurs traversed "This is science, not just ani- the Earth. was as large as some experts suggested and how it physi- mation," Manning said. Kent Stevens, a computer callycould have moved such a Their verdict: As far as the scientist and expert in dinotitanic frame. physics go , A r g e ntinosau- saur locomotion at the UniverThe Washington Post
That uncertainly has persisted in part because so little of the Argentinosaurus has been r ecovered. Scientists h a v e been left to deduce the size and mobility of the dinosaur based largely on a handful of vertebrae, ribs and leg fossils. "It is frustrating there was so little of the original dinosaur fossilized, making any reconstruction difficult," Phil Manning, who collaborated on the project and heads Manchester's paleontology research group, said in a statement detailing the research. To tackle that challenge, the researchers in Manchester and
sity of Oregon, said in a lecture last year that doing "good science" on the topic is difficult and tricky, mainly because researchers must figure out "a behavior that's no longer observable" using mostly circumstantial evidence. Sellers said he and his team tried to begin their undertaking with no preconceived notions and tried to rely only on the data available. "The difference between what we're doing and some other people are doing is that we don't use as a starting point an assumed way that this animal would have moved,"he said. "We can't be 100 percent certain that we found the best answer.... But we're getting close." The Manchester team eventually plans to set its sights on detailing how smaller dinosaurs would have moved through the prehistoric world. "Our next target is probably a triceratops," Sellers said. "It has short front legs and
long back legs. It's going to have a really peculiar way of walking."
The former Homestake Gold Mine in Lead, S.D., has a hallowed place in the history of physics as a spot where nothing happens. It was there, in the 1970s, that Raymond Davis attempted to catch neutrinos, s pooky s u batomic p a r ticles emitted by the sun, in a vat of cleaning fluid a mile underground and for a longtime came up empty. For revolutionizing the study of those particles, he shared the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2002. On Wednesday, an international team of physicists based in the same cavern o f the former m ine a n nounced a new milestone o f frustration, bu t a l s o h ope — this time in t h e search for dark matter, the m ysterious, invisible i n gredient that astronomers say makes up a quarter of the cosmos. In the first three months
of running the biggest, most sensitive dark matter detector yet — a vat of 368 kilograms of l i q uid xenon cooled to minus 150 degrees Fahrenheit — the researchers said they had not seen a trace of the clouds of p a r ticles that t heorists say should b e wafting through space, the galaxy, the Earth and, of course, ourselves, knocking out at least one controversial class of dark matter candidates. But the experiment has just begun and will run for all of next year. The detector will gain another factor of sensitivity in the coming run. "Just because we don't see anything in the first r un d o esn't m e a n w e won't see anything in the second," s a i d Ri c h a rd Gaitskell, a p r ofessor of p hysics at B r ow n U n i versity and a spokesman for an i n ternational collaboration that o p erates the experiment known as LUX, for the Large Underground Xenon dark matter experiment. As has become de rigueur for such occasions, the scientists took pride and hope in how clearly they did not see anything. "In 25 years of searching, this is the cleanest signal I've ever seen," Gaitskell said in an interview. That meant, the scientists said, that their detector was working so well that they would easily see a dark matter particle if and when i t d e cided to
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
Bendwatershedandpipeline
LOOICING AHEAD: ELECTION 2016
The city of Bend draws much of its water from a portion of the Tumalo Creek watershed west of the city in the Cascade foothills. The city holds rights to take water from roughly 7,000 acres. The total acreage of the watershed exceeds 37,000 acres.
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Upper Tumalo Creek Watershed
By Philip Rucker The Washington Post
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NORFOLK, Va. — In recentstump speeches and policy remarks, Bill and Hillary Clinton have offered sharp criticisms of t h e p a r tisan
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gridlock paralyzing Wash-
Bend city water intake Swampy Lakes
Cascade LakesHighway 46
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In Clintons' talk ofcompromise, an implicit rebukeof Obama
46
Source: U S. Forest Service Tumalo Creek Watershed Analysis
Water Continued from A1 C ity Manager Eric K i n g said that damage from the 1979 Bridge Creek Fire in the watershed still sometimes results in high levels of debris in the creeks. Ultraviolet light treatment is much less expensive than membrane filtration. According to city estimates, an ultraviolet treatment plant would cost $12 million to $14 million, and the least expensive membrane filtration plant would cost more than $30 million. The city could also build an ultraviolet t r eatment p l ant and add wells at additional cost to keep water flowing if the watershed was damaged
by fire. "If wildfire wasn't a threat, we'd choose (ultraviolet light t reatment)," King said t h i s week. " But because it i s a threat, and there hasn't been much mitigation up there and there's a lot of dead, standing timber, it is a threat." The city must begin treati ng its d r i n king w ater f o r cryptosporidium t o c o mply with a 2006 rule issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Bend received an extension to October 2014 of the original 2012 federal water treatment deadline. T he types o f f o r est i n this area — lodgepole pines and, at h i g her e l evations, m ixed conifers an d h e m locks — burn less frequently than ponderosa pine forests, said Fire M anagement Officer Doug Johnson with the Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District. When wildfire passes through these areas, however, there is greater potential for it to be a severe, "stand-replacing" fire that burns and kills all of the vegetation, including the larger trees. Fires burn through lodgepole pine forests every 30 to 80 years, Johnson said. Without human intervention, mixed conifer trees at higher elevations in the watershed would burn once every 300 to 350 years. "We can certainly put (in) an effort, and we do, at minimizing the impacts of fire in the watershed, but I'm never
going to guarantee anybody another '79 fire won't come down t h r ough t h e w a t ershed," he said. One of the major changes in recent years is that beetles have infested the area and killed many lodgepole pines. "The potential i s g r o w i ng each year, as we're not able to go in and treat any of that area just yet," Johnson said. " We've ha d s m al l f i r e s (in the watershed) we've responded to and been able to suppress," he added. He estimated three to five small fires start in the watershed each year, and "most of those are
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
know, not having a lot of access up in t h ere," Johnson said. Federal regulations also prohibit the Forest Service from u sing f i r e r e t ardant within 300 feet of any stream or other wet area, so that also limits what the Forest Service can do to slow down flames in the area. The two closest fire lookout towers do not have a clear view of t h e w atershed, so when a storm passes through the area, the Forest Service uses an airplane to check for smoke from fires started by lightning. "If a fire did get established up there, it would certainly be our No. I priority fire," Johnson said. The only exception would be if the Forest Service had to focus on another fire that threatened lives or property. Due to the lack of roads, f irefighters might h av e t o hike a mile or two from their vehicles, Johnson said. " Without roads to get i n and anchor off of, some kind of safeanchor, (fires are) really hard to fight," Johnson satd.
terms of potential impacts to water quality and also potential impacts to a whole bunch of other values people care about." C hang said t hat o n t h e question of whether the Forest Service should treat the forest to prevent fire in the watershed, people involved in the Deschutes Forest Collaborative Project hold a variety of views. Even among people who believe fire is an important part of the natural forest cycle, some think Tumalo Creek watershed is a unique area that should be protected from a major wildfire, Chang satd. "We definitely are finding this thing where in the environmental community, they are conflicted," Chang said. Johnson said Forest Service officials are waiting for the Bend City Council to decide how it will treat city water. If the city begins to filter water, that could help clear the way for a fire prevention project in the forest. C hang said t ha t d u r i n g fire prevention work, r o ad Thinning project discussed construction would pose the Despite the challenges of largest threat to water qualtrying t o p r event a m a j or ity. "When you do thinning or wildfire i n t h e w a t ershed, logging types of operations, the Forest Service and repre- the thing t ha t c a uses the sentatives of other interests most watershed disturbance — other government officials, is actually the road system," environmentalists, the timber Chang said. industry and elected officials It is u n l ikely th e F orest — are discussing the concept Service would build roads as of just such a project. part of any effort to thin the The Deschutes Forest Col- forest. "I don't see us building laborative Project b r ought roads in there," Johnson said. together a variety of people to Crews would do most of the build agreement on how the work to thin trees and other Forest Service should man- vegetation by hand. "It's goage public land, and one issue ing to be very, very labor inon the collaborative's agenda tensive for us, and probably is fire in the Tumalo Creek quite expensive," Johnson watershed. satd. Phil Chang, who works on Johnson said he can only the Deschutes Collaborative t ell people how o f ten t h i s Forest Project, said it might type of forest typically burns, be at least another year until and there is no way to predict the ForestService begins an when the next major blaze e nvironmental r eview p r o will o c cur. T h a t d e pends cess for any fire prevention too much on factors such as project in the area. weather. It's up to city coun"What I think is important cilors to decide how much about this ... planning area risk to the water source they is unlike all the areas that can tolerate, King said. we're focused on for restora"A lot of that for council tion that are lower in eleva- comes down to what is the tion, the forest isn't as out of risk of wildfire, and how to whack," Chang said. "The mitigate for that risk," King probability of the fire startsaid. "And what's the best reing is not huge, but the con- turn on investment." sequences of the fire would — Reporter: 541-617-7829, be pretty significant, both in hborrudC<bendbulletin.com
ington, signaling a potential 2016 campaign theme if Hillary Clinton chooses to run for president. The Clintons' critiques in recent days have been explicitly aimed at congressional Republicans, who helped spur a 16-day government shutdown and potential debt default in October. But their remarks alsoseem to contain an implicit rebuke of President Barack Obama's failure to change Washington as he pledged when first running for the White House. The arguments suggest a way that Hillary Clinton could attempt to run in 2016
Jose LuisMagana/The Associated Press
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks last month at a campaign rally for Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe, right, in Falls Church, Va.
also marked by fierce partisan battles that roiled the nation, including an impeachment fight and two government shutdowns. In the 2008 Democratic as an agent of change — po- primaries, Hillary C l i nton tentially putting her at odds dismissed Obama's message with th e t w o-term Demo- of post-partisanship as woecrat she would be seeking to fully naive. But since stepping replace. down as Obama's secretary At campaign rallies and of stateearlier this year, she other recent a ppearances, has adopted a similar theme, both Clintons have called for repeatedly berating lawmaksoothing partisan tensions ers for choosing "scorched and have espoused a vision earth over common ground." "We are careening from of governing by compromise. Barnstorming Virginia this crisis to crisis instead of havweek with longtime friend ing a plan, bringing people to and Democratic gubernato- that plan, focusing on comrial candidate Terry McAumon-sense solutions and beliffe, Bill Clinton repeatedly ing relentless in driving toassailed ideological politics ward them," Clinton said last on both sides of the aisle. week during at a Center for "When people sneeringly American Progress gala. say, 'McAuliffe is a dealmakNeither Cl i n t o n h as er,' I say, 'Oh, if we only had brought up Obama directly one in Washington during in their remarks or explicthat shutdown,'" the former itly criticized his leadership. president said at a rally here Still, the Clintons' general in Norfolk on Monday. "It's critiquescarry echoes of the exhausting seeing politicians charges Republicans have waste time with all these ar- frequently l eveled against guments. It i s e x hausting. the current president: that People deserve somebody Obama doesn't respect their who will get this show on the ideas and resists any comproroad." mise with them. Such themes of change and Obama has been making comity are particularly ironic his own pleas for bipartisanfor the Clintons considering ship, even if they fall on deaf that one or the other has held ears on Capitol Hill. "Now public office in Washington more than e ver, A m erica for the past two decades. Bill needs public servants who Clinton's tenure in office was are willing to place problem
solving ahead of politics," he said at Wednesday's memorial service for former House speaker T h o ma s Fo l e y, D-Wash. The Clintons have been careful t o d i stinguish between promoting bipartisan-
Dam
to 50-foot-long sections of metal that were driven into the ground so that only 15 to 20 feet remained above the bottom of the pond. Gravely said he was not at liberty to disclose estimates of the cost of repairing all or part of the dam. PacifiCorp officials wil l b e w e i ghing those costs against the dam's power generation capacity, the expense of removing the dam, and the price the dam could draw if it was sold. "I think t h i s i n spection will probably tell us what we need to know," he said.
Continued from A1 PacifiCorp w i l l n o t b e revealing its findings from T hursday's inspection i m mediately, however. Gravely said the latest leak is only a small part of the equation. While the leak appears fixable, it's the condition of the rest of the dam that will determine whetherrepairs are worthwhile, Gravely s aid. The dam's hydro generators create only enough power for 200 to 300 households, and a long list of repairs could render it unprofitable. "It's not f i xing the leak
that's the big decision; it's the bigger question," he said. "We want to have a better sense of the bigger question before we know what we're
going to do." Gravely said he'd mistakenly given the i m pression that past repairs to leaks in the dam were simpler than was actually the case. In 2008 and 2009, PacifiCorp repaired three damaged sections of the dam using the heavy corrugatedmetal seen on the upstream side. Gravely said before he'd believed the metal panels were simply bolted to the face of the dam. In fact, the repairs used 40-
O~~A Oregan Hewapeper
ship and ceding ground on core values. Hillary Clinton, for example, has been busy advocating for traditionally liberal issues such as minority voting rights, gay marriage equality and women's rights. This appears to be an effort by Clinton, following a fouryear hiatus from domestic politics, to cement ties to the Democratic Party's progressive wing. If she runs, Clinton would want to avoid a repeat of the2008 campaign, when Obama built support among liberal activists by running to her left on the Iraq war. The Clintons' message is one that Democrats across the country could carry into the 2014 midterm elections, where the battle for control of the Senatecould come down to a handful of hotly contested races in states that lean Republican. Rep. Gerald Connolly, a Democrat, who r e presents a Northern Virginia swing district,said after a recent McAuliffe rally that the message laid out by Bill Clinton would be "a really powerful theme into the next cycle."
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersCabendbulleti n.com
A Free Public Service
Publishera Assaeiath ii
lightning-caused."
The Forest Service also wants to thin trees and complete other f ir e p r evention treatment in the watershed, but has not yet begun the environmental impact r eview process for such a project.
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
Prevention, firefighting options limited The U.S. Forest Service has a limited ability to prevent fires in the watershed because the agency does not want to stir up debris that could wind up in th e city's w ater. Bend currently h a s an exemption to the requirement i n t h e f e d eral S a fe Drinking Water Act that all m unicipalities f i l te r t h e i r s urface water. This i s o n e reason most of the watershed is a roadless area. "We're trying to maintain the quality of that water up t here, but there is a p r i c e to that and the price is, you
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013•THE BULLETIN
IN FOCUS:HOMELAND SECURITY
Drones
Report: Workersroutinely boost pay with unearnedovertime
Continued from A1 Islamabad regularly criticizes the attacks in public, even though it's believed to have supported and even provided targeting data for some past strikes. On Wednesday, the Ministry of Defense told parliament that only 3 percent of the 2,227 people killed in 317 drone attacks since 2008 were civilians — far lower than the 16 percentto 25 percent some international groups have estimated. In a written statement, the ministry also said no civilians were killed in such attacks since January 2012. The areas along the border with Afghanistan where drones most commonly operate are off limits to journalists and aid groups, making it difficult to verify the identities or numbers of those killed. "These figures are ridiculous," said Mansur Khan Mahsud, director of the FATA Research Center, an Islamabadbased think tank researching militancy in Pakistan's tribal areas. "Forty people were killed in one drone strike alone in March 2011 in the Datta Khel
come a culturally acceptable practice." Federal employees at the Over the past year, as fedDepartment of Homeland Se- eral cuts have torn through curity call it the "candy bowl," d epartment b u d gets, t h e a pot of overtime money they use and misuse ofovertime have long dipped into to pad known as AUO has become a their pay even if they haven't matter ofincreasing concern earned it, whistleblowers say. among federalmanagers, emThis practice, which can ployees and unions. add up to 25 percent to a payAsked about th e s pecial check, has become so routine counsel's r eport, a DHS that it's often held out as a spokesman said acting Secreperk when government man- tary Rand Beers has ordered agers try to recruit new em- a department-wide review of ployees, according to t hese how AUO is used and whethaccounts. er it complies with the law In a report submitted to the and other rules. "DHS takes seriously its reWhite House and Congress on Thursday, the federal Of- sponsibility to ensure proper fice of Special Counsel details use of taxpayer funds," said what it calls a "profound and spokesman Peter Boogaard. entrenched problem" at DHS "While many frontline offiand a "gross waste of govern- cers and agents across the dement funds." Based on the tes- partment require work hour timony of seven whistleblow- flexibility, often through the ers, the OSC concludes that use of Administratively Unthe pervasivemisuse of over- controllable Overtime (AUO), time pay in six DHS offices, misuse of these funds is not including four within Customs tolerated." and BorderProtection, comes In a written response to the to $8.7 million a year. special counsel's allegations, At issue is Administratively the CBP's assistant commisUncontrollable Ove r t i m e, sioner for i n t ernal a f fairs, which is meant only to com- J ames Tomsheck, said t h e pensate for urgent and unan- agency would "work towards ticipated work like that often a unified and simplified agenundertaken by law enforce- c y-wide directive on A U O" ment agents. and would show all employBut Carolyn Lerner, special ees avideo to reinforce rules counsel at the OSC, an inon proper AUO use. vestigative and prosecutorial Federal employees across a agency, said in an interview range of agencies are eligible that many employees across to receive this kind of overDHS now consider the over- time pay, and each agency has time pay their due. She said some latitude to determine the whistleblowers' testimony how to regulate it. The Office suggests that the department of Special Counsel said it had bill for these improper pay- not receivedreports of abuses ments is running in the tens other than at DHS. of millions of dollars a year. Some DHS employees rou"These are not border pa- tinely claim more than their trol guys chasing bad guys " straight eight," w i t h t w o who can't stop w hat t h ey hours of overtime every day, are doing and fill out paper- recounted one of the whistlework for overtime. We are blowers, Jose Rafael Ducos not questioning that," Lerner Bello, who works as a supersaid. "These are employees visor for Customs and Border sitting at their desks, collect- Protection, until recently in ing overtime because it's be- Washington. By EmilyWax-Thibodeaux The Washington Post
Social media
"It's pickpocketing Uncle Sam," Ducos Bello said in an interview. "Employees will sit at their desks for an extra two hours, catching up on Netflix, talking to friends or using it for commuting time." He estimated that 27 employees in the Commissioner's Situation Room, which is part of CBP, improperly put in for a total of $696,000. They ranged from managers, who received up to $34,000 each, to border patrol agents, who r eceived $24,500 each, h e said. "It was such misuse that I felt I had a legal obligation to report. I will sleep better at night," said Ducos Bello, a 24year veteran of government employment. "It's like a father who has a son who commits a crime and has to report it for the health of their child's future." Another wh i s t l eblower, Jimmy Elam, a supervisory paralegal specialist for Customs and Border Protection in San Diego, reported that eight administrative employees at his location received a total of $150,000 of improper AUO a year. "It happens day after day, year after year," Elam said in an interview. "They are sometimes w orking, s ometimes
goofing off or just unaccountable completely. W h atever they are doing, they shouldn't b e doing t hose extra t w o hours according to the law." Elam, who has worked at his office since 2008, said he had noticed the problem for years but that it began bothering him more after automatic federal budget cuts, known as sequestration, kicked in this year. He said he worried about employees losing work and programs being slashed while employees continued to get overtime payments. "It's just wrong," he said. "But everyone here condones it
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speak out about matters of public concern in their capacities as Continued from A1 public citizens." State government agencies Court cases relating to emand officials have embraced States are advised to ployeesocialmedia speech are socialmedia products such as consider: starting to surface with reguTwitter and Facebook as a way larity. In September, the U.S. • Does social media activity to engage citizens and get the Court of Appeals in Richmond, fall under public meeting or word out about their policies Va., ruled that using Facebook's records laws? "like" feature to express supand services. But government • What terms of service are use of social media comes with port for p olitical candidates social media companies a host of tricky questions about is protected under the First requiring users to agreeto? how to protect state interests Amendment — even when the • How will comments be while also protecting the First candidate an employee "likes" monitored or moderated? Amendment rights of citizens is running against his or her • How are states using and state employees. boss. employees' and job According to NASCIO, evIn Bland v. Roberts, former candidates' social media ery state uses social media in sheriff's office employees araccounts in employment some way, but only about 30 gued that they were unjustly decisions? states have statewide social fired for supporting the sher• Are safeguards in place iff's political opponent. "It was media policies in place. "Some to prevent discrimination of the gaps found have the povery controversialwhen the based on things like tential to open states up to some trial court said that ( liking religious affiliation and severe heartburn: including something on Facebook) was sexual orientation that employee discontent, managenot speechbecause most of us may be revealed onsocial ment concerns,public percepwho use Facebook every day media? tion and liability," the report understand that yes, it is," said warns. Statewide policies are • What happens if a state Lyrissa Lidsky, a law professor usually set by state information at the University of Florida. agency or public official's technology offices, but in some Lidsky noted similar issues identity or username is states, individual agencies have in the private sector. Those emstolen? established their own policies. ployeesmay be protected under The NASCIO report provides the National Labor Relations states with a checklist of 18 of the ¹NRA. Next time, let it Act if they complain about their legal issues and eight policy be YOUR sons and daughters. jobs on social media in ways issuesto consider when using Shame on you. May God damn that could be interpreted as an social media. you." effort to change their working Experts in the field expect Guth agreed to take indefi- conditions, she said. to see more lawsuits related to nite administrative leave after Ultimately, each public ofstate use of social media. "Right some Kansas legislators called ficial and state agency has to now, there's not a whole lot of on the university to fire him. decide whether to participate in caselaw or precedent out there Some lawmakers have threat- the often unruly world of social about state use," said Meredith ened to cut the school's funding media and, if so, how hands-on Ward, senior policy analyst for if it doesn't take further action. to be in moderating comments. NASCIO. The university is receiving There arebenefits and risks NASCIO cites as a caution- criticism from the other side, to being either strict or lax, said ary tale the case of Officer Trey as well. First Amendment ex- Murray Weed, an instructor Economidy of the Albuquerque perts warn that the school's at the Carl Vinson Institute of Police Department, who was in- decision to place Guth on leave Government at the University volved in a fatal on-duty shoot- and launch an i nvestigation of Georgia. Carefully moderating in 2011. A TV station found may have a chilling effect on ing comments can keep state Economidy's Facebook page, political speech o n c o llege accounts clear of lewd or ofwhich listed his occupation as campuses. Just because the fensive language that might "human waste disposaL" After view espoused in a tweet is of- draw complaints, Weed said. the publicity nightmare, the po- fensive or ill-considered, they But allowing freewheeling dislice department put Economidy argue, doesn't mean a public cussion engages citizens in the on desk duty and established a employee doesn't have the right democratic process,creating policy to govern officers' use of to express it. a meaningful back-and-forth. "It was pretty clear from "You can limit it to the point social networking sites. More recently, David Guth, reading the tweet that profes- where you're missing the fun a journalism professor at the sor Guth is only speaking for part and the magical part of University of Kansas, created himself," said Peter Bonilla of what social media is designed an uproar by criticizing the the Foundation for Individual to do," he said. National Rifle Association in a Rights in Education. "He's not In weighing free speech tweetfrom hispersonal account speaking for his university, and rights, courts are likely to take after the Navy Yard shootings any reasonable observer should seriously policies about moderin Washington in September. be able to understand that. State ating comments that are promiHe tweeted: "¹NavyYardShoot- employees, includinguniversity nently displayed and followed ing The blood is on the hands professors, have every right to to the letter, Weed said.
NASCIO social mediachecklist
Tax Continued from A1 Proponents of the measure, such as Ben Perle, regional vice president of operations at the Oxford Hotel in Bend, encourage voters to support the increase, in part,because locals won't be paying for it. "This is not a tax on residents," he said. "It's an incremental increase on tourists and won't be enough to dissuade them from making the area a travel destination." Flavel, in a letter to The Bulletin editorial page, said he read several arguments in support ofthe measures
encouraging people to pass them becauseresidents won't have to pay, but that reasoning doesn't work for him. "Most were quick to assure me that I'd not be paying the tax, it would be paid by guests to my town," he wrote. "Yeah, you bet, as a host of my own home I'm always open to a way to stick it to those I invite." In Bend, Measure 9-94 would increase the tax rate from 9 percent to 10.4 percent by 2016. Measure 9-96 would increase the transient room tax rate on overnight lodging units located outside city limits from 7 percent to 8 percent
beginning July 1. If passed,Measure 9-94 is expectedto raise $450,000 to be spent on marketing campaigns to increase tourism in the area, according to Visit Bend CEO Doug La Placa. It is also expected to raise about $200,000 annually for Bend's fire and police departments. "Whenever you invite millions of people to visit your town, you're going to need an increased law enforcement presence," said Kelly Cann on-Miller, director of t h e Deschutes County Historical Society, who supports the increase. "When you have an increase in population, you need an increase in public safety." In Deschutes County, the tax increase generated if Measure 9-96 passes should
AS
area of North Waziristan," he said. "Of those, only five were militants." In June 2009, he added, drones attacked a funeral in South Waziristan, killing another 60 civilians. The 67 figureundermines the government's own argument that drone strikes must
A survey released in September by Gilani Research Foundationof 2,626 men and women in rural and urban areas found 71 percent of respondents believed Pakistan should not cooperate with the United States in fighting terrorism compared with 27 percentin favor and 2 percent end because popular anger who didn't answer. over civilian deaths fuels radiWashingtonviewsthedrone calization, militancy and more program in Pakistan as a vital recruits for th e i nsurgents, weapon against al-Qaida and some analysts said. Taliban militants who take Ultimately the biggest ben- refuge in the lawless northeast eficiary of this week's ques- to mountcross-border attacks tionable disclosure may be on American troops in neighthe Taliban and other militant boring Afghanistan. President groups, analysts said, by sup- Barack Obama has said the porting their argument that program is kept on a "very the Pakistani government is tight leash" and that without it, working with the Americans the U.S. would have had to reto target and deploy drones sort to more intrusive military and can't be trusted. action. It also could undermine But the view is not univerproposed talks between the sal. Some residents of the government and the Taliban tribal areas say drones are an aimed at stemming the vio- effective way to kill militants lence, they added. without costly or disruptive "Now, they would blame military operations. Pakistan and i t s s e curity In response to the controagencies for being complicit versy, Pakistani I n f ormain the drone program," said tion Minister Pervaiz Rashid Rahimullah Yusufzia, a de- said the government had not fense analyst and journalist c hanged its o p position t o based in the Pakistani city of drones and remains hopeful Peshawar. their use will end soon.
raise around $527,000 a year, according to projections. Of that, 70 percent will go to fund marketing campaigns for events at the Deschutes County Fair & E xpo Center.The remaining 30 percent would be used for other county functions, such as public safety, health and human services and county infrastructure. "I'm not voting for 9-96 either," Flavel said. "If the fairgrounds has been doing so good, shouldn't they have put ... some of t h at money aside for marketing already'?" Proponents of m easures 9-94 and 9-96 say raising the rates on transient room taxes will bring more revenue and increase marketing c apabilities to encourage tourism. Opponents saythe increase could make tourists change their minds about coming to Central Oregon. "Everything is price-sensitive," said Bend resident John Driscoll. "Any tax increase is going to discourage people. Especially people who want to stay awhile, the amount can add up." Perle disagrees that raising room taxes will dissuade visitors, because people choose where to vacation relative to their budget, not the amount of tax on a room. "There are several hotels and resorts in the area that already charge" more with added fees, he said. "And they're reporting an increase in guests. So it's already been proven increased room taxes won't deter people." Some who don't support the measures say they don't think it's f air t o i n crease taxes on people who are already choosing to spend their money here. "People come and they pay their money to spend their vacation here," said Jerry Egge of Bend. "They're eating at our restaurants and shopping at our stores. That is paying their fair share." Other opponents say encouraging tourism as a rev-
enue-generating measure for the area isn't a wise choice because it's not a reliable source of money. "Tourism i s ep h e meral; it's a luxury item and in bad times people can do without it," Driscoll said. "People may not wantto come here forever. It's entirely possible that in the next few decades tourism in the area will die out." Cannon-Miller believes it is unlikely people will stop wanting to vacation in Bend. "This path of tourism began years ago w it h p laces like Black Butte Ranch and Sunriver," she said. "Marketing the areas to tourists is just a continuation of what planners in the '60s and '70s began." People who come to Central Oregon as tourists sometimes become residents, often bringing businesses to the area, said Perle. "I can't tell you how often I hear of people coming here to visit and deciding to move," he said. "Those people usually either move a business or start a business. I want to continue to createmore jobs in ourarea." — Reporter:541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin.com
HWY 20E & Dean SwiftRd. (1 block West of Costco)
541-323-3011 • starks.com
Partners In Care, together with Hospice Foundation of America presents:
Improving Care for Veterans Facing Illness and Death Friday, November 1 Registration: 8:30 am National Program: 9:00 to Noon Followed by a light lunch and panel discussion of local guests: 1230 pm -1:30 pm
Community Education Series:
Caring for Children with Special Needs
r' • •
Mark L. Mintz, CFM Certified Special Needs Advisor with Merrill Lynch
r
Friday, November 8 Noon to 1:00 pm
Partners In Care
2075 NE Wyatt Court
Bend, OR 97701
Events are at Partners in Care, no-cost, and RSVP appreciated. Please call the main receptionist and have your name added to the list. •
'
541-382-5882
www.partnersbend.or9 •
A6
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
UPDATE: NSA LEAKER
nt es a ows, intso a ie or now enin oscow By Steven LeeMyers
service, clearly controls the circumstances ofSnowden's life MOSCOW — On very rare now, protecting him and also occasions, almost always at circumscribing his activities, night, Edward Snowden leaves even if not directly controlling his secret, guarded residence him. "He's actually surrounded here, somewhere, in Russia. He is always under close protec- by these people," said Soldatov, tion. He spends his days learn- who, with Irina Borogan, wrote ing the language and reading. a history of the new Russian He recently finished "Crime security services, "The New and Punishment." Nobility." Accompanying him is Sarah Hints of his life nonetheless Harrison, a B r i tish activist flitter in and out of the public working with WikiLeaks. With eye. On Thursday, his lawfar less attention, she appears yer, Anatoly Kucherena, said to have found herself trapped in Snowden had agreed to take the same furtive limbo of tem- a job with one of the country's porary asylum that the Russian major I n t ernet c o mpanies, government granted Snowden beginning today. Kucherena three months ago: safe from would not disclose the compaprosecution, perhaps, but far ny or any other details, and he from living freely, or at least declinedto discuss Snowden's openly. life in exile "because the level Andrei Soldatov, a journal- of threat from the U.S. governist who has written extensively ment structures is still very about the security services, said high," he said. "He's free, but he's not comthe FSB, the domestic successor to the Soviet-era intelligence pletely free," said Ray McGovNew Yorfs Times News Service
Inspectors: Syria has destroyed chemical arms sites By Alan Cowell New York Ti mes News Servi ce
LONDON — T h e i n t ernational chemical w eapons watchdog said Thursday that Syria had met an important deadline for the " functional destruction" of all the chemical weapons production and mixing facilities it declared to inspectors, rendering them inoperable, under a deal brokered by Russia and the United States. While some experts depicted the announcement as a milestone, the m easures left President Bashar Assad in control of a declared 1,290 metric tons of chemical weapons that are supposed to be destroyed by mid-2014, and an array of conventional weapons used in the country's civil war, in which over 100,000 people have died. "The Assad regime continues to use artillery, air power and siege tactics against civilians, with t housands killed every month," the British Foreign Office said in a statement. While the destruction of facilities is "an important first milestone, it brings no relief to the Syrian people." "As winter approaches, the humanitarian situation grows more acute with millions left vulnerable," th e s t a tement said. The watchdog group, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, in The Hague, said in a statement that a joint team of its inspectors and U.N. officials had visited 21 of the 23 chemical sites Syria declared to them. While the remaining two sites were too hazardous to visit because of the country's civil war, the chemical-making equipment therehad been moved toother sites that the inspectors could visit, the statement said. The group said Syria had met the deadline set by the group's executive c o uncil, which had urged the destruction of production and other e quipment n o la t e r t h a n today. According to an inventory of Syria's chemical weapons program reported by the agency to the U.N. secretary-general, Ban Ki-moon, the facilities thathave been destroyed since inspectors started work at the beginning of October include 18 production facilities, eight mobile filling units and three other "chemical weapons-related" facilities. Syria agreed to the destruction of its chemical arsenal to avert threatened U.S. and French military strikes after a poison gas attack in a suburb of Damascus, the Syrian capital, on Aug. 21 that killed hun-
dreds of people. The next phase of the timetable set down by the United Nations is Syria's destruction of its stockpiles of chemical weapons by mid-2014.
The Assooiated Press file photo
Former National Security Agency systems analyst Edward Snowden, center, receives an award from the Sam Adams Associates for Integrity in Intelligence in Moscow last month. Snowden reportedly has found a job in Russia. ern, a former CIA official and a member of the Sam Adams A ssociates for I n tegrity i n Intelligence, which met with Snowden three weeks ago in his only verified public appearance sincehe received asylum on July 31. Even those who attended were not exactly sure
where the meeting took place, having been driven in a van with darkened windows. The possibility that Snowden might work openly here could not be verified, though the conditions of his asylum would in theory allow it, and some experts doubted the notion, given
Snowden's evident desire to keep a low profile. Other claims about Snowden's surreptitious life here — his whereabouts, his social activities, even his dating — are unsubstantiated. Nonetheless, interviews with those who have met with him here have provided some clues to an unintended life in exile. Aside from Kucherena, a bearish man who has handled many prominent cases here, Snowden's main conduit to the world and the efforts to challenge the extent of U.S. eavesdropping has been Harrison, a trusted lieutenant of WikiLeaks' f ounder, Julian Assange. She arrived with him on a flight from Hong Kong in June that left them unintentionally stranded in a transit zone at Sheremetyevo I n t ernational Airport i n M o scow. W hen Snowden received p e rmission to stay in Russia, despite intense U.S. pressure, she was
photographed with him as they left the airport and climbed into a taxi, headed for the underground existence they have since managed to maintain. It was through Harrison and WikiLeaks that the members of the Sam Adams Associates organized their meeting with Snowden — possibly, though not certainly, here in Moscow — to present an award to him for his leaks. Those who have seen him in Russia say Snowden appears aware of the gravity of the situation he has created, but also at peace with his choice to disclose secrets. His father, Lon, who visited him last month, said he was working "to try to normalize his life." His son, he said, had no interest in writing a book or otherwise seeking monetary gain from the disclosures. He said he did not know if his son would soon begin working, as Kucherena said.
Iraqi leadercalls on U.S.to helpfight terrorist threat By Michael R. Gordon and Eric Schmitt
the U.S. Institute for Peace, the prime minister attributed New Yorh Times News Service the rise of al-Qaida in Iraq to W ASHINGTON — I r a q i chaos in neighboring Syria Prime Minister Nouri al-Maand the collapse of state strucliki said Thursday that Iraq tures as a result of the Arab once again faced a terrorist Spring uprisings in 2011. threat and t h a t a d ditional Many c r i t ics, i n c luding U.S. weapons and intelligence prominent U.S. lawmakers, were needed to roll it back. have said that al-Maliki shares "We shed blood together," much of the blame for the real-Maliki said, referring to newed violence, asserting that the nearly nine-year Iraq war. his failure to share power with "We came to Washington to the Sunni minority has proconsolidate the partnership." vided a fertile ground for ap"We want an international peals from al-Qaida. war, a global war against terBut al-Maliki did not acror," he added. knowledge that political tenIn an animated speech at sions in Iraq or that his own
often authoritarian governing style had contributed to the
public wanted him to stay on the job. "This is somethingthat is up problem. "There is no problem be- to the Iraqi people," he said. Al-Maliki was last in Washtween Sunnis and Shiites," he said. "The constitution is rul- ington i n D e cember 2011. ing in Iraq." During a joint news conferAl-Maliki a s serted t h at, ence then, President Barack as a young democracy, Iraq Obama praised al-Maliki for was still building its political leading Iraq's most inclusive system. But he insisted that government to date and boastany political problems were ed that violence was at "record "under control" and were be- lows." i ng worked out u nder t h e The last of the troops from constitution. the United States left Iraq that During a question-and-an- month, and the White House swer sessionafterhis speech, and the al-Maliki government the prime minister said he were eager to portray Iraq as would seek a third term if the a nation largely capable of
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Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
NOV. 5 ELECTION
en se oma enew ires
Ballots are in the mail. If you haven't received
one yet, call your county clerk's office: Deschutes.....541-388-6546 Crook.............541-447-6553 Jefferson.......541-475-4451
Ballots must be returned
at a drop box ormailed to your clerk's office by 8 p.m. Nov.5. Postmarks
do not count. Here are the issues on local ballots:
By Hillary Borrud
will help the city process building permits and maintain development data. The city will also hire a planner and civil engineer earlier than anticipated, due to construction activity. Current Planning Manager Colin Stephens said the civil engineer will review private developers' plans to connect new buildings to the city sewer and street systems. "We didover 800 single-family dwellings last fiscal year,"
The Bulletin
The city of Bend is adding employeesinresponse to the rebound in the construction industry. The City Council recently approved a plan to hire eight more employees, on top of the 15 new hires already included in the current budget. During the recession, the city shed 110 jobs. Five of the new employees
said Building Division Manager Joe McClay. "This year, we've already had over 400 single-family dwelling applications in the first four months (of the fiscal year)." As of Oct. 28, the city had already brought in $1.6 million from permits and other building services in the fiscal year that began in July, Chief Financial Officer Sonia Andrews wrote in an emaiL That is 45 percentmore
revenue than budgeted. During the same time period, the city received $572,000 in revenue forland use planning services. That is 32 percent more revenue than budgeted, Andrews wrote. The Engineering and Infrastructure Planning Department collected $195,000 in fees on private development so far this fiscal year, 56 percent more than budgeted. See Hires/B2
crease the temporary lodging rate from 9 to 10 percent, then to 10.4 percent. • Measure 9-96: Increase the transient room tax outside incor-
porated areas by 1 percentage point,
connec eo
1e
from 7 to 8 percent.
Deschutes andCrook counties • Measure 9-95: Form Alfalfa Fire District and
create a permanent taxing district at a rate
of $1.75 per $1,000 assessed property value. Deschutesand Jefferson counties • Measure 16-69: Re-
new operations levy for Crooked River Ranch Rural Fire Protection District at a rate of 69
cents per $1,000 assessed property value. Jefferson County • Measure 16-70: Levy a
five-year jail operations tax of $1.24 per $1,000 assessed property value. • Measure 16-71:
Approve $8 million in bonds for repairs and improvements to schools in the Culver School District.
Read ourstories Coverageleading up to the election is at bendhulletin.com/
election2D13
STATE NEWS Tualatin Salem
• Tualatin:The possible
expansion of services at a compositing
company hassome residents making a
• Condolences pour in from around the community ' //~ u +-
By Megan Kehoe
ff(s'4rA--
The Bulletin
Within minutes of the announcement that Thomas the otter had died, the condolence notes started flooding in on The High Desert Museum's Facebook timeline. People posted sad faces, expressions of sorrow and their favorite photos of Thomas. "We havegotten so many comments from visitors who remember Thomas and talk about what he taught their kids," said Melissa Hochschild, vice president of communications for the museum. "We've started to get cards and drawings from local kids who miss him. It's all been really lovely." Thomas, the High Desert Museum's furry aquatic mammal, died Oct. 25. He was 16 years old and had been delighting visitors at the museum for more than 10 years. While he may have been just an otter, Hochschild said, he represented a lot more for the museum. "Our goal with all of our animals is to connect people with the wildlife and ecosystem of the High Desert," she said. "Thomas and the whole otter exhibit spoke a lot to how important riparian zones are to local wildlife." Thomas' death left his roommate, Rogue, alone in the otter habitat exhibit. Rogue only recently arrived at the museum in March. Despite a rocky beginning, the two got along well in the end. "Rogue really fit in great — he really perked Thomas
P" V r
at uo.
Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Melissa Hochschild, the High Desert Museum's vice president of communications, hangs a card Thursday inside the Autzen Otter Exhibit. The card was from a child expressing sympathy for the passing of Thomas the otter. The museum's longtime resident river otter died Oct. 25 from old age. He was 16.
"Thomas and the whole otter exhibit spoke a lot to how important riparian zones are to local wildlife."
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Courtesy the High Desert Museum
Thomas' death leaves the museum with a single otter, Rogue, after one was recently returned to Ohio after it was discovered he had a bacterial infection.
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70 68 69 72 68 50 34 - 4 6 5 7
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u
reader PhotOS • We want to seeyour photos of signs of winter foranotherspecial version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors
section. Submityour best workatdenddulletin.com /signsofwinterand we'll pick the bestfor publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors
toreaderphotos© bendbulletin.comand tell us a bit about where
and whenyou took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submissionrequirements: Include as much detail as possible —when and where you tookit, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phonenumber.Photos m ust be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
FR
38 28
2 9 2 7 2 9 32 29 30
30 34 32 31 31 28 2 4 23 29 29 31 34
31 32
34 32
35 36 30 30 24 24 30
PRECIPITATION TOTAL: 0.48" Historical average precipitation for the month: 0.72"
l«eHR K
T= Trace
I R R R H H EII H R R H R R R R R R R R R R R R R H K I K IH H
SNOW TOTAL: 0" Historical average snowforthe month:0.24"I
l«eHH R
Originally opened as an elementary school, it operated as the district's alternativeschool forseveralyears. In early 2009, the district attempted to close Brown as part of a cost-cutting measure, prompting a lawsuit from the union representing Redmond teachers. While the alternative program was moved to the Redmond HighSchool campus, the building did not close, and other pro-
T =Trace
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R H H R R R R R R R R H
ALMANAC
Highest
temperature
Lowest temperature
Average high
Highest recorded temperature
Lowest recorded temperature
Monthly average
for the month:
for the month:
high temperature through the years:
Monthly average low temperature through the years:
90'
Q
63'
32.1'
on Oct. 6, 1979
on Oct. 31, 2002
O
* Monthly averages calculated from 1928through 2005, Western Regional Climate Center Sources: NOAA,Western Regional Climate Center, Bend public Works Department
that were once based at Brown have cycled in and out, said superintendent Mike Mclntosh, placing the building's future in limbo and had delayed any push to upgrade the facility. The school currently hosts programs for students with physical and developmental disabilities and a program that teaches construction skills to students who have previously dropped out of school. At any given time, 110 to 140 students attend classes at Brovm, McIntosh said. "They've been the black sheep for far too long, and I've taken it upon myself to rectify that situation," he sard. McIntosh said that while the $110 million bond has been exhausted through the construction of RidElementary School and the near-complete replacement of Terrebonne Community School, the improvements made at the district's other schools have reduced its list of deferredmaintenance projects. Now Brown is near the top of the list. The district is anticipating investing $716,000 in Brown over the next three years, including a new roof, new plumbing fixtures, a new heating system and new windows. Fire and security alarms will be re-
placed, and exposed pipes
Octoder2013weather for Bend
Stories on B3
The only Redmond public school not upgraded through a $110 million bond approved by Redmond School District voters in 2008 will be getting significant renovations next summer. Located off Black Butte Avenue near downtown, the Edwin Brown Education Center has had a tumultuous last few years.
geview High School, Sage
— Melissa Hochschild, vice president of communications for the High Desert Museum
DAILY HIGHS AND LOWS Average temperature: 44.6' (2.9' below normal)
Well shot!
By Scott Hammers
grams moved in. Programs
stink. • Salem:A state audit
finds payroll issues
Edwin Brown to receive face-lift The Bulletin
City of Bend • Measure 9-94: In-
Deschutes County
REDMOND
gP
Averagelow
Qi il
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
and wiring on the ceiling of a hallway will be concealed with a new drop ceiling. McIntosh said the district has recently completed a renovation of the offices at Brown, moving across the hall, so staff can better see who's coming in and out of the building. The relocation of the office is one of several smaller projects the district has undertaken to improve security since last December's mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut, he said, which at Brown has included new fencing, changing out old locks and adding a handful of security cameras. SeeRedmond/B2
"They've been the black sheep for far too long, and I've taken it upon myself to rectify that situation." — Mike Mclntosh, superintendent of the RedmondSchool District
B2
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
OREGON NEWS
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i s in n er rise earn a ou in so ou
~%ag
By Katy Nesbitt La Grande Observer
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Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
Following Thomas the otter's death, the High Desert Museum has received a number of cards and mementos — including this CD with his picture on it. Staff and volunteers are planning a private memorial for sometime in the coming weeks.
Otter Continued from B1
"I think he's enjoying being
king otter," Hochschild said. "It snowed recently and it seemed like the first time he'd ever been in the snow. He was sliding around and being very active." Rogue arrived in March with fellow otter Sandy, bringing the museum's otter count up to three in the spring. But it was quickly discovered that Sandy was unwell with a bacterial illness, which threatened the health of the other otters. Shortly after arriving, Sandy was sent back to the facility in Ohio where he and Rogue came from. Rogue is now the museum's sole otter, but the museum is on the search for another to join him and is working with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife to find one. Hochschild said a new otter might arrive in
allowa Resources Exploration of N ature class teaches team building, outdoor survival and leadership An Indian summer day was the backdrop and Marr Pond the classroom for Wallowa Resources Exploration of Nature class in Enterprise last week. Fifth- through eighth-grade students learned first aid and wilderness survival skills during one ofthe most requested WREN courses. Amy Busch, youth education coordinator for Wallowa Resources said, "WREN's curriculum is designed to be fun. We teach life skills tied to the curriculum and let the students and parents request their favorite topics." With the aid of paramedic Todd Evans and instructors Dave and Bobby Duncan, children learned basic skills that could help save their lives if hurt in the woods. "If I see you on fire, the first
the spring.
thing I'm going to do is go get
A private memorial for museum staff and volunteers will take place at some point in the coming weeks, which will offer those who saw and worked with Thomas every day a chance to remember and honor him. Any notes and letters related to Thomas' passing sent to the museum will be displayed on a special memorial wall. A fund has also been established in Thomas' name to help with otter care for Rogue and any otters the museum hosts in the future. "If people are so motivated to donate, that's great. But we're not looking at it as just a way to raise money," Hochschild said. "It's more about remembering Thomas and how amazing he was. So many people bonded with him — h e was a r eal favorite."
some marshmallows," said Evans, making the point that when one comes upon an emergency, the first thing to do is stop and think. Duncan, who has taught WRENfor manyyears, backed Evans up with the acronym, "STOP," which stands for stop, think, observe and plan. Both Evans and Duncantold the students that if someone is in trouble, the worst thing they could do is rush in and get hurt themselves. After a situation is assessed, Evans told them, "Start the breathing, stop the bleeding, treat for shock. "You need to protect yourselfand scan the scene for safety; then call for help using
— Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoeC<bendbulletin.com
Redmond
asset worth keeping, and it houses some necessary proContinued from B1 grams. But that hasn't always McIntosh said the district's been the case," he said. previous sup e r i ntendents Most of the planned work — he's the fifth in 10 years, is expected to be performed not counting interim assign- next summer, while the inments — haven't always been stallation of n e w w i n dows committed to Brown's role in w ould likely c ome a y e a r the district's future. later. "I'm fairly certain as super— Reporter: 541-383-0387, i ntendent that Brown is an shammers@bendbulletin.com
a phone or smoke signals," Evans said. Evans used an exercise to illustrate breathing by having each kid blow up a balloon attached to a straw. An asthma attack can be brought on by exercise, bug bites, dust or cold air, Evans said. He told the kids if they venture out with an asthmatic to be sure they have an inhaler. As he explained that asthma is something they should watch for w it h h i k i n g c o mpanions, several of the balloons
popped. Keeping the attention of a couple dozen pre-teens is no easy task. But dress them up in clothes suitable for outside,
go on a couple hour hike, play a game of capture the flag, and they comeback formore.
Sisters and brothers Teagan Miller, of Wallowa, said her older sister did the WREN program, so she signed up, as well. "I met some people from Joseph who are really nice, so I get to see them." Wallowa fifth-grader Mason Ferre said his sisters were enrolled in WREN last year, and this year, he and sister Riley are taking the course together. Brother and sister Rachel and Andy Gebhardt are enrolled, as well as Foster Hobbs, all returning WREN students. Rural kids often have leeway in being allowed to explore the fields, woods and trails around their homes, but if there is an injury, Evans said, they must be aware of their surroundings. "When you call for help, be as descriptive as you can of your location to tell dispatch," Evans said. The kids started their day with an overview of an ambulance, then moved outside
to trychest compressions on child-size dummies and splinting techniques. Having a first aid kit on a hike or while hunting is preferable, but Evans showed the students how to make splints out of torn shirts and sticks. A belt, shirt, backpack straps, shoelaces and sticks all make for good bandages and splint makings, as well, he said. Evans showed them how to check their own pulse by using a finger on a wrist, at the throat or at the bicep — a preferred spot on small children, he said. With a watch, he told the kids to count their heartbeats for six seconds, then multiply that number by 10 to get their heart rate. "Short cuts are important in emergency medicine," Evans said. After checking for a pulse and breathing, stopping the bleeding, when necessary, is next on the list. Evans showed the kids how to check for circulation before and after bandaging a wound. "If the skin is warm, it's a sign of good circulation. If the skin is cold, they don't have good blood flow," he said. Reassuring the patient or having a good "bedside manner" was also stressed by Dave Duncan as an important part of first aid. If in a group, leaving someone with the patient while another goes for help was advised.
A quick snack After lunch, the kids spent a couple of hours coming up with their own wilderness accident scenarios including gun shots, grizzly bear attacks, and broken limbs. Wallowa Resources has offered WREN classes as one of its many outdoor options for
Hires
R ecently, the t urnaround time f o r building services such as issuing perContinued from B1 mits exceeded what McClay considers McClay said he began working for the acceptable. "Our goal is to have single-family dwellcity in 2005, near the peak in the construction boom. The experience of laying ings (permits) turned around and out of off employees during the recession stuck here in 10 days," McClay said. with him. Over thesummer, the processing time "It's been really hard to see all those reached 20 days. people go," McClay said. "When you're Planners are also working hard to keep laying all the people off, (as) we were a few up with the increase in development. Steyears ago, you're hesitant to start staffing phens said a land use planner the city up again." hired on a temporary basis in June was As building activity began to increase, slated to become a permanent employee McClay said the Building Division "start- in2014. "We've got sufficient revenue and sufed paying a lot of overtime, which is less than a permanent employee." ficient incoming permits to make that
kids since 2005, Busch said. Other courses instruct skills such as building bows and arrows and war clubs, Busch said. "They are really great problem-solving skills involv-
ing engineering and design. They are given only so many tools and have to harvest some of the materials. We give them little tips but didn't tell them how to do it." Wallowa Resources d eveloped WREN to meet the needs of families looking for things for their elementaryand middle-school-age kids to do on Fridays in a county with four-day school weeks, Busch sa>d. "The c urriculum i s d e signed to be fun by teaching life skills like building shelters and lighting one-match fires," she said. T hey often d i v ide i n t o groups to promote team building and leadership skills — the main goals of the program. Each spring the WREN kids go for an overnight camping trip, Busch said. Several of the them continue with programs geared for the high school kids, including backpacking trips into the Wallowas. The program has had continuing support from the Gray Family Foundation, and this year it received funds from the National Environmental Education Foundation t hrough a competitive grant process. "Only 20 programs were funded by them this year," Busch said. The Oregon Community Foundation and Herbert A. T empleton Foundation a r e also funders. "WREN supports research that says outdoor education makes kids emotionally and socially adept and they do better on IQ tests," Busch said.
permanent early," Stephens said of the position. The goal is for city planners to finish reviewing minor land use decisions in 20 days and complex decisions in 60 days. Although they have continued to meet those goals in most cases, "the staff has been working on overdriveto achieve that," Stephens said. The city will also hire an administrative employee to work in the city manager's office, a technology specialist in the Police Department and a grant-funded employee to coordinate services for people with mental illness. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrudC<bendbulletin.com
PUBLIc OFFIcIALs For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.
CONGRESS U.S. Senate • Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-ore. 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298
• Sen. Ron Wyden, D-ore. 223DirksenSenate Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 W eb:http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
U.S. House of Representatives • Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 W eb:http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. Bond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, 0 160 State Capitol, 900 Court SL Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary of State Kate Brown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • Treasurer Ted Wheeler, 0 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court SL N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, 0 1162 Court SL N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400
Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
LEGISLATURE Senate • Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District 30 (includes Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. Tim Knopp, R-District 27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court SL N.E., S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 (includes Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court SL N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett
House • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court SL N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane, R-District 55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court SL N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District 53 (portion of Deschutes County)
900 Court SL N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 N.W. Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
Gounty Gommission • Tammy Baney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney@co.deschutes .QcUs
• Alan Unger, 0-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger@co.deschutes. Or. US
• Tony DeBone, R-La Pine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email: Tony DeBone@co.deschutes. OI'. US
CROOK COUNTY 300 N.E. Third St., Prineville, OR 97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891
Email: administration@co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us • Crook County Judge Mike McCabe Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe©co.crook.or.us
County Court • Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren@co.crook.or.us
JEFFERSON COUNTY 66 S.E. D St., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us
County Commission • Mike Ahern, John Hatfield, Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner@co.jefferson .Qr.Us
CITY OF BEND 710 N.W. Wall SL
Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-388-5505 Web: www.ci.bend.or.us
• City Manager Eric King Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: citymanager©ci.bend.or.us
City Council • Jodie Barram
Phone: 541-604-5403 Email: Ed.0nimus©ci.redmond.or.us
CITY OF SISTERS 520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Sisters,OR 97759 Phone:541-549-6022 Fax:541-549-0561
Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: jbarram@ci.bend.or.us • Mark Capell Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: mcapell©ci.bend.or.us • Jim Clinton Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: jclinton@ci.bend.or.us • Victor Chudowsky Phone: 541-749-0085 Email: vchudowsky©ci.bend.or.us. • Doug Knight Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: dknight©ci.bend.or.us • Scott Ramsay Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: sramsay©ci.bend.or.us • Sally Russell Phone: 541-480-8141 Email: srussell@ci.bend.or.us
City Council
CITY OF REDMOND
Phone: 541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462
716 S.W. EvergreenAve. Redmond, OR97756 Phone: 541-923-7710 Fax: 541-548-0706
City Council • Kathy Agan
City Council • Mayor George Endicott Phone: 541-948-3219 Email: George.Endicott©ci.redmond .OI.US
• Jay Patrick Phone: 541-508-8408 Email: Jay.Patrick@ci.redmond.or.us • Tory Allman Phone: 541-923-7710 • Joe Centanni Phone: 541-923-7710 Joe.centanni©ci.redmond.or.us • Camden King Phone: 541-604-5402 Email: Camden.King©ci.redmond .Or.US
• Ginny McPherson Phone: tobedetermined Email: Ginny.McPherson@ ci.redmond .Or.US
• Ed Onimus
• David Asson Phone: 503-913-7342 Email: dasson@ci.sisters.or.us • Wendy Holzman Phone: 541-549-8558 wholzman@ci.sisters.or.us • Brad Boyd Phone: 541-549-2471 Email:bboyd@ci.sisters.or.us • Catherine Childress Phone: 541-588-0058 Email: cchildress@ci.sisters.or.us • McKibben Womack Phone: 541-598-4345 Email: mwomack@ci.sisters.or.us
CITY OF LA PINE P.O. Box 3055, 16345 Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739
Email: kagan@ci.la-pine.or.us • Greg Jones gjones©ci.la-pine.or.us • Ken Mulenex Email: kmulenexC!ci.la-pine.or.us • Stu Martinez Email: smartinez@ci.la-pine.or.us • Karen Ward kward@ci.la-pine.or.us
CITY OF PRINEVILLE
Com
• Dean Noyes Email: dnoyesOcityofprineville.com • Gordon Gillespie Email: ggillespieOcityofprineville. com • Jason Beebe Email: jbeebeOcityofprineville.com • Gail Merritt Email: gmerritt©cityofprineville.com • Jason Carr Email: Tobedetermined
CITY OF MADRAS 71 S.E. DStreet, Madras, OR 97741 Phone: 541-475-2344 Fax: 541-475-7061
City Council • Mayor Melanie Widmer Email: mwidmer@ci.madras.or.us • Tom Brown Email: thbrown@ci.madras.or.us • Walt Chamberlain Email: wchamberlain@ci.madras. OcUS
• Royce Embanks Jr. Email: rembanks@ci.madras.or.us • Jim Leach Email: jleach@ci.madras.or.us • Richard Ladeby Email: rladeby@ci.madras.or.us • Charles Schmidt Email: cschmidt@ci.madras.or.us
CITY OF CULVER 200 W. First St., Culver, OR97734 Phone:541-546-6494 Fax:541-5463624
Mayor • Shawna Clanton
City Council
387 N.E. Third St., Prineville, OR 97754 Phone: 541-447-5627 Fax: 541-447-5628
• Nancy Diaz, Laura Dudley, Amy McCully Sharon Orr Shannon Poole, HilarioDiaz Phone:541-546-6494
Email: cityhall©cityofprineville.com Web: www.cityofprineville.com
CITY OF METOLIUS
City Council • Betty Roppe Email: broppe©cityofprineville.com • Jack Seley Email: jseley@cityofprineville.com • Stephen Uffelman Email: suffelman@cityofprineville.
636 Jefferson Ave., Metolius, OR 97741 Phone:541-546-5533
City Council • Bob Bozarth, John Chavez, Bill Reynolds, Tia Powell, Patty Wyler Phone:541-546-5533
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013• THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON •
ors romcom os in a n avesome in ua a inworrie The Associated Press TUALATIN — People who live and work near a composting facility in Tualatin want the state Department of Environmental Quality to reduce odors drifting from the plant and to make sure it doesn't become a worse nuisance in the future. The DEQ held a public hearing this week on a draft composting permit for G r imm's Fuel Company. Grimm's has been composting mostly yard debris and clippings since 1980. Residents at the hearing were fearful that the pending permit would eventually allow the facility to
compost meat, dairy products and certain dead animals. They pointed to the controversial Nature's Needs plant in North Plains, where more than a thousand odor complaints led Washington County commissioners to remove commercial food waste from the site. Jeff Grimm, th e g eneral manager, said his facility was only interested in composting residential food w aste, if a curbside collection program started nearby. Lawrence Brown, a DEQ official in charge of writing Grimm's fuel permit, said he w ould likely clarify that the company
is only seeking to compost residential food waste in the permit. Washington County, however, has considered launching a pilot commercial food waste compost collection program in the Tigard, Tualatin and King City area. And people at the hearing complained that the existing smell, w ithout residential food waste, forces them to stay inside with windows shut. "Our neighborhood is full of young children who are already affected by the current odor levels," said Emily Gonzalez, who lives in a nearby subdivision. "Some days are
•
Count on our group of local real estate professionalsto help you navigate. '$flE
Fp
so bad my children can't play outside. My three and six year olds complain it smells like
dog poop. Grimm's Fuel had its defenders, though. Stephen Titus, of Tualatin, said it was "irresponsible" to cast the situation as the same in North Plains. "They seem like honest people trying to provide a service that has been mandated by Oregonians in an ever increasingly regulated environment," he said. DEQ is accepting written comment until Nov. 6, and the agency expects to respond to comments and issue a decision in December.
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DA: Woman
COVER OREGON
in the death ofhei mom
The Associated Press
2099 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. • Master on main level • Bright, open great room • Bonus room upstairs • Outdoor living areas • Priced at $429,900
pleadsguilty Site misses performance goal The Associated Press PENDLETON — An Eastern Oregon woman pleaded guilty to criminallynegligent homicide in thedeath of her 83-year-old mother, according to Morrow County District Attorney Justin Nelson. Nelson said that Ida Powers made the plea after an all-day settlement conference with a judge in Pendleton. Wednesday's meeting brought Powers together with a sister, Sharon Ham, of Umatilla, who sided with the prosecution. Powers, who lives in the small town of Irrigon, is expected to ask for probation, instead of 16 to 18 months in prison at her Nov. 21 sentencing in Heppner, Nelson said. Criminally negligent homicide is a lesser felony thanthe original charge of manslaughter. It specifies that the defendant acted negligently rather than recklessly. Powers, 64, had been caring for her mother, Anna Lyons, before other members of the family intervened when they said there was a decline the mother's condition. Lyons was flown to Oregon Health 8 Science University in Portland, where she died Oct. 6, 2012, from an untreated bedsore. Lyons, who had Parkinson's disease, required help to get in and out of her chair. Relatives said that in her final fewmonths, she would sit in her chair all day, surrounded by ca r f r esheners to mask the smell of rotting wounds and feces. Powers' husband, 92-year-old Lou Powers, was not charged in the case. Nelson said there was no evidence he participated in the caregiving for his mother-in-law. Sharon Ham said in May that she was trying to get her mother out of Powers' care when she discoveredthe bed sore. Ham said the family later Iearned that Powers spent much of hermother's $200,000 in savingsandrackedup nearly$50,000 in cmfit card debt in her name. The district attorney said Thursdaythat the investigation intothat accusation remains active.
SALEM — Oregon's health insurance exchange has not met its goal of allowing online enrollment by the end of October. Officials at Cover Oregon announced Thursday t h at
they'll begin processing applications by hand. They say they've received more than
7,000 applications so far. Cover Oregon was supposed to allow residents of the state to sign up for insur-
ance coverage beginning Oct. 1. But officials said their software hasn't been able to accurately determine people's eligibility for tax credits or the Oregon Health Plan and Healthy Kids.
Officials did not set a new goal for getting the w ebsite fully functional. In the meantime, people can fill out a form online and submit it e lectronically or p r int a n d mail it. A staff member will determine whether they're eligible for a tax credit or public assistance and notify them in writing.
OIRECTIONS:West on Skyliners Rd.,
righton NW Lemhi Pass Dr.
2679 NW Shields Dr. • Home w/ BDD sf ADU • Deck, privacy upgrades • Hickory flooring • Master on main level • Priced at $579,000 OIRECTIONS:West on Shevlin Park Rd., lefton NW Mt Washington Dr, lefton
NW Shields Dr.
2171 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. • Bright sunroom • Hardwood floors • Open great room • Spacious master • Priced at $459,000
QUITE A FRIGHT
DIRECTIONS:West on Skyliners Rd., nghton NW LemhiPass Dr.
2175 NW Lolo Dr. • Elegant & spacious • Main floor above street • Master on main level • Central courtyard • Priced at $739,900 DIRECTIONS: West on Skyliners Rd., right on Mt. Washington Dr., right on NW Lolo Dr. T
li
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A LL A R O U N D
Bend R. Central O r egon ~ ggi iiggi
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• Q H
e
1900 NW Monterey Plnes Dr. • Charming cottages • 2 & 3 bedroom plans • High end finishes • Central location • Homes priced from $359,900
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DIRECTIONS:West on NWNewport AveyNW Shevlin Park Rd., right on NW
Pence Ln., left on NWMonterey Pines Dr. Property on right.
Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard
Chiropractor Frank Muhr, of Eugene, heads home from his chiropractic clinic with a sidekick in preparation for Halloween festivities ahead of the holiday. A fixture in Muhr's office for more than 20 years, the skeleton turned heads during his annual trip across town.
19036 Mt. Shasta Dr. • Three Pines luxury • Master on main level • Large openkitchen • Courtyard & patio • Priced at $639,900
Auditors take issue with UO payroll TheAssociatedpress
the time sheets for 13 employSALEM — State auditors ees of the Institute of Neuroscisay some University of Orence. Auditors said furlough egon employees were allowed days were recorded when the to use overtime to get around employee was actually workmoney-saving furlough days ing, and overtime was recordand pay freezes. ed to offset the impacts of the The Secretary of S tate's unpaid furlough days. Office released the r eport The audit i ndicates that Thursday. emails confirmed that payroll Auditors found problems on personnel would add overtime
DIRECTIONS:West on Shevlin Park Rd.,
left on NWPark CommonsDr., left on Mt. Jefferson Pl., right on Mt. Shasta Dr.
to the time sheets if employees forgot to do it. Auditors concluded that the university's leadership should have more involvement in payroll decisions. An administrator responded in a letter that the university agrees with the recommendations and is taking steps to correct the problems.
61384 Campbell Ct. • Stunning contemporary
• Large glassareas • Art studio/activity rm. • Radiant floor heat • Priced at $699,900 DIRECTIONS:Southwest on Century Dr., right on E. Campbell Way, left on W. Campbell Rd., at Kemple Dr., left into SW
Campbell Ct. M
PREVIE W
AROUND THE STATE Sturgean fiShing — Fishery managers from OregonandWashington
Umatilla OPPOSeS bridge PrOjeCt —Umatilla County and the
announced that white sturgeon retention fishing will close Nov. 12 DII the
city Df Pendleton are divided by a bridge they co-Dwn. The Pendleton
Columbia River. Its tributaries betweenTheDalles andJohn Daydamsare
City Council has voted to replace the104-year-old bridge that spans the
also slated to close. The state Department Df Fish and Wildlife said the 25mile stretch Df the river is the only remaining portion Df the Columbia cur-
Umatilla River, but the County Board Df Commissioners opposes the project. The bridge's center support beam is reported tD be eroded, and
rently open to sturgeon retention. OtherColumbia River sturgeon fisheries aboveandbelow BonnevilleDam closedwhenpreseasonharvestquotas were met. Catch-and-releasesturgeon fishing remains openthroughout
the foundation is cracked, making it too weak tD support big vehicles,
the Columbia.
$762,000. The city proposed to evenly split the cost with the county. But commissioners say the county doesn't have the funds.
OSP trOOPerOnleaVe — An Oregon state trooper who wasreport-
account. Lt. Gregg Hastings said a Marion County grand jury indicted John Sipple DII six counts Df first-degree theft. Sipple used to workat the
edly ejected from Autzen Stadium in Eugene after a dispute with other football fans has been placed Dn administrative leave and is the subject
Oregon StateCorrectional Institution in Salem.
Df a personnel investigation, according to authorities. Lt. GreggHastings
Hedge trimmer eleCtrOCutiOn —A landscaper wasusing a saw atop a 20-foot pole to trim ahedgeWednesday in Portland when hehit a 7,000-volt power line and was electrocuted. Portland Fire and Rescue said emergency respofiders had tD wait for a PGE utility crew to turn Dff the
power before theycould recover thebody.
O N LI NE
thegarnergroup . com 834 NE Hidden Valley Dr. • NE Bend duplex • Two 2-br, 2-ba units • Great rooms wl fireplaces • Convenient kitchens • Open spacebehind • Both sides rented • Priced at $299,900
such as fire engines. The city won a $7.42 million federal grant for the project, but local agencies must provide about10 percent Df the total, Dr
Inmate aCCOunt —State police arrested a former OregonDepartment Df Corrections employeesuspected Dftaking money from aninmate's
% % % % a %
W W H H % % IS %
FiH Llg
•
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said Marc Boyd is under investigation for possible misconduct when he was Dff duty at the Oct. 19 game between Oregon and Washington State.
9
Boyd was reportedly ousted for becoming disorderly. Hehas not been charged with a crime. He works as a fish and wildlife officer assigned to OSP's Springfield office. — From wirereports
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
AN LNDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
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f you haven't yet voted in Tuesday's election, don't say
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you don't have time. It's likely that you do — if you're typical. The federal Bureau of Labor Statistics has a ha n dy-dandy chart that shows how the average American with kids spends his or her workweek time. And in a 24hour day, that American has more than four hours to spend on leisure, sports and something called "other." We know. Even that time might not feel like enough to get everything done, and what with kids' sports, hair appointments and the like, we can still be hard-pressed to work our way through the daily todo list. But consider this: In Deschutes County, voters county-wide are being asked to approve new transient room taxes. Bend voters have an additional vote on the city's room tax. In Alfalfa, they're also being asked to create a new fire district and tax themselves to support it. Yet, only 20 percent of us had turned in ballots as of Thursday morning. Turnout is better in Jefferson County — 29 percent as of Thurs-
day morning. Voters in Culver are deciding on a bond measure for the local school district, while countywide voters have been asked for money to keep the county jail operating as it should. In addition, Crooked River Ranch voters in both Deschutes and Jefferson counties must decide the fate of levies for their rural fire protection districts. Meanwhile, only 33 voters in Crook County received ballots for this election, and they all live within the proposed Alfalfa rural fire district. By Thursday, 30 percent of them had cast ballots. Local issues like the ones on this election's ballot are the place where local voters call the shots, no matter what people elsewhere might think. Like that room tax proposal? Vote for it. Don't think it's a good idea? Let your displeasure be known at the ballot box. This late in the game, you'll have to hand-deliver your ballot to the county clerk's office or at an official drop-off site by 8 p.m. Tuesday. Postmarks don't count, but your vote surely does.
Studentsmay benefit from 4-year guarantee ortland S t ate U n i versity has joined universities from around the nation in offering a four-year guarantee. Full-time freshmen entering in fall 2014 who meet certain criteria will be able to graduate in four years or pay no tuition for classes they need beyond that deadline. The plan will directly help only a portion of PSU students, because many won't be eligible for a variety of reasons. But itwill focus administrative attention on barriers — such as overcrowded classes — that can now prevent even highly focused students from earning a bachelor's degree in four years. PSU has a low four-year graduation rate: Only 17 percent of fulltime students entering in 2006 earned a degree in four years, compared with 32percent at Oregon public universities overall and 45 percent at the University of Oregon. By comparison, some elite private schools hit more than 90 percent. The extra years in school add to the already considerable financial burden of college, adding thousands to the cost of a degree and delaying full-time employment. For many students, especially at an urban campus like PSU's, taking more thanfour years is necessary becauseofpersonal circumstances,
including the need to take time off school to work, so they can pay for living expenses and tuition. But for others, it's not personal circumstance but university structure that slows their progress and costs them more. The guaranteemeans PSU will focus on removing those barriers for students who start as freshmen with declared majors, pass a full load of45 credits each year and meet regularly with an adviser. At the University of Buffalo, for example, the "Finish in 4" program prompted the school to add 30,000 seatsin bottleneck classes,according to a report from CNN Money. Other schools have offered incentives instead of guarantees, such as the $500bonus for Ball State University students who graduate on time. Increasing the four-year graduation rate will also require a change in attitude from students and their parents, who have been lulled into the notion that taking five or six years is normal. If PSU gets a good response to this guarantee option, other schools will be encouraged to follow. It may be only one piece in the complex problem of college costs, but it could have wide-reaching impacts.
" ICKIEStHALt0WKNNe gAZE EVE R!!!"
M Nickel's Worth Vote yes on room tax measures
Here's why: • This is not a tax on Bend residents. It's a small increase in the room tax tourists already pay to stay in local hotels. • Bend's current room tax rate of 9 percent is lower than the rate in competing cities like Boise at 13 percent, Boulder at 12.3 percent, Santa Barbara at 12 percent, Portland at 14.5 percent and Seattle at 15.8 percent. • This is not the kind of increase that's going to discourage visitors from coming to Bend. A 1.4 percent increase means visitors will pay an additional $1.40 per night on a $100 room. • Most tourists make their travel decisions based on what they can afford. The rate they can pay for a hotel room or r ental property dictates where they stay, not the tax that is commonly applied to all lodging in the city. Most people who travel understand the taxes and fees associated with a hotelstay and aren't likely to change p lans based o n s u c h a s m a l l amount. • Funds generated by 9-94 will provide $2.4 million for Bend's police and fire departments, $3.8 million for tourism promotion and $1.8 million for the arts over the next 10 years. These are vital things for all members of our community. Please join me in voting yes on Measure 9-94. Ben Perle Regional vice president of Operations, Oxford Hotel Group
These measures benefit our local community in many ways. For one, the extra funding raised by a small room tax increase will help local t ourist-related industries, many of which are vital to the foundation of our community and commerce, to better advertise all the fantastic things people can come here for — t h ings beyond mountain bikes and Mt. Bachelor like art, history, culture, music, parks, BendFilm and N ature of Words. Everyone can benefit from simply asking those who come here and enjoy our area, use our infrastructure and public services to pay a few dollars more. Second, a portion of the funds raised would go toward police and fire services, departments we are
already far too guilty of ignoring. We win as a community via better emergency services, and this time it is not the resident taxpayer footing the bill. Third,these measures have local support. Mayor Jim Clinton, the Bend Chamber of Commerce, The Bulletin, Source Weekly, Bend B roadband, local f i r e a n d l a w enforcement, many of the major hotels and tourist businesses and many, many others. They all see a win-win situation here. DavId Miller Bend
Support measure 9-94
Bend room tax hike makes sense
I recently mailed in my b allot with a yes vote on Measure 9-94, and I'd like to urge you to do the same.
Measure 9-94 — the proposal
to raise Bend's transient room tax rate from 9 percent to 10.4 percent — makes good economic sense for the city. Bend is fortunate to be a premier vacation destination, which gives us a tourism-based economy. Tourism is over a h a l f-billion-dollar enterprise here, bringing muchneeded revenue into the coffers of community members, small business owners and public services. Tourist dollars feed every segment of Bend's economy, benefiting locals and visitors alike. S mart c i ties i n vest i n t h e i r strengths, and it's clear that Bend excels at tourism. By bringing the TRT rate closer to the i ndustry standard set by competing cities (i.e. Boise at 13 percent, Boulder at 12.3 percent, Santa Barbara at 12 percent, Portland at 14.5 percent, Seattle at 15.8 percent), Bend will create the revenue necessary to fund additional economic development, public safety and a muchneeded cultural tourism fund. As it stands now, having a tax rate below the industry standard means we're leaving vital dollars on the table. If this measure does pass, it will generate $2.4 million for Bend's police and fire departments, $3.8 million for tourism promotion and $1.8 million for the arts over the next 10 years. These are all worthy investments and critical to the economic vitality of our city. I'm encouraging the people in our community and in the city to support this proposed room tax increase. It's the right thing to do for Bend's safety, economy, arts and future. Amy Mentuck Executive Director, The Nature of Words
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SNAP isn't perfect, but families across the nation need to eat f you're among the roughly 20 percent of Oregonians who take part in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — or food stamp
and the SNAP program reflects that. People are eligible if their income is as much as DO percent ofthe federally-established poverty level program — your benefit is going — $20,172 gross income for a family down this month. The decline was of two in 2012. That same family, afplanned: Benefits were increased ter deductions, must have an income temporarily in 2009 to help ease the of no more than $1,290 a month to pain of recession. qualify for the program. That's not much money with which Though the recessionis over, the number of people qualifying for food to pay rent,keep a car — and with stamps hasn't declined as much as food stamps that car must be worth some expected. You can blame a less than $5,000 — buy $3.25-plus lingering, relatively-high unemploy- per gallon gasoline, buy clothing and ment rate for that. During August, all the rest. SNAP will add as much about 8 percent ofworkers in Or- as $347 per month to that, though the egon were unemployed, according to number could be smaller. the state. In Deschutes County, that And that is not much money to figure was9.9 percent, 1 percent be- spend on food, even food for two low what it was in Jefferson County. people over 30 days. In fact, it's just Crook County's unemployment rate over $10 per day, enough to eat meat, was 12.6 percent. occasionally, if you skimp for several Yet, even those of us with jobs can days running, but probably no more find it hard to keep food on the table, than once a week.In winter, when
t
JANET STEVENS produce costs can be high, it could mean fresh saladsand the like are not a part of the daily diet. In fact, the Economic Policy Institute, a nonpartisan economic think tank, says a family of two in Bend living modestly can expect to spend about $20 a month more than that on food. In the end, like the idea of food stamps or not, SNAP is one of those government programs that actually improves the lives of those who take part. In doing so, however, it has gathered its fair share of critics. Two complaints seem to rise to the top. One, that SNAP goes to large numbers of people who don't
deserve it, is simply untrue. In fact, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, more than 99 percent of recipients are eligible, and more than 96 percent are receiving exactly the amount to which they're entitled. Payment errors are, USDA said, less than half of what they were ll years ago. For recipients, it pays to be honest. If they're not, they run the risk of being kicked out of the program altogether. Meanwhile, officials spend considerable time and effort pursuing fraud — most commonly fraud in which a recipient receives cash from a supermarket or smaller store. That's called trafficking, and today accounts for about a penny on the dollar distributed in benefits, down from about 4 cents on the dollar in 1993. It's a crime USDA pays close attention to: In 2012, for example, the government reviewed more than
15,000grocery stores in the country and did undercover investigations in 4,500 of them. Some argue that some SNAP recipients should be made to work. How, with high unemployment, that is possibleescapes me. But many recipients do work. About 60 percent of families with children on SNAP are employed, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, and many of the rest include disabled or elderly family members. In the end, I d on't think m ost Americans want t h eir n e ighbors to go hungry, and SNAP helps prevent that. It's a critical piece of what President Ronald Reagan called the "safety net," something that is supposed to assure that everyone in this country has or can get the basics of life. — Janet Stevens is deputy editor of The Bulletin.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013• THE BULLETIN
BS
WEST NEWS
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES
Washington pianist Dick Morganbacked the greats, Sinatra
Alan LeRoy Hewitt, of Prineville Oct. 15, 1962 - Oct. 26, 2013 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459. Visit www.PrinevilleFrmerarHome.com
to share your memories or express your condolences by signing the on-line Guest Book. Services: There will be a public viewing for Alan at Prineville Funeral Home on Wednesday, November 6 from 3-8PM. There will be a memorial service in Wyoming at a later date.
By Matt Schudel The Washington Post
Dick Morgan, who began his professional musical career as a child and spent decades as one of Washington's leading jazz pianists, died Oct. 20 in hospice care. He was 84 and resided in Silver Spring, Md. He had prostate cancer, said his wife, Sylvia Morgan. Since his arrival in Washington, D.C., in 1960, Morgan had a long and steady career as a p i anist i n n i g htclubs, hotels and concert halls, including Blues Alley and the Kennedy Center. He recorded more thana dozen albums and performed overthe years with many top singers and musicians, including Etta Jones, Joe Williams and Keter Betts. He was known as a versatile, crowd-pleasing pianist who could embellish a large repertoire of tunes with improvised flourishes that reminded many listeners of piano stars Oscar Peterson and Erroll Garner. "Dick showed you that jazz is fun," David Einhorn, Morgan's bass player for 17 years, said Wednesday. "Dick was
Contributions may be made to:
The Rocky MountainElk Foundation.
Julia Frances Coulter, of Bend Aug. 17, 1925 - Oct. 29, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend, 541-318-0842, www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A funeral service is planned for 1 p.m., on Monday, November 4, 2013, at the Partners ln Care Hospice facility, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701. An informal reception will follow. Contributions may be made to:
The chaplain's fund at Partners In Care. (Updated info. on funeral services).
Samuel Angelo Deleone
a guy who could bring you to
July 5, 1930 - October 21, 2013 Samuel Angelo DeLeone, 83, of B e nd , O R , p a ssed away on October 21, 2013, f rom Co n g e stiv e He a r t Disease. The Rosary will be at 6:00 p .m, N o vember 5, at St '. Thomas Catholic Church in Redmond, OR. A Memorial M ass w i l l be held at Samuel A. 1200 p DeLeone v ember 6, a t S t . T h o m a s C atholic C h u rc h i n R e d mond, OR. S amuel was born i n A b bington, PA , o n J u l y 5, 1 930. He g r aduated f r o m N ortheast High S chool i n Philadelphia, PA, and cont inued on to r eceive a B S from Northeastern University in Boston, MA. H e founded T h e D e L e o ne Corporation i n 1 9 7 1, manufacturer o f p r e ssure sensitive labels. S amuel DeLeone is s u r vived by brothers, Carmen and Francis; children, Gina D eLeone, C o n ni e ( D e L eone) W h i t ne y ( h u s b and, Kal), Mike D eLeone, Sam D eLeone, P au l D e L e o n e ( wife, D e b r a ) , T he r e s a (DeLeone) McGrath ( h u sb and, Rex), D o m i ni c D e L eone (wife, N i c k y) , a n d D anielle ( D e L eone) H e b ener (spouse, P h i ll) ; 1 6 grandchildren, n u m e r ous cousins, n iec e s an d n ephews], and other f a m ily and friends. Samuel D e L e on e w as p receded in death by p a r e nts, Dominick an d R o s e D eLeone, s i s t ers , A n n e a nd M a r y , a n d br o t h e r John. In lieu of flowers, memor ial d o n a t i on s m a y b e g iven to H o spice of R e d mond S i s t ers, 7 3 2 SW 23rd, Redmond, OR 97756, ( 541) 548-7483, T h e f a m i ly o f Sa m u e l D e L e o n e wishes to t h ank ev eryone of Hospice of Redmond for e verything an d H o m e I n stead for all th e care provided. Please sign our on l ine gu e s t bo ok at www.niswonger-reynolds. com
tears and make you laugh and make you bounce in your seat, all in one song."
A trip to Vegas In the mid-1950s, when Morgan was working in Norfolk, the trombonist and bandleader Tommy Dorsey invited him to join his group in Las Vegas. The job was cut short when Dorsey died in 1956. During his time in Las Vegas, Morgan performed at a birthday party for Frank Sinatra, with Sinatra singing along with him. By the late 1950s, Morgan had returnedto Norfolk, where he often worked with guitarist Charlie Byrd, who helped launch the bossa nova craze of the 1960s. Byrd helped bring Morgan to Washington. Saxophonist Julian "Cann onball" A dderley, then at the height of his fame, was so bowled over by what he heard from Morgan that he called his record label. Within a week, a recording crew came to Washington to capture Morgan in a live album, "Dick Morgan at the Showboat" (1960). His drummer on th e r ecording, Bertell Knox, continued to work with Morgan for more than 50 years. "I don't make any claims to be a first-class jazz pianist," Morgan said i n 2 0 07. "I'm s omebody that w i l l i m m e-
"Dick was a guy who could bring you to tears and make you
laugh and make you bounce in your seat, all in one song." — David Einhorn, Morgan's bass player
diately get immersed in the audience and get them to pay attention. That has carried me through the years. I play for the audiences — I don't play for me." Richard Lewis Morgan was born June 5, 1929, in Petersburg, Va. By the time he was 5, he could play hymns from memory — after his mother had played them just once on
the pump organ.
Duke Largely self-taught on piano, Morgan had his own radio show in Petersburg when he was 10. He learned mostly from older musicians passing through nearby Fort Lee, Va., and had an early encounter with bandleader Duke Ellington, who encouraged his budding career. Morgan attended Virginia State University and played in an Army combo during the early 1950s. He often had extended hotel and club engagements in the Bahamas, Bermuda, Canada and Puerto Rico, but Morgan became a Washington fixture. In 1997, a Washington Post critic praised Morgan's album "After Hours," noting that he "taps into the essence of the
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crossing" highways. There has also been discussion of having farmers along major thoroughfares water down dry fields to limit blowing dust.
Safety tips for driving Authorities r e c ommend t hat motorists pull off t h e highway immediately upon seeing an approaching dust storm. If drivers find themselves in the middle of one, officials r ecommend t h ey pull completely off the paved portion of the road, turn off all lights i ncluding emergency flashers, set the emergency brake,keep feetoffthe brakes so others don't try to follow the tail lights, and stay in the vehicle with seat belts fastened until the storm has
passed.
CALIFORNIA
Nick Ut/The Associated Press
The nation's largest landfill, located about 20 miles east of Los Angeles in Puente Hills, Calif., closed Thursday after more than a half-century of service. Future plans for the site haven't been determined, but the landfill might be turned into a park.
Nation's largest landfill is closed The Associated Press INDUSTRY, Calif. — The nation's largest landfill, where 130 million tons of garbage have been dumped, closed Thursday after more than a half-centuryofservice. T he 630-acre landfill i s about 20 miles east of Los Angeles and served as a regional waste facility. Its gates are being shut because a permit for the site, which is nearly filled, expired on Halloween. The landfill, which opened in 1957, has accepted more than a third of Los Angeles County's trash, which now
stands as high as a 40-story
Losing the site won't lead to atrash crisis because more At itspeak some 25 years private companies in recent ago, the landfill accepted the years have added their own maximum of 13,200 tons per landfills. day. Items taken to the site It will take a couple of years included burned-out store- to clean up the area that could fronts from riots following be turned into a park connectthe Rodney King verdict and ing to existing hiking trails. buildings destroyed by a 1987 Giant vacuum tubes also earthquake. will continue to remove methGarbage from the county's ane gas and send it to a plant 88 cities eventually will be that has b een c onverting put on trains to an abandoned it into energy for nearly 30 gold mine more than 200 years. The gas will provide miles away. In the interim, enough juice for70,000 homes trash will be buried in nearby for the next two decades, officounties. cials said.
building.
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DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world:
such storms. In 2011, the Arizona Department of Transportation began testing a ne w d u st warning system that takes field readings on w eather c onditions, h u midity a n d wind speed. The goal is to detect potential dust storms to provide drivers advance warning. ADOT spokesman Dustin Krugel says the agency wants to predict and educate. "There's really no way we can reduce the dust impact. That's kind of beyond our control," he says. "And there's no feasible engineering solutions that we could install to prevent dust from
When he was approaching 50, Morganreturned to college at the behest of a friend, comedian Bill Cosby, and graduated in 1979 from the Washington program of Antioch College. He receiveda law degree from Howard University in 1983 but never pursued a legal career. "He really touched audiences because of how he understood the music and how he could convey what the music was saying," Steve Abshire, his guitarist for the past 29 years, said.
guidelines must be followed.
Local obituaries are paid
human activity," says National Weather Service MePHOENIX — P o w e rful teorologist Ken Waters, who dust storms carrying whirlhas spent years studying ing dirt and debris are com- dust storms. "We typically mon o c currences a c ross don't see that sort of dust in p arts of A r i zona and t h e parts of the desert where it's arid Southwest during the just mountains and the area spring and summer months. hasn't been disturbed." A day after a massive dust Potential causes storm swept across an Arizona highway, killing three Small, fast-moving dust people in a 19-vehicle pileup, storms, like the one Tuesday experts say the state isn't in Arizona, can be caused alone, across the country simply by high winds sweepor the world, in its suscep- ing across dry desert terrain. tibility t o s uch a w e ather These t y pically d i s sipate phenomenon. quickly but can often be the Africa's Sahara desert and most dangerous to drivers parts of the Middle East are who have little warning and often hit with powerful dust find themselves stuck amid storms, also called haboobs zero visibility on c r owded derived fromthe Arabicword h ighways. La r ge r du s t haab, which means wind, be- storms can be formed when cause of dry conditions and air is forced down from the large amounts of sand. atmosphere a n d pu s h ed In the U.S., experts say outward by an approaching dust storms also occur in thunderstorm, dragging dearid parts of the country, of- bris with winds reaching up ten in agricultural regions to 60 mph. Such storms can that have been manipulat- create a wall of blowing dust ed through soil tilling and that reaches up to 10,000 feet crop planting that leave the high and blackens out the ground disturbed and more day sky. easily picked up by winds. Mitigating danger Over the d ecades, dust s torms have o ccurred i n Scientists with the NationArizona, California's Central al Weather Service, along Valley, New Mexico, and in with state and private partagriculturalareas of Oregon, ners, have been working for Idaho, Texas, Utah, Wash- several years on developing ington state, Kansas and advance warning systems elsewhere. and ways that landowners "I certainly believe that a along busy roadways might lot of this can be tracked to help mitigate the severity of The Associated Press
blue mood envelops the listener, thanks to his rippling tremolos and leisurely paced turnarounds." Morgan's final r ecording, the solo album "Bewitched," was released in 2010. He gave his last performance in April.
be run for oneday, but specific advertisements submitted by
By Brian Skoloff
blues" and "an engagingly
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will
us s ormsa ome in ese an sca es
Sid Yudain, 90: Cr eated what he called a community George Thomas Thornton, n ewspaper — Roll C a l l 84: An Oregon highway enfor what he called "the most gineer whose 1970 decision i mportant c o m m unit y in to use a half-ton of dynamite the world, probably" — U.S. to blast away a beached dead Congress. Yudain had scant whale became an I n ternet experience asa professional sensation. The Oregon De- journalist — h e h a d b e en partment of Transportation a r eporter i n Ho l l y w o od — when he arrived in Washsays Thornton was a highly r espected e n g i neer w ho ington in 1951 to work as a worked for the agency for press secretary for Rep. Al37 years. Died Oct. 27. bert P. Morano. Died Oct. 21
in Arlington, Va.
Ulysses
"Crazy Legs"
Curtis, 87: A two-time Grey Cup champion and the first black player for the Toronto Argonauts. C u r ti s p l a y ed for the CFL team from 1950 to 1954 and was one of the m ost p r o ductive r u n n i n g backs in the club's history.
He made nine playoff appearances, winning titles in '50 and '52. — From wire reports
$100M oil terminal fiercelydebated The Associated Press V ANCOUVER, Was h . — More than 300 people attended a hearing in Vancouver on a planned oil terminal earlier this week. The $100 million terminal planned by Tesoro Corp. and Savage Cos. would take oil arriving from North Dakota by train and ship it to West
Coast refineries. O pponents wearing r e d T-shirts out-numbered supporters. The two sides clashed on some of the same arguments opponents of the terminal h av e m e ntioned
previously — shipping risks and global climate change from burning fossil fuels. The companies said the
project w il l m e e t r e gulations. They hope to begin c onstruction b y t h e e n d of next year at the Port of Vancouver. The purpose of the hearing was to help determine the scope of an environmental impact statement for the Washington Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
B6
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.
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55/32
Rome
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• Brookings
Medford
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61/46
Lakeview
McDermitt
6U37
59/31
59/29
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
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WATER REPORT
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INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
50/46
FIRE INDEX
S aturdayBend,westoiHwy97.....Low Sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central H i /Lo/WBend,easto/Hwy.97......Low La Pine...............................Low Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as
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• 18'
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• Lakeview
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IPOLLEN COUNT
• 68'
59/33
61/30
• 69/40
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 59/32 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........75m1966 Monthtodate.......... 0.29" Record low.......... 0 in 2002 Average month todate... 0.59" Average high.............. 55 Year to date............ 4.30" Averagelow ..............31 A verageyeartodate..... 7.77"
2
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
Paisley
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:37 a.m...... 5:44 p.m. Venus.....12:00 p.m...... 8:11 p.m. Mars.......2:30 a.m...... 3:46 p.m. Jupiter... 1008pm......120p.m. Satum......7:57 a.m...... 6:11 p.m. Uranus.....4:36 p.m...... 5:08 a.m.
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
58/37
Frenchgle
PLANET WATCH
Redmond/Madras........Low PrineviHe..........................Low a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Astoria ........56/49/0.07.....58/45/c.....55/44/sh Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Baker City......47/22/0.01 .....57/32/s..... 50/30/rs To report a wildfire, call 911 Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 32,657...... 55,000 Brookings......66/44/0.00.....61/46/s.....56/43/sh Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 82,551..... 200,000 6urns..........59/23/0.01 .....55/29/s..... 50/26lrs Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 57,919 . . . . 91,700 Eugene........ 58/48/0.01 ....61 /42/pc.....55/39/sh Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . . 9,824 . . . . 47,000 Klamath Falls .. 62/21/0 00 ....62/29/s ...49/26/pc The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 81,357..... 153,777 Lakeview.......59/18/0.00 ....59/31/s.....52/28/pc R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec La Pine........58/32/0.00.....54/23/s.....47/23/sh the need for eye and skin protection. Index is Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 221 Medford.......68/40/0.00.....69/40/s.....54/38/sh for sol t noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 34.0 Newport.......54/50/0.04....59/46/pc.....54/43/sh C rescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . . 3 LO MEDIUM HIGH gggg North Bend..... 61/48/0.00....61 /47/pc.....56/44/sh Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 127 Ontario........52/29/0.01 .....59/36/s.....57/37/sh 0 2 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 495 Pendleton..... 63/38/trace.....59/41/s.....60/34/sh Deschutes RiverAt 6enham Falls ..... . . . . . 494 Portland ....... 60/49/0.05....61/46/pc...... 54/42/r Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res.. ... . . . . . 35 Prineville....... 57/35/0.00....56/33/pc.....52/29/sh Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res.... . . . . . 74.2 Redmond...... 60/33/trace.....57/37/s.....50/26/sh Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 1.03 Roseburg...... 67/46/trace....65/44/pc.....50/40/sh Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 127 Salem ....... 57/51/irace .6 0/43/pc ...55/40/sh Sisters.........63/33/0.00....55/30/pc.....48/28/sh Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM LOWI The DaRes..... 64/47/trace.....62/42/s.....58/38/sh or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
•
Juntura
6i/34
Chiloquin
MedfOrd
EAST
Nyssa
60/28
extremes
45 33
Yesterday F r iday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W
55/29
59/24
Silver l.ake
57/25
65/44
rants ~ Pass
0
HIGH LOW
41 31
OREGON CITIES
59/36
Christmas valley
Port Orford
• ei /44
HIGH LOW
Mostly sunny skies.
Ontario •
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Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers
42 2 9
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Mostly sunny skies.
58/25
56/93
Rosebu
Baker City
60/32
•
63/46 •
•
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• 64/39 — Hampton • • a plne 4/ 56/29 • Crescento Crescent • Fort Rock 58/27 Lake
62/42
•
Paulina 55/29
57(37
Sunriver Bend
5 0 / 31
54/34
Granite
Mostly cloudy and cold
HIGH LOW
Sunsettoday...... 5 55 p.m. New First F u ll Last Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:44 a.m. Sunset tomorrow... 5:53 p.m. Moonrise today.... 5:37 a.m. Moonsettoday .... 4:53 p.m. Nov. 3 Nov. 9 Nov. 17 Nov. 25
CENTRAL
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La Grande
59/95
Eugene •
Coos Bay
5 5ui
Condon
60/47
Florence•
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60/45•
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57/35
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• Hermiston 57/37
57/38
Ma u pin
60/43•
NeW Ort evvpo,
A r l ington
Ie
48 29
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 7:42 a.m. Moon phases
WEST Partly to mostly cloudy north and sunny to partly cloudy south.
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HIGH LOW
BEND ALMANAC
As t oria
TiBamook•
Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain and snow
windy with rain likley
IFORECAST:STATE I,
•
W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
lce
4
Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......73/58/000...76/45/s .. 70/44/s GrandRapids....63/57/087 ..52/41/sh. 49/35/sh RapidCity.......54/27/000 ..50/33/pc.53/37/pc Savannah.......84/54/000... 82/63/t. 74/51/sh Akron..........64/58/019... 58/44/r..52/36/rs GreenBay.......58/52/074...51/39/c .. 47/30/c Reno...........62/29/0.00... 64/35/s .. 68/38/s Seattle..........58/51/0.03... 56/47/c...51/42/r Albany..........57/32/0.19...70/44/r. 58/38/sh Greensboro......71/56/0.00...68/51/t. 68/40/pc Richmond.......75/56/000... 76/56/r. 69/41/pc SiouxFalls.......46/35/000...50/31/c. 51/34/pc Albuquerque.....57/31/000...61/36/s.. 62/41ls Harusburg.......67/52/0.00...69/47/r. 60/43/pc Rochester, NY....68/41/0.35... 61/46/r. 51/36/sh Spokane....... 55/32/trace.. 52/35/pc. 48/32/sh Anchorage ......45/38/0 01...41/29/r. 40/33/pc Hartford,CT.....65/37/0.00...70/45/r. 63/41/sh Sacramento......71/41/000...76/49/s.. 75/47/s Springfield,MO ..65/51/052..63/39/pc.. 55/35/s Atlanta .........74/60/000...70/50lt.. 64/41/s Helena..........50/39/0.00..49/29/pc.50/28/pc St. Louis.........68/55/073..62/45/pc. 56/35/pc Tampa..........85/68/000 ..86/72/pc...81/60/t Atlantic City .....67/46/0 00... 70/54/r. 64/48/pc Honolulu........89/73/0 00...86/74ls. 85/75/pc Salt Lake City....55/44/000...57/36/s .. 70/42ls Tucson..........75/44/000...80/49/s .. 85/54/s Austin..........82/64/2.47...81/51/s.. 75/45/s Houston ........79/68/1.07..80/56/pc..77/50/s Sao Antonio.....85/73/0.12... 82/52/s .. 77/46/5 Tulsa...........70/58/0.25... 70/42/s.. 63/4us Baltimore.......70/53/000...73/49/r.66/42/pc Huntsville.......76/64/001 ..70/43/pc .. 63/39/s SaoDiego.......74/55/0.00... 76/58/s.. 72/60/s Washington,DC.68/56/0.00... 74/54/r. 66/46/pc 6igiogs.........55/36/0.00..49/32/pc.55/36/pc lndianapolis.....64/57/0.00...58/42/c. 51/36/pc SaoFrancisco....71/48/000... 70/50/s.. 65/50/s Wichita.........66/48/066 ..63/3ipc .. 59/43/s Birmingham.....76/64/000... 72/51/t. 66/42/s Jackson, MS.... 74/68/0.79. 75/48/pc.. 72/43ls SaoJose........72/44/000...73/50/s.. 71/49/s Yakima.........68/32/000 59/39/pc.55/33/sh Bismarck........47/27/000 ..46/29/pc. 48/31/pc Jacksonvile......84/60/000..85/66/pc...76/48/t SantaFe........51/30/000...54/29/s .. 56/34/s Yuma...........80/52/000...83/56/s .. 8457/s Boise...........54/34/001 ...59/38/s. 59/35/pc Juneau..........46/44/001... 44/35/r. 42/31/sh INTERNATIONAL Boston..........63/40/000...72/52/r.63/47/sh KansasCity......57/47/045 ..62/38/pc. 55/38/pc Bodgeport,CT....65/44/0.00...70/51/r. 63/44/pc Lansing.........62/55/1.24...52/41/c. 48/33/sh Amsterdam......55/46/000 59/44/sh54/46/sh Mecca..........97/81/000 . 92/71/s.. 92/71/s Buffalo.........67/45/0.34... 58/47/r. 53/37/sh LasVegas.......68/48/0.00... 74/53/s .. 74/53/s Athens..........81/55/0.00 ..70/56/pc.68/57/pc MexicoCity .....75/57/0.02... 77/54/t .. 69/51/1 BurlingtonVT....57/34/013... 67/46/r. 52/34/sh Lexington.......67/63/003 ..64/43/pc. 53/38/sh Auckland........72/57/000..61/50/sh.6U53lsh Montreal........52/36/018...61/41/r.43/30/sh Caribou,ME.....43/25/004...62/40/r. 50/34/sh Lincoln..........59/33/000 ..58/32/pc.. 56/37ls Baghdad........80/59/0.00 ..83/65/sh.82/66/sh Moscow........46/37/0.00... 39/34/c .. 43/38/c Charleston SC...83/54/000...80/64/t. 74/50/pc Little Rock.......77/64/083...71/47/s.. 67/41/s Bangkok........95/82/000 ..97/72/sh. 90/72/pc Nairobi.........84/61/000... 78/56/t...78/54/t Charlotte........73/56/000... 71/51/t. 68/42/pc LosAngeles......77/52/0 00... 79/59/s .. 72/56/5 Beiyng..........59/36/000 ..60/45/pc. 66/48/pc Nassau.........84/77/000 ..83/74/pc...83/76/t Chattanooga.....74/60/001 ..72/45/pc. 64/qllpc Louisville........69/63/014..63/44/pc. 54/38/pc Beirut..........82/68/000 ..78/67/pc.. 77/66/s New Delh/.......86/68/000 ..90/69/pc.. 88/65/s Cheyenne.......46/30/0.00 ..48/30/pc.. 59/36/s Madison,Wl.....63/49/0.45... 51/40/c. 48/30/pc Berlin...........54/36/000..54/48/sh.55/48/sh Osaka..........70/52/000...67/58/s .. 67/6vs Chicago...... 64/55/1.07...55/44/c. 50/36/pc Memphis....... 72/66/1 19 ..72/48/s .. 67/41/s Bogota.........66/52/003... 59/50/t...62/48lt Oslo............50/28/007 ..43/41lsh. 45/29/sh Cincinnati.......65/60/0.1 5.. 62/43/pc. 52/34/sh Miami . . . . 86/75/0 00 88/74/s 90/72/pc Budapest........61/36/000 ..53/48/sh.. 65/53/c Ottawa.........$9/34/029 ..52/37/sh. 43/32/sh Cleveland.......67/61/025...60/47/c. 52/37/sh Miliaauke......663/57/08...550/43/. 48/35/pc BuenosAires.....70/64/019...69/56/r. 73/48/pc Paris............57/37/000..53/42/sh.61/52/sh ColoradoSpnngs.58/30/000..56/27/pc.. 62/36/s Minneapolis.....50/41/0 00... 50/36/c. 48/32/pc Cabo580Lucas ..82/70/000...BI66ls .. 88/65/s Rio deJaneiro....77/70/000 .. 75/63/pc.. 77/6vs Columbia,MO...63/49/1.10..61/40/pc .. 55/34/s Nashvige........70/62/0 20 ..69/46/pc. 60/40/pc Cairo...........81/66/0.00 .. 83/59/s 82/60/s Rome...........75/57/0.00... 71/62/t. 71/60/sh Columbia,SC....81/53/0.00... 76/54/t .. 74/43/s New Orleans.....83/73/0.00... 80/59/t .. 76/52/s Calgary.........54/37/000..43/30/pc 32/27/sn Santiago........59/52/000..73/56/pc. 79/50/pc Columbus, GA....80/60/0.00... 73/54/t .. 71/44/s New York.......65/54/0.04... 72/53li. 66/48/pc Cancun.........86/81/0.00... 84I75/t...85/76/t Sao Paulo.......68/59/0.00 .. 70/59/pc. 78/60/pc Columbus, OH....67/57/0.29...61/45/c. 52/36/sh Newark, Nl......68/52/0.05... 73/52li. 66/46/pc Dublin..........55/46/007 ..47/38/sh.. 46/39/r Sapporo ........57/45/000 ..50/43/pc. 52/48/pc Concord, NH.....54/25/010...70/4ur. 64/38/sh Norfolk VA......77/56/000... 79/62li. 69/45/pc Edinburgh.......54/43/000. 57/43/pc .. 55/45/c Seoul...........63/37/000..60/45/pc. 63/48/pc Corpus Christi....92/77/000 ..79/62/pc.. 78/56/s OklahomaCity...69/55/023...70/41/s .. 64/43/s Geneva.........54/37/000...59/46/c. 55/44/sh Shangha/........72/64/000..71/63/pc.72/61/pc DagasFtWorrh...75/66/000...76/49/s.. 71/42/s Omaha.........57/38/000..56/34/Pc.55/37/Pc Harare..........82/63/000...90/65/c.89/62lsh Singapore.......90/77/035 ..87/78/sh. 85/78/sh Dayton .........64/60/0.55...60/42/c. 51/33/sh Orlando.........88/66/0.00 ..BI70/pc...83/58/t HongKong......82/73/000..82/73/pc.82/72lsh Stockholm.......48/34/000..45/42/sh. 54/41/sh Denver..........56/31/000 ..55/33/pc. 64/35/s Palm Springs.....81/51/0.00. 86/58/s .. 86I57/s Istanbul.........64/57/000 ..58/52/pc. 62/55/pc Sydney..........75/63/000 ..76/57/pc. 88/48/pc DesMoines......54/43/000..54/37/pc. 51/34/pc Peoria..........65/49/112...56/42/c. 51/32/pc lerusalem.......73/60/000..76/59/sh.. 76/59/s Taipei...........77/70/000..84/72/sh.79/72/sh Detroit..........63/54/0.69...57/45/c. 50/37/sh Philadelphia.....70/52/0.00... 73/53/r. 64/46/pcJohanneshurg....84/66/000...75/48/s ..75/50ls Tel Aviv.........84/66/000 ..83/65/sh.. 83/66/s Duluth..........46/43/010...47/33/c.. 44/29/c Phoeuix.........76/53/000...83/56/s .. 87/60/s Lima...........70/63/0.00 .. 71/59/pc.. 66/58/s Tokyo...........66/57/0.00..65/56/pc. 65/59/pc El Paso..........70/45/000...71/45/s .. 72/49/s Pittsburgh.......67/56/006... 60/44/r. 52/36/sh Lisbon..........66/50/000 66/58/pc67/54lsh Toronto.........64/41/047 ..50/45/sh 46/34/sh Fairhanks........27/18/000 ..28/16/sn .. 28/22/s Portland, ME.....55/27/0.06... 66/46/r. 58/44/sh London.........55I54/0.04..55/41/sh.51/41/sh Vancouver.......52/48/0.40... 50/46/r...50/45/r Fargo...........45/37/000...46/32/c.45/32/pc Providence......64/37/002...69/50li. 63/42/sh Madrid .........64/36/000 ..61/42/pc. 64/54/sh Vienna..........57/37/000... 55/43ls.. 55/48/c Flagstaff........55/19/0.00...57/25/s.. 60/29/s Raleigh.........76/58/0.00... 75/55/t. 71/42/pc Manila..........86/75/0.00 ..82/75/sh.89/76/sh Warsaw.........54/36/0.00..49/39/pc.. 56/48/c
I II
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© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
RODEO: COLUMBIA RIVER CIRCUIT FINALS
PREP SOCCER
Area 5A teamsset for postseason With the Class 5A
girls and boys soccer postseason set to begin, six Central Oregon teams are gearing up for runs at the state cham-
pionships. Summit's girls and
boys teams earned automatic bids into the state playoffs, and both teams will host first-
round games onTuesday. The Storm girls nearly ran the table dur-
ing the regular season,
Loca starssetto itRe mon
2013 ColumbiaRiver Circuit Finals When:Today,7:30 p.m.;
By Beau Eastes
and Jim Ross Cooper, a heeler from Monument, N.M., The Bulletin both sit at No. 3 in the world standings in their respecBrandon Beers and Jim Ross Cooper got a late tiveteam roping categories.Beers has won $97,373 so far this season, approximately $15,000 back of PRCA start on the 2013 rodeo season. Pals since their youth when their fathers were header leader Clay Tryan, of Billings, Mont., who has standout ropers on the Professional Rodeo Cow- Be e rs made $112,981. Ross has pocketed $105,195 this year, boys Association circuit — Mike Beers and Jimmie less than $6,000 behind Jade Corkill, of Fallon, Nev., Cooper are both former world champions — Brandon and the PRCA's leading heeler in 20D with winnings of $111,350. "Jim and I talked and the plan was to go to Reno (in June) Jim Ross did not start seriously hitting the 2013 PRCA circuit until late June. and rodeo hard through the Fourth of July (weekend)," says And they have been on fire ever since. Beers, 27, who is looking to claim his first Columbia River Heading into this weekend's Columbia River Circuit Finals Circuit Finals title on Saturday. in Redmond, Brandon Beers, a header from Powell Butte, See Redmond/C4
Saturday, 1 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Where:Hooker Creek Event Center at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, Redmond
Cost:$15 for each evening performance; for Saturday's afternoon performance, $10for adults and free for kids under18 Ticket information:1-888-849-2723 Web: www.columbiarivercircuitfinals.com
finishing with a 14-0-2 record to earn the No. 1
ranking in Class 5Aas determined by the Oregon School Activities
PREP SOCCER
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Association. Summit's boys, meanwhile, went 12-1-2 and have won
host Hillsboro's Liberty
Pac-12 oo in to ain some res ect
(7-7)in a play-in contest today at 3 p.m.
By John Marshall
their past11 in a rowto land the No. 2 spot in the final 5A rankings.
The top eight teams in the final OSAA 5A
rankings are awarded first-round state playoff home matches. Teams ranked nine through16
host play-in contests against teams ranked 17 through 24. With a 9-2-2 record, Bend High's girls earned
' yg@i'p'
a No. 4 ranking to give the Lava Bears afirstround home contest
on Tuesday.TheBend boys (4-5-5), 12th in 5A,
The Mountain View
The Associated Press
girls (4-9-1), 21st in 5A, will travel to 13th-
ranked Pendleton (85-1) for a play-in game today at 3 p.m. TheCougar boys (4-5-6), ranked No. 17, visit Corvallis
on Saturday to take on 16th-ranked Crescent
Valley (6-6-2) in a playin matchup slated for 2 p.m. — Bulletin staff report
PREP CROSS-COUNTRY Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Area runners ready for state
Sisters Liz Stewart gets her head on a cross intended for Summit's Christina Edwards during Thursday's girls soccer game in Bend.
The 2013 Oregon School Activities As-
sociation cross-country state championships
take place Saturday at Lane Community College in Eugene,where seven Central Oregon high schools will be represented. Summit's girls and boys teams will be looking to win their sixth and third straight Class 5A
state championships, respectively, and Mountain View will be aiming to break up the Storm's reign. Bend High will be
represented by onerunner in the boys race. The 4A field includes the boys and girls
squads from Sisters High, along with the Ridgeview girls and the Crook County boys. The Ravens will have one
runner in the boys race,
• Summit handS SiSterSits first lOSSin a nanleague battle that helPedbath teamSPrePare fOrthe State Playaffs Inside
By Emily Oller The Bulletin
• More Thursday prep sports results,C4
Summit knocked off undefeated Sisters 5-0 on Thursday in a state playoff tuneup match between two Central Oregon girls soccer powerhouses. The host Storm, the state's No. 1ranked team in Class 5A, led just 1-0 at halftime but then broke it open in the second half, scoring four goals against the 4A fifth-ranked Outlaws. "I think that this game will let us say, 'OK, here's some uglies. Now we need
to make a good run at state,' " Summit coach Jamie Brock said, whose team improved to 14-0-2 on the season. Camille Weaver scored the lone goal of the first half with an assist from Hadlie Plummer. After the break, Plummer took over, adding two goals of her own, one of which was assisted by Christina Edwards. Megan Cornett and Emma Malmquist each scored in the final five
minutes of the game; Raja Char was credited with an assist for Malmquist's
goal. "Hadlie is a key player for us," said Brock. "In terms of goals and assists, she's got the most. If we get the ball to her there's an attack or goal involved." Sisters midfielder Liz Stewart said the Outlaws (13-1-1) struggled with communication. "We need to work on organizing the defense and being really vocal," Stewart said. "Everyone needsto start communicating with each other. I think we
also need to work on playing (the ball) outside more and making smart runs." SeeStorm/C4
Once one of college basketball's better conferences, the Pac-12 has gotten little respect in the past few years. That could change this season. With some of the best teams in the country near the top and more talent across the conference, the Pac-12 appears to be on the rise again. "We have never had more depth than we have this year as a conference," Arizona coach Sean Miller said. "I think that some of the teams that have been at the bottom are much, much improved. As a matter of fact, they might even be near the top." The Pac-12 has not had much luck with the NCAA tournament selection committee in recent years, getting just two teams into the bracket twice in the past four seasons. Washington was left out ln 2012 desp>te w>nn>ng the regular-season conference title, and Oregon felt slighted last season when it was a No. 12 seed despite winning the conference tournament. This season should be different. No. 6 Arizona is the favorite to win the league title and make a deep NCAA run, adding freshman phenom Aaron Gordon and veteran point guard T.J. McConnell to a group who went to the Sweet 16 last season. SeePac-12/C4
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Oregon State
as will La Pine.
First races arescheduled for a10 a.m. start. The Class 4A girls will get underway at 11:15 a.m., followed by the 4A boys at11:50 a.m. The 5A girls race is slated for 1:15 p.m., and the boys will begin at1:50. Admission is $8
Defenseshoud define both OregonState, USC V
, Ozzzoz
The Associated Press
CORVALLIS — Defense might define both sides when Oregon State hosts USC tonight in a Pac-12 Conference football contest at Reser Stadium.
for adults and $5 for
Both teams are coming off strong defensive ef- Ne Xt up
students. Each race will also be streamed live at
www.osaa.tv for $6.95. — Bulletin staff report
NFL
Safety in OTlifts Dolphins to win A sack by Cameron Wake leads Miami over Cincinnati,C3
By Anne M. Peterson
Tony Avelarl The Associated Press
to 201. But the Trojans will have a considerable challenge in Oregon State quarterback Sean Mannion, who leads the nation in passing with an average of 408 yards. The 6-foot-5 junior has thrown 30 touchdown passes with just three interceptions this season.
Hi s fav o rite target is Brandin Cooks, who leads
forts — although with different outcomes. the nation with 1,256 yards receiving and shares The Beavers (6-2, 4-1 Pac-12) fell 20-12 at home Oregon State the lead with 13 touchdowns. to Stanford last weekend, but they limited the After the loss to Stanford, Cooks, cornerback "' physical Cardinal offense to just 273 yards, the Rashaad Reynolds and safety Ryan Murphy got the lowest total in Stanford's past 14 games. Cardinal y' p Beaver s together for apep talk. Itwasmuchthe same T": ESPN2 quarterback Kevin Hogan passed for just 88 yards as they did at the start of the season when Oregon • Radio: and no touchdowns. State lost to lower-division Eastern Washington. The Trojans (5-3, 2-2) forced four turnovers, in- K ICE-AM 940 "We told each other that we could go two ways, cluding three interceptions, in a 19-3 victory over just like we did at the beginning of the season. We Utah last Saturday. It was the second win in three games c a n either lay down and roll over to next week or we can for USC since Ed Orgeron was named interim head coach, l e arn from it and push forward," Reynolds said. "I think replacing Lane Kiffin. with the team, veteran group and leadership we have, I Southern California, which ranks 11th in the nation in t h i n k we will be all right. You can't dwell on it too much." overall defense, holding opponents to 318 yards, held Utah SeeDefense /C4
C2
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 'I, 2013
SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY Time
MOTOR SPORTS
COREBOARD
TV/Radio
Formula One, Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, qualifying NASCAR, Sprint Cup,
6 a.m.
AAA Texas500, practice
9:30a.m. FoxSports1
NBCSN
NASCAR, Nationwide,
O'Reilly Auto Parts 300, practice NASCAR,Truck Series,
11 a.m. Fox Sports1
Winstar World Casino 350, qualifying NASCAR, Sprint Cup, AAA Texas 500, qualifying NASCAR, Truck Series, Winstar World Casino 350 HORSERACING
noon
Breeders' CupWorld Championship
1 p.m.
Fox Sports1
1:30 p.m.
ESPN2
5:30 p.m. Fox Sports1 NBCSN
GOLF
Champions Tour, Charles SchwabCup WGC, HSBC Champions
1:30 p.m. 8 p.m.
SOCCER Women's college, Utah at Arizona BASKETBALL
3 p.m.
NBA, Miami at Brooklyn NBA, Portland at Denver
5 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. Comcast SN
NBA, San Antonio atLosAngeles Lakers HOCKEY College, Northeastern at Boston College FOOTBALL
7:30 p.m.
College, Southern Cal atOregonState High school, Liberty at Mountain View
6 p.m. 6:40 p.m.
Golf Golf Pac-12
ESPN
5 p.m.
ON DECK Today Football: Libertyat MountainViewin Class5Aplayin, 7 p.mJSummit at Sandyin Class5Aplay-in, 7 p.m.; Estacada at Ridgeview in Class4Aplay-in, 7 p.m.; CulveratCentral Linn,7p.m. Volleyball: Philomath atMadrasin first roundof0lass 4A state playoffs, 6p.m.;LaSale atCrookCounty in first round of Class4Astateplayoffs, 6:30p.m. Boys soccer: Liberty atBendin Class5Aplay-in, 3 p.m. Girls soccer: MountainVlewat Pendleton in Class 5A play-in, 3p.m.
VOLLYBALL Women's college, Arizona State at Oregon 6 p.m.
Pac-12
Women's college, UCLAat Stanford
Pac-12
8 p.m.
NFL
"Steve won't be back, coach. He took
a sharp blow directly to his ego."
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA NewEngland 6 2 0 750 179 144 N.Y.Jets 4 4 0 500 143 211 Miami 4 4 0 500 174 187 Buffalo 3 5 0 375 176 213 W L T Pct PF PA 5 2 0 714 187 131 Tennesse e 3 4 0 429 145 146 Houston 2 5 0 286 122 194 Jacksonville 0 8 0 000 86 264 North W L T Pct PF PA Cincinnati 6 3 0 667 217 166 Baltimore 3 4 0 429 150 148 Cleveland 3 5 0 375 148 179 Pittsburgh 2 5 0 286 125 153 West W L T Pct PF PA Kansas City 8 0 0 1.000 192 98 Denver 7 1 0 .875 343 218 San Digo e 4 3 0 .571 168 144 Oakland 3 4 0 .429 126 150 NATIONALCONFERENCE
Time 8 a.m.
TV/Radio F o x Sports 2
9 a.m. Fox Sports1
Formula One, Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, qualifying
10:30 a.m.
N B C SN
NASCAR, Nationwide, O'Reilly Auto Parts 300 GOLF
1 2:30 p.m.
ES P N2
Champions Tour, Charles SchwabCup
1:30 p.m.
WGC, HSBC Champions FOOTBALL
8 p.m.
College, Wisconsin at lowa College, lllinois at PennState College, Virginia Tech atBoston College
9 a.m. 9 a.m. 9 a . m. 9 a.m. 9 a.m. 9 a.m.
East
Golf Golf
ABC ESPN ESPN2 College, Army at Air Force ESPNU College, Southern Miss at Marshall CBSSN College, Ohio State at Purdue Big 10 College, Michigan at Michigan State 12:30 p.m ABC College, Florida at Georgia 12:30 p.m CBS College, Navy atNotre Dame 12:30 p.m NBC College, Clemson atVirginia 12:30 p.m ESPN College, West Virginia at Texas Christian 12 : 30 p.m ESPNU College, lowa State at Kansas State 12:30 p.m Fox Sports1 12:30 p.m Pac-12 College, Arizona at California College, Montana State at Northern Colorado12:30 p.m Root
College, Northwestern at Nebraska or Minnesota at Indiana College, Hawaii at Utah State
12:30 p.m
Big 10 CBSSN ESPN2 ESPN 4 p.m. Fox 4 p.m. ESPNU 4:30 p.m. Fox Sports1 5 p.m. ABC 5 p.m. Root 5 p.m. CBSSN 6 p.m. ESPN2 7:30 p.m. ESPNU
1 p.m. 3 p.m. 4 p.m.
College, Auburn at Arkansas College, Tennessee atMissouri College, Oklahoma State at Texas Tech College, Pittsburgh at Georgia Tech College, Colorado at UCLA
College, Miami at Florida State College, NewMexico at San DiegoState College, Boise State at Colorado State College, UTEP atTexasA&M College, Nevada at Fresno State SOCCER
English Premier League, Arsenal FC vs. Liverpool FC MLS, playoffs, Sporting Kansas City at New England MLS, playoffs, Portland at Seattle HORSERACING
10:30 a.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
NBCSN NBCSN
Breeders' CupWorld Championship Breeders' Cup
12:30 p.m.
N B C SN NBC
5 p.m.
NBC
W L T 4 4 0 3 5 0 2 5 0 2 6 0 South W L T 6 1 0 4 3 0 2 5 0 0 7 0 North W L T 5 2 0 5 3 0 4 3 0 1 6 0
Dallas Philadelphia Washington N.Y.Giants
NewOrleans Carolina Atlanta
TampaBay GreenBay Detroit
Chicago Minnesota
Pct PF PA 500 230 186 375 176 211 286 173 229 250 141 223 Pct PF PA 857 196 120 571 170 96 286 166 184 000 100 163 Pct PF PA 714 212 158 625 217 197 571 213 206 143 163 225
West W L T 7 I 0 6 2 0 4 4 0 3 5 0
Seattle SanFrancisco Arizona St. Louis
Pct PF PA 875 205 125 750 218 145 500 160 174 375 165 198
Thursday'sGame Miami22,Cincinnati20, OT Sunday'sGames Minnesotaat Dalas,10a.m. TennesseeatSt.Louis,10a.m. Atlantaat Carolina,10 a.m. NewOrleansatN.Y.Jets,10a.m. KansasCityatBuffalo,10 a.m. San Diego atWashington,10a m. Philadelphia at Oakland,1:05 p.m. TampaBayatSeattle,1:05 p.m. Baltimoreat Cleveland,1:25p.m. PittsburghatNewEngland,1:25 p.m. Indianapo is at Houston, 5:30p.m. Open:Arizona,Denver, Detroit, Jacksonvile, N.Y.Gi ants, San Francisco Mondey'sGame Chicagoat GreenBay,5:40 p.m. Thursday'sSummary
Dolphins 22, Bengals 20(OTj Cincinnati Miami
03 7 10 0 — 20 010 7 3 2 — 22
SecondOuarter
Cin — FGNugent 31,11:56. Mia — Tannehil 1 run(Sturgis kick), 239. Mia — FGSturgis 36,.06. Third Gearter Mia — Grimes94interception return(Sturgis kick) 7:37. Cin — Bernard3 run(Nugent kick), 2:10. Fourth Quarter Cin — Bernard35run (Nugentkick), 12:37. Cin — FGNugent 54,1:24. Mia — FGSturgis 44 .11. Overtime Mia — Wakesafety, 6:38. A—52,388.
VOLLEYBALL
Women's college, Arizona State at OregonState
6 p.m.
BASKETBALL NBA, San Antonio at Portland
7 p.m. Blazer Network
Pac-12
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by TVorradio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF GOLF
FOOTBALL
Bend golfer tied for
Arizona State deats
Kearney, a 34-year-old golf professional from Bend, is in
lor Kelly threw five touchdown
48th iR FIOrida —Brandon a tie for 48th place with13 other golfers after the first round of the Assistant PGA
Championship in Port St. Lucie, Fla., on Thursday. Kearney, an assistant pro at Bend Golf and Country Club, shot an opening round 2-over-par 74 at PGA Golf Club's Wanamaker
Course. The 126-player field is cut after 36 holes to the top 70 golfers and ties. Trent Rom-
mann, of Wichita, Kan., leads at 5 under. The Assistant PGA attracts the top assistant club
professionals from around the country. The 72-hole tournament ends with Sunday's final
round.
WaShingtOn State — Tay-
Cin 28
First downs Total Net Yards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penaltles-Yards Time ofPossession
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Cincinnati: Bernard 9-79, GreenEllis 21-72,Dalton5-12. Miami: Miffer16-105, Dan. Thomas12-38,Clay1-13,Tannehiff1-1. PASSING —Cincinnati: Dalton 32-53-3-338 Miami: Tannehill 20-28-0-208. RECEIVING —Cincinnati: Green 11-128, Sanu 6-62, M.Jones 4-66, Bernard4-25/ Gresham3-33, Eifert 3-14, Hawkins1-10. Miami: Wallace 6-82, Miller 4-24,Hartline3-39,Clay3-22, Matthews2-24 Egnew1-13 DanThomas1-4. MISSED FIELDGOALS —Miami: Sturgis 34
(WL).
passes and ran for two more scores as No. 25 Arizona
College
State beat Washington State 55-21 on Thursday night in
(Sebject tochange) Tbursday'sGames
Pullman, Wash. Kelly threw for 275 yards and rushed for 66 to help Arizona State
(6-2, 4-1 Pac-12j qualify for a bowl and win its first road
game of the season after two losses. Connor Halliday had 300 yards passing for Washington State (4-5, 2-4), which has lost four of five. Halliday,
Schedule All Times PDT
SOUTH Louisiana-Monroe 49,Troy37 SOUTHWES T Houston35,SouthFlorida23 NorthTexas28,Rice16 FAR WEST ArizonaSt.55,Washington St.21
Today's Games SOUTHWES T SouthernU.at TexasSouthern, 6p.m. FAR WEST SouthernCalatOregonSt., 6 p.m.
Pec-12 Standings All Times PDT
who set an FBS record in his
previous game with 89 pass attempts in a loss to No. 2 Oregon, was 29 of 54 with two touchdowns. — From wire reports
Mie
15 465 345 35-163 30-157 3 02 18 8 6-49 0-0 3 -45 3 - 79 0-0 3 -106 32-53-3 20-28-0 5 -36 3 - 20 4-38.5 8-48.9 1-1 1-1 3 -63 2 - 25 40:02 28:20
North
Oregon Stanford Oregon State
Conf. 5-0 5-1 4-1
Overall 8-0 7-1
6-2
2-3 2-4 0-5
Washington Washington State California South
Conf. 4-1 2-2 2-2 2-2 14 0-4
ArizonaState UCLA Arizona USC Utah Colorado
5-3 4-5 1-7
Overall
6-2 5-2 5-2 5-3 44
3-4
Thursday'sGame ArizonaState55,Washington State 21 Today'sGame USCatOregonState, 6p.m. Saturday'sGames ArizonaatCahfornia, 12:30pm. Coloradoat UCLA, 4:30p.m.
Betting line NFL
(Hometeamsin CAPS) Favorite Opening Current Underdog Sunday PANTHE RS 7.5 7.5 Falcons 1 0.5 10 Vikings COWB OYS JETS Saints 4 .5 6 Titans 3 3 RAMS Chiefs 3 3 BILLS Chargers PK 1 REDSKIS N RAIDER S 2.5 2.5 Eagles SEAHA WKS 1 6.5 16 Buccanee rs BROWN S Ravens 2.5 2.5 PATRIO TS 7 7 Steelers TEXANS Colts PK 25 Monday PACKE RS 11 11 Bears
College Today
OREGO NST
4 .5
Clemson
17 4 .5 29 23
VirginiaTech
TOLEDO N. Illinois AKRON RUTGE RS PENN ST GEORGIA TECH SYRAC USE W.Kentucky MISSOUR I KANSAS ST MARSHA LL TEXAS ABM Mid Tenn St TULSA AIR FOR CE TCU
4
Saturday
1.5 (K) 14 10 95 3 1 9.5 1 2.5 15 2 8.5
Usc
17 VIRGINIA 458OSTONCOLLEGE 30 E. Michigan 24 .M 5ASSAC HUSETTS 1 KentSt 13 . 5 Temple glinois 10 . 5 105 Pittsburgh 4 WakeForest 1 9 GEORGIA ST Tennesse e 11 17 lowaSt 3 1 S Mississippi 47 Utep UAB 4 Tx-S.Antonio 3.5 PK Army 13 W. Virginia Florida 3 CALIFOR NIA 16 22 Miami-Fla 9.5 IOWA 6 Michigan 3 1 .5 PURDUE Minnesot a 85 28 Colorado Navy 16 8 ARKANS AS 6.5 Northwesiern 3.5 ArkansasSt 24 Hawaii UNLV 3.5 3 1 NewMexico St 10 . 5 IDAHD 5.5 NC STA TE 28 Kansas
32-35 —67 35-32 67 31-37 — 68 36-32 —68 32-36—68 34-34—68
35-34—69 34-35 69 33-36—69 36-33—69 32-37—69 34-35 —69 37-32W9 35-35 —70 35-35 —70 35-35 —70 37-33 —70 35-35 —70 36-34 70 36-34 — 70 36-34 —70 33-37 —70 35-35 —70 35-35 —70 37-33 70 37-33 —70 35-36—71 35-36—71 35-36—71 36-35 —71 36 35 71 35-36—71 34-37 —71 36-35 —71 36-35—71 38-33—71 34-37 —71 37-35 —72 38-34 —72 37-35 —72 36-36—72 37-35 72 39-33 — 72 36-36—72 37-35 —72 35-37 —72 37-35 72 36-36 — 72 38-34 — 72 37-35 —72
KevinStreelman
NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All Times PDT
Indianapolis
MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR, Sprint Cup, AAA Texas 500, practice NASCAR, Nationwide, O'Reilly Auto Parts 300, qualifying
ErnieEls
DustinJohnson Graeme McDowell GaganjeetBhugar JonasBlixt MartinKaymer Ryan Moore KenDuke WenyiHuang Jin Jeong
FOOTBALL
South
SATURDAY
In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
Saturday Cross-country: OSAA Class4Astatechampionships at Lane Community Collegein Eugene,11:15 a.m., OSAAClass5Astatechampionships at LaneCommunityCollegeinEugene,1:15 p.m. Volleyball: Lebanon atSummit infirst roundof Class 5A stateplayoffs, 6p.mzBendatClevelandin first round ofClass5Astateplayoffs, 3 p.mJMountain View atSt. Helensin first roundof Class5Astate playoffs, 4p.m.; Astoriaat Sistersin first roundof 0lass 4A stateplayoffs, 3p.m.;RidgeviewatMarshfield in first roundof Class4Astate playoffs, 5:30 p.mzMyrtlePointat Culverin hrst roundof Class 2A state playoffs, 4p.m.;YoncaffaatTrinity Lutheran in second roundof Class1A stateplayoffs,2 p.m. Boys soccer: MountainViewat Crescent Valley in Class 5Aplay-in, 2 p.m.; Madrasat Ontario in Class 4Aplay-in, 4 p.m.; Ridgeviewat North Marion inClass4Aplay-in, noon Girls soccer: Ridgeview at Brookings-Harbor in Class 4A play-in, 3 p.m.
NBCSN ESPN2 COTV, 101.1-FM, 1110-AM
GonzaloFernandez-Castano JamieDonaldson JordanSpieth Tommy Fleetwood BubbaWatson JustinRose ScottHend PaulCasey Kiradech Aphibarnrat
IN THE BLEACHERS
PeterHanson LouisOosthuizen BooWeekley SergioGarcia LukeDonald DarrenFichardt DerekErnst PeterUihlein LeeWestwood Graham DeLaet lan Poulter Billy Horsche ChrisWood HidekiMatsuyama BrianGa y Phil Mickelson KeeganBradley MichaelHendry Francesco Molinari Bill Haas ScottPiercy DavidHowell JacoVanZyl MarkBrown JohnMerrick Wen-Chong Liang D.A Points MatteoManassero Mikko ff onen HaoTongLi
The top 25teamsin TheAssociated Press' preseason college basketball poll,withfirst-placevotesin parentheses,2012-13final records,total pointsbased on 25pointsfora first-placevotethrough onepoint for Champions ToUr a25th-place voteand2012-13final ranking Charles SchwabCup R ecord Pts P r v Thursday 1. Kentucky (27) 21 - 1 2 1 ,546 At TPCHarding Park 2. Michigan St. (22) 2 7- 9 1 , 543 9 San Francisco 3. Louisville (14) 35 - 5 1, 50 1 2 Purse: $2.5 million 4. Duke (2) 3 0 6 1,435 6 Yardage: Tt127; Per 71(36 35) 31-6 1,357 3 5.Kansas First Round 2 7-8 1,311 2 1 6. Arizona 30-33 —63 Peter Seni or 3 1-8 1,120 1 1 7. Michigan 30-34 —64 David Frost 2 4-9 1,093 1 7 8. Oklahoma St. 34-31 —65 FredCouples 30-10 1,093 16 8. Syracuse 33-33 —66 10. Florida 2 9-8 1,048 1 4 MarkO'Meara 35-32 — 67 Steve E ki n g t o n 2 9-8 1,036 7 11. OhioSt. 34-33 —67 DuffyWaldorf 1 2. North Carolina 2 5 -1 1 95 4 34-33 —67 BernhardLanger 31-5 7 4 1 19 13. Memphis 34-34 —68 MikeGoodes 2 7-9 6 8 0 14. VCU 33-35 —68 Bart Bryant 32-3 53 8 1 15. Gonza ga 31-37 68 GeneSauers 16. WichitaSt. 3 0-9 5 1 2 32-36—68 RussCochran 26-9 5 1 0 15 17. Marquette 34-34 —68 Michael Allen 20-10 448 18. Uconn 33-35 —68 Kenny Pe rry 28-9 4 0 8 25 19. Oregon 35-34 —69 Jay Don Blake 20. Wisconsin 23-12 33 8 18 34-35 —69 TomLehman 21. NotreDame 25-10 33 2 23 34-35 69 JohnCook 22. UCLA 25-10 24 4 24 34-36 —70 Mark Cal c a v e c chi a 29-6 2 1 3 10 23. New Mexico 36-34 —70 Jay Haa s 23-12 189 24. Virginia 34-36—70 Rocco Mediate 2 3-14 I 8 0 25. Baylor 32-38 —70 Othersreceivingvotes:Tennessee176, Creighton FredFunk 37-33—70 EstebanToledo 145,Indiana111, Colorado83,lowa83, Harvard46, 34-36—70 BoiseSt.22, Viffanova14,ArizonaSt. 11,Georgetown CoreyPavin 34-37 —71 11, UNLV 8,Washington 8, LSU6, Pittsburgh 6,Stan- Jeft Sluman 35-36—71 ford 6,BostonCollege5, LaSale 4, Missouri 3, Saint TomPerniceJr. 36-35—71 Kirk Tri p l e tt Louis 3,St.John's3, Cincinnati1. 35-37 —72 ChienSoonLu JohnRiegger 38 34 72 38-36—74 DanForsman HOCKEY 37-37—74 CralgStadler 39-36—75 MarkWiebe
NHL
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AN TimesPOT
DEALS
EasternConference Atlantic Division
Transactions
GP W L OT Pts GF GA Toronto 1 4 10 4 0 20 48 32 Boston 12 8 4 0 16 35 22 TampaBay 12 8 4 0 16 40 33 Montreal 1 3 8 5 0 16 37 23 Detroit 13 7 4 2 16 29 34 Ottawa 12 4 6 2 10 35 38 Florida 12 3 7 2 8 26 42 Buffalo 1 5 2 12 1 5 23 43 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 1 3 9 4 0 18 41 31 Carolina 12 4 5 3 11 26 36 N.Y. Islanders 12 4 5 3 11 37 39 Columbus 1 1 5 6 0 10 31 29 N.Y.Rangers 12 5 7 0 10 20 37 Washington 1 2 5 7 0 10 34 38 NewJersey 1 2 3 5 4 10 26 37 Phi adelphia 1 1 3 8 0 6 20 30
BASEBALL
AmericanLeague BALTIMOREORIOLES— Assigned INFDanJohn-
son and OFChris Dickersonoutright to Norfolk(IL).
CHICAGO WHITE SOX Exercised the 2014 contractoptionon RH PMatt Lindstrom.NamedTodd Steversonhitting coach. CLEVELANDINDIANS — Rel eased RHP Chris Perez.Agreedto termswith DHJasonGiambion a 46 minor league contract. KANSASCIT Y ROYALS Exercised the 2014 45 contractoption onRHPJamesShields. 3 T AMPA BA Y RAYS— Assigned DHFreddy Guz1.5 1 3.5 manoutright to Durham(IL). j-Georgia TEXAS RANGERS— Declinedthe contract option 25 Arizona on f 8/DHLanceBerkman. 15 22 T ORONTO BLUE JAYS — Named Kevin Seitzer FLORIDA ST hitting coach. Wisconsin 9.5 MICHIGAN ST 4 .5 National League 3 0.5 COLOR ADOROCKIES — Declined thecontract OhioSt Western Conference INDIANA option on RH P R a fael Betancourt. 10 Central Division 27 LOS ANG ELES DODGERS Declined contract UCLA GP W L OT Pts GF GA 28 MarkElis andI.HPChris Capuano. NOTRE DAME 17 Colorado 1 1 10 1 0 20 35 16 options on MIAMIMARLINS—ReinstatedOFMarceffOzuna Auburn 10 Chicago 13 8 2 3 19 45 38 from the 60-day DL. NEBRA SKA 7.5 St. I.ouis 10 7 1 2 16 38 25 3 NEWYORKMETS— Reinstated 18 Ike Davis S. ALABA MA Minnesota 13 6 4 3 15 30 31 22 UTAHST Nashville 13 6 5 2 14 27 37 LHPsJoshEdginandScott Rice, RHPsMatt Harvey, Jenrry Mejia,BobbyPameffandJeremy Hefnerfrom SanJoseSt 3 Winnipeg 14 5 7 2 12 34 40 UL-LAFA YETTE 2 9.5 Dallas 12 5 6 1 11 31 36 the 60-dayDL. ST. LOUISCARDINALS— Declined the contract TexasSt 11 Pacific Division nonRHPJakeWestbrook. N. Carolina 3.5 GP W L OT Pts GF GA optio TEXAS 28 SAN DIEGO PADRES— TradedLHPColtHynesto SanJose 13 1 0 I 2 22 51 24 FLAATLAN TIC 3 .5 Clevel and for cashconsiderations. 3 Tulane Anaheim 14 10 3 1 21 44 36 TEXAS TECH 1 2 Oklahoma St WASHING TONNATIONALS Named Matt WilPhoenix 14 9 3 2 20 48 44 21 25 liamsmanager. E. Carolina FLAINT'L Vancouver 1 5 9 5 1 19 42 41 BASKETBALL FRESND ST 21.5 2 0 .5 Nevada Los Angeles 14 9 5 0 18 40 36 MississippiSt Calgary National Basketball Association S.CAROLIA N 13 13 12 5 5 2 12 36 43 BoiseSt 7 .5 7 COLOR ADOST Edmonton 1 4 M EMPHIS G R IZ ZLIES—SignedG/FQuincyPon3 9 2 8 36 54 SANDIEGOST 16 15 NewMexico NOTE: Two points for awin, onepointfor overt imeloss. dexter toacontractextension. j-Jacksonvige,Fla FOOTBALL Thursday's Games National Football League K=KentStateopened as thefavorite Boston3,Anaheim2, SO CINCINNATI BE N GALS— Activated WRAndrew Phoenix5, Nashvile 4, SO Hawkins frominjured reserve. N.Y.Rangers2,Bufalo 0 TENNIS DALLAS COWBOYS—Signed DEJasonVegato Today's Games the practicesquad. WashingtonatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. Professional MIAMI DOL PHINS — Signed WR Ryan Spadola Columbus atPiffsburgh,4 p.m. from the practice squad. Paris Masters TampaBayat Carolina, 4 p.m. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—SignedTEChaseFordto Thursday N.Y.IslandersatOttawa,4:30p.m. the practicesquad. At Palais Omnisports dePeris-Bercy St. I.ouisatFlorida,4:30p.m HOCKEY Paris MontrealatMinnesota, 5p.m. National Hockey League Purse: $4.42million (Masters 1000) ColoradoatDallas, 5:30p.m. NHL — Suspended Buffalo F John Scottseven Surface: Hard-Indoor Detroit atCalgary,6p.m. games Ior an i l e gal check to the headofBostonFLoui Singles Erikssonduringtheir Oct.23game. Third Round SOCCER BOSTONBRUINS— Recalled F RyanSpooner StanislasWa wrinka (7), Switzerland,def. Nicolas from Providence (AHL) Almagro(12), Spain, 6-3,6-2. COLORADOAVALANCHE — Tra ded F Steve MLS David Ferrer(3), Spain, def. GiffesSimon(15), Downi e to Phi l a del phiator FMaximeTalbot. France,6-2,6-3. MAJORLEAGUESOCCER DETROIT REDWINGS— Assigned CLukeGlenNovakDjokovic (2),Serbia, def. JohnIsner (13), Aff Times POT dening toGrandRapids (AHL). UnitedStates,6-7(5), 6-1, 6-2. MINNES O TA WILD — Reassigned F Stephane Juan Martin dePotro(4), Argentina,def. Grigor Playoffs Veiffeuxto lowa(AHL). Dimitrov,Bulgaria,3-6, 6-3, 6-4. KNOCKOUT ROUND MONTEAL CANADIENS—SignedDAlexei Emelin Roger Federer (5), Switzerland, def. Philipp EasternConference to a four-yearcontract. Kohlschreiber,Germany,6-3, 6-4. Thursday, Oct. 31 Houston 3,Montreal 0 O TTAWA SE NATORS— Assigned F Jean-Gabriel TomasBerdych(6), CzechRepublic, def. Milos WesternConference PageautoBinghamton(AHL). Raonic(10), Canada,7-6(13), 6-4. Wednesday, Oct. 30:Seattle 2 Colorado0 PHOENIX COYOTES— AssignedFTim Kennedy RichardGasquet(9), France,def. KeiNishikori, CONFERENCESEMIFINALS to Portland(AHL) RecalledDBrandonGormleyfrom Japan,6-3,6-2. EasternConference Portland RafaelNadal(1), Spain,def. JerzyJanowicz (14), New Yorkvs. Houston TAMPA BAYLIGHTNING— Recalled FBrett ConPoland,7-5,6-4. Leg1 — Sunday,Nov.3: NewYorkat Houston,12:30 nolly fromSyracuse(AHL). p.m. COLLEGE Tournament ofChampions Leg 2—Wednesday,Nov.6: Houstonat NewYork,5 p.m. NCAA—Named Big 12senior associate commisThursday Sporting KC vs. NewEngland sioner Dru Hancock chai r of theDivision I Wom en's At ArmeecArena Leg1 —Saturday,Nov. 2:Sporting KCat NewEngland, BasketbalComm l ittee. Sofia, Bulgaria 5 p.m. FLORIDA— Suspended men'sbasketballFDorian Purse: $750,000 Leg2 Wednesday,Nov.6:NewEngandatSporting Finney Smith, F/CDamontre Harris andGScottieWilSurface: Hard-Indoor KC,6p.m. bekin indefinitely. Round Robin WesternConference UCLA Announced Freshman GIsaac Hamilton Singles Portland vs.Seattle was notgranteda national letter of intent bythe NLI Group Serdika Leg1 —Saturday,Nov. 2:PortlandatSeattle, 7p.m. appeal s com m i t ee an d ca nnot participate thisyear. SimonaHalep(1), Rom ania, def. ElinaSvitolina, Leg 2 Tuesday,Nov.7: SeattleatPortland, 8p.m. Ukraine,6-1,6-1. Reel Selt Lakevs. LAGalaxy Standings:Halep,3-0(sets6-0); Pavlyuchenkova, LegI— Sunday,Nov.3:RealSaltLakeatLA Galaxy, FISH COUNT 1-1 (2-2); Comet,1-1 (2-2); Svitolina, 0-2 (0-4); 6p.m. Upstream daily movement ofadult chinook,jackchiKirilenko,0-1(0-2), withdrew Leg2— Thursday,Nov.7:LAGalaxyatRealSaltLake, Group Sredets nook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia 6p.m. R iver d a m s l a stupdatedonWednesday Ana Ivanovic(2), Serbia,def.SamStosur (4), AusChnk Jcbnk Stlhd Wstlhd tralia, 6-2,5-7, 6-2. GOLF ElenaVesnina(5), Russia,def.TsvetanaPironkova Bonneville 7 9 5 24 8 TheDages 446 52 90 36 (8), Bulgaria,6-2, 4-6,6-0 John Day 41 1 109 168 86 Standings:Ivanovic,2-0 (4-1); Stosur,1-1 (3-2); VVGC McNary 45 6 37 131 60 Vesnina,1-1(2-3); Pironkova,0-2(1-4). HSBCChampions Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, Thursday jack chinook,steeheadand wild at selectedColumbia At SheshanInternational Golf Club BASKETBALL River damslastupdatedonWednesday. Shanghai Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Perse: $8.6miNion Bonnevi lle 1,125,311 170,644 232,940 98,668 College Yardage:7,266;Pan 72(36-36) TheDages 757,093 140,948 190,675 80,319 First Roundleaders PoNs 33-32—65 John Day 569,446 137,718 150,797 63,664 RoryMcllroy AP PreseasonTop25 McNary 582,146 91,394 144,141 55,513
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013• THE BULLETIN
GOLF ROUNDUP
NBA ROUNDUP
Paul leadsClippers
Mcllroy gets off to early lead at HSBC
to win over Warriors
The Associated Press SHANGHAI — The graceful combination of power and b alance. The bounce in hi s step after every birdie. His name at the top of the leaderboard. For at least one round,
The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Chris Paul scored 42 points and had three of his 15 assists on consecutive alley-oop dunks b y Blake Griffin d u r ing a 30-second span of the third quarter, leading the Los Angeles Clippers to a 126-115 victory over Golden State in their home opener on Thurs-
1
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Rory McIlroy finally looked like the former No. 1 player in the world instead of a guy who hasn't won a tournament all year. W ith e i ght b i r d ies a n d hardly any s t ress, McIlroy opened the HSBC Champions on Thursday with a 7-under 65 for a two-shotlead over Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano and Jamie Donaldson. It was the first time since he won in Dubai last November that McIlroy has been in the outright lead after any round. "It felt good to be out there and in control of my golf ball," McIlroy said. Maybe it was just a coincidence that McIlroy's only win of any variety was earlier this week at Mission Hills when he rallied to beat Tiger Woods in an 18-hole exhibition. That didn't hur t h i s c o n fidence, though the 24-year-old from Northern Ireland pointed to other factors that have been leading him in this direction. He took a four-week break, spending most of that time in Northern Ireland with swing coach Michael Bannon and "getting back to what we used to do." He has a new driver and a golf ball that is softer, giving him more spin around the greens. And perhaps most importantly, he hasn't lost his mind or his patience during t he most difficult season of his young career. "It's obviously frustrating when you've had a c o uple of seasons previous where you've had success, and not being able to emulate that," he said. "The way I look at it, if I have a 25-year career, nine months isn't actually that long. I wouldn't say 'restless,' but obviously there's a point in time where you're thinking to yourself, 'Right, come on, let's get this back on track.' But I've tried to stay as patient as
possible." More patience is required a gainst a s t r on g f i el d a t Sheshan International for this World Golf Championship. Fernandez-Castano is coming off his first win of the year last week at the BMW Masters. The group at 4-under 68 included U.S.Open champion Justin Rose, former Masters champion Bubba Watson and 20-year-old Jordan S p ieth, playing as though last season never ended. Another shot behind were Dustin Johnson, Paul Casey and Graeme McDowell, who remains second on the European Tour money list with h opes of catching Henrik Stenson. Also on Thursday: Senior up one stroke in San Francisco: SAN FRANCISCO — Australia's Peter Senior shot an 8-under 63 to take a one-stroke lead in the Champions Tour's season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship. Senior had nine birdies, an eagle and three bogeys at TPC Harding Park. David Frost shot 64, missing a short putt on the 18th hole. Fred Couples was third at 65, and Mark O'Meara had a 66. Bernhard Langer, Steve Elkington and Duffy Waldorf shot 67.
David J. Phillip/The Associated Press
Boston Red Sox's Jacoby Ellsbury celebrates with teammates after Game 6 of the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals on Wednesday in Boston.
Ellsbury, othersmaysoon become former RedSox By Barry Svrluga
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
The Washington Post
BOSTON — Jacoby Ellsbury, the leadoff man on the past two World Series championship teams of the Boston Red Sox, began the team's first rally Wednesday night with a single. Mike Napoli, the thick-bearded first baseman, singled in a run an inning later. Stephen Drew, the shortstop, broke out of an autumnlong funk with a home run, and the Red Sox overwhelmed the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 6, setting off a Fenway Park celebration unlike any other. In the haze from the fireworks on the field, players and coaches alike theorized about what it took to turn around a team that had finished in last place a year earlier. David Ortiz, the World Series MVP and October legend, credited John Farrell, the firstyear manager. Farrell, in turn, credited Ben Cherington, the general manager, who provided him with driven, like-minded players, many on reasonable, short-term contracts. It was a swift reversal, whoever gets the commendation. But as much as the Red Sox players who embraced each other — and the city of Boston, battered by April's marathon bombings — will be remembered in New England, the way the team was built could mean it needs to be rebuilt this winter. Ortiz, proven ace Jon Lesterand surprise closer Koji Uehara are undercontract through next year (Lester by virtue of an option in his contract that the team will all but certainly pick up). Yet other key parts will have to be resigned — or replaced. "This is one of the best organizations, since I've been here," said Ortiz, the only link to the 2004 World Series champion still in place this year. "You have those funky years that you put a really good team together and you don't make it to the playoffs, and you have those other years that you let
a big player go, and all of a sudden you're in the playoffs. This organization, as long as I've been here, has been a box full of surprises." What will the surprises be this offseason? The Red Sox, from the front office to the coaching staff to the clubhouse, said the camaraderie that was created contributed to their success, though that is an impossible quality to quantify. But they also know that playing in Boston is not for everyone, and they need to find players who excel, not shrink,under the microscope. "I think, in the eyes of some, Boston might present some specific challenges that might be intimidating for certain players," Farrell said. "But I would hope what they're witnessing would certainly become a place of destination for a number of guys that might have a choice." Internally, the Red Sox have discussions about what players might hold up well in the atmosphere. "That's tough to gauge," said Zack Scott, the team's director of baseball operations and one of Cherington's top lieutenants.
"We've brought in star players that haven't thrived in this environment, this fishbowl environment. "We have a good feel for the pressure that's involved with playing for the Red Sox. It's a big city, but it's a small-town mentality. Pro sportsare just so big here, so whether we think a guy can handle it is definitely a factor." And all of that will factor in considering their own players. Ellsbury, the 30-year-old center fielder from Central Oregon, is a free agent for the first time and could be the prize of the class, other than Yankees second baseman Robinson Cano. A career .297 hitter with a .350 on-base percentage, Ellsbury was successful on 52 of 56 stolen-base attempts this year. His agent is Scott Boras, so there will be no hometown discount,and the Red Sox have a center field prospect in Jackie Bradley Jr. In some ways, the potential departure of Ellsbury will be easier for Boston to handle than other potential losses. In one season, Napoli became an important part of the middle of the lineup and their personality, driving in 92 runs while posting an on-base-
T he Clippers, wh o w o n the franchise's first division title last season with a clubrecord 56 wins, began their 30th season in Los Angeles on Tuesday night with a 116-103 loss to the Lakers — the designated home team in the arena they are sharing for the 15th season. This is the first season in which the L akers' championship banners and retired numbers will be covered up
prise of "Lob City," helping during Clippers home games the Clippers pull away to an by banners depicting some of their players in action — an innovation by new head coach Doc Rivers. F ive Clippers scored i n double figures. Griffin had 23 points and 10 rebounds before fouling out with 3:53 remaining. Reserve Jamal Crawford added 17 points and DeAndre Jordan had 17 rebounds and nine points. Golden S t ate's S t ephen Curry, who set an NBA single-season record with 272 3-pointers last season made nine 3s against the Clippers and finished with 39 points and nine assists. David Lee scored 22 pointsbefore fouling out with 4:10 to play, and center Andrew Bogut had 17 points. Warriors gua r d Kl ay Thompson, who had a careerhigh 38 points on 15-for-19 shooting in a 125-94 rout of the Lakers, did not attempt a
Originally, Napoli and the Red Sox agreed to a three-year, $39 million contract, a deal that fell apart because Boston's doctors discovered a condition in Napoli's hip, avascular necrosis,that caused enough concern that the Red Sox offered instead a one-year, $D million deal. That makes Napoli, 32, a free agent again immediately. Given that he made a seamless transition from catcher to full-time first baseman, and his hip withstood a season in which he made acareer-high 578 plate appearances, the Red Sox may wish, in hindsight, that they had kept the original deal. Drew, similarly, signed a one-year, $9.5 million contract, and though he played stellar defense throughout the postseason, his apparent replacement played alongside him from the middle of the American League Championship Series through the victory over the Cardinals. Xander Bogaerts, 21, started each World Series game at third base, but shortstop is his natural position. After he hit .296 with an .893 OPS in the postseason, Bogaerts did nothing to dissuade the Red Sox from thinking he is ready. Catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia, who was benched in favor of backup David Ross for the final three games of the World Series, also is a free agent for the first time. Each of those players, though, will head into free agency trying to find an environment like the one that was created at Fenway Park this
year. "This is a team that we have a lot of players with heart," Ortiz said. "We probably don't have the talent that we have in '07 and '04, but we have guys that are capable to stay focused and do the little things. And when you win with a ballclub like that, that's speciaL"
88-70 lead with 4:31 left in the quarter. Los Angeles led 68-55 at halftime w it h f ou r p l ayers reaching double digits, including Paul with 18 points. The Clippers took t heir b i ggest lead, 65-47, on a 21-footer by Redick that capped an 11-2 spurt with 1:43 left in the second quarter. He finished with 17 points. Also on Thursday: Bulls 82, Knicks 81: CHICAGO — Derrick Rose made a baseline floater with 5.7 seconds left to lift Chicago to a victory over New York in his first home game since he injured his left knee 18 months ago. Rose had 18 points on 7-of-23 shooting and committed four turnovers. But there was no doubt who was getting the ball after Tyson Chandler went 1 for 2 at the line to give New York an 81-80 lead with 10.8 seconds remaining.
NBA SCOREBOARD
plus-slugging percentage of .842.
NFL
The Associated Press
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — With the Miami Dolphins needing any kind of score to end a four-game losing streak, two points were plenty. Cameron Wake sacked Andy Dalton for a safety with 6:38 left in overtime, and Miami beat the Cincinnati Bengals 22-20 on Thurs-
day night. On third-and-10 from the 8, Dalton retreated to the goal line and was tackled by Wake coming up the middle for the third overtime safety in NFL history. The officials immediately signaled the score, which was
upheld following a replay review. Rory Mcllory hits out of a bunker on the 8th hole during the first round of the HSBC Champions inShanghai, China, on Thursday.
day night.
field goal against the Clippers until he was awarded a basket on a goaltending call against Jordan with 5:04 left in the half. Thompson finished with 10 points. Trailing by as many as 19 points, the Warriors sliced the deficit to 110-102 on a fourpoint play by Curry, who was fouled by Jared Dudley on his fourth 3-pointer of the fourth quarter with 6:05 remaining. But they never got closer as the Clippers responded with a 10-5 run capped by newcomer J.J. Redick's 3-pointer with 3:12 left. Lee committed his fifth foul with 6:38 left in the third quarter and went to the bench with the Warriors trailing 77-67. Paul and Griffin then worked the sellout crowd of 19,060 into a frenzy with their sudden re-
Standings National Basketball Associa1t0ll
All TimesPDT EASTERNCONFERENCE Atlantic Division W t Toronto 1 0 Philadelphia 1 0 NewYork 1 1 Brooklyn 0 1 0 1 Boston
Southeast Division
Miami
Atlanta Charlotte
Washington Orlando
Pct GB 1.IIOO 1.000 500
I/2
.000 1 .000 1
Dallas atHouston, 5p.m. Detroit atMemphis, 5p.m. Miami atBrooklyn,5 p.m. Portlandat Denver,6p.m. Utah atPhoenix, 7p.m. LA Clippersat Sacramento, 7 p.m. SanAntonioatLA.Lakers,7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Clevelandatlndiana,4 p.m. ChicagoatPhiladelphia, 4:30p.m. Charlotteat NewOrleans, 5 p.m. Memphisat Dallas,5:30p.m. Torontoat Milwaukee,5:30p.m. Houstonat Utah,6 p.m. SanAntonioat Portland,7p.m. Sacramento at Golden State,7:30 p.m.
W 1 0 0 0 0
t 1 1 1 1 2
Pct GB 500
000 1
Summaries
W 2 1
L 0 0 0 1
Pct GS 1.IIOO 1.000 '/z
Thursday'sGames
Central Division
000 I/2 000 I/2 000 I/2
Indiana Cleveland 1.II00 '/2 Detroit 1 Chicago .500 1 Milwaukee 000 1'/~ 0 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct GB SaoAntonio 1 0 1.IIOO Dallas 1 0 1.000 1 0 1000 Houston NewOrleans 0 1 .000 1 Memphis 0 1 .000 1 Northwest Division W t Pct GB 1 0 1.00Q 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 Pacific Division W t Phoenix 1 0 Sacramento 1 0 GoldenState 1 1 L.A. Lakers 1 1 L.A. Clippers 1 1
1.000 .000 1 .000 1 .000 1
Pct GB 1 IIOO 1.000 500 I/2 500 I/2 500 I/2
Thursday'sGames Chicago 82, NewYork 81 L.A. clippers126,Goldenstate 05 Today's Games NewOrleansatOrlando,4 p.m. Philadelphiaat Washington, 4 p.m. Cleveland atCharlotte, 4p.m Milwaukee atBoston, 430p.m. TorontoatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Oklahoma City at Minnesota,5 p.m.
Bulls 82, Knicks 81 NEWYORK(81) Bargnani4-70-09,Anthony8-244-522, Chandler 3-81-2 7, Felton5-142-313, Shumpert 2-6 2-2 7, WorldPeace3-11 Ij-08, Stoudemire2-31-2 5, HardawayJr. 4-130-010, Prigioni 0-00-0 0, Martin 0-0 0-0 0.TotaIs31-86 10-14 81. CHICAGO (82) Deng 8-15 0-0 17, Boozer5-7 4-4 14, Noah 2-72-2 6, Rose7-23 2-218, Butler 3-0 5-611, Gibson 3-51-2 7, Hinrich 3-63-3 9, Dunleavy0-2 0-00,Mohammed0-0 0-0 0.Totals 31-76 1719 82. New York 16 22 23 20 — 81 Chicago 26 17 28 11 — 82
Clippers 126, Warriors 115 GOLDEN STATE(115) iguodala5-8 3-614, Lee8-15 6-822, Bogut6-7 5-717, curry14-231-1 38,Thompson3-7 3-310, O'Neal1-62-24, DGreen1-31-44, Douglas0-20-0 0, Speights2-5 2-26, Bazemore 0-0 0-0 jj, Nedovic 0-00-0 0,Kuzmic 0-0 0-0 0.Totals 40-76 23-33 115. LA. CLIPPERS I126) Dudley4-6 0-010, Griffin 9-125-823, Jordan39 3-12 9,Paul12-2016-1742, Redick5-114-4 17, Crawford7-141-2 17, M.Bames0-4 4-4 4, Hollins 2-20-04, Collison0-30-1 0,Mullens0-40-20 Bullock 0-00-00. TotaIs 42-85 33-50 126. Goldenstate 26 2 9 25 35 — 115 L.A. Clippers 36 3 2 25 33 — 126
Safety in OTleads Dolphins to 22-20 victory overBengals Late rally lifts BIuins By Steven Wine
Eugene Hoshiko/The Associated Press
C3
"We calleda pressure, and the guys executed it well," coach Joe Philbin said. "Cam had good pressure throughout the game and he made aplay to end the game" Wake had three sacks, and Cincinnati committed four turnovers that might have
meant a difference of 17 points. The Dolphins (4-4) won for the first time sincetheir 3-0 startand snapped a four-game winning streak by the Bengals (6-3), who still enjoy a two-game lead in the AFC North. "You never want to lose four games in a row," Philbin said, "and we had an excellent football team coming in town. It was time for us to step up and we had to make a decision — what are we going to be? And I thought they answered the bell pretty well tonight." The teams traded punts to start overtime. After Cincinnati's Terence Newman was called for a 38-yard pass interference penalty, the Bengals dug in and forced another punt that pinned them deep, setting up the safety by Wake. "My eyes were downfield, and he was there pretty quick," Dalton said, adding he thought he was out of the end zone.
The Associated Press BOSTON — Zdeno Chara scored the tying goal on a power play with under 3 minutes remaining in regulation and Jarome Iginla had the lone goal in a shootout to rally the Boston Bruins past the Anaheim Ducks 3-2 on Thursday night. Carl Soderberg scored his first NHL goal and Tuukka Rask made 21 saves for the Bruins, who mustered only one shot on goal in the first period. They never sustained much of an offensive attack but still managed to snap a two-game skid. Devante Smith-Pelly scored less than 2 minutes into the game, Mathieu Perreault had a goal and an assist and Jonas Hiller stopped 21 shots for the
NHL ROUNDUP Ducks. But they went zero for 4 on the power play, dropping the league's worst unit to 7.3
percent (4 for 55). Also on Thursday:
Rangers 2, Sabras 0:NEW YORK — Henrik Lundqvist made 29 saves in his 47th NHL shutout, and New York won its second straight and first at home with a victory over lowly Buffalo. Coyotes 5, P redators 4: GLENDALE, Ariz. — Mikkel Boedker scored the lone shootout goal in the fifth round to lift Phoenix over Nashville. Thomas Greiss made 36 saves and stopped all five shootout attempts for the Coyotes, who rallied from a 3-0 deficit.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
Redmond Continued from C1 He has $27,909 in CRC winnings this year, some $11,000 more than current runner-up Riley Minor, of E l lensburg, Wash. "If we didn't do so good, we'd ease around and still go to some circuit rodeos," Beers says. "We were committed to each other through this year, though, whether we rodeoed good or not, and we figured we'd go hard again next year. " That f i rs t r o d e o w e n t great," Beers says about the Reno Rodeo, at which he and Cooper placed fifth in the average. "Once it started, it's never slowed down." Beers figures he had $4,400 in w i n nings b efore R eno, meaning that in the past four months he has pulled in about $93,000 in PRCA money. The boyhood buddies have won five rodeos since catching fire in the Silver State and only once all season have they worked a w eekend without cashing a PRCA check. "And even then we t o ok third at a (non-PRCA) roping event and won about $13,000," Beers says. A two-time National Finals Rodeo qualifier, Beers had a tough go last season when he finished 53rd in the world and won just $17,046 on the PRCA tour. He and Cooper, 29, who in 2011 went to the National Finals as partners, did not rope together last season after one of Beers' horses was injured. "It wasn't a partner split-up," Beers says. "I didn't feel like I could be competitive." Instead, Beers mainly hit local events with Prineville's Cully Stafford, winning both t he Sisters Rodeo and t h e Chief Joseph Days Rodeo. With tw o h e althy a n imals
Pac-12
Victory helpsSummit boys water polo securetrip to state
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Bulletin staff report BEAVERTON — Behind four goals by Tommy Brewer, Summit secured a 10-6 5A state playoff boys water polo win over Cottage Grove at Tualatin Hills Aquatic Center, earning the Storm a bid to the state championship tournament next week. Quinn Rasmussen and Zack Barry added two goals apiece, helping Summit build a 10-0 lead at the end of the third quarter. Jack Butler and Carson Brenda each scored once for the Storm, who will take on West Albany next Friday at Osborn Aquatic Center in Corvallis, and Kyle Alhart was credited with 11 blocks
in goal.
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Brandon Beers will compete in the Columbia River Circuit Finals rodeo starting today and continuing Saturday. He will then take some time off before preparing for the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas in December.
heading into this year, Beers and Cooper, who advanced to the 2012 NFR with Prineville cowboy Charly Crawford, decided tomake another run on the big stage in 2013. "Since we started winning, our goal hasn't been just to m ake the Finals, but h o w
get in.' Now we want to go in as No. 1." After this weekend's CRC Finals, Beers plans to take a few days off for an elk hunt before making final preparations for the 2013 NFR next month in Las Vegas. "The circuit finals are alhigh can we be going in," says ways fun," Beers says. "It's a Beers, who made his first NFR neat atmosphere and there's appearance in 2007 with his a lot of people. And it's always father. "That's what's really nice knowing your next rodeo helped us. We're not just hop- is the (NFR)." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, ing to get 15th. That's how I beastes@bendbulietinicom. usually thought; 'I just want to
2012-13 and this season may have his best team yet. AriContinued from C1 zona will be a matchup nightColorado lost Andre Rober- mare for teams with its length son but returns four starters, and i n terchangeable p arts including Spencer Dinwiddie, and could end up being one of one of the conference's top the nation's leading defensive players. No. 22 UCLA had one teams with so many long, athof the nation's best recruiting letic players. McConnell could classes a year ago and is load- be the key. The transfer from ed with talent. Duquesne gives the Wildcats Oregon is t h e r e t urning the pass-first point guard they conferencetournament chamlacked last season and is one pion and went to the Sweet 16, of the nation's standout perimArizona State has one of the eter defenders. nation's best point guards in Fabulous freshmen: A r i Jahii Carson, California has zona's Gordon is considered been to the NCAA tournament one of the top freshmen in the four times in five years, and country, but he is not the only Stanford is experienced and a one in the Pac-12 to have an program on the rise. immediate impact. His teamEven Southern California, mate Rondae Hollis-Jefferson which labored through the was highly touted out of high 2012-13 season, will be a tough school and should get solid minutes in Tucson. Cal shootout after new coach Andy ing guard Jabari Bird was the Enfield brought "Dunk City" from Florida Gulf Coast. marquee name in a stellar re"This league is from top to cruiting class by coach Mike bottom as strong as it's been Montgomery and is an athletic since I've been in it, and I think player who can get to the rim there's some coaches maybe and shoot from the perimeter. who have been around longer Washington coach L orenzo than I have that can probably Romar missed out on landattest to that," Colorado coach ing Gordon, but he does have Tad Boyle said. Nigel Williams-Goss, a smart It should be interesting to point guard who will replace watch how the season unfolds. Abdul Gaddy and should be To get ready for the Pac-12 suited to run the Huskies' fastseason, here are five things to paced offense. Better at the bottom:One of watch for: At the top:Miller has done a the reasons the Pac-12 is exsuperb job of rebuilding Ari- pected torebound this season zona's program after the chaos is the strength of the teams at left by Lute Olson's retirement. the bottom of the league. WashHe led the Wildcats to the re- ington State plays hard and gional round of th e N CAA features high-scoring guard tournament for t h e s econd Royce Woolridge. One-time time in the past three years in power Washington has missed
Defense
PREP ROUNDUP
h
the NCAAs the past two seasons but has good young talent, including Williams-Goss. Utah made a late-season run into the conferencesemifinals and returns athletic forward Jordan Loveridge. Oregon State took a step back last season but has Roberto Nelson and Devon Collier coming back. Dynamic backcourts: The b ackcourts could r u l e t h e Pac-12, which has some of the best in the country. Arizona will have McConnell playing alongside junior Nick Johnson. Jermaine Marshall, Penn State'ssecond-leading scorer before transferring, will join Carson at Arizona State. Oregon's Dominic Artis, Johnathan Loyd and Daymean Dotson may be the best trio in the league. UCLA has one of the conference's most d y namic players in Jordan Adams, and multidimensional for w a r d/ guard Kyle Anderson is back. Alford in Westwood: Ben Howland led UCLA to three Final Fours but was fired in March after the program became fracturedand inconsistent. Now it is Steve Alford's turn to get the Bruins back on track. The former Indiana star and coach at New Mexico was not the most popular choice among UCLA fans and boost-
ers who had hoped for a bigger name to take over a program that has won 11 national titles. Alford will have some good talent to work with, a nice mix
of young players and returnees, so now it is just a matter of showing everyone he was the right choice.
sons and limited the team to no more than 75 scholarship players. Right tackle Kevin Graf Continued from C1 probably will not play tonight because of a left The Trojans have been devastated by injuries. ankle injury, and linebacker Morgan Breslin At the top of the list is receiver Marqise Lee, is still nursing a hip injury. Tight ends Xaviwho is questionable for tonight's game because er Grimble and Randall Telfer both sat out of a left knee injury that has sidelined him for against Utah and were limited in practice eartwo of the past three games. lier this week but hoped to play tonight. SafeAnd of course there is the fact that USC has ty Su'a Cravens is expected to play despite a not won at Reser Stadium since 2004. groin injury last week. Here are five things to look for when USC Cummings out: Oregon State senior receiver Kevin Cummings suffered a wrist injury durvisits Oregon State tonight: ing the first half of the loss to Stanford and reGiant Killers:This year is really no comparison, but the Beavers have come up big against quired surgery. It will keep him out for the rest some very formidable Trojan teams — and of the season but he could be back for a bowl won. In2008, the Beavers were 26-point under- game. Senior Michal Hatfield and redshirt dogs when they knocked off then-No. 1 USC freshman Malik Gilmore will take on greater 27-21 on a Thursday night in Corvallis. Two roles in Cummings' absence. A lot of orange:Oregon State is going to debut years earli er,Oregon State topped then-No. 3 USC at Reser 33-31. Back in 1967, the "Giant its new "orange-out" all-orange uniforms and Killers" bested the top-ranked Trojans and star metallic orange helmets for the national televirunning back O.J. Simpson 3-0 in Corvallis. "I sion audience tonight. At least one fan website think you have to give (coach) Mike Riley and joked that the monochromatic look could make Oregon Statethe credit," Or geron said."Those the Beavers resemble traffic cones. The team guys do a tremendous job when the Trojans get has also asked their fans to wear orange to the up there." game. Injuries galore: In addition to Lee, the TroThe last time: The two teams have not met since 2010, when the Beavers downed then-No. jans are dealing with numerous injuries that have forced them to shift players to new po- 20 USC in Corvallis. Ryan Katz passed for 154 sitions and use walk-on players. USC also yards and two touchdowns while Jacquizz Rodcontinues to play under NCAA sanctions that gers rushed for 128 yards and another score in costthe team 30 scholarships over three sea- the 36-7 victory.
In other Thursday action: BOYS WATER POLO Cougars advance: BEAVERTON — MountainView recorded 37 steals,and the Cougars dispatched Marist of Eugene 15-2 at the 5A state playoffs at Tualatin Hills Aquatic Center to advance to the state championship tournament in Corvallis next week. Noah Cox paced Mountain View with six goals, Tim Gorman added four, and Nate Cox scored three times. Kade Bachman and Abby Andresen each had
one goal. Tracy Pitcher collected six blocks in goal, and Brandon Deckard led the Cougar defense with eight steals. Mountain View, the No. I seed heading into the state tournament at Osborn Aquatic Center, will play next Friday against Ashland, who defeated Madras 12-7. GIRLS WATER POLO Summit rolls at state:BEAVERTON — The Storm used a nine-goal first quarter to jump out to a 13-0 halftime lead, as Summit cruised to a 16-1 win over Cottage Grove at the 5A state playoffs at Tualatin Hills Aquatic Center. Sydney Goodman picked up seven saves in goal, while Laura Robson paced the offense with four goals. Robson added three steals, Kayanna Heffner chipped in with three goals and six steals, and Vanessa Rogers finished with three goals. Caroline Richelson and Annie Jarvis each scored twice (Jarvis also had three steals), and Britt Hansen and Kaylin Ivy had one goal apiece. Summit advances to the state championship tournament next Friday, when the Storm face off against Ashland, which put away Madras 13-9. Also at the state playoffs was Ridgeview, which fell to West Albany 17-5.
Storm
work on our touches up front a nd keeping control of t h e Continued from C1 ball." After finishing first in Summit, which has won two their respective leagues, of the past three 5A state titles, the O u t l aws (Sky-Em won nonleague matchup.But League) and the Storm (In- according to Brock, the Storm termountain C o nference) struggled finishing their ofboth received byes for the fensive attacks. With a total state play-in round. Each of 25 shots on goal, Summit team opens the state play- capitalized on only 20 percent offs with home matches on of its o p portunities. Brock Tuesday. said she hopes for better in the Sisters coach A u drey playoffs. "I don't know if I would use Tehan said the Outlaws n eed to f o cus o n c o n - this game as a reflection of trolling the ball, adding anything we're going to do that Summit, the r eignin the playoffs," Brock said. ing 5A s t ate champion, was the most challenging team they have faced all season. "I thought we did a really
play our own game." Plummer said the matchup with Sisters highlighted what Summit needs to work on in order to repeat as state champion. "Honestly, I just feel like this is a wake-up call," Plummer said. "We've got to wake up and know we have a playoff game on Tuesday, and if we come out playing like we
did today we're going to get (knocked) out." — Reporter: 541-383-0375, eoiier@bendbulletin.com.
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
good job of keeping the ball out of the center and attacking up the sidelines," Tehan said. "Our defense really kept it together under high pressure. I think we need to
I
"There's lots of things we need to work on. But we need to
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
+
3,91 9.71
Toda+ Fnday, November b 2013
Eye on Exxon Exxon Mobil stock has trailed the market this year. It's up roughly 3 percent and is one of the worst performers in the Dow Jones industrial average. Earlier this month the stock was upgraded to a "Strong Buy0 by Raymond James analystPavel Molchanov, who said he thinks investors in the energy sector will look for safer bets in 2014.
15,760 .
1,740
Close: 1,763.31
15,480
Change: -8.64 (-0.5%) 1 0 DA Y S
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1,750
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DDW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 3,764 2,100 Pvs. Volume 3,446 1,836 Advanced 1 210 9 6 7 Declined 1868 1571 New Highs 1 38 109 New Lows 25 45
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..0 . . 14 400
Close: 15,618.76
Change: -61.59 (-0.4%) 10 DA Y S .
HIGH LOW C LOSE 15651.86 15544.69 15545.75 7021.37 6929.43 6975.18 503.44 494.27 499.87 10072.50 10001.79 10009.64 3945.04 3909.26 3919.71 1768.53 1755.72 1756.54 1298.60 1285.83 1289.18 18837.87 18688.30 18711.92 1108.60 1097.84 1100.15
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C H G. -73.01 -33.38 -2.85 -44.74 -10.91 -6.77 -1.70 -69.75 -5.35
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NAME
ALK 37.25 — A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 8. 9 2 ~ BBSI 28 74 — BA 6 9 .30 — CascadeBancorp CACB 4.65 ~ Columbia Bakg CDLB 16.18 — Clorox earnings Columbia Sporlswear COLM 47.72 ~ The maker of Clorox bleach, Glad CostcoWholesale COST 93.51 — trash bags and other consumer Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 ~ FLIR Systems FLIR 18 58 ~ products reports its fiscal Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 ~ first-quarter results today. Price
Alaska Air Group based on trailing 12 month results Avista Corp Dividend: $2.52 Div. yield: 2.8% Bank of America Source: Factset Barrett Business Boeing Co
increases helped offset sales declines in the April-June period, lifting Clorox's profit. Investors will be looking to see if that trend continued in the latest quarter. Clorox's stock has risen more than 10 percent this month.
Cardinal Health distributes
pharmaceuticals and medical supplies and makes products like surgical gloves and gowns. Recently its contracts with Express Scripts, a pharmacy benefits manager, and Walgreen, the drugstore chain, expired. In March, Cardinal Health paid $2 billion to buy AssuraMed, which distributes medical supplies to patients at home. The acquisition is expected to make up for some of the revenue lost from the Walgreen contract. Cardinal Health reports its latest results today.
Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Microsoft Corp
7. 81 —
KEY KR 241 9 — LSCC 3.55 LPX 14.51 MDU 19.59 — MENT 13.21 MSFT 26.26 ~ NKE 44 83 — JWN 50.94 ~ NWN 39.96 ~ DMX 6. 3 8 — PCAR 41.17 ~ PLNR 1.12 PCL 40.60 PCP 168.03 SWY 16.00 SCHN 23.07 SHW 140.12 SFG 32.14 SBUX 45.00 TQNT 4.31 UMPQ 11.17 USB 30.96 WAFD 15.64 WFC 31.25 W Y 2 4.75 ~
PaccarIac Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Safeway Ioc Schaitzer Steel Sherwin Wms Staacorp Facl StarbucksCp Triquint Semi UmpquaHoldings US Baacorp WashingtonFedl Wells Fargo &Co Weyerhaeuser
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Higher expenses weighed on the results of American Tower, which posted sharply lower thirdquarter earnings. The company earned $180.1 million, or 45 cents per share, down from earnings of $232.1 million, or 58 cents per share, in the 2012 third quarter. The latest quarter's results included losses of $30.9 million due to fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates related =:' to intercompany loans and other items. ::::.='. — — "; e
Price-earnings ratio: 5 7 based on trailing 12 month results
Total return YTD: 6%
Dividend: $1.21 Div. yield: 2.2%
AP
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$68 ~
~
~
~
85
3-YR*: 17%
Total returns through Oct. 30
Annual dividend: $1.12 Div. yield: 1.4% 5-YR*: 23%
(trailing 12 months):55
*Annualized
Source: FactSet
Source: Factset
FundFocus
SelectedMutualFunds
AP
This 5-star fund's performance is lagging its small-cap growth fund MarketSummary peers this year, but Morningstar Most Active says investors should not be NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG concerned. Facebook
1729038 S&P500ETF 1168325 BkofAm 1038600 iShEMkts 645632 AlcatelLuc 531660 MktVGold 527295 AriadP 487662 SPDR Fncl 480886 RegionsFn 465571 iShR2K 437079
50.21 +1.20 175.79 -.50 13.97 -.20 Sentinel CmaStkA m SENCX 42.46 —.45 3.83 + .53 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH 25.10 -1.13 -1.76 2.20 ccC 20.57 —.22 00 9.63 + .09 0O tc 109.19 -.64
Gainers NAME ZeltiqAes
L AST
1 2.97 Inteliquent 1 2.82 ShoreTel 7 .93 CarboCer 1 25.34 RBS China 3 5.37 Fluidigm 3 1.50 HudsonTc 2 .13 SilvSpNet n 2 1.84 Expedia 5 8.97 NQ Mobile 1 4.40
C H G %C H G +3. 1 7 +3 . 0 7 +1 . 8 2 + 2 7.66 +7. 0 1 +6 . 1 7 +.36 +3. 6 2 +9. 0 1 +2. 1 5
+32 . 3 +3 1 . 4 «C +2 9 . 8 00 +2 8 . 3 «C +24 . 7 0O +2 4 . 4 Mornittgstar Ownership Zone™ +20 . 4 +19 . 9 O o Fund target represents weighted +18 . 0 average of stock holdings +17 . 6 • Represents 75% of fttrtd's stock holdings
Losers NAME AriadP Nll Hldg
DdysMar AtlasAir RockyBr
LAST 2.20 3.43 2.16 37.03 15.16
CHG %CHG -1.76 -44.4 -1.37 -28.5 —.68 -23.9 -11.66 -23.9 -4.44 -22.7
Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG + 25.78 + . 6 0 4,299.89 London 6,731.43 -46.27 —.68 Frankfurt + 23.65 + . 2 6 9,033.92 Hong Kong 23,206.37 -97.65 -.42 Mexico -11.44 -.03 41,038.65 Milan 19,351.52 + 184.59 + . 96 Tokyo -174.41 -1.20 14,327.94 Stockholm 1,283.52 -7.62 -.59 Sydney -5.10 -.09 5,420.30 Zurich 8,234.29 + 5.92 + . 0 7 NAME Paris
CATEGORY MORNINGSTAR RATING™ ASSETS EXP RATIO MANAGER SINCE RETURNS3-MD
Large Blend ** * y y yy $1,376 million 1.06% Hilary Roper 2010-04-30 +3.5
YTD +24.2 1-YR +26.8 3-YR ANNL +15.3 5-YR-ANNL +14.6
TOP 5HOLDINGS Johnson & Johnson Exxon Mobil Corporation United Technologies Corp
Time Warner Inc Microsoft Corporation
A S 52-week range $23.39~
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 2 3.63 06 +17.3 +19.4 +12.9+13.1 A A 8 CaplncBuA m 58.25 22 $.13.3 +15.0 +9.6+11.4 8 A 8 CpWldGrlA m 44.06 19 +20.7 +25.3 +10.6+13.6 C C C EurPacGrA m 47.70 44 $-15.7 +22.2 +6.9 $-12.9 C C 8 FnlnvA m 5 0.5 1 12 +24.9 +28.7 $-15.1 +15.5 8 C 8 GrthAmA m 43 .61 22 +27.0 +31.5 $-1 5.5 $-15.4 8 C C IncAmerA m 20.31 05 +15.4 +1 7.0 $.1 1.7 $.13.3 8 A A InvCoAmA m 37.46 13 $-25.7 +27.8 $-1 4.4 $-13.9 C D C NewPerspA m37.81 30 +21.0 +26.4 $-1 2.1 $-15.5 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m38.49 19 $-25.2 +26.6 +16.6+14.1 C A C Dodge 8 Cox Income 1 3.64 . . . + 0 . 6 + 0 . 7 + 4.3 +8.6 A 8 8 IntlStk 42.42 -.19 $-22.5 +31.5 +8.7 $-1 5.4A A A Stock 158.00 -.32 +31.1 +35.7 +17.9+16.5 A A A Fidelity Contra 97.83 -.30 + 27.3 +29.9 +15.8+16.1 8 B C GrowCo 121. 73 - .53+30.6 +34.0 +18.7+19.6 A A A LowPriStk d 48.52 -.13+29.0 +34.5 +17.7+20.5 8 B A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 62 .32 -.24+25.3 +27.1 +16.5+15.1 C B 8 FrankTemp-Fraokffo Income C m 2. 41 - .01+11.3 +12.8 +9.8+13.9 A A A IncomeA m 2. 3 9 -. 01 +11.8 +13.5 +10.4+14.5 A A A FrankTemp-Templetoa GIBondAdv 13.10 -.06+1.4 +4.2 +5.3+10.4 A A A Oakmark Intl I 26.72 -.13 $.27.7 +42.3 $.14.3$.20.1 A A A Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20. 91 - .08+21.1 +23.7 +14.0+11.9 E D E RisDivB m 18. 92 - .07+ 20.2 +22.5 +13.0+10.9 E E E RISDivC m 18 . 82 - .08+20.3 +22.7 +13.2+11.1 E D E SmMidValA m42.62 -.16 + 31.5 +36.2 +13.2+16.5 8 E D SmMidValB m35.74 -.13+30.6 +35.0 +12.2+15.5 8 E E PIMCO TotRetA m 1 0 . 90 .. . -1.3 -0.6 +3.3 +7.9 C C 8 T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.48 -.19 $-24.4 + 27.1 $-16.1$-14.5 C B 8 GrowStk 4 9.33 -.28 $-30.6 +34.4 $.17.6$-19.3 A A A HealthSci 58.23 -.39 +41.3 +46.0 +30.6 +25.5 8 A A Vanguard 500Adml 162.14 -.61 +25.3 +27.1 +16.5+15.2 C B 8 500lnv 162.13 -.61 +25.1 +27.0 + 16.4+15.0 C 8 8 CapDp 45.53 -.13 $-35.4 +44.4 $ -17.3$-18.4 A A A Eqlnc 29.41 -.10 $.24.2 +25.3 + 18.3+14.7 D A 8 StratgcEq 28.52 -.08 +33.0 +38.9 + 20.3+18.9 A A 8 TgtRe2020 26.98 -.07 +13.2 +15.5 + 99+120 8 A 8 Tgtet2025 15.63 -.05 +15.0 +17.6 + 10.7+12.6 C 8 C TotBdAdml 1 0 72 . . . -1.2 -1.2 + 2.9 +6.0 D D D Totlntl 16.67 -.08 +13.5 +20.4 + 58+120 D D C TotStlAdm 44.44 -.16 +26.4 +28.9 + 16.9+16.1 8 A A TotStldx 44.42 -.16 +26.3 +28.7 + 16.8+15.9 8 A A USGro 26.85 -.15 +26.3 +30.8 + 16.7+15.7 8 B C Welltn 38.43 -.09 +15.7 +16.8 $ -11.9$-13.3 8 A A FAMILY
PCT 1.9 1.83 1.81 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 1.67 fee. f - front load (satescharges). m - Multiple fees arecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 1.57 redemption fee. Source: Morningstat.
Yelp
YELP
Close:$67.05 V-1.78 or -2.6% Losses widened for the online review site and shares tanked after it announced that it would sell 3.7 million new shares. $80
0 $37.97
Vol341.9m (2.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$51.53 b
P E: .. Yield: ..
AFL Close:$65.02 V-1.98 or -3.0% The insurer was slammed by the falling value of the yen in Japan, where the company does a substantial part of its business. $70 65
A S 52-week range
0
$15.32 ~
$75.37
Volc10.1m (2.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.66 b
Yield:...
P E: . . .
Range Resources
RRC
Close:$77.40L2.76 or 3.7%
The independent energy company beat Wall Street expectations for the third quarter as it grew more efficient and costs fell. $85 80 75
~ A S 0 52-week range $49.17~ $97.00 $91.03 ~ $95.23 Vol.:6.3m (3.3x avg.) P E: 9 . 0 Vol.:5.7m (3.8x avg.) P E: 1 9 3.5 Mkt. Cap:$30.24 b Yiel d : 2.2% Mkt. Cap:$12.65 b Yiel d : 0. 2%
A S 52-week range
0
.0 —
LNKD Close:$224.11 V-23.03 or -9.3% The professional networking service boosted its user base and increased revenue, but turning a profit is still
Electronic Arts EA Close:$26.00%1.87 or 7.7% The video game maker reported a better-than-expected second quarter and raised its full-year earnings fore-
problematic.
cast. $28
Linkedln
$260
26
240
24
220
52-week range
A S 0 52-week range $72.29 ~ $29.73
$94.75~
$257.55
Vol.:8.9m (4.0x avg.) P Mkt. Cap:$21.04 b
E :640.3 Volc12.9m (3.3x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$7.97 b
Buffalo Wild Wings
ewLD
Close:$141.22Lf 1.71 or 9.0% Agrowing base of restaurants, falling costs and a strong outlook grabbed the attention of a lot of investors this quarter. $160 140
PE: 68.4 Yield: ...
Questcor QCOR Close:$60.01 V-9.72 or -13.9% The drugmaker revealed that federal regulators have joined an ongoing investigation, possibly into its promotional practices. $80 70
120 00
A S 52-week range
0 52-week range
$99.72~
$143.90
Vol.:1.6m (5.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.65 b
P E: 44 .0 Vol.:10.4m (5.5x avg.) PE: 1 6 .2 Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$3.6 b Yiel d : 2 . 0 %
$21.53 ~
$74.79
AP
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
-0.01 ... L ... V
L
W
.11
L ~
L V
.15 .17
2-year T-note . 31 . 3 2 -0.01 ~ 5-year T-note 1 .33 1 .32 + 0.01 L
~
T
.28
3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill 5 2-wk T-bill
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.54 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans. Pr i c e-earnings ratio
Market value: $31.9 billion
-.0139
60
34
Operating expenses rose 19 percent to $499 million. Adjusted Funds From Operations increased 24 percent to $367.3 million, from $295.3 million last year FFO is considered a key financial measure for real estate investment trusts like American Tower. It adds back such items as amortization and depreciation to net income. Analysts,on average, expected FFO of 91 cents per share, according to FactSet.
52-WEEK RANGE
1-Y R :11%
GM Close:$37.23L1.1 7 or 3.2% Investors looked past the one-time expenses for the automaker during a strong third quarter in which revenue rose 4 percent. $39 ~
60
: ":"' American Towerprofit slides
American Tower(AMT) Wednesday's close:$80.69
1 Q '13
0
71.44 70 .66 + . 9 2 + 1.3 L L 29.26 2 7. 7 9 -.10 -0.4 W L 15.03 13.97 20 -1.4 w w 8600 83.27 2.68 -3.1 13 1 .43130.50 +.82 +0.6 w L 7.18 5.17 13 -2.5 V V 26.19 25.69 26 -1.0 w L 69.97 66.87 +.25 +0.4 V L 12 0 .20118.00 +.24 $.0.2 L L 18.70 16.21 -.71 -4.2 w L 33 82 28.48 05 -0.2 w w 27.78 24.37 +.17 +0.7 L L 16.03 15 .59 +. 0 6 +0.4 L L 25.98 2 4. 4 7 -.03 -0.1 L L 12.80 12 .54 +.01 . . . w L 43.85 42 .84 -.05 -0.1 w L 5.71 5 .1 3 +.10 +2.0 L L 22.55 17 .01 -.23 -1.3 V V 30.46 29 .78 05 -0.2 w L 23.77 22 .08 04 -0.2 V V 3 6.43 3 5.4 1 -.14 -0.4 W L 76 89 75 .76 -.37 -0 5 L L 6 3.34 60.4 7 +.0 9 +0 .1 L L 46.93 4 3. 4 3 -.32 -0.7 W L 15.32 14 .98 +. 1 8 +1.2 w L 60.0 0 55. 6 0 +. 0 3 +0.1 V L 2.36 2 .0 4 01 -0.5 54.62 45 .40 V V 270.00 253.45 +1.39 +0.6 w L 36.90 34 .90 34 -1.0 V L 32.99 29 .04 08 -03 w L 195.32 188.00 47 -0.2 W L 61.50 58 .90 -.01 w L 81.08 81 .05 +.22 +0.3 L L 8.98 7 .9 2 +.08 +1.0 w 17.48 16 .37 33 -2.0 V L 38.25 37 .36 40 -1.1 w L 23.48 22 .77 13 -0.6 V L 44.79 42 .69 -.41 -1.0 w L 33.24 3 0. 4 2 -.06 -0.2 W L
1.3588+
StoryStocks
Aflac
Dividend Footnotes: 3 Extra - dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid tn tast12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement. t - Sum ct dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. l - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dtvtdend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or patd tttt$ year, 3 cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - tmtiat dividend, annual rate not known, yteld not shown. 7 - Declared cr paid tn precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid tn stock, apprctcmate cash value on ex-dtstrtbutton date.Fe Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss tn last t2 months
$55.68
CAH $60
0
Home Federal Bacp ID HOME 10.33 — o Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~
Nike Inc 8 NordstromIac Nwst NatGas OfficeMax Iac
Making up for losses?
0
-.39 '
Stocks fell Wednesday, pulling the Standard & Poor's 500 index and Dow Jones industrial average down from their record highs set a day earlier. It was the first loss for the S&P 500 in the last five days. Energy stocks had some of the sharpest declines, hurt by the falling price of crude oil. A government report showed that crude supplies in inventory rose more than analysts expected last week. In an expected move, the Federal Reserve also said that it will continue to buy $85 billion in bonds monthly to help support the economy. Many economists expect it hold steady on its stimulus until at least early 2014. General Motors
" M "' " 'j
52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thocs)P/E DIV
3Q ' 1 3
$96.38
Dow jones industrials
NorthwestStocks
I'
3 Q '12
Price-earnings ratio: 1 1
50
SILVER $21.83
14,700
StocksRecap
, ''13
GOLD ~ $1,323.60
.
15,200 .
1,800
M
$90.'62
Operating EPS
S&P 500
'.:
90 80
1 800
1,600
$88.81
XOM
10 YR T NOTE 2.56% ~
1,756.54
1,680 '
The oil and gas giant reports third-quarter results today, following a second quarter in which it reported its lowest quarterly profit in more than three years. $100
+
S&P 500
NASDAQ ~ -10.91
15,545.75
. 03 . 08 .09
.04 .08 .09
10-year T-note 2.56 2.54 30-year T-bond 3.64 3.64
BONDS
W T .72 T W 1.69 W W 2.86
+ 0.02 L ... L
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO IlTRAGO
Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.41 3.41 ... L BondBuyerMuni Idx 5.09 5.09 ... W Barclays USAggregate 2.25 2.24 +0.01 L PRIME FED Barcl ays US High Yield 5.69 5.72 -0.03 w w RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.48 4.47 $0.01 L YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.51 1.50 +0.01 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3 .12 3.12 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities The price of crude fell for the second straight day. A report showed that the amount of oil supplies in inventory rose more last week than industry analysts expected.
Exchange The dollar rose modestly against the euro, British pound and Japanese yen. The Federal Reserve said that it will hold
steady on its stimulus for the
economy, as investors expected.
h5N4 QG
W 2 .54 L 4. 14 W 1. 7 8 6.39 L 3 5. 4
w w
.98 2.74
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 96.38 96.77 - 0.40 + 5 . 0 Ethanol (gal) 1.79 1.80 +0.06 -18.5 Heating Dil (gal) 2.97 2.98 -0.36 -2.5 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.58 3.62 - 1.08 + 6 . 9 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.63 2.65 -0.65 -6.3 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE
CLOSE PVS. 1323.60 1349.00 21.83 22.95 1448.40 1479.90 3.29 3.32 736.25 748.95
%CH. %YTD -1.88 -21.0 -4.85 -27.6 -2.13 -5.9 -0.78 -9.5 - 1.70 + 4 .8
CLOSE 1.35 1.05 4.28
PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.33 + 0.86 + 3 . 5 1.07 -1.36 -26.7 4.30 -0.46 -38.7 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.77 0.78 - 0.85 + 2 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 361.50 364.70 -0.88 -3.3 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.22 1.18 + 2.75 + 4 . 7 Soybeans (bu) 12.80 12.88 -0.56 -9.8 Wheat(bu) 6.75 -1.11 -14.2 6.68
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
Foreign
W W W w W
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6048 +.0030 +.19% 1 .6130 C anadian Dollar 1.0 4 2 1 —.0057 —.55% 1.0002 USD per Euro 1.3588 —.0139 -1.02% 1.2962 —.25 —.25% 79.76 Japanese Yen 98.33 Mexican Peso 13.0 133 + .1009 +.78% 13.0849 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5246 +.0045 +.13% 3.8865 Norwegian Krone 5. 9 508 + .0467 +.78% 5.7025 South African Rand 10.0550 +.1075 +1.07% 8.6633 Swedish Krona 6.47 1 8 +.0654 +1.01% 6.6309 Swiss Franc .9057 +.0059 +.65% .9313 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0572 + .0008 +.08% .9 6 38 Chinese Yuan 6.0947 -.0015 -.02% 6.2382 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7534 -.0002 -.00% 7.7501 Indian Rupee 61.635 +.374 +.61% 5 3.855 Singapore Dollar 1.2416 +.0027 +.22% 1 .2202 South Korean Won 1066.15 +5.26 +.49% 1090.30 Taiwan Dollar 29.45 $-.05 $-.1 7% 2 9 . 23
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder
(aaa.opisnet.com). GASOLINE • Space Age,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend
....$3.26 • Ron's Oil,62980 Highway 97, Bend ....
$3.35 • Chevron,61160 S. Highway 97, Bend....$3.36 • Chevron,1745 N.E. Third St., Bend....$3.40 • Chevron,1095 S.E. Division St.,
Ray's FoodPlacebeginsto sell pharmacies By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
C&K Market Inc., which operates Ray's Food Place, has sold its prescription files from the Bend and Redmond storesto Safeway as partofthe company's effort to close its pharmacies. However, some customers were not aware their prescriptions from Pharmacy Express, the name of Ray's pharmacies in Bend and Redmond, were transferredto Safeway. "Customers that wanted to have their files transferred elsewhere would have needed to let the pharmacy staff at Pharmacy Express know prior to
the last date of operation at the Bend location," Grant Lunde, spokesman for C&K Market, wrote in an email. Based in Brookings, C&K operates 60 grocery stores in Oregon and California under several different names. The company plans to sell its 15 pharmacies — which operated as Pharmacy Express, Tiffany's Drugs and Chetco Pharmacy 8 Gifts — by mid-November to focus on its grocery business, it announced Oct. 21. Some stores, such as the Ray's in La Pine, Prineville and Sisters, did not have pharmacies. According to the news release, "customer prescriptions
will be transferred to the buyers with the goal of making thetransferasseamless as possible." As a general practice, when a pharmacy closes,itsrecords have to go somewhere or customers would have no way to fill their prescriptions, said Jennifer Davis, president of the Oregon State Pharmacy Association. "We want continuity of care," Davis said. "It's a verytypical practice when a pharmacy closes to sell their records to another pharmacy." She said selling the records ensures that customers can get their prescriptions without
having to go back to a physician to obtain another prescription. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, she said, allows medical records to be sharedbetween two medical professionals. It's up to the company that buys the prescription files to notify customers, she sald. Lunde said C&K Market will remove pharmacies from its websites as sales are completed. "We started with 15 pharmacies and nowhave 10that are still open today," he said on Wednesday. — Reporter: 541-61 7-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
Bend....$3.40 • Chevron,3405 N. Highway 97, Bend....$3.40
•Texaco,2409
Income
I,g
Butler Market Road,
Bend....$3.40 • Chevron,1210 S.W. Highway 97,
gap gets
St., Madras....$3.50
linked to depression
• Chevron,398 N.W. Third St.,
ByShan Li
Madras....$3.50 •Texaco,178 S.W. Fourth St.,
Madras....$3.50 • Safeway,80 N.E. Cedar
Prineville....$3.48
Los Angeles Times
• Chevron,2005 S. Highway 97,
Redmond....$3.36 • Chevron,1501 S.W. Highland Ave.,
Redmond....$3.40 DIESEL • Chevron,3405 N. Highway 97, Bend....$3.90
• Chevron,1210 S.W. Highway 97,
Madras....$3.96 • Texaco,178 S.W. Fourth St.,
Madras....$3.96 • Safeway,80 N.E.Cedar St., Madras....$4.06 • Chevron,1501 S.W.
Highland Ave.,Redmond .... $4.00 The Bulletin
BRIEFING EDCO hires
Sisters manager EconomicDevelopment for CentralOregon has hired aformerexecutive of aRedmondcompany to headup economic development in the Sisters
area, theagencyannouncedThursday. Caprielle Foote-Lewis, who is scheduled to start
work Monday,will manage the recruitment of
newcompaniesandhelp existing onesgrow, according to anews release from EDCD.Shewill work
withbusinessownersand government officials in the
Sisters area. Foote-Lewiswasvice president andco-founder of M-PressPackaging Inc., whichmanufactures paperboardproductsfor the food-service industry,
according tothe news release. Shealsohas experience inthe pharmaceutical, medicalresearch and biotech fields.
David Paul Morris/Bloomberg Newsfile photo
Investors are rushing back into shares of the biggest solar panel makers, even before companies have returned to profit across the boards. While the market's looking up, a bit of uncertainty remains.
0 ar Seen oreCOver as er an 0-ComS By Ehren Goossens Bloomberg News
Solar industry manufacturersare rebounding from a two-year slump faster than technology companies recovered from the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s. The benchmark BI Global Large Solar Energy Index of 15 manufacturers, which slumped 87percent from a February 2011 peak through November 2012, has regained 55 percent of its value in the past year. The technology-dominated Nasdaq Composite index reached its post-bubble low in October 2002 and regained 37 percentofitsM arch 2000 peak value in the next year, according to data compiled
by Bloomberg. Suppliers including California's SunPower Corp., which has gained more than fivefold this year, and China's Yingli Green Energy Holding Co. are driving the rally as panel prices stabilize. Installations at power plants and on roofs could swell 40 percent this year from a 6.1 percent pace last year. "The worst is probably behind us," Jenny Chase, lead solar analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance, said. "We've just gone through a
big trough in solar supply." Investors poured $205 billion into clean-energy projects in the past year, soak-
ing up some of the global
Montana to seek oil-spill damages BILLINGS, Mont.
— After twoyears ofreview, Montana and federal officials notified Exxon
Mobil Corp.Thursdaythat they intend to seekdamages for injuries to birds,
fish andother natural resourcesfrom amajor
oversupply of panels. The recovery will continue in 2014 with prices remaining stable, Chase said. Manufacturers are "a lot less depressed." Analysts have become more optimistic about solar shares in recent months. The average rating for SunPower, the biggest U.S. supplier of polysilicon-based solar
panels, is3.5,up from 2.4 Finance. in December and the highThe strongestcompanies est in more than two years, are now selling panels above according to data compiled cost, according to Chase. A by Bloomberg. A 5 rating year ago, more than half the indicates investors should Chinese panel-makers in the purchase the shares, and l Large Solar Energy index means they should sell. reported negative gross JinkoSolar Holding Co., margins. That's a strong sign the only Chinese solar manu- that the industry is starting facturer to report a profit in to turn the corner from the the second quarter, has an av- last two years, when facerage rating tories were of 3.7, up overbuilt. "It'S pretty Cl ear from23in Thetop 10 manufacturOVer gITe laSgnine compiled by ers boosted Bloomberg mOnthS that t»raS totalpanelshow. lts h aV eim p r O Ved production shares have Sf'giffffcpiff/ycapacity 19 morethan percent to 20.6 tmpled this Robert Petrina, managing gtgawatts tn year. director Yingli ofthe Americas Invesyears earlier, tors have according to rushed Bloomberg back into shares of the bigdata. Those factories came gest panel makers, even online as demand waned. before they've returned to Panel installations more than profit. Yingli, which has more doubled from 2009 to 2010. than doubled, is forecast to The pace slowed to 58 percent report narrowed losses comin 2011, and then slumped to pared with 2012. Canadian 6.1 percent last year. Solar lnc., which has risen Some of the "illogical elealmost sevenfold, is forecast ments of the market" have to return to a profit of $27 disappeared, Chase said. million from a $195 million Demand is climbing in loss in 2012. Japan, where the country "It's pretty clear over the is promoting wider use of last nine months that things renewableenergy instead of have improved significantly," nuclear power, and China, Robert Petrina, Yingli's man- where the government exaging director for the Ameripects its installed capacity cas, said. to double this year. The two Yingli, based in Baoding, countries will be the top solar China, was the biggest panel markets this year, according maker last year, based on to New Energy Finance. 2.3 gigawatts of shipments. The solar slump had casuThe company expects that alties, driving more than two figure to increase as much dozen manufacturers into as 43 percent this year. The bankruptcy, and some comglobal photovoltaic industry panies are still struggling, may install as much as 42.7 said Chase. "I don't think we're out of gigawatts of panels this year, 40 percent more than in 2012, the woods. There may still be according to New Energy some bankruptcies,she " said.
Women who live in states with the greatest income gaps are at higher risk ofdepression, according to a recent study. Living in states with a vast divide between the wealthy
and poor makes people, especially women, more aware of their own financial circumstances and frustrated at being unable to keep up, according to a study published in the Jour-
nal of Epidemiology and Community Health. Roman Pabayo, co-author of the study and a researcher at Harvard University's School of Public Health, said that team members studied data from a national mental health report, combining it with their own calculations on income gaps in the 50 states. The study found that women living in areas such as Washington, D.C., with a yawning gap between the haves and the have-nots, are almost twice as likelyto sufferfrom depression, compared with those residing in more equitable states such as Alaska. The report comes at a time of increased focus on the vast divide between the rich and poor in America. The gap between the wealthiest l percent and the rest of the country is at its widest since 1928, according to economists at University of California-Berkeley, Oxford University and the Paris School of Economics, who analyzed data from the Internal Revenue Service. Robert Shiller, a professor at Yale University, who was one of three Americans to win this year's Nobel Prize in economics, said that economic inequality in the U.S. and around the world is a huge problem. Part of the growing divide can be attributed to stagnant incomes. Many American workers saw no increase in pay during the recession and its aftermath. When adjusted for inflation, the median household income lastyear was 8.3 percentlower than in 2007, according to the Census Bureau. There also are vast differences in income, depending on whatcity a person resides. Accordingtoresearch from 2 4/7 Wall Street, areas such as Washington, D.C., and San Jose, Calif., ranked at the top for highest median incomes among metropolitan areas. At the verybottom were areas such as Brownsville, Texas, and Dalton, Ga.
crude oil spill into the Yel-
lowstone River. The Texascompany's
DISPATCHES
12-inch Silvertip pipeline
broke nearLaurel during flooding in July 2011, releasing 63,000 gallons of
oil that washedupalong an 85-mile stretch of the
scenic river. — Fromstaffand wire reports
• The Broker Networkwill celebrate its grand opening from 4-7 p.m. Wednesday.ThePortland-based real estate company's Bendoffice is located at 505 N.W.Franklin Ave. • Bamboo Salon andSpawill celebrate its grand opening on Thursdayfrom
4-7 p.m. Located at405 N.E.Third St. • John L. Scott Real Estatehas announced acomplete redesign of its website, www.johnlscott.com, andthe addition of personal websitesfor each of its agents inWashington, Oregonand Idaho.
• Hopscotch Kids,1303 N.W. Galveston Ave., will celebrate its grand opening this weekend,and it includes a fundraiser for CascadeMiddleSchool, along with other activities. Hours: 10 a.m.-9 p.m. today, 10a.m. -6 p.m. Saturday and 11a.m.-4 p.m Sunday.
• Bend Research Inc.,a division of Capsugel' sDosageForm Solutions,has announced theaddition of Capsugel technologyto its drug development process. This technology will help Bend Research's oral and inhalation product development.
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TUESDAY • Obamacare, How It ImpactsYouas an Individual andBusiness Owner:Learn about the Affordable CareAct; registration requested; free; 4-5 p.m.; Boston's, 61276 S. U.S. Highway97,Suite 140, Bend; 541-389-1058; Central OregonBuilders Association, gretchenp@ coba.org or www.coba.org. • What's Brew>ng tnYour Community?Looking ThroughtheGlass: Mirror Pond's Future; panel discussion; registration required; 5 p.m.Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY • Risk Management Association:What is Shaping Today'sCredit Policy; topics include changing credit policy, increasing regulation and industry consolidation registration required; $35 for an individual, $375 for a corporate table sponsorship (seats 8); $5 from each ticket donated to Neighborlmpact; canned foodcontributions accepted; 7a.m. Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-7437 or www. bendchamber.org. • Women'sRoundtable Series:BendChamber of Commerce; registration required; 5:30 p.m.; Whispering Winds, 2920 Conners Ave.,Bend; 541-312-9690 or www. bendchamber.org. • iOS AppDevelopment3 - GameDevelopment:Last class in theseries; build games, learn animation, graphic elementsand troubleshooting; advanced knowledge ofXcodeand Objective-C or iOS App II; registration required; $179; Wednesdays through Nov. 20, 6-9 p.m.;Central Oregon Community College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • LaunchYourBusiness: COCC'sSmall Business DevelopmentCenteroffers this course for local startup companies; helps business owners get started and develop aworking plan; four one-hour coaching sessions withWednesday evening classesfrom Nov. 6 to Dec. 4;pre-registration required; $119;6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • OregonAlcohol Server Permit training:Meets Oregon Liquor Control Commission minimum requirements to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9a.m.; RoundTable Pizza, 1552 N.E.Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining.com. • OregonGeothermal WorkingGroup:Discussion of geothermal projects, power plant development, state and federal regulatory agenciesand aroundtable session; open tothe public; 9 a.m.; TheEnvironmental Center, 16N.W.Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908. • General Certificatein Brewing information session:Learnabout this new exampreparation course to earn the lnstitute of Brewing andDistilling General Certificate in Brewing (GCB);registration required; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. NOV. 12 • Membership101Driving YourMembership: Connect with newmembers and reconnect with current members of the Bend Chamber ofCommerce; registration required; free; 10 a.m.; 777 NWWall St., Suite 200; 541-382-3221, shelley@bendchamber.org or www.bendchamber.org/ • Closing theDeal:Youare inthe Door,NowWhat? Learn to improvesales, build trust, credibility and authority; registration requested; $20 orfree for Central OregonBuilders Association members; 1-3 p.m.; COBA,1051N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-3891058, gretchenp@coba.org or www.coba.org. Twitter forBusiness:Learn how small-to-medium sized businessesusethe social media site Twitter to market and advertise; registration required; $49; 1-4 p.m.; COCC,2600 N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270.
Forthe complete calendar, pickup Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbu//etin.corn/bizca/
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > 50-Plus, D2 Parents a Kids, D3 Pets, D4 THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/allages
BRIEFING
BOOMER CULTURE
GOOD QUESTION
How will the health care law affect Medicare?
Class offered on dehavior issues The Central Oregon Disability Support Net-
work is offering a free training for parents of children with behavioral issues Nov. 13-14 in Bend. The training will focus on implementing the
principles of positive behavior supportand intervention. It is meant for parents or family
members who want to better supporta child with behavior issues, or with a child who has
Editor's Note:Good Question is a recurring feature in which a local expert in a particular field answers a question related to families and aging. Have a question? Send it to mmclean@bendbulletin. com.
a formal behavior support plan at home or at
school. Participants will learn how to improve interac-
~r
tions, how to prevent a crisis, how to protect
yoyg
themselves andothers
By Mac McLean
in acrisis situation and the theory and practice of positive behavior
The Bulletin
Q
supports, according to an announcement from CODSN.
The classes will take place from 9:30 a.m.
Photos by Rob Kerr i The Bulletin
Singer-songwriter Bill Valenti, 64, sings "The No Good Blankety-Blank Chemotherapy Blues" in his room at St. Charles Bend.
to 2 p.m. both days at the Deschutes County
A
Services Building, 1300 N.W. Wall St. To register: Contact Michelle Townsend, 541-322-7551.
Thanksgiving at Jake's Diner
OF
Jake's Diner is taking reservations for its annual Thanksgiving meal for seniors, which
provides a warmmeal and entertainment to
any senior who doesnot have family nearby and may otherwise miss out on the holiday celebration.
Relying on help from the Central Oregon
Council on Aging and an army of volunteers, the diner's staff will
serve a Thanksgiving meal to seniors in need
every hour on the hour from noon until 5 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 28. The event will
feature performances by local musicians who are volunteering their
services as well. Cost is $8. Transportation will be provided to the diner, which is located at 2210 N.E. IJ.S. Highway 20 in Bend, for anyone
who needsa ride, and volunteers will deliver a meal to any senior who cannot or does not want to leave his or her home.
To reserve aspot call Jake's Diner at 541-3820118.
Survey: Financial future looks grim About 48 percent of middle-class Americans do not think they will
have enough money to enjoy a comfortable retirement, according
to a survey released last week by the Wells Fargo Institutional Retirement
• How will the Af• fordable Care Act, which launched its first online health insurance marketplaces earlier this month, affect my Medicare benefits'? • Stephanie Magill is • the regional spokesperson for the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services' Region 10 office in Seattle. This office serves as the main point of contact for any resident of Alaska, Idaho, Oregon or Washington who has an issue with Medicare coverage. Commonly known as Obamacare, the Affordable Care Act set up a series of online marketplaces, such as Cover Oregon, earlier this month that give people who do not have health insurance a place to shop for an affordableplan. It is a completely different program than Medicare — which provides health insurance benefits to people who are 65 or older or meet certain other conditions — even though both
• Manyboomerscontinue the musical tradition they were a part of in the '60s
Michael Fun-
ke organizes
By Mac McLean
CDs featuring some of the protest songs he plays on his KPOV radio show"The Radical's
dt
The Bulletin
eated in a hospital bed with the tube from an intravenous drip bag running into his left arm, Bill Valenti grabbed his guitar and started playing a few verses from his latest song — "The NoGood Blankety-BlankChemotherapy Blues" — to break the silence. "The news sent me reeling, I can't describe the feeling, when the 'Big C' stepped into my way," the 64-year-old mu"(This song is) an expression of what sician sang while a group of nurses doing their rounds at St. Charles Bend listened I ' v e been going through," said Valenti, a to his impromptu performance. baby boomer who is continuing his genBack in September, Valeneration's love for protest music ti's doctor's told him his non- ~ S e e vjdep pf by penning songs about politiHodgkin lymphoma metasta- ~ Bll l Valentl calandotherissues. sized into triPle-hit lymPhoma Every generation has musierfprmjn hjs rptest — a rather aggressive form of musjc atbsndbuIts)jn cians who exPresstheir ideas blood cancer — and prescribed cp~/ppp$sgtssngs and experiences through song. four months of chemotherapy These musical compositions before he gets a bone marrow fall into the category of protransplant this winter. test songs, said Bend community radio Valenti wrote "Chemotherapy Blues" D J M ichael Funke, when they focus on an to describe this experience and how his i s sue or the musician thinks needs to be doctors said their "aim is to kill all the a d d ressed. "There will always be musicians who bad stuff (in his body with the toxins contained his his drip bags) without killin' a r e a w areoftheworldaroundthem,"said you." Funke, who features protest or political
Songbook." Protest songs remain popu-
lar among many baby boomers. music on his KPOV radio show. "And when they see (stuff they don't like), they feel compelled to write songs about it." Some people argue protest music had a golden age during the 1960s, when the baby boomers — the generation born between 1946 and 1964 — transitioned from adolescence to adulthood at a time that was bookended by the civil rights movement and the Vietnam War. B ut other people argue that w r i t ing protest or political songs is part of a greater tradition of music that started long before songs written by Bob Dylan, Pete Yarrow, Joe McDonald and John Lennon dominated the airwaves, and continues today. See Protest/D2
programs have open enrollment periods that overlap
(see "Sign up for Coverage" on Page D2). But this separation doesn't mean the two programs do not interact, Magill said. "The Affordable Care Act has changed the Medicare program forthe better,"Magill said, listing ways Medicare has changed since the Affordable Care Act became law in 2010. Many of these changes have already occurred, she said. Magill said one of the biggest changes the Affordable Care Act brought to the Medicare program is that it increased the number and type of preventive health care screenings people who have Medicare Part B coverage can get for free. These tests include a bone mass measurement, cholesterol screenings, diabetes screenings, flu shots, mammograms and tests for cervical, colorectal and prostate cancers. See Medicare /D2
and Trust financial services division. Based on interviews conducted with 1,000
middle-class people between the agesof 25 and 75, the survey found that only 29
percent ofthe people in this economic bracket have a written plan for
their retirement, and only13 percent of them consider saving for their retirement to be a finan-
cial priority like paying their bills.
The survey also found 34 percent of
the population expects to work until they are at least 80 years old
becausethey haven't saved enough money to retire. — From staff reports
Saving for college from dayone By Pamela Knudson Grand Forks Herald
GRAND FORKS, N.D. — The last thing on Christian Klenner's mind is whether he has enough money to pay for college, but it's one of the first things his parents thought about when he was born. Christian, 13 months, already has a bank account that
tops $1,500. For their only child, Rob and Anita Klenner of Grand Forks, N.D., plan to grow that fund, so he'll have the money he needs when he's ready to go to college. They enrolled in Children FIRST, a program that encourages parents — and
FAMILY LIFE others who want to contribute — to start saving early. "We started putting money away right when he was born," said Rob. "You've got to start saving now so he'll be debt-free when he finishes
college." "I want him to have a good future," Anita said. "It's best to save now, so we don't have a
big chunk (to pay) at the end." "I want him to have his own account, so we don't spend it," she said. For many parents, rising college costs present a serious
concern. The average cost of a four-year education is about $22,000 per year, according to Sandy Botkin, professor of accounting and taxation at the University of Maryland. The average cost of tuition continues to rise at a rate of 4.5 percent at private schools and 83 percent at public schools. Rob is putting $10 each week into Christian's account, plus small, unexpected checks. He has no specific goal, he said. "I'm still trying to figure that out." At some point, Rob may need to increase that weekly contribution, he said. SeeCollege /D3
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John Stennes i Grand Forks Herald
Thirteen-month-old Christian Kenner, of Grand Forks, N.D., already has more than $1,500 saved for college. His parents, Anita and Rob Kenner, started saving when he was born.
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
Email information for the Activities Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulietin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
0-PLUS
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ACTIVITIES CALENDAR
FRIDAY BEND KNIT-UP:$2; 10 a.m.-noon; Rosie Bareis Community Campus, 1010 N.W. 14th St.; 541-728-0050. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;Golden AgeClub,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post ¹44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
SATURDAY BEND SKICLUB:Ski season kickoff party; free, registration requested by Nov. 1; 6-9 p.m.; Anthony's at the Old Mill, 475 S.W. Powerhouse Drive; 678-333-5767 or www.bend skiclub.info.
SUNDAY BINGO:12:30p.m.; American Legion Post¹44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-5p.m.;GoldenAgeClub,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
NOTABLES SWING BAND:Featuring blues, Latin, rock-n-roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541728-8743 or www.notablesswing band.com.
MONDAY THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Double deckpinochle;noon-3 p.m.;Golden Age Club, 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. CRIBBAGE CLUB: Newcomers welcome; 6-8:30 p.m.;Elks Lodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-317-9022. SCOTTISH COUNTRYDANCE CLASSES:Noexperience or partner necessary; $5, first class free; 7-9 p.m.; Sons of Norway Hall, 549 N.W. Harmon Blvd., Bend; 541-923-7531.
TUESDAY LA PINECHAMBER TOASTMASTERS:8-9a.m.;Gordy's Truck Stop, 17045 Whitney Rd.; 541-771-9177.
HIGHNOONERS TOASTMASTERS: Classroom D; noon-1 p.m.; New Hope Evangelical Church, 20080 S.W. Pinebrook Blvd., Bend; 541-382-6804. BEND GENEALOGICALSOCIETY'S "FIRSTTUESDAY MENTORING PROGRAM":One-on-one mentoring and research help for beginning genealogists; free, registration requested; 6-8 p.m.; Williamson Hall (behind Jake's Diner), RockArbor Villa, 2200 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541317-9553 or www.orgenweb. org/deschutes/bend-gs. BEND KNIT-UP:6-8 p.m.; Gossamer, 550 S.W. Industrial Way; 541-728-0050.
WEDNESDAY BEND CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: noon-1 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave.; 541-383-2581. KIWANISCLUB OF REDMOND: Noon-1 p.m.; Juniper Golf Course, 1938 S.W. Elkhorn Ave.; 541-548-
(
8198 or www.redmondkiwanis.org. REDMOND AREATOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; Ray's Food Place, 900 S.W. 23rd St.; 541-905-0841. PRIME TIMETOASTMASTERS: 12:05-1 p.m.; Home Federal Bank, 555 N.W. 3rd St., Prineville; 541-447-6929. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;GoldenAge Club,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post ¹44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
Ms;,
Jim Fitzgerald The Associated Press
THURSDAY THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;GoldenAge Club,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. COMMUNITY HEALINGNIGHT: Canned food drive; 5-7 p.m.; Shilo Inn Suites Hotel, 3105 D.B. Riley Road, Bend; 541-389-1159. COMMUNICATORS PLUS TOASTMASTERS:6:30-7:45 p.m.; IHDP, 30 N.E. Bend River Mall Drive, Bend; 541-388-6146, ext. 2011.
Robb Kushner, center, talks with Alicia Evans during a Death Cafe discussion in a New York City apartment. At rear are Marjorie Lipari, left, and discussion leader Jane Hughes Gignoux.
At these coffee klatches, death
is on the agenda By Jim Fitzgerald
Florida, New Y ork, O hio, Oregon, Pennsylvania and NEW YORK — It can be Washington. tough to get a conversation At a re c ent t w o -hour going if you want to t alk Death Cafe shepherded by about the late stages of de- Gignoux, six p a r ticipants, mentia, your last will and most in their 60s, talked eastestament or the recent pass- ily over tea and biscotti. ing of your mother. Kathryn Janus, 66, noted "When you're at a cock- that death involves "a lot of tail party and you lead off by 'why?' Why did a 12-yearsaying, 'What do you think old with leukemia die? Why about death?' it'll be, 'C'mon, did a cat get run over?" man, it's a party! Chill out!' Marjorie Lipari, 68, talked says Len Belzer, a retired ra- about the death of her twin dio host from Manhattan. brother 16 years ago. "What does one do with Belzer is among a growing number of people around that kind of hole?" she asked. the world who are interested "It never occurred to me he enough in death to gather wouldn't be with me for my in small groups in homes, whole life." restaurants and churches to Robb Kushner, 62, distalk about it. cussed the differences beThe gatherings, known as tween Christian and Jewish Death Cafes, provide places funerals he'd been to, noting w here death can b e d i s - the open casket at a Methodcussed comfortably, without ist wake. Alicia Evans, in her fear of violating taboos or be- 40s, then told the tale of a man ing mocked for bringing up known to be a bit "scruffy" in the subject. life who was nicely tidied up Organizers say there's no by the embalmer. eHe looked so good in the agenda other than getting a conversation started — and coffin I wanted to give him that talking about death can my number," she said, crackhelp peoplebecome more ing up the group. comfortable w it h i t and Janus said afterward, "I thereby enrich their lives. like that we laugh." But Li" Most p e ople w a l k i ng pari said she wasn't sure down the street, they're ter- she would ever be entirely at rified of death," said Jane ease about death. "My ego is going to be opHughes Gignoux, 83, an author who leads Death Cafe posed to death because that's gatherings at her Manhattan ego's job," she said. "My goal apartment. "But if you think is to b ecome comfortable of death as part of life and let with being u ncomfortable go of the fear, you think more about death." about living your life well." Other subjects commonly J on U n d erwood, w h o brought up at Death Cafes organized the f irst D eath range from financial planCafe in London two years ning to suicide. They include ago, said he was inspired by cremation, memorial s e rdeath discussionspioneered vices, loved ones' last moby Bernard Crettaz, a Swiss ments and the possibility of sociologist. The first Death an afterlife. Cafe in the U.S. was held in Underwood and other orColumbus, Ohio, last year, ganizers emphasize that the and "It's just kind of snow- discussions are not meant to balled," he said, estimating be counseling. "There's no nearly 300 Death Cafes have guest speaker, no materials, been held in the U.S., Brit- because we're not guiding ain, Canada, Australia, New people to any conclusions." Zealand, Italy, Portugal, BraAnd while th e sessions zil and Singapore. attract a wide range of reliOne was held at a Geor- gions, races and ages, orgagia cemetery.Sessions are nizers notethere are more scheduled this week alone people 50 and above than in in C a l i fornia, C o l orado, their 20s. The Associated Press
Protest Continued from D1 "All communitieshavesongs that are political," said Loren Kajikawa, a professor with the University of Oregon's School of Musicwho teaches a course on political and protest music. But while the idea of writing protest songs is universal and timeless, he said baby boomers often gravitate back to the music of the 1960s because "every generation looks back on the things that were important to them when they were
growing up."
The'60s Funke said the very act of listening to rock 'n' roll during the early to mid-1950s and 1960s was considered to be an act of protestbecause the genre brought black artists and white artists together and gave them the chance to perform in front of a mixed audience. "That freaked a lot of people out," said Funke, who also remembers how listening to the music that came out during that time period was a social activity in itself. "When the Rolling Stones came out with a new album, my friends and I would get together, listen to it, and then we would talk about it." Funke said the energy and the structures that embodied his generation's early experiences in music created the perfect environment for the political music that made the soundtrack for a decade when people challenged the status quo and the values that had been handed to them. "When you think of protest music the natural thing is to think of the folk music that came from the 1960s," Funke said, listing off songs including Bob Dylan's "Masters of War," Country Joe and the Fish's "Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag," and Pete Seeger's version of "We Shall Overcome," all of which reached what Funke called an anthem status because of their subject nature and timing. But like Kajikawa, he also noted these songs — which people often sang while they were taking part in one of the thousands ofprotest marches or demonstrations that took place in that decade — were nothing new and that protest
Rob KerriThe Bulletin
With the tube to an IV bag draped over his left shoulder, Bill Valenti shows off a T-shirt that explains the call he feels to write protest songs andencourages others to do the same.
"Songs have their own life and they take on their own tradition. There are some songs that have transcended the decades and never goneaway."
years ago and has since written about 70 songs, most of w hich have to do w it h t h e wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the financial collapse and other political themes. "The trick to writing a good protest song is that it has to be both topical and universal," he said, explaining that one song he wrote about Mitt Romney's "47 percent"remark flopped because it was about a very specific instance in time, while songs like "Souplines" remain relevantbecause they're about a broader topic people could relate to and will continue to relate to no matter what the era is. Valenti said t h e O c cupy movement is one of the biggest inspirations and audiences for his music, and along with several other musicians he has organized a few concertsto help the movement's activists raise money and spread their
— Loren Kajikawa, professor, message. University of Oregon School of Music But he said that while today's protest songs may have the same spirit and passion m usic didn't start w it h t h e starts playing a few bars of that came out of the 1960s, "Souplines," a song he wrote they aren't nearly as much of a 1960s nor did it end there. Using the last song Funke that talks about the camara- part of popular culture as the mentioned as an example, Ka- derie people feel after having protest songs he listened to jikawa said "We Shall Over- lost their savings, and in some while growing up. come" started out as a black cases their homes, during the He said one of the biggest spiritual that expressed the financial crisis that erupted in reasonsfor this is the number stress and p ai n a ssociated 2008. of independent radio stations with slavery. Before it resurBehind what seems to be that played protest or political faced in the civil rights move- a happy-go-lucky message songs has decreased signifiment, he said, the song was of the song's verses — where cantly since the 1960s. adopted by labor organizers Valenti sings about how "you To make matters worse, Valand sympathizers during the meet such nice folks in the enti said, these stations have pro-union movements of the soup lines, they're all having been replacedwith corporate, 1930s and 1940s. such a good time" and tries to commercial music radio sta"Songs have their own life paint a happy face on the peo- tions that seem to be focused and they take on their own ple who are newly destitute on playing pop music more tradition," he said, explain- and yet "still smiling through than anything else. "The music industry isn't ing many people who write it all" — is a bit of sarcasm that p rotest songs often pick a tips the listener off that Valsuper-interested in playing poprevious generation's music enti's not exactly happy about litical music," said Kajikawa, and adjust it to fit their times. the way things turned out. who agreed w it h V a lenti's "There are some songs that He's a little more blunt with arguments about the rise of have transcended the decades "Throw Them in Jail," a song commercial radio stations. and never gone away." Valenti said during one perforBut he also said the InterAnother example of this tra- mance was about "Wall Street net has created a place where dition, he added, is 1931 union bankers and what we should people can listen to and share anthem "Which Side Are You do with them." music, and that makes today's On" that has since been covValenti spent a few years artists less reliant on the radio ered by a n u mber of musi- playing music as a busker on as a means to get their mescians including Rebel Diaz, the streets of Paris during the sages out. a hip-hop trio that re-mixed 1960s, and as a result became He seesthe development of the song in 2007 and used it quite familiar with the protest this new medium as just part to challenge anti-immigration songs of that era and how peo- of the evolution protest and bills in Texas. ple reacted to them. political music has made that He took a break from song- will continue for decades to Continuing the tradition writing to focus on his career, come. Back in his hospital room, but found a calling when the — Reporter:541-617-7816, Valenti adjusts his guitar and financial crisis hit about five mmclean@bendbulletin.com
r iVf Signingup for coverage Cover Oregon, ahealth insurance marketplace set up by the Affordable Care Act, and Medicare are both having their
open enrollment periods this month. Here is whatyou need to know if you want to sign up for the health insurance benefits that best fit your
needs: COVER OREGON • Provides a place where people whodo nothavehealth insurance or arenot yet eligible
855-268-3767.
MEDIGARE • Provides health insurance benefits to people who are 65 or older, have received Social Security disability benefits
for two years or who have end-stage renal disease. Basic Medicare is free for most people, but there is a
charge for expandedservices such as Medicare Part Band prescription drug coverage. • Open enrollment for Medicare started Oct. 15 and runs until
Dec. 7. • For more information, visit
for Medicare can find an
www.medicare.gov or call the insurance plan federal Medicare program at • Open enrollment for Cover 1-800-MEDICARE if you need Oregon started Oct.1 and runs general Medicare information until March 31. • For more information, visit
www.coveroregon.com or call
or the program's Region 10 office at 206-615-2354 if you
have a specific question.
Authentic Taste of Mexieo Since 1997
Medicare
pocket costs a person who has a Medicare Advantage Continued from D1 plan can incur and started a She said Medicare also process that will eliminate the gives its b eneficiaries one "doughnut hole" some benefifree wellness visit each year ciaries encounter with their after they have the "Welcome prescription dru g c overage to Medicare" doctor's ap- by 2020. pointment that comes when — Reporter: 541-617-7816, they first sign up for their covmmcleanCtbendbulletin.com erage. It extended the amount of time beneficiaries are eligible to receive this free introductory visit from six months after they enroll to a year, provided them with access to free health and nutrition classes if they have diabetes and gave them the ability to get free tobacco cessation counseling if they do not a lready suffer from a s m oking-related ailment. B ecause of t h e A f f o r dable Care Act, she said, the Medicare program has also capped the amount of out-of-
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013• THE BULLETIN
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PARENTS 4 ICIDS MR. DAD
FAMILY CALENDAR folk and bluegrass bands, with a chili feed and silent auction; proceeds benefitthe center's Feed FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: the Hungry Program; $15, free for Event includes art exhibit openings, children 12 and younger; 1-9 p.m.; artist talks, live music, wine and Bend's Community Center, 1036 food indowntown Bend and the N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; www.bendscommunitycenter.org. throughout Bend. KNOW SWEAT:SWEAT LODGES: COLUMBIA RIVERCIRCUIT Learn how sweat lodges are a time FINALS RODEO: Top cowboys for cleansing and purifying by in the Northwest compete in Sweet Medicine Nation, founder bareback, saddle back, roping, and president of Four Winds bull riding, barrel racing and Foundation; free; 2 p.m.; East Bend more; tickets available at Big R in Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Redmond, Boot Barn in Bend and Road; 541-312-1032 or www. Prineville Men's Wear; $15, $10 deschuteslibrary.org. for Saturday daytime; 5:30 p.m.; DAY OFTHEDEAD: Featuring Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Latino arts and crafts, music and Center, Hooker Creek Event Center, refreshments; proceeds benefit 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; Recursos; $5-$10 suggested 888-849-2723. donation; 4-8 p.m.; Liberty Theater, THE SCARE GROUNDS: A haunted 849 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-390house;recommended only forages 12 and older; $12 for one haunt, $20 6213 or greg@causaoregon.org. for two haunts, $25 for three haunts; KNOW SWEAT:LAVA CITY ROLLER DOLLS: W atchtwo 7 p.m.,gatesopen at6:30 p.m .;old home roller derby teams bout Parr Lumber buildings, 443 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-548- at the Deschutes Public Library appreciation night; show your 4755 or www.scaremegood.com. library card for a $2 discount; $10 in advance, $12 at the door; 4:30 SATURDAY p.m. for junior derby, doors open 4 p.m., adultderby 6 p.m.;Cascade VFW BREAKFAST: A breakfast Indoor Sports, 20775 High Desert of pancakes, eggs, sausage or Lane, Bend; 541-312-1032 or ham; $8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFW www.deschuteslibrary.org. Hall,1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. COLUMBIA RIVERCIRCUIT FINALS RODEO: Top cowboys EXCEPTIONALRODEO:A rodeo in the Northwest compete in for participants with mental or bareback, saddle back, roping, physical disabilities; free; 9-10:30 bull riding, barrel racing and a.m.; Deschutes County Fair& Expo more; tickets available at Big R in Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond, Boot Barn in Bend and Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www. Prineville Men's Wear; $15, $10 rascalrodeo.org. for Saturday daytime; 5:30 p.m.; LORD'S ACREDAY:The 67th Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo annual event features a craft Center, Hooker Creek Event Center, sale, baked goods,live m usic,a 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; barbecue dinner, an auction, 10K 888-849-2723. run, 5K walk and more; proceeds PAMELAMORTENSEN:The benefit Powell Butte Christian Seattle-based didgeridoo musician Church projects; free admission, performs, with Dave Goodman; $10 barbecue, $15 in advance $15 suggested donation; 6 p.m.; or $20 day of event to race; 7:30 Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 a.m. registration, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541events; Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 S.W. State Highway 330-0334 or www.hawthorncenter. com. 126; 541-548-3066 or www. powellbuttechurch.com. TRIAGE:The comedy improvisational troupe performs; ART PARTY:View and purchase $5; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; works from a variety of artists; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. a portion of proceeds benefits Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389St. Charles Foundation's Sara's 0803 or www.cascadestheatrical. Project, a breast cancer prevention org. and awareness organization; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; RISE UPHALLOWEENPARTY: Harkness-Williams home, 1 Beech Featuring a costume contest, Lane, Sunriver; 541-788-2486 or hauntedhouse and live musicby sunriversister©yahoo.com. Mosley Wotta, The HardChords and more; $5; 9 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: Featuring ceramic demonstrations, 903 S.E. Armour Road, Bend; 541-389-7047. potter booths with pieces for sale, children's area, raffle and more, hosted by the Clay Guild SUNDAY of the Cascades; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Highland Magnet WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: School, 701 N.W. Newport Ave., Featuring ceramic demonstrations, Bend; 541-279-0343 or www. potter booths with pieces for clayguildofthecascades.com. sale, children's area, raffle and COLUMBIA RIVERCIRCUIT FINALS more, hosted by the Clay Guild of the Cascades; free admission; RODEO:Top cowboys in the 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Highland Magnet Northwest compete in bareback, School, 701 N.W. Newport Ave., saddle back, roping, bull riding, Bend; 541-279-0343 or www. barrel racing and more; tickets clayguildofthecascades.com. available at Big R in Redmond, Boot Barn in Bend and Prineville CRANKSGIVINGBICYCLERIDE: Men's Wear; $15, $10for Saturday A scavenger hunt and race on daytime;1 p.m.; Deschutes County bicycles to purchase food items Fair 8 Expo Center, Hooker Creek for the Bethlehem Inn, followed by Event Center, 3800 S.W. Airport an awards ceremony; $20 for food Way, Redmond; 888-849-2723. donations; 11 a.m., registration at10 HOEDOWN FOR HUNGER: a.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Performances by local Americana, Century Drive, Bend; 541-322-8768
or www.bethleheminn.org.
TODAY
MONDAY "LED ZEPPLIN:CELEBRATION DAY LIVEFROM LONDON 2007": A screening of the concert film; $12 general admission, $48 club pass, plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.
TUESDAY GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT:A screening of the film "Chasing Ice" about the story of disappearing arctic glaciers through time-lapse photography; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. NATIVEAMERICAN STORIES AT FAMILY FEST:Rosemary Charley of the Warm Springs Reservation will present stories and activities of her heritage; free; 6:30-7:30 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-4477978 or www.crooklib.org. AN EVENINGOF EMPOWERMENT: A fundraiser featuring empowering speakers and live music; proceeds benefit Sparrow Club, Family Access Network and Kids in the Game; $35, $20 students 16 and younger, plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.
WEDNESDAY HIGH DESERT PERSPECTIVES: A screening of "The Oregon Story: Ranching," an Oregon Public Broadcasting documentary on the past, present and future of ranching; free for members, $3 for nonmembers, reservation requested; 6 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. GEOCACHINGINSPACE:W atcha rocket launch followed by a possible experience in geocaching; free, registration requested; 7:30-8:30 p.m.; Base Camp Pizza, 806011th St., Terrebonne; 541-450-9776 or www.geocaching.com.
"HONOR FLIGHT":A screening of the documentary about four living World War II veterans and a Midwest community coming together to give them the trip of a lifetime; $10, free for WWII veterans and spouses; 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-610-8683 or www. bendheroes.org. "FREE TOBE.. YOUANDME": Music and drama students present songs, storiesand comedy sketches to encourage children to accept and celebrate diversity; $5; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:15 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-335-4401. RISING STARCREATIVE WRITING COMPETITIONAWARDS CEREMONY:Honoring emerging writers ages15 and older in various genres with a lecture by guest author Karen Finneyfrock; free; 7-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend;541383-7700 or www.2013natureofwor dsfestival.eventbrite.com.
and libraryyouth events
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2690 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242 • ONCE UPON ASTORYTIME: All ages; 11 a.m. Friday. I
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19530 Amber MeadowDrive, Bend; 541-388-1188 • STORY TIME: All ages; 11 a.m. Thursday. 'll
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175 S.W. MeadowLakesDrive, Prineville; 541-447-7978 • PRESCHOOL STORYTIME:Ages 3and older; 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and 11a.m.Thursday. • WEEREAD:Ages 0-3;10a.m. Mondayand Wednesday. I I
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WednesdayandThursday;$15 perchild nonmembers, $10 per child members. • TOTALLYTOUCHABLETALES: Ages 2-5; storytelling about animals andpeople of the High Desert; 10:30 a.m. Tuesday. • THE PLAYSPACE:Ages 2-5; creative play and learning; 10 a.m.-2 p.m. weekdays; $5 for one child, $3 for additional child and museum admission for adults. I
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enced stress caused by factors such as divorce, the death of a • The ongoing financial partner, or having problems • c risis h as b e en r e at work (many of which are ally hard on my family. We money related), were as much haven't had a family vacation as 20 percent more likely to in several years, we had to developAlzheimer's or other get rid of one of our cars, and forms of dementia up to 40 my husband and I a l ways years later. The greater the seem to be getting angry at number of stressful events, each otheror atour children. the higher the dementia risk. It's pretty obvious that all Stress over finances can the stress about money has make you s t upider, studaffected us emotionally, but ies indicate. Researchers in could it be affecting us physi- the U.S. and England found cally too? that people who are worried . Absolutely. Stress can about money tend to make . damage your immune more bad decisions — such system, making your more as taking on too much debt susceptible to getting sick. — than those who aren't as It increases the risk of heart concerned a b ou t m o n ey. attack and stroke. And it can How much stupider? Worrymake people abuse drugs ing about money can take as and alcohol, which in turn many as 13 points off of your does all sorts of damage to IQ. the body — not to mention The researchers were very the damage that's done to careful to emphasize that the others when s tressed out problem isn't that people with people cause car accidents, lower IQs make less money. get into fights or shoot each I nstead, w o r r y in g a b o u t other. money makes it harder to foStress — especially when cus on what's important. As it's caused by financial wora result, you're more likely to ries — can affect us physical- do things that make your situly in a number of unexpected ation worse. Fortunately, this ways. For example, it can do drop in intelligence seems to long-term damageto the brain be temporary. In the study, in the same way it damages when financial burdens were the heart. So there may be a eliminated, people's intelliconnection between today's gence rose to the same level stressand dementia a few de- as those who'd never had ecocades down the road. A team nomic problems. of Swedish researchers found Money stressalso affects that adult women who experi- o ur decisions about f a m -
He or she may withdraw any amount from t h e a ccount Continued from 01 as long as it's for the child's The Klenners want Chrisbenefit. "When a childreaches the tian to avoid future stress, Rob said, especially since age of majority — 18 in North many people finish school Dakota and Minnesota — the with lots of debt. "I think evmoney is the child's to do with erybody has some level of whatever way he wants," he debt. It's not a good thing. saving (when your child is) a said. "This causes parents Trying to minimize it, in the baby instead of 16. That's just some degree of angst." long run, is important." the way arithmetic works. It's • Open a 529 account, an As University of North Da- really key." IRS option that allows gifts to kota graduates who earned There are several ways a child's college fund. North master'sdegrees, the couple to get started, he said. His Dakota's College SAVE prodid not incur massive debt recommendations: gram is an example. "The donor controls the but know many who did. • Open a separate account "Financial stress can take that you designate for a col- funds which grow tax d ea toll," Rob said. "If we can lege fund and agree not to dip ferred and ar e d i stributed prevent it, why not?" into it. tax-exempt as long as they "The advantage of this ac- are used for 'qualifying colHe hopes his son will receive scholarships, "but you count is that you maintain lege expenses,' such as tudon't want to rely on what control o f t h o s e d o llars," ition, room and board, and you don't know," and that his Hoplin said. But there "are no books," Hoplin said. son will work, like he did, in benefits tax-wise." How much you invest in a high school and college to • Open a "custodial" ac- college fund each month deearn money. c ount — e i ther a U T M A pends on the family budget, "I don't know where (tu(Uniform Transfers to Minors he said. "You don't want to ition) will b e i n 1 8 y e ars Act) or UGMA (Uniform Gift break your back and live in when he's ready to go off to to Minors Act), to which "any- poverty." college." one can make an irrevocable It also depends on "where The projected cost of col- gift for the child," he said. parents think this child might lege in2030 is $355,900 for In North Dakota, the per- go to school," he said. "Then four years at a private school son who opens the account, it's arithmetic, working back and $102,900 for four years at the "custodian," may invest from there." a public university, according "up to $ 14,000 each year Between state colleges and to Botkin. without triggering any gift Ivy League schools, "there The best thing parents can taxes," he said. The custodian can be a $30,000 to $40,000 do to grow sufficient funds is anyone who wants to help difference" in annual costs, is to start saving early, said the child, not just the parent. he said.
241 S.W. Seventh St., Madras; 541-475-3351 • BABIESAND TODDLERS STORY TIME: 10:10a.m. Tuesday. • PRESCHOOLAND OLDER STORY TIME: Ages3-5;10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.Tuesday. • SPANISHSTORYTIME: All ages; 1 p.m. Wednesday. •
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Jeff Hoplin, director of managed investment accounts at Alerus Financial in G r and Forks. "That's common advice, but it's like someone said, the eighth wonder of the world is compound interest. It makes a huge difference if you start
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College
THURSDAY
STORY TIMES • For the week of Oct. 25-31. Story times are free unless otherwise noted.
inancia stress can a ect eat o t ew oe ami
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62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-330-3760 • TODDLIN' TALES:Ages0-3;9:30a.m.W ednesday. • PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5; 9:30 a.m. Thursday. • SATURDAY STORIES:All ages; 10 a.m. Saturday. • ANIMALADVENTURES WITH THE HIGH DESERT MUSEUM:Ages 3 and older; 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. • MUSIC, MOVEMENT & STORIES (MNMS): Ages3-5;9:30 a.m. today. 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www.highdesertmuseum org; 541-382-4754 • UNLESS NOTED, EVENTS INCLUDED WITH ADMISSION ($12 ADULTS,$10 AGES65 ANDOLDER, $7 AGES5-12, FREEAGES4ANDYOUNGER) • BACKPACKEXPLORERS:Ages3-5;explore museum's animal habitat, share stories and songs; 9:30-10:3p a.m.
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827 S.W.Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1054 • MOTHERGOOSE AND MORE: Ages0-2;10:15a.m.and 11 a.m.Thursday. • PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5; 9:45 a.m. and1 p.m. Wednesday. • DIVERSIONFAMILIAR EN ESPANOL: Ages 0-5;11a.m. Wednesday. • PAJAMAPARTY:Ages 0-5; Wear your PJs; 6:45 p.m. Tuesday. • ANIMAL ADVENTURES WITH THE HIGH DESERT MUSEUM:Ages 3 and older; 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. • TEEN TERRITORY: Grades 6-12; Hang out, eat snacks, play games; 3 p.m.Thursday. I
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16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 • FAMILY STORY TIME: All ages; 10:30 a.m. Thursday. • NOW FUN.KNOWGAMES:All ages; Wii, LEGO®and strat egygames;2:30 p.m.Thursday. • NIMALADVENTURES WITH THE HIGH DESERT MUSEUM: Ages 3 and older; 12:30 p.m. Monday.
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ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
arme
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The Associated Press file photo
Rose McGowan, a star of the original "Charmed," isn't thrilled by news of a series reboot. "They really are running out of ideas in Hollywood," the star wrote.
wants in on the action, but its proposed reboot of the notBy Patrick Kevin Day too-distant-past witch series Los Angeles Times "Charmed" is getting the evil LOS ANGELES — If orange eye from two of that show's is the new black, then witch is stars, Alyssa Milano and Rose the new vampire as the spell- McGowan. casting, br o o mstick-riding, "Charmed" aired on the WB cat-loving ladies are suddenly from 1998 to2006 and starred TV's supernatural archetype M ilano, M c G owan, H o l l y du jour. With "American Hor- Marie Combs and Shannen ror Story: Coven" and "Witch- Doherty (for three seasons) es of East End" already on as witchy sisters who work to the air, it's no surprise CBS protect humanity from vari-
series re00 ous nasty magical threats, including demons. On Friday, Milano, who curr ently appears on the A BC series "Mistresses" and the Lifetime reality series "Project Runway: All Stars," tweeted her frustrations to her fans, writing, "The thing a b out them doing a .charmed reboot is ... it just ... it feels like yesterday. It feels too close." McGowan, wh o r e cently appeared on the ABC series
"Once Upon a T i me," also wasn't thrilled about the prospect of someone else filing her shoes, even ifthose shoes didn't show up on the original series until Season 4 (she replaced Doherty as a H a lliwell half-sister). "They really are running out of ideas in Hollywood," she w r ote. She followed it up with "lame lame lame lamertons," which sounds like some kind of spell incantation.
TV TODAY
PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVI ES
8 p.m. on l3, "MasterChef" — The first "Junior Edition" of the cooking competition, in which all the contestants were between 8and13 years old, comes to an end starting tonight, as the four remaining young cooksma ke chicken dishes. The top two will advance to the final round next week. Gordon Ramsay, Graham Elliot and Joe Bastianich judge their efforts in "Junior Edition: Finale, Part 1."
This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitable for children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13areincluded, along with R-ratedfilms that may have entertainment or educational value for older children with parental guidance.
"ENDER'S GAME" Rating:PG-13 for some violence, sci-fi action and thematic material. What it's about:A gifted boy is singled out for leadership in a future when the young and the videogame savvy are our best warriors and our greatest military leaders. The kid attractor factor:Kids, mastering training games, battling each other and bug-eyed aliens. Goodlessons/bad lessons: The killer instinct comes easily; compassion and empathyyou grow into. Violence:Bullying, fistfights, blood, a death.
Language:Pretty tame. Sex:Not even flirtation. Drugs:None. Parents' advisory:Humorless, dark and brooding, this isn't sci-fi for the very young. Suitable for10and-up,though.
"FREE BIRDS" Rating:PG for some action/peril and rude humor What it's about: Two turkeys travel back in time to change the menu at the first Thanksgiving. The kid attractor factor:Animated turkeys, in 3-D, outsmarting colonists backthen and Haz-Mat
suited soldiers today. Goodlessons/bad lessons: "When you'r e ina flock,youknow you belong to something bigger." Violence:Nothing graphic, though the fate of turkeys during the holidays is revealed. Language:Disney clean, even the "rude humor" bits. Sex:Flirting turkeys, lots of discussion of the muscles in turkey butts. Drugs:None. Parents' advisory:Tameenough for the whole family, suitable for all ages.
Richard Foreman I Summit Entertainment via The Associated Press
Ben Kingsley, left, and Asa Butterfield star in "Ender's Game," a dark and brooding sci-fi film suitable for ages 10 and up.
om is in mi e o tu -o -war Dear Abby:I have been divorced five years and have five children, ranging in age from 23 to 8. When I was having trouble with my middle son, "Logan," I found help from his godfather, "Carl." I hadn't seen Carl in years. He was my ex's best friend when Logan was born. DEAR Long story short, ABBY Carl and I have been in a committed rel ationship fo r t w o years now. He has been more a part of our lives than my ex has. Four of my kids love Carl, and he is very involved in their lives. Logan, however, hates him and throws a fit if his name is mentioned. I have tried to explain that I didn't intend this to happen, but Logan feels I "took away his godfather from him." Carl is still there for him, but Logan will have none of it and refuses to listen. Carl and I mainly spend time together on the weekends we don't have our kids, or meet for lunch or breakfast. I'm at a loss. Logan is now 17. I don't want to lose Carl. He's a great man and wants what's best for me and the kids. What should I
doy — Pulled InTwo Directions in Canada Dear Pulled:Logan may be 17, but he is acting like a child. Do not let his
behavior discourage you from having a life. In another year he will be 18 — and either concentrating on finishing his education or finding a job. Logan needs to realize that he hasn't "lost" a godfather, and that everyone may eventu-
tion of quitting, it would have happened already. Four years of procrastination are enough. Because you feel so strongly about this, it's time tomove on because your boyfriend is not going to change. Dear Abby:I would like to share a ally be gaining a step- Thanksgiving tradition our family dad. He also needs has enjoyedfor years. We realized to understand that if that after a big holiday dinner we f~ he can't accept it, he weren't ready to eat a lot of dessert, will find himself odd so we started having "Pie Night" the man out in an other- evening before Thanksgiving. After wise healthy, happy and functional a light meal we could enjoy the varifamily. ous pies or cakes family members Dear Abby:My boyfriend of five brought. It became one of our favoryears, "Todd," is a daily pot smoker. ite traditions. We met during our senior year of My father suggested it as a social college, and I knew he smoked. I event/fundraiser to the pastor of our don't use drugs, and I assumed that local church, and it was one of their after college he would grow up. best-attended events. Our family is However, it seems unlikely that he scatteredacross the country now, will quit, and frankly, I'm sick of it. but those times were some of my faI have asked Todd for the last four vorites, and I thought some of your years to please stop, but he hasn't. readers might like to incorporate it He keeps saying he will, but I don't into their holiday celebrations, too. know how much longer I want to — Good Times in Arizona wait. I know it's unfair to expect to Dear Good Times: They might, change someone, but I would not indeed, especially if they are trybe comfortable getting engaged or ing to spread those extra calories married to Todd if he's still getting over a longer period. (And it would stoned. I love him. Should I give it be a good idea to exercise the day more time or move on? after they indulge.) Thanks for the — Patient Girlfriend in San Diego suggestion. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com Dear Girlfriend:You have been patient enough. If Todd had any intenor P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may be an additional fce for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS(PG-13) 12:15, 3:20, 6:25, 9:25 • CARRIE(R) 3:15, IO: IO • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)1,4:20, 6:55 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 23-D (PG) 9:20 • THE COUNSELOR (R) 1:10, 3:50, 6:30, 9:15 • ENDER'8 GAME (PG-I3)12:45,3:45,6:45,9:30 • ENDER'SGAMEIMAX (PG-13) I: I5,4, 7, 9:45 • ENOUGH SAID (PG-13) 12:20, 3, 7:45, 10:10 • ESCAPE PLAN(R) 1:55, 4:40, 7:25, 10:05 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 12:30, 3:30, 6, 8:45 • FREE BIRDS 3-D (PG) 1:25, 3:55, 6:15, 9 • GRAVITY(PG-I3) 3:05, 9:05 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13) 12:50, 2:05, 4:50, 6:50, 7:40, 10 • JACKASSPRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 12:15, 1:35, 3:10, 4: IO, 6:35, 7:35, 9:15, 10:15 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 12:35, 1:45, 3:35, 4:30, 6:10, 7: IO, 8:50, 9:50 • RUSH(R) 12:25, 7:20 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I
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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • RED 2(PG-13) 6 • THE WORLD'SEND(R) 9 • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 2f mayattend screenings before 7 p m. ifaccompanied by a legal guardian.
YOURHOROSCOPE
many changes in your lifestyle. You will By Jacqueline Bigar maintain your friendships, and you also will add quite a few new people to the list. You becomemoreverbaland expressive, might not be getting your message. You which delights could be somewhat off-kilter, which might Stars showthekind manyfriends who result in a change of plans. Tonight: Make of day you'll have ha ve known you for time for a friend. ** * * * D ynamic years. Your style ** * * P ositive o fcommunication CANCER (June21-July22) ** * A verage wil l express more ** Your need for some quiet comes forward. Someone you meet could be ** So-so of your depth. With quite electric in his or her communication. * Difficult as powerful of a You can't help but listen to this person. A year as this is, you close associate might express his or her would be wise to pull back and visualize feelings about a situation and offer you whatyou desire more often. If you are guidance. Tonight: Head home first. single, someone quite spectacular could LEO (July23-Aug. 22) enter your life. Make sure this person is ** * You might be forced to look at for real. If you are attached, remember someone'sbehaviorin awaythatyou'd that a partnership is made up of two prefer not to. This person is quite capable people, not one. Make time for your of delivering emotional jolts. Consider sweetie, for both your sakes. LIBRA can not reacting. A family member suddenly be quite charming. becomes more vocal. Tonight: Out with ARIES (March21-April19) friends. ** * * * Y ou could be jumping VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) through hoops to get where you want ** * * R emain sensitive to a loved to go. Unexpected events and others' one, especially a sibling. Money could be unintended interference could make involved in a decision, but if you are not finishing up what you must challenging. comfortable with what is going on, say Tonight: Go with the best suggestion. so. Others might not realize how many TAURUS (April 20-May20) options they have. Tonight: Your treat. ** * You have a lot going for you. You might not believe how much interference LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * You feel empowered, and others could run through your plans. Much of will workwith you. The irony isthatyou whatis happeningaround you could be give a lot, even if you are not aware of it. unexpected. Tonight: Encourage a friend An unexpected insight revolving around to join you after work. TGIF! a work or personal matter might setyou GEMINI (May 21-June20) back for a while. Tonight: Play the role of ** * * Be more direct in how you deal king or queen for a night. with a child or new friend. This person
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
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SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21)
Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 4:45 • THE COUNSELOR (R) 7:30 • ENDER'SGAME(PG-13) 5: l5, 7:45 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 4:45,7 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 5:15, 7:30
** * You could be taken aback by a boss and/or aloved one.M any peopleappear to be confused. You might be going through several changes, so you probably won't be as open or as tolerant as usual. Tonight: Accept the limelight.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18) ** * * * Y o u could opt not to get involved in others' problems. A partner seems pushy and oversensitive. You might want to distance yourself. A conversation with a loved one opens up new possibilities with greater understanding. Tonight: Lookforward, not backward.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * * A p artner might make a gesture toward you. This person knows that he or she has been difficult. You'll want to distance yourself, but understand that this is a phase. You seem rather vague to others. Discuss more of what you're thinking. Tonight: Dpt for togetherness. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
10 p.m. on A C3, "Dracula" — While investigating her connections to the Order of the Dragon, Grayson (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), alias Dracula, takes Lady Jayne (Victoria Smurfit) as a lover. Mina (Jessica DeGouw) rises to a challenge at medical school with Grayson's help. Jonathan Harker (Oliver Jackson-Cohen) makes a deal with Grayson thathasan unexpected outcome in the new episode "A Whiff of Sulfur."
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• THE COUNSELOR (R)4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • ENDER'SGAME(PG-13) 4:30, 7, 9:30 Sat-Sun: 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 3, 5, 7, 9 • JACKASS PRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)
9p.m. on STARZ, Movie: "The Oranges" —Two New Jersey families are brought closer together in a way they never anticipated in this comedy about a May-December romance, with Leighton Meester ("Gossip Girl") and Hugh Laurie ("House") playing the couple. The news does not go over well when others eventually learn of the affair.
©Zap2it
** * Know when you have created an unsound problem for yourself as well as for others. A child or loved one might become difficult. Randomly weird behavior also surrounds what you believe is a given. Tonight: Be mysterious. Vanish, and meet up with a favorite person! ** * * U nderstand what a friend wants from you. You might be mulling over your relationship with this person as a result. You could receive an unexpected jolt from a family member. Tonight: Only where the crowds are.
Next Top Model" —The guys get competitive during a workout challenge in this new episode. The photo shoothasthe models hanging upside down with bats, but one model has trouble taking a good picture. The field is narrowed down to three at the end of "The Guy Who Becomes aBat."
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NOV. 1, 2013:This yearyou greet
9 p.m. on(CW), "America's
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • BIG ASS SPIDER! (PG-13) 9 • THE SUMMIT(R) 4
Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road,
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY,
9 p.m. on H E3, "Grimm" — Nick (David Giuntoli) is manic when Monroe, Hank, Rosalee and Juliette (Silas Weir Mitchell, Russell Hornsby, BreeTurner, Bitsie Tulloch) track him down and try to reverse what's been done to him. Renard (Sasha Roiz) tries to clean up the zombies' mess locally and globally. Adalind (Claire Coffee) encounters more disturbing developments in her quest to regain her powers. Shohreh Aghdashloo guest stars in the new episode "PTZD."
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Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. LI.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 4, 6:45, 9:35 • THE COUNSELOR (R) 2:35, 5, 7:20, 9:45 • ENDER'SGAME(PG-13) 2:05, 4:35, 7:10, 9:40 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 4:50, 7 • FREE BIRDS3-D (PG)2:45,9 • JACKASSPRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 3:30, 5:30, 7:40, 9:50
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• CAPTAINPHILLIPS(Upstairs — PG-13) 4, 7 • THE COUNSELOR (R) 8 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 3:40, 6 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
• Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in today's
0 G D! Magazine • Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at benddulletin.com/mevies
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ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013 •
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Place an ad: 541-385-5809
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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
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Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of everything in The Bulletin's daily garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for
Sales Northeast Bend ROBOTICS S A LE, Sat., Nov 2, 9-2:30. MVHS caf e teria, 2 755 NE 2 7t h S t . Quality d o n ations
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CHECK YOUR AD
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO
GUN SHOW
SELL
FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with oui
"QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 k 2|k ~k Ad must include
Whoodle puppies, 12 wks, 1st shots, wormed, 3 males, $900 each.
HANCOCK & MOORE SOFA in salmon/coral chenille fabric with diamond pattern. Traditional styling w ith loose pillow back, down-wrapped seat cushions, roll arms, skirt, two matching pillows a n d arm covers. L i k e new condition. $1 500.
541-410-1581
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to
Nov. 9th & 10th Deschutes Fairgrounds Buy! Sell! Trade! SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 $8 Admission, 12 & under free! OREGON TRAIL GUN SHOWS, 541-347-2120
Northwest Spa Hot Tub, seats 8 people, has cover, $400 or best offer. You haul! 541-385-0454
or 541-404-1890 Marlin 1895 SS Guide your ad, please con541-420-5640 45/70 ported, ammo, tact us ASAP so that sling, as new $575. corrections and any accepted Fri. p.m. Sell them in 541-815-8345. adjustments can be price of single item In Events Calendar. TV, Stereo 8 Video made to your ad. The Bulletin Classifieds of $500 or less, or R EM 1100 T ra p w / 541-385-5809 multiple items raised rib; 141 pump D irecTV - O v e r 1 4 0 The Bulletin Classified 35 REM; BRWN Siwhose total does 288 cost-conscious *** 38th Annual *** channels only $29.99 541-385-5809 not exceed $500. tory OU 20 ga. and a month. Call Now! 541-526-1332 consumers. And if Sales Southeast Bend Snowflake Boutique gold hunter 12 ga. 3 you're planning your • Fri. Nov. 1, 1-8 pm Triple savingsi Yorkie pup, AKC - 12 wk Call Classifieds at Guns, Hunting 1/2 in auto; Sitory 12 own garage or yard Fri. only 9 -5 . 6 1 202 • Sat. Nov. 2, 9-4 pm $636.00 in Savings, male, with potty training, Washer 8 Dryer, Whirl541-385-5809 ga., OU ultra trap XT; & Fishing sale, look to the clas- Larkspur Lp. Fly fishDeschutes County Free upgrade to Ge$550. 541-241-0518 www.bendbulletin.com pool, electric, large BAR 300 WIN mag; nie 8 2013 NFL Sunsifieds to bring in the ing 8 wgt. rod, reels, Fairgrounds Redmond Yorkie puppy 8 w k s capacity, great cond., Berretta SxS s i lver day ticket free for New 300 Win Magnum buyers. You won't find lines, tools, clothes, Admission: $3. cute, p layful m a le. $275/set. Will deliver Hawk 12 ga.; A YA $350, a better place 2010 7 ' can o py, Proceeds go to Family C ustomers! Star t Shots, t ai l d o c ked. locally. 541-593-1861. SxS 10 ga. 3 1/2 in.; saving Free! Two adult 541-408-0053 for bargains! Access Network. today! couch, loveseat, misc. $650. 541-536-3108 Sharp 1874 45/70 & www.snowflakeboutique.org spayed female cats. 1-800-259-5140. Call Classifieds: 541-382-6934. CASH!! 45/120 Quigley; WIN 541-385-5809 or Very loving, need new Yorkie pups AKC, sweet, The Bulletin (PNDC) 208 For Guns, Ammo 8 1 886 45/70 & 1 8 7 3 home as can no longer adorable, potty training, 2 recommends extra email 61 4 3 5 Reloading Supplies. Pets & Supplies 44/40; Snake classffiedObendbulletin.com F ri./Sat., 9-1. keep. Sweet disposiboys, 2 girls, $450 8 up. I ca ko k e p Steens Mtn. Loop, off DISH T V Ret a i ler. 541-408-6900. Charmer 410 ga. tions, one black & Health guar.541-777-7743 chasing products or • 286 Starting ai SE 27th. Clo t hes, H 8 H Firearms 8 Tack white and one calico. services from out of I Chainsaw winch h oliday decor, a nd The Bulletin recom$19.99/month (for 12 Sales Northeast Bend 541-382-9352 210 Contact Mike at the area. Sending ~ $300. much more! mends extra caution mos.) 8 High Speed 541-279-4821 or Furniture & Appliances cash, checks, or 541-419-6756 R uger Red Label o / u 541-728-0003. when purc h a s- Irussell I nternet starting a t ARTIST LEAVES 2@yahoo.com ing products or ser28 ga., $ 1000 obo. $14.95/month (where I credit i n f o rmation TOWN! Curiosities 8 Double Tap Firearms may be subjected to Ammo. 541-749-0627 vices from out of the available.) SAVE! Ask Collectibles. Sunrise A1 Washers&Dryers 290 2075 NE Hwy. 20 area. Sending cash, I FRAUD. For more About SAME DAY Into Sunset, Nov. 2 to 6, $150 ea. Full warSelling Below Retail 541-977-0202 Sales Redmond Area checks, or credit ininformation about an ~ stallation! CALL Now! 1935 NE Lotus Drive. ranty. Free Del. Also S aiga A K 47 , $ 5 7 5 . f ormation may b e advertiser, you may Buy/Sell/Trade/Consign REM model 700 STS 1-800-308-1563. 541-965-0663. wanted, used W/D's Final Moving Sale. Ev- subjected to fraud. (PNDC) I call the O r egon $ 541-280-7355 t actical 2 0 " he a v y e rything must G O ! For more i nformaState Attor ney ' DON'TMISS THIS barrel threaded, $600. ** FREE ** F urniture, lamp s , tion about an adverI General's O f fi ce ATI GSG-5 22 c al., SAVE on Cable TV-InHAVANESE PUPPY Bed frame, lodgepole, Consumer P rotec- • kitchen items, garden tiser, you may call Garage Sale Kit w/full access., $425. ternet-Digital Phonequeen size, w/slats. t ion (F) AKC, Dewclaws, Place an ad in The art, clothes, too much the O r egon State ho t l in e at I DO YOU HAVE Ammo avail. Satellite. You've Got $175. 541-389-5017. UTD shots/wormer, to list. Fri. and Sat. Bulletin for your gaAttorney General's I 1-877-877-9392. SOMETHING TO 541-306-0166 A C hoice! O ptions rage sale and re1 0am-5pm, 157 7 5 Office C o n sumer non-shed, hypoaller- Dining chairs, q uality SELL from ALL major sergenic,$850 S W S a lmon R d . , Protection hotline at ceive a Garage Sale Wanted: Collector FOR $500 OR m edium oak, 4 o r 6 , vice providers. Call us 541-460-1277 Crooked River Ranch. 1-877-877-9392. seeks high quality Kit FREE! $200. 541-382-6151 LESS? to learn more! CALL I(oOIMore Pix at Bendbfflletin.o fishing items. Non-commercial Today. 888-757-5943. KIT INCLUDES: Call 541-678-5753, or advertisers may Huge Multi Family GaJack Terrier Russell, 212 sek ng cekrral aregoh vktke ets (PNDC) • 4 Garage Sale Signs 503-351-2746 place an ad rage Sale, 11305 SW female, 5 mo., shots, • $2.00 Off Coupon To Antiques & with our Robinson Lane, Pow$150. 541-350-3621 Use Toward Your 55 gal fish aquarium & I Collectibles "QUICK CASH Call a Pro ell Butte, (cross road wood stand, beautiful! II Next Ad Labrador Pups, AKC SPECIAL" Computers Bussett). Sat. 8-4 & $125 obo. 541-408-8611 • 10 Tips For "Garage Whether you need a Chocolate & Yellow. Antiques wanted: tools, 1 week3lines 12 Sun. 9-4. Old 8 new Sale Success!" fence fixed, hedges Adopt a buddy! Adult Hips OFA guaranteed furniture, marbles, beer OI' T HE B U L LETIN r e items: Kitchen, glass Antique $300- $400. cans, early B/W photrimmed or a house ware, furniture, Xmas, c ats/kittens over 6 ~k e e k k 2 0 ! quires computer adD!n!ng Set 1-541-954-1727 tography, Western PICK UP YOUR LP's, bar ware, vin- mos., 2 for just $40! Ad must vertisers with multiple built, you'll find 18th century legs, items. 541-389-1578 GARAGE SALE KIT at include price of tage 8 c o llectables, Thru 11/3 only. Fixed, ad schedules or those mahogany topshots, ID chip, tested, professional help in 1777 SW Chandler f $5 0 0 selling multiple sysladies shoes, purses k~il e ke 95"x46"x29"; more! Nonprofit group Ave., Bend, OR 97702 or less, or multiple The Bulletin's "Call a a nd w a l ker, 1 9 6 5 tems/ software, to dis6 Chippendale style a t 65480 7 8th S t . , items whosetotal close the name of the AMC cross country Service Professional" chairs, $2770. Bend, open Sat/Sun does not exceed classic. Cash only! A Cot!Stgtt Cottcspt business or the term 541-639-3211 Directory 1 -5; other days b y D,ttttg $500. "dealer" in their ads. appt. Photos & info: Lost: Yellow t a bby Visit our HUGE 541-385-5809 Private party advertisDale & Mary Michaelson www.craftcats.org. home decor Call Classifieds at ers are defined as Dishwasher, M a ytag, male cat, named 541-389-8420, or like consignment store. 541-385-5809 ESTATE SALE Winchester pre-64 model those who sell one Socks. Awbrey Butte portable/covertable, 1 us on Facebook. New items www.bendbulletin.com 12, 20 ga deluxe wood, computer. a rea. P l ease c a l l yr. old, white, New 64718 StarWOOd DriVe arrive daily! $500. 541-548-3408 Adopt a rescued kitten 541-647-8149 $799, asking $350. Friday, Nov. 1 • Saturday, Nov.2 930 SE Textron, 541-593-1861 or cat! Fixed, shots, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Bend 541-318-1501 ID chip, tested, more! Lovebird baby hand-fed, www.redeuxbend.com s weet, ready in 1 2 Crowd control admittance numbers Nonprofit sanctuary at weeks. $60 taking deissued at 8:00 a.m. Friday 65480 78th St., Bend, posits. 541-279-3578 (Take Hwy 97 north to Tumalo Rd. Overpass, open Sat/Sun 1 -5; The Bulletin reserves about 5 miles and turn west onto Tumalo Rd. kitten foster home by Poodle pups, AKC.Toy SELL IT FAST IN CLASSIFIEDS! the right to publish all and follow one mile to Starwood subdivision, appt., call 815-7278. Also-7mo. M,$200; F, ads from The Bulletin turn south (left), and follow about 2/3 mile to Commercial www.craftcats.org. $250. 541-475-3889 newspaper onto The address, follow signs) 541-389-8420, or like upright Delfield Bulletin Internet web1 999FORD ESCORT STATION WAGON!!! Puppies! Maltese us on Facebook. 6000 Series site. King size bed, Nikken magnetic topper; Tempur- Aussies, Mini AKC, 2 litPoodles; Reduced freezer, 20 cubic pedic Queen bed w/ Electric lift; 2 electric re- ters, parents on site, 1st prices! Male $200 feet, stainless, Sekking Central OregOn ktnke 1903 cliner chairs (No lift); Lovely oak dining set and shots / worminq. Female $250. Cash $1200. matching china cabinet; 2 regular recliners; Twin 541-598-5314/788-7799 only. 541-546-7909. 541-325-2691 size hide-a-bed; Loveseat; Two wing-back 240 chairs; Three bookcases filled with GREAT B lack Lab AK C p u p Queensland Heelers Crafts & Hobbies books; Coffee and end tables; side tables; pies, Born Aug 18. Standard 8 Mini, $150 GENERATE S OM E & up. 541-280-1537 dressers; sofa/entry table; small stands; 2010 $250 541-508-0429 EXCITEMENT in your 5 00 Wine c orks, a l l Vizio 39" TV in dark wood entertainment center; www.rightwayranch.wor neighborhood! Plan a natural. No sythetics. Suround sound set; 5 CD disc changer; 2 small dpress.com garage sale and don't $20. 541-948-4350 round dinette tables, one has 4 chairs, one has forget to advertise in 2 chairs; Oak desk w/ console computer unit; classified! Upright freezer; All refrigerator-no freezer sec241 541-385-5809. tion; Great pictures 8 prints; TV trays; Very nice f/ Bicycles & ladies clothing size 10 Medium, size 9yeN Chihuahua puppies, teaNEED TO CANCEL Accessories shoes,new inboxes; Mens clothing X and XX L, YOUR AD? cup, shots 8 dewormed, shoes size 11; Linens, bath supplies; Five crock The Bulletin $250. 541-420-4403 pots; Kitchen Aid mixer; Griddle; Food Saver; Retriever-Poodle Classifieds has an Electric knives; Turkey roasters; Blender; cof- Donate deposit bottles/ puppies. Family dogs "After Hours"Line fee pot; Jar opener; and more electrical appli- cans to local all volwith hunting heritage. Call 541-383-2371 ances; Stemware; set of Pfaltzgraf dishes blue unteer, non-profit res5 months, all shots, ~ k k kk O M ET 24 hrs. to cancel w/ off white; Stainless steel; Kitchen tools - lots; cue, for feral cat spay/ tails docked, social/ Twe dark eak night your ad! Pyrex & Corningware; Pots 8 pans; Casserole neuter. Cans for Cats house training. stands and matching 2005 Maverick ML7 head boards condition ReplaceThat old tiredBedroomsetyou got fromyour Parents! dishes; CDs and DVDs; Foodstuffs;Spices; t railer at B en d P e t $1000 (discount for M ountain Bike, 1 5 " Ne scratches. Very Lamps; Jewelry chest; Lovely patio table & cash) see pics at Express E, a c ross frame (small). F ull sturdy. Was $1200 new, Item Priced af: Y o ur Total Ad Cost onl: chairs; 2 sets of Chrome shelving units; Older from Costco; or dofacebook.com/ offenng for only suspension, Maverick 2002 TV 8 entertainment center; Silk flowers 8 nate Mon-Fri at Smith Szmoodles • Under $500 $29 shock, S RAM XO II650 OBO 503-623-5282 craft supplies by the hundreds; Garden tools; Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or • $500 fo $99 9 $39 541-000-000 drivetrain & shifters, 9 Jewelry cabinet; Decor items by Fitz & Floyd; at CRAFT in Tumalo. hundwald@aol.com • $1000 fo $2499 $49 speed rear cassette, Halloween 8 Christmas decor; Yard decor; Out- www.craftcats.org GREAT SOFA 34-11, Avid Juicy disc • $2500 and over $59 door storage chest; Nice artwork; Char-Broil 9'x28"h x 37"d. Rodent issues? Free brakes. Well t a ken BBQ; Exercycle; Nice Patio table & chairs; Doxie mix female pup, adult barn/shop cats, Tan, down feather Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with Electric & Kerosene heaters; Cleaning supplies; 10 weeks, very cute. fixed, shots, s o me care of. $950. with foam for supborder, full color photo, bold headline and price. Birdhouses; Small dogloo; 15 Fishing poles and $150. 541-390-8875 541-788-6227. SekklngCentral Oregan kknke1903 port. 3back&3 friendly, some n ot. vests; Garden tools and supplies, and lots and Just bought a new boat? Will deliver. 389-8420 • 1'he Central OregonNickel Ads • The Bulletin seat loose cush541-385-5809 lots more! Ha n dled by .... Free B icycle - 12 Sell your old one in the ions. Very comfy! • Central Oregon Marketplace + bendbullefin.com Some restrictions apply Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC classifieds! Ask about our St. Bernard Puppies, $400. speed, needs tires, 541 -47 9-4742 days • 541 -382-5950 eves Super Seller rates! 1st shots, wormed. 541-504-5224 b ut i n e x c . c o n d. 'Privatepariy merchandiseonly - excludespets&livestock, autos, Rys,moiorcycles, boats, airplanes,andgaragesaletaiegories M/M/M/.deeedysestatesafes.com 541-389-0808 541-385-5809 $400. 541-977-4686
CASH for dressers, dead washers/dryers
Just too many collectibles?
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E2 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 261
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
270
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• P roduce & Food
Employment Opportunities F ound two r ugs, o n THOMAS ORCHARDS B aker Rd., c all t o Kimberly, Oreqon LOG TRUCK DRIVERS ROOFERS 541-934-287YI identify. 541-480-5813 for logging company with experience, Fruit stand will be in Florence, OR. Exneeded. Lost: DACHSHUND open through perience re q u ired, Call River Roofing, Blk/tan longhaired Monday, Nov. 4 541-316-7663 CDL, current medical female 20 Ibs on CRR APPLES OUT OF BIN: c ard. Great pay & (Similar to illustration) Horney Hollow area. Pride Go-Go 65C per lb. Red Delibenefits. Year-round, Call The Bulletin At PLEASE help her get cious, Golden Delicious 3-wheel scooter long-term em p loy- 541 -385-5809 home!!! Call her mom with upgrades, Cameo, Pinata, Ambro- ment. Great place to Place Your Ad Or E-Mail at 541-316-8382. absolutely like brand live! 54 1 -997-8212 sia, Granny Smith. Fuji. At: www.bendbulletin.com new, hardly used Lost pair of Black Dia- BRING CONTAINERS! Machinist/Operator $495. 541-548-5667 mond collapsible hik- Closed Tues. & Wed. CNC Machinist Pro ing poles that were in open Thurs. thru Mon. grammer/CNC Lathe 262 10 a.m.-4 p.m. only. a bag and f ell o ut Operator. Experience See us on Facebook somewhere near the Commercial/Office required, wage DOE. chasing products or I & Bend Farmers Marround-a-bout at Bond Immediate opening in services from out of Equipment & Fixtures & Colorado. and Tu- ket on Wed., 3-7p.m. Belgrade, Montana. area. Sending malo Creek Kayak. $20-$35/hr. Benefits. I the Office chairs, 1 blue 1 ash, checks, o r 541-383-2488 Please call I c brown $50 ea. or both 406-388-2200 or credit i n f o rmation $90. Call 541-593-7438 I may be subiected to email before 5 p.m. FRAUD. employmentOonlyFor more informa263 REMEMBER: If you longrange.com tion about an adverTools have lost an animal, (PNDC) I tiser, you may call Place a photoin your private partyad don't forget to check PRIVATE PARTY RATES the Oregon State Like new Lincoln 225 The Humane Society Pharmacy Tech for only $15.00 perweek. Starting at 3 lines I Attorney General's amp stick w e lder, Bend Full -time position in Office Co n s umert *UNDER '500 in total merchandise OVER '500in total merchandise $155. 541-410-3425 541-382-3537 La Pine. Needs to be hotline at l Redmond organized, caring, ef- I Protection 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 Metal workshop table, 476 1-877-877-9392. 541-923-0882 ficient and accurate. 14 days................................................ $16.00 $30. Call 7 days.................................................. $24.00 Employment Pi e ille Competitive wage & LT}~eBiilletttT, g 541-504-8482 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.................................................$33.50 541-447-7178; Opportunities benefits. Call 28 days.................................................$61.50 Miller portable welder, or Craft Cats 541-419-4688 Garage Sale Special diesel power, $850 541-389-8420. (call for commercial line ad rates) 4 lines for 4 days ................................. CAUTION: 541-389-9684 Get your Realtor Ads published in 265 "Employment OpSeeking Principal Brobusiness ker. Oceanfronts, 10 A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: portunittes" in clude Building Materials employee and indeyr. est a blishment. Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Fractional - $3 million G ROW I N G pendent p ositions. Double vintage French * B ELOW MARKED WITH A N ( ) Ads fo r p o sitions inventory, Sale, Comdoor, $150 mission Bonus. Call 541-548-0291 that require a fee or with an ad in REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well Pres 541-921-8000 upfront i nvestment La Pine Habitat The Bulletin's as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin must be stated. With RESTORE "Call A Service any independentjob beodbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at Building Supply Resale opportunity, please Receptionist Professional" Quality at any time. is located at: 325 i nvestigate tho r Seeking an outgoing LOW PRICES Directory oughly. Use extra 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. organized p e r son Hay, Grain & Feed 52684 Hwy 97 c aution when a p that really wants a 541-536-3234 Bend, Oregon 97702 part-time p o s ition Looking for your next First quality Orchard/Tim- plying for jobs onOpen to the public . line and never prowith a f uture. Are othy/Blue Grass mixed employee? Prineville Habitat you seeking p art hay, no rain, barn stored, vide personal inforPLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Place a Bulletin help mation to any source ReStore time work while your $230/ton. Patterson Ranch is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Building Supply Resale wanted ad today and you may not have Sisters, 541-549-3831 kids are in school, to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these reach over 60,000 researched and maybe "empty nest" 1427 NW Murphy Ct. newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party readers each week. 541-447-6934 deemed to be repunot wh a t you Your classified ad Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. Looking for your table. Use extreme Open to the public. expected? Do you will also appear on next employee? c aution when r e l ike w o rking w i t h Scaffolding, (6) 60"x78" bendbulletin.com 258 Place a Bulletin s ponding t o A N Y people? If any of the frames, (6) braces, (4) which currently help wanted ad online employment above fits you, you Travel/Tickets Travel/Tickets Misc. Items Misc. Items home made casters. receives over 1.5 • ad from out-of-state. today and p robably want t o $325. 541-593-6303 million page views We suggest you call reach over contact us and see Advertise V A CATIONSIX DAY VACATION in BUYING & SE L LING COWGIRL CASH every month at the State of Oregon w hat we h ave t o SPECIALS to 3 m i lOrlando, Flor i da! All gold jewelry, silver We buy Jewelry, Boots, Vintage exterior door, 60,000 readers no extra cost. craftsman grid, $85. Consumer H o tline offer and show us lion P acific N o rth- Regularly $1,175.00. and gold coins, bars, Vintage Dresses & each week. Bulletin Classifieds 541-548-0291. at 1-503-378-4320 rounds, wedding sets, More. 924 Brooks St. what you have to westerners! 29 daily Yours today for only Your classified ad Get Results! For Equal Opportuoffer. Please send class rings, sterling silnewspapers, six $389.00! You SAVE 541-678-5162 will also Vintage exterior doors, Call 385-5809 nity Laws c o ntact your resume to the states. 25-word clas- 6 7 p e rcent. P L US ver, coin collect, vin- www.getcowgirlcash.com 2 avail. at $75 each. appear on or place Oregon Bureau of following address: sified $540 for a 3-day One-week car rental tage watches, dental GENERATE SOME 541-548-0291 bendbulletin.com your ad on-line at Bill Fl e ming, Labor & I n dustry, tulip2tree©bend a d. Cal l (916) included. Call for de- gold. which currently bendbulletin.com EXCITEMENT Civil Rights Division, 2 88-6019 o r vis i t tails. 1-800-712-4838. 541-382-9419. 266 broadband.com IN YOUR receives over 971-673- 0764. www.pnna.com for the (PNDC) Heating & Stoves NEIGBORHOOD. 1.5 million page Cemetery plot at Pacific Nor t hwest Plan a garage sale and The Bulletin views every 260 Tumalo cemetery. Daily Con n ection. Registered Nurses NOTICE TO don't forget to advermonth at no A bargain at $450. (PNDC) Misc. Items ADVERTISER 541-385-5809 tise in classified! extra cost. 541-848-7436 Since September 29, 541-385-5809. Community Counseling Solutions is Bulletin ARTIST LEAVES 1991, advertising for recruiting for Registered Nurses to work GET FREE OF CREDIT used woodstoves has Classifieds Add your web address TOWN! Curiosities & at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center People Look for Information to your ad and readCARD DEBT NOW! Get Results! Collectibles. Sunrise been limited to modlocatedinJohn Day, OR. Cut payments by up els which have been Call 541-385-5809 ers on The Bulletin's About Products and to Sunset, Nov. 2 to 6, to half. Stop creditors c ertified by the O r web site, www.bendServices Every Daythrough 1935 NE Lotus Drive. or place your ad from calling. egon Department of bulletin.com, will be Juniper Ridge is a S e c ure Residential 541-965-0663. on-line at The Bulletin Classi5eds 866-775-9621. able to click through Treatment Facility providing services to Environmental Qualbendbulletin.com Bend Indoor Swap automatically to your (PNDC) individuals with a severe mental illness. ity (DEQ) and the fedMeet - A Mini-Mall full website. Classic Stallion eral E n v i ronmental of Unique Treasures! 375 These positions provide mental health Boots Home Security Protection A g e ncy • • I I 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. —All Shifts Ladies size 7t/a, nursing care including medication oversight, System 2GIG (EPA) as having met Meat & Animal Processing Caregiver 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. avail. Apply in person. medication r e l ated tr e atment, f o l l ow seldom worn, smoke emission stanBrand new installed Paid $1100; dards. A cer t ifiedGrass fed & f i nished Interviews this week. physician's prescriptions and procedures, by AbbaJay inMeet singles right nowl Buying Diamonds selling for $290. w oodstove may b e beef, no grain, no hor- Apply in person at cludes 2 hour inmeasure and r e cord p atient's general No paid o p erators, /Gold for Cash identified by its certifi- mones, no antibiotics, for 1099 NE Watt Way, 541-480-11 99 stallation and one physical condition such as pulse, temperajust real people like Saxon's Fine Jewelers Bend. cation label, which is your peace of mind. Oryear basic security you. Browse greet541-389-6655 ture and r e spiration to p r ovide daily service. $375. permanently attached der now for custom cut & Driver Needed. Night information, educate and train staff on ings, exchange meswrap, 8 delivery Nov. 22BUYING Find exactly what to the stove. The Bul(Valued at $850) sages and c o nnect medication administration, an d e n sure letin will no t k n ow- 30. Quarters, halves or s hift, apply a t O w l 541-382-3479 live. Try it free. Call Lionel/American Flyer you are looking for in the documentation is kept according to policies. Taxi, 1919 NE 2nd, wholes, $3.75 hanging wt trains, accessories. ingly accept advertisnow: 8 7 7-955-5505. CLASSIFIEDS deliyered. Giye the gift of Bend. After 5pm. No 541-408-2191. ing for the sale of (PNDC) How to avoid scam This position works with the treatment team phone calls please. health! 541-306-0860 and fraud attempts uncertified to promote recovery from mental illness. woodstoves. VBe aware of internaThis position includes telephone consultaPressroom 267 tional fraud. Deal lotion and crisis intervention in the facility. Night Supervisor cally whenever posFuel & Wood The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Orsible. Qualified applicants must have a v a l id egon, is seeking a night time press superviV Watch for buyers Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's sor. We are part of Western Communications, who offer more than WHEN BUYING careaogeasteetabte license at the time of hire, hold a valid call 54I 3855809topromote yaur servci e Advertisefor28daysstartingct t lfgirlrsspe onos websta Inc. which is a small, family owned group conyour asking price and FIREWOOD... Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon who ask to have history background check. Wages depenTo avoid fraud, and two in California. Our ideal candidate will money wired or dent upon education and experience, but The Bulletin manage a small crew of three and must be handed back to them. Handyman IBuilding/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care recommends payable t o l e a r n o u r e q u ipment/processes will be b e tween $48,000 t o $ 7 2,000. Fake cashier checks ment for Firewood Excellent benefit package. Signing bonus quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for and money orders NOTICE: Oregon state Chester Elliot Constr. NOTICE: Oregon Landonly upon delivery of up to $10,000. our 3 t/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ law r equires anyone Home remodel/renovate scape Contractors Law are common. and inspection. leadership experience preferred. In addition to who con t racts for Creative designs (ORS 671) requires all YNever give out per• A cord is 128 cu. ft. our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuPlease visit t h e O r e gon E m ployment construction work to businesses that a dsonal financial infor541-420-2980 4' x 4' x 8' merous commercial print clients as well. BeDepartment or the Community Counseling be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form mation. CCB¹ 148659 • Receipts should sides a competitive wage and benefit proSolutions website for an a pplication or Construction ContracLandscape Construc- YTrust your instincts include name, gram, we also provide potential opportunity for tors Board (CCB). An BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS tion which includes: contact Nina B i sson a t 5 4 1 -676-9161, and be wary of phone, price and advancement. active license Search the area's most p lanting, decks , nina.bisson©gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, someone using an kind of wood If you provide dependability combined with a means the contractor comprehensive listing of fences, arbors, escrow service or Heppner, OR 97836. purchased. positive attitude, are able to manage people is bonded & insured. classified advertising... water-features, and inagent to pick up your • Firewood ads and schedules and are a team player, we Verify the contractor's real estate to automotive, stallation, repair of irmerchandise. MUST include would like to hear from you. If you seek a CCB l i c ense at merchandise to sporting rigation systems to be Instructor species & cost per stable work environment that provides a great www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the The Bulletin goods. Bulletin Classifieds cord to better serve contractor.com Landscape Contracplace to live and raise a family, let us hear appear every day in the OSU-Cascades, in Bend, is r ecruiting for our customers. from you. or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit *REDUCE YOUR print or on line. part-time Instructors to teach on a term by Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at The Bulletin recomn umber is to be i nCABLE BILL! Get an Call 541-385-5809 term basis for the 2013/2014 academic year. mends checking with cluded in all adverBulletin anelson@wescompapers.com with your comAll-Digital Sat e l lite The serwng centra( oregans>nre 1903 the CCB prior to con- www.bendbulletin.com tisements which indiplete r esume, r e ferences a n d s a l ary These are fixed-term appointments, w/resystem installed for newal at the discretion of the Dean. Courses tracting with anyone. cate the business has FREE and programhistory/requirements. No phone calls please. Bulletin to be taught may include EXSS 444 Adapted Some other t r ades The a bond,insurance and ming Drug test is required prior to employment. srvtng central 0 uon smce s03 s t a rting at All Year Dependable Physical Activity, EXSS 323 Biomechanics, or also req u ire addiworkers c o mpensa- $ 24.99/mo. Firewood: Seasoned EOE. FRE E EXSS 385 Therapeutic Exercise, in the Exertional licenses and Home Repairs, Remod tion for their employ- HD/DVR upgrade for Lodgepole, Split, Del. cise and Sport Science program. certifications. els, Tile, C arpentry ees. For your protec- new callers, SO CALL Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 Finish work, M a inte tion call 503-378-5909 NOW (877)366-4508. for $365. Cash, Check nance. CCB¹168910 or use our website: Millwrights - Bright Wood Corp. Salary is commensurate with education and or Credit Card OK. Debris Removal (PNDC) Phil, 541-279-0846. www.lcb.state.or.us to 541-420-3484. experience. Required qualifications: MS, MA, check license status Studded tires Hankook Juniper or Lodgepole or We are looking for experienced DPT, or Ph.D. (preferred) Exercise Science or JUNK BE GONE $100 Heating/Cooling before contracting with 245/70R16, MOULDER OPERATORS & SET UP people, a closely related field, and evident commitI Haul Away FREE Pine (some Hemlock)971-275-5361 the business. Persons ment to cultural diversity & educational equity. as well as entry level stacker positions. For Salvage. Also Cut, split & delivered, doing land s cape Bend Heating 8 Preferred qualifications include teaching expeCleanups & Cleanouts The Bulletin Offers $200/cord (delivery inmaintenance do not rience at the college or university level and a Sheetmetal, Inc. Entry level positions starting at $10.00 per Mel, 541-389-8107 Free Private Party Ads cluded). 541-604-1925 r equire an L C B CCB¹08653 hour. Moulder/Set Up pay rates up to$16.00 demonstrable commitment to promoting and • 3 lines 3 days cense. 541-382-1231 enhancing diversity. depending on experience. Medical, dental, • Private Party Only I Domestic Services Pine & Juniper Split www.bendheating.com vision, life insurance and vacation available • Total of items adverFor consideration to teach Winter 2014 appliafter standard qualification requirements for tised must equal $200 PROMPT D E LIVERY A ssisting Seniors a t Landscaping/Yard Care Nelson each. Bright Wood is an equal opportunity emcations should be received by Nov. 30, 2013. or Less Home. Light house Landscaping & 541-389-9663 ployer and we p erform our own on-site For all other terms, applications will be acFOR DETAILS or to keeping & other ser Maintenance pre-employment drug screening. You must cepted online throughout this academic year. PLACE AN AD, v ices. L icensed & Serving Central 269 pass a p r e-employment drug screening. Call 541-385-5809 Bonded. BBB C erti Oregon Since 2003 Please apply in person in the Personnel Dept. To review posting and apply, go to website: Fax 541-385-5802 Gardening Supplies fied. 503-756-3544 ZooN'z gaa8rip Residental/Commercial http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and review postto complete an application. & Equipment Upright Freezer; front ing number 0010921. Zacug ga e I,. Drywall Sprinkler Blowouts loader Wsher & dryer; We are located in the Madras Industrial Park. Sprinkler Repair Managing various ho u sehold BarkTurfSoil.com Bright Wood Corporation — Personnel Dept., OSU is an AA/EOE. JL' S D R YWALL items. 541-383-1962 Central Oregon 335 NyyHess St., Madras, OR 97741 Maintenance Over 30 years of fast, Landscapes • Fall Clean up Wanted- paying cash PROMPT D E LIVERY reliable service. Since 2006 •Weekly Mowing General for Hi-fi audio & stuCommercial & Residen541-389-9663 & Edging CROOK COUNTY dio equip. Mclntosh, tial. 541-815-4928 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Fall Clean Up •Bi-Monthly & Monthly J BL, Marantz, D y CCB¹161513 Don't track it in all Winter Maintenance naco, Heathkit, SanFor newspaper •Leaves •Bark, Rock, Etc. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Crook County Road Department Electrical Services delivery, call the Advertising Account Executive •Cones Call 541-261-1808 Certified ODOT Flagger/Labor/Winter Circulation Dept. at Rewarding new business development • Needles Landsca in ~ Anti Icing Application Mike Dillon Electric 541-385-5800 • Debris Hauling •Landscape Check out the NON - CDL Position Electrical troubleshootTo place an ad, call The Bulletin is looking for a professional and Construction classifieds online ing, Generator systems, 541-385-5809 $20.09 per hour driven Sales and Marketing person to help our • Water Feature Winter Prep www.bendbulletln.com new panel installations. or email Full time w/benefits/union position customers grow their businesses with an Installation/Maint. • Pruning classifiedObendbulletin com Updated daily 24 yrs exp/ Lic./ Bonded expanding list of broad-reach and targeted Closes: November 14th, 2013 at 5pm •Pavers •Aerating ¹192171 503-949-2336 products. This full-time position requires a •Renovations •Fertilizing 261 The Bulletin serv~ng cenaal oregons>nre 1903 background in c onsultative sales, territory •Irrigations Installation Medical Equipment Handyman management and aggressive prospecting skills. REQUIREMENTS: Must have experience in Compost Senior Discounts Two years of media sales experience is road maintenance, construction. Shall have a SUPER TOP SOIL I DO THAT! www.hershe soilandbark.com Applications Bonded & Insured preferable, but we will train the right candidate. current ODOT Flagger Certification and a valid Home/Rental repairs Screened, soil & com541-815-4458 Oregon Driver License. Able to lift 40 pounds, Use Less Water Small jobs to remodels LCB¹8759 post mi x ed , no The p o s ition i n c ludes a comp etitive stoop, kneel bend and stand for long periods. $$$ SAVE $$$ Honest, guaranteed rocks/clods. High hu- compensation package including benefits, and Work environment will be exposure to heat, Improve Plant Health work. CCB¹151573 mus level, exc. for rewards an aggressive, customer focused rain, snow, wind, and cold temperatures. FALL CLEAN-UP flower beds, lawns, Dennis 541-317-9768 salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Lifting and placing traffic control devices for 2014 Maintenance Debris removal, fertilizgardens, straight work zones. Completion of daily Traffic ConPackage Available Go-Go Elite Traveling, pruning. aerating. ERIC REEVE HANDY s creened to p s o i l . Email your resume, cover letter trol Plan and use of two-way radio is mandaler 3-wheel scooter, Villanueva Lawn Care. SERVICES. Home & Bark. Clean fill. Deand salary history to: tory. Overtime winter call out evenings and Weekly, Monthly & 541-981-8386 Model SC40E, under Commercial Repairs, liver/you haul. Jay Brandt, Advertising Director weekends. Application and full job description One Time Service warranty, like new Carpentry-Painting, 541-548-3949. 'brandt@bendbulletin.com can be found at www.co.crook.or.us. condition, used 2 Pressure-washing, OI' times. Health forces EXPERIENCED 270 Honey Do's. On-time Tile/Ceramic • drop off your resume in person at Please apply at the sale. Purchased from Commercial promise. Senior Lost & Found 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Crook County Treasurer's!Tax Office Advanced Mobility & Residential Discount. Work guarBaptista Tile Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. 200 NE 2 St. July, 2013 for $1295; anteed. 541-389-3361 & Stone Gallery Found emergency kit on No phone inquiries please. Prineville, OR 97754 selling for $795 obo. Senior Discounts or 541-771-4463 CCB¹19421 Hwy 97 north of Bend. 541-480-2700 541-447-6554 54'I -390-1466 541-382-9130 Bonded & Insured Call to identify, EOE / Drug Free Workplace EOE pattym51OQ.com CCB¹181595 Same Day Response www.baptistatile.com 541-389-2406 (Iv msg) Medical Equipment
Lost & Found
Employment Opportunities
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
Monday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 : 0 0 pm Fri. Tuesday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . Noon Mon. Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Saturday • . • .. 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. • • • • . 5:00 pm Fri.
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The Bulletin
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 2013 860
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R e d mond Homes Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
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528
Loans & Mortgages
Call for Specia/s! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
WARNING
The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have
concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER
Canyon Rim 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 1/3 acre, 1 level. $310,000 2248 NW 19th, Redmond 541-923-3093
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales
648
Houses for Rent General
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
4 Bdrm, 2y2 bath family home, AC large fenced back-yard, mint cond.
in great neighborhood. $1350. 541-617-7003 PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d v ertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, LOADED, 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32,000 in bike,only $23,000 obo.
HD Fat Bo 1996
Completely
Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
$1 7,000
541-548-4807
Suzuki DRZ400 SM 2007, 14K mi.,
4 gal. tank, racks, recent tires, $4200 OBO. 541-383-2847.
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Motorhomes
T r a vel Trailers
KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000
$25,000.
& air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003
541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)
541-382-2577
541-385-5809 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
541-385-5809
The Bulletin 880
Motorhomes
t~
...don't let time get
away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
• 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000. • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, SOLD!
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NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1 slide, Corian surfaces,
Keystone Laredo31' RV 20 06 w i th 1 2' wood floors (kitchen), slide-out. Sleeps 6, 2-dr fridge, convection queen walk-around microwave, Vizio TV & bed w/storage underroof satellite, walk-in neath. Tub & shower. shower, new queen bed. 2 swivel rockers. TV. White leather hide-a- Air cond. Gas stove & bed & chair, all records, refrigerator/freezer. no pets or s moking. Microwave. Awning. $28,450. Outside shower. Call 541-771-4800 Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room 5th wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,
( in La Pine )
WILL DELIVER FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
RV Transport
Call Dick, 541-480-1687.
541-260-4293
Local or Long Distance: 5th wheels, camp trailers, toy haulers, etc. Ask for Teddy,
541-447-4805
Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991Ideal for camping or hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, auBeautiful h o u seboat, tomatic levelers, $85,000. 541-390-4693 Onan generator, www.centraloregon king-size bed, awhouseboat.com ning. Nice condition or trade? $8700. GENERATE SOME ex- Sell541-815-9939 citement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.
Servtng Central O~egon srnce l903
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
Fifth Wheels
The Bulletin
875 Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K mi l e s , Watercraft perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin Ads published in "Wa¹201536. tercraft" include: Kay$4995 aks, rafts and motorDream Car Ized personal Auto Sales watercrafts. For 1801 Division, Bend "boats" please see DreamCarsBend.com Class 870.
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat
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5erving Central Oregon smce1903
541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
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Fifth Wheels CHECK YOUR AD
The Bulletin
Snowmobiles
ppo o
21' Crownline Cuddy Cabin, 1995, only 325 hrs on the boat, 5.7 Merc engine with outdrive. Bimini top & moorage cover, $7500 obo.
Need to get an ad in ASAP? Harley Davidson SportYou can place it ster 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0cc, online at: 9,257 miles, $4995. Call Michael, 541-310-9057 www.bendbulletin.com
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HMl &Rni© Re ©nljO
541-379-3530
E5
882
9' Fiberglass Dinghy, w/ ors, and n e w s a i l, $395. 541-593-6303
541-385-5809 Looking for your next
880
~euenucsu! 20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for l ife $ 8 900 O B O .
541-318-6049
emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help HOTLINE, wanted ad today and 1-877-877-9392. reach over 60,000 readers each week. BANK TURNED YOU Your classified ad DOWN? Private party will also appear on will loan on real esbendbulletin.com on race, color, tate equity. Credit, no based which currently resex, handiproblem, good equity religion, ceives over familial status, is all you need. Call cap, 1.5 million page Oregon Land Mort- marital status or naviews every month tional origin, or an ingage 541-388-4200. at no extra cost. tention to make any Cut y ou r S T UDENT such pre f e rence, Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! LOAN payments in limitation or discrimiCall 385-5809 or HALF or more Even if nation." Familial staLate or in Default. Get tus includes children place your ad on-line at Relief FAST. Much under the age of 18 bendbulletin.com LOWER p a yments. living with parents or Call Student Hotline legal cus t o dians, 855-747-7784 pregnant women, and 763 (PNDC) people securing cus- Recreational Homes tody of children under LOCAL MONEY:We buy & Property 18. This newspaper secured trust deeds & not knowingly acnote,some hard money will cept any advertising PRICED REDUCED loans. Call Pat Kelley cabin on year-round for real estate which is 541-382-3099 ext.13. in violation of the law. creek. 637 acres surrounded federal land, O ur r e a ders ar e 573 Fremont Nat'I Forest. informed that Business Opportunities hereby 541-480-7215 all dwellings advertised in this newspa771 A Classified ad is an EASY W A Y TO per are available on Lots an equal opportunity REACH over 3 million basis. To complain of Pacific NorthwesternSq.ft. I o t i n cal l 17,000 ers. $54 0 /25-word discrimination Shevlin Ridge w i th t o l l -free at c lassified ad i n 2 9 HUD approved plans. More The daily newspapers for 1-800-877-0246. details and photos on 3-days. Call the Pa- toll f re e t e l ephone craigslist. $ 175,000. for the hear- 541-389-8614 cific Northwest Daily number im p aired is Connection (916) ing 1-800-927-9275. 775 2 88-6019 o r em a i l elizabeth Icnpa.com Manufactured/ Rented your for more info (PNDC) Property? Mobile Homes The Bulletin Classifieds Good classified ads tell has an FACTORY SPECIAL the essential facts in an "After Hours"Line. New Home, 3 bdrm, interesting Manner. Write $46,500 finished Call 541-383-2371 from the readers view - not on your site. 24 Hours to the seller's. Convert the J and M Homes «I. facts into benefits. Show 541-548-5511 the reader how the item will 687 LOT MODEL help them insomeway. Commercial for LIQUIDATION This Prices Slashed Huge Rent/Lease advertising tip Savings! 10 Year brought to youby Fenced storage yard, conditional warranty. building an d o f f ice Finished on your site. The Bulletin semingcenvalom go 5 nce t903 ONLY 2 LEFT! trailer for rent. In conRedmond loRedmond, Oregon Extreme Value Adver- venient 541-548-5511 205 SE Railtising! 29 Daily news- cation, Blvd. Reduced to JandMHomes.com papers $540/25-word road Avail. 10/1. classified 3-d a y s. $700/mo. Rent /Own 541-923-7343. Reach 3 million Pa3 bdrm, 2 bath homes cific Northwesterners. $2500 down, $750 mo. 693 For more information OAC. J and M Homes Office/Retail Space call (916) 288-6019 or 541-548-5511 email: for Rent elizabeth I cnpa.com for the Pacific North- 500 sq. ft. upstairs a. west Daily Connec- office on NE side of tion. (PNDC) town, private bath, all util. paid. $500 month TURN THE PAGE plus $500 d eposit. 541-480-4744 For More Ads The Bulletin
IXmitRnlh
870
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Coachman Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 - pristine with just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, rear qn walkaround bed, sofa/hideabed,caboverbunk, ducted furn/AC, flat screen TV skylight pantry, 16' awning. No pets/smkg - a must see! $57,900. 541-548-4969
TIFFIN PHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT
350hp diesel engine, $129,900. 30,900 miles, great condition! dishwasher, washer/ dryer, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries please Stored in Terrebonne.
Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34'
fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new 908 Kubota 7000w marine Aircraft, Parts diesel generator, 3 & Service slides, exc. cond. ins ide & o ut . 27 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5y2 y ears.. No p ets, no smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for 1/3 interest in Columbia $24,000 including slid- 400, $150,000 (located I Bend.) Also: Sunrii ng hitch that fits i n your truck. Call 8 a.m. ver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, to 10 p.m. for appt to I $400/mo. see. 541-330-5527.
Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388 Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
541-948-2963
Keystone Raptor, 2007 37' toy hauler,2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system,sleeps 6,m any extras. $32,500. In Madras, call 541-771-9607 or
Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual
batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441
541-475-6265
1/3 interest i n w e l lequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 Find It in
The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809
Monaco Lakota 2004 5th Wheel 34 ft.; 3 s l ides; immaculate c o ndition; l arge screen TV w / entertainment center; reclining chairs; center kitchen; air; queen bed complete hitch and new fabric cover. $20,000 OBO. (541) 548-5886
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper that fits 6/2' pickup bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
541-548-5174
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541-410-6007
MONTANA 3585 2008,
1974 Bellanca 1730A
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.
Fleetwood Discovery 2009 40X, Corian 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 541-420-3250 counters, convection/ 180 mph, excellent WEEKEND WARRIOR ATVs micro, 2-door fridge/ • Zieman 4-place condition, always Toy hauler/travel trailer. Nuyya 297LK HitcHiker freezer, washer/dryer, trailer, SOLD! 24' with 21' interior. hangared, 1 owner 2007, Out of consign745 central vac, new tile & Winnebago Suncruiser34' All in good condition. Sleeps 6. Self-conment, 3 slides, 32' for 35 years. $60K. carpet, roof sat., 3 TVs, 2004, 35K, loaded, too Homes for Sale Located in La Pine. tained. Systems/ 627 perfect for snow birds, window awnings, level- much to list, ext'd warr. appearancein left kitchen, rear Call 541-408-6149. good In Madras, Vacation Rentals ers, ext'd warranty, multi- thru 2014, $49,900 Den- condition. Smoke-free. lounge, extras. First NOTICE call 541-475-6302 media GPS, 350 Cum- nis, 541-589-3243 & Exchanges $25,000 buys it. Tow with y2-ton. Strong All real estate advermins diesel, 7.5 gen. 541-447-5502 days & suspension; can haul tised here in is sub- Motorcycles & Accessories Polaris Outlaw 450, 2008, Many extras! $129,900. 881 541-447-1641 eves. Dramatic Price ReducMXR Sport quad, dirt & ATVs snowmobiles, ject to t h e F e deral 541-604-4662 Travel Trailers tion Executive Hangar sand tires,runs great, low even a small car! Great F air H o using A c t , llp w at Bend Airport (KBDN) What are you hrs, $3750 541-647-8931 • ~ price - $8900. which makes it illegal 60' wide x 50' deep, to advertise any prefCall 541-593-6266 looking for? w/55' wide x 17' high bi870 erence, limitation or fold dr. Natural gas heat, You'll find it in Boats & Accessories discrimination based Want to impress the Christmas at offc, bathroom. Adjacent on race, color, relirelatives? Remodel the Coast to Frontage Rd; great The Bulletin Classifieds 2013 Harley L gion, sex, handicap, WorldMark visibility for aviation busiyour home with the Davidson Dyna Fleetwood D i scovery familial status or naness. 541-948-2126 or Depoe Bay, OR Wide Glide, black, help of a professional 40' 2003, diesel mo- Cougar 33 ft. 2006, tional origin, or intenemail 1jetjockOq.com 2 bedroom condo, 541-385-5809 only 200 miles, torhome w/all from The Bulletin's tion to make any such brand new, all stock, 14 ft. slide, awning, sleeps 6 options-3 slide outs, easy lift, stability bar, "Call A Service The Bulletin preferences, l i m ita12/22 - 12/29 or plus after-market satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, tions or discrimination. exhaust. Has winter To Subscribe call Professional" Directory 12/23 -12/30. 16'9" Larson All Ameri- etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. bumper extends for We will not knowingly 541-385-5800 or go to $1500 can, 1971, V-hull, 120hp Wintered i n h e ated extra cargo, all accover, helmet. accept any advertis541-325-6566 I/O, 1 owner, always ga- shop. $84,900 O.B.O. cess. incl., like new www.bendbulletin.com Selling for what I Looking for your ing for r ea l e s tate condition, stored in raged, w/trlr, exc cond, 541-447-8664 owe on it: $15,500. next employee? which is in violation of RV barn, used less Piper A rcher 1 9 80, $2000. 541-788-5456 Call anytime, 630 Place a Bulletin help this law. All persons OPEN ROAD 36' t han 10 t i mes l o based in Madras, al541-554-0384 wanted ad today and Rooms for Rent are hereby informed 2005 - $28,000 ways hangared since c ally, no p et s o r reach over 60,000 that all dwellings adKing bed, hide-a-bed smoking. $20,000 new. New annual, auto Buell 1125R, 2008 15k readers each week. Laundry and k i tchen vertised are available sofa, 3 slides, glass obo. 541-536-2709. pilot, IFR, one piece miles, reg. s ervice, Your classified ad on an equal opportushower, 10 gal. waprivileges, fully f urwindshield. Fastest Arwill also appear on ter heater, 10 cu.ft. nished. $300 mo. nity basis. The Bulle- well cared for. factory cher around. 1750 toBuell optional fairing bendbulletin.com fridge, central vac, 357 Sena Ct, Bend tin Classified tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. G ulfstream S u n 18' Maxum ski b oat, 200 0, 541-977-7479 kit, Michelin 2cc tires, which currently res atellite dish, 27 " 541-475-6947, ask for sport 30' Class A inboard motor, g r eat will trade for ie: Enceives over 1.5 milTV/stereo syst., front 746 Rob Berg. 1988 ne w f r i dge, 632 cond, well maintained, front power leveling DR 650, $5700 lion page views evNorthwest Bend Homes duro TV, solar panel, new $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 Advertise your car! obo. 541-536-7924. ery month at no jacks and s c issor Apt./Multiplex General refrigerator, wheelAdd A Picture! stabilizer jacks, 16' extra cost. Bulletin Clean 2 bdrm with large c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W Reach thousands of readers! Fleetwood A m e ri- Classifieds Get Reawning. Like new! CHECK YOUR AD basement. Spacious g enerator, Goo d Call 541-385-5809 cana W i lliamsburg 541-419-0566 sults! Call 385-5809 attached studio. Dbl condition! $12,500 The Bulletin Classlfieds 2006. Two king tent or place your ad garage. Move-in obo 541-447-5504 end beds w/storage on-line at ready. Only $338,000. Need help fixing stuff? t runk b e lo w on e , bendbulletin.com Call Glenn Oseland, Call A Service Professional slideout portable diSunchaser Pontoon Have an item to Principal Broker, find the help you need. Health Forces Sale! nette, bench s e at, N4/IZr' 541-350-7829 2007 Harley Davidson 20' boat - $19,895 www.bendbulletin.com on the first day it runs sell quick? cassette t o i le t & Holiday Realty 2006 Smokercraft FLHX Street Glideto make sure it is corFifth Wheels shower, swing level • If it's under cruise, S-8521. 2006 Too many extras to list! rect. "Spellcheck" and galley w/ 3 bu r ner Mercury. F u ll '500 you can place it in Save money. Learn human errors do oc- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 6-spd, cruise control, ste- 75hp. cook top and s ink. e n c losure. to fly or build hours reo, batt. tender, cover. camping Alpenlite 2002, 31' cur. If this happens to outside grill, outside Set-up for long haul road Pop u p cha n ging The Bulletin with 2 slides, rear with your own airyour ad, please con- Door-to-door selling with trips. Dealership svc'd. room/porta-potty, BBQ, shower. includes 2 c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o kitchen, very good Classifieds for: tact us ASAP so that fast results! It's the easiest propane tanks, 2 batswim ladder, all gear. Only 2,000 miles. condition. Commander, 4 seat, corrections and any teries, new tires plus P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h way in the world to sell. PLUS H-D cold weather Trailer, 2006 E a syNon-smokers, 150 HP, low time, adjustments can be bike trailer hitch on loader gal v anized. '10 - 3 lines, 7 days wheel, 1 s lide, AC, gear, rain gear, packs, no pets. $19,500 full panel. $23,000 made to your ad. back bumper. Dealer P urchased new, a l l '16 - 3 lines, 14 days The Bulletin Classified helmets, leathers TV, full awning, exc. obo. Contact Paul at or best offer. 541-385-5809 & much more. $15,000. records. 541-706-9977, (Private Party ads only) serviced 2013. $8500 shape, $19, 5 00. 541-447-51 84. 541-385-5809 541-382-2577 The Bulletin Classified 541-948-2216 541-382-3135 after 5pm cell503-807-1973. 541-350-8629 865
Where Buyers
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E6 FRIDAY NOVEMBER 1, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
908
Antique & Classic Autos
Aircraft, Parts & Service
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Pickups
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935
975
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Toyota Highlander 2012 15,540 mi. white, ¹161242 $27,995,
'
SuperhavvkOnly 1 Share Available
Ford Model A 1930
Coupe, good condition, $16,000. 541-588-6084 Economical flying Just bought a new boat? in your own Sell your old one in the IFR equipped classifieds! Ask about our Cessna 172/180 HP for Super Seller rates! only $13,500! New 541-385-5809 Garmin Touchscreen avionics center stack! Exceptionally clean! Hangared at BDN. Call 541-728-0773 Ford Ranchero 1965 Rhino bedliner cusTrucks 8 tom wheels, 302V-8 Heavy Equipment a uto. R u n s go o d $9,995. 541-389-0789 Ford 1965 6-yard dump truck, good paint, recent overhaul, everything Price Reduced! works! $3995. 541-815-3636 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 GMC 2004 16'
refrigerated box van, gvw 20,000, 177,800 mi, diesel, 6 spd manual with on-spot automatic tire chains. Thermo-King reefer has 1,635 engine hours. $19,995.
aaaoregonautosourcercom
People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough
The Sullefin Classirfeds
928-581-9190
Vans
i
X~ +
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A JMSI
FAST FREE T O W-
ING. 24 hr. Response Tax D e duction. U NITED BRE A S T CANCER FOUNDATION. Providing Free Mammograms & MGA 1959 - $19,999 Breast Cancer Info. Convertible. O r igi888-592-7581. nal body/motor. No (PNDC) rust. 541-549-3838 Automotive Parts,
Service & Accessories
(4) Studded tires on rims from th e T i re Factory, 225/60/R16 off Buick, but fits other GM. 5/16 tread, $250. 541-389-0038
4 studded Wintercat tires, U mounted on 16 rims, 225/70R-16, $300. 541-390-7270
Hancook DynaPro tires s tudded o n rim s , 225/70R/16, like new $400. 541-593-4398. Say Ugoodbuy
U
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
5 41 -385-580 9 Les Schwab Mud & Snow blackwall Murano P245/50/R-20 102T
Observe G02, used 1 winter. Pd $1200. Will take reasonable offer. 541-306-4915
STUDDED SNOW TIRES
size 225/70-R16 and Hyundai Santa Fe wheels, new! $600. 541-388-4003
Studded tires (4) Hankook 205/65R15S, exc.cond. $200 541-388-5152
Stud Tires, Winter Cat XT, minimal use over 2 seasons 205/60R16. $300. 209-743-4996
Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.
I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t on dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.
(photo for illustration only)
935
Mercedes-Benz C230 2005, V6, auto, RWD, leather, moon r oof, alloy wheels. Vin ¹778905. $9,888
Sport Utility Vehicles
4@S UBARU.
541-419-5480.
Automobiles
"My little red Corvette" Coupe
2 0 07, 99 K miles, premium pack1996, 350 auto, age, heated lumbar 132,000 miles. supported seats, panNon-ethanol fuel 8 oramic moo n roof, synthetic oil only, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xepremium Bose stenon headlights, tan & black leather interior, reo, always garaged, $11,000. new front & r ear 541-923-1781 brakes I 76 K miles, one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. AUDI 1990 V8 Quat541-388-4360 tro. Perfect Ski Car. LOW MILES. $3,995 obo. 541-480-9200. Chevrolet Tahoe
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
Chevy Tahoe 1998, 4x4, 5.7L V8, 197K
mi., good c o nd., runs great, w/studded tires on extra factory rims. $3000 OBO. 541-480-8060
BMW 525 2002
Regal, T-type Transmission rebuilt & 3000 rpm stall converter; 750 Holley double pumper w/milled air horn (flows 850 cfms); turbo rebuilt. Have receipts for all 3 items. Plus additional work done. $3300 obo. Call for addtional info 541-480-5502
Call on one of the professionals today!
i The Bulletin i
L'"" " " ' J
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
SUBARUOIBBND COM
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added power pkg.,
L88 - 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-
aged or abused.
•
$12,900.
Dave, 541-350-4077
530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior,
new quality t ires, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700. 541-322-9647
(photo for illustration only)
Chevy 1955 PROJECT Ford F350 Super Duty (photo for illustration only) car. 2 door wgn, 350 Crew Cab 2004, V10, Nissan Pathfinder SE il am absolutelyamazed. The small block w/Weiand auto, 4WD, tow pkg., 2005, V6, auto, 4WD, I car sold by noon on Saturday. I dual quad tunnel ram alloy wheels, w i de roof rack, moon roof, with 450 Holleys. T-10 tires. VIN ¹A53944 t ow pk g . , all o w I have been trying to sell it forna 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, $9,888 wheels. Vin¹722634 Weld Prostar wheels, I year. Please take the ad out. $12,988 extra rolling chassis + S UBA R U . I Thankyou, Karen M. extras. $6500 for all. SUBARUOPBBNDCOM 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend 4j@SUBARU. 541-389-7669. 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 Take care of Dlr ¹0354 your investments with the help from Mr. Red 1968 Mustang The Bulletin's convertible, orig. I "Call A Service owner, orig. 289 rebuilt, new Ford Supercab 1992, Professional" Directory radiator, floor brown/tan color with Subaru Bal a T urbo pans, carpeting.. m atching f ul l s i z e Sport 2005, Auto, tow c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 pkg., two tone, moon Get Results from Qualified over drive, 135K mi., roof, alloys. Central Oregon Buyers! full bench rear seat, Vin¹103619 Call us at 541-385-5809 and ask slide rear w i ndow, $15,999 about our Wheel Deal special! bucket seats, power Chevy Wagon 1957, seats w/lumbar, pw, ©~ S U BARU. 4-dr., complete, SUBARUOPBENDCOM HD receiver & trailer brakes, good t ires. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend $7,000 OBO / trades. 877-266-3821 Please call Good cond i tion. 541-389-6998 $4900. 541-389-5341 Dlr ¹0354
©Q
SUBARUOFBEND COM
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
,8
8,'8
G T 2200 4
and place an ad today! Ask about our "Whee/ Deal"! for private party advertisers
BUBARUOPBENDCOM
Corvette 1979
I
cyl, 5
I I
Volvo C30 1008, red, 60k mi. ¹081324
The Bulletin
PBIUrog CBoirsi OrSgoo since 1903
$15,995 Oregon Autngnurce
541-598-3750
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
Looking for your next employee?
Where buyers meet sellers Classifjeds Thousands ofads daily in print and online. •
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Vehicle? Call The Bulletin
2003 6 speed, X50
Jeep Grand Cherokee 1996 4x4, automatic, 135,000 miles. Great shape - very nice interior, $3,900. 541-815-9939
The Bulletin
Vin ¹023839 $13,988
r-,;„;..;,.v
4+
yourneeds.
mends extra caution i I when I p u rchasing I products or servicesI from out of the area. ash ,I Toyota Matrix S 2009, I S ending c FWD, power window, checks, or credit inp ower locks, A / C . I formation may be I
Place a Bulletin help (Photo for lllustration only) speed, a/c, pw, pdl, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ad today and Subaru lmpreza WRX nicest c o n vertible wanted 877-266-3821 reach over 60,000 2006, 4 Cyl., Turbo, 5 around in this price Dlr ¹0354 readers each week. spd, AWD, moon roof, range, ne w t i r es, Your classified ad leather. Vin ¹508150 wheels, clutch, timMercedes Benz will also appear on $18,888 ing belt, plugs, etc. bendbulletin.com E500 4-matic 2004 111K mi., remark86,625 miles, sun4@ SUSUBARUOPBEND B ARU. which currently reCOM able cond. i n side ceives over 1.5 milroof with a shade, NE Hwy 20, Bend. and out. Fun car to loaded, silver, 2 sets 2060 877-266-3821 lion page views d rive, M ust S E E ! every month at of tires and a set of Dlr ¹0354 $5995. R e dmond. no extra cost. Bullechains. $13,500. 541-504-1993 541-362-5598 tin Classifieds Subaru STi 2010, Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place Mercedes C300 2009 16.5K, rack, mats, cust Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the your ad on-line at 4-door 4-Matic, red, snow whls, stored, oneclassifieds! Ask about our owner, $29K, bendbulletin.com one owner, loaded. Super Seller rates! 541.410.6904 29,200 mi. $ 2 4 ,900 541-385-5809 obo 541-475-3306
Dodge Durango 2005, Nissan Versa S 2011, 4WD, V8 5.7L, Tow Gas saver, auto, air, pkg., running boards. CD, a lloys, Vin third row seat, moon¹397598 roof. $11,888 Plymouth B a r racuda Vin¹ 534944 $10,999 1966, original car! 300 Buick La Cross CXS S UB A R U . hp, 360 V8, center- 45i S U B A R u 2 005, loaded, n e w lines, 541-593-2597 SUBARUOPBSND COM battery/tires, p e rfect 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend $8995. 541-475-6794 PROJECT CARS: Chevy Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 Cadillac El Dorado Dlr ¹0354 Chevy Coupe 1950 1994 Total Cream Puff! rolling chassis's $1750 Body, paint, trunk as ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, showroom, blue complete car, $ 1949; leather, $1700 wheels Cadillac Series 61 1950, w/snow tires although 2 dr. hard top, complete car has not been wet in Pontiac G6 2007, low w/spare f r on t cl i p ., miles, $8900. 8 years. On trip to $3950, 541-382-7391 541-548-1422 Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., lnfiniti FX35 2012, $4800. 541-593-4016.s Platinum silver, I .Iitii ~ ' . Get your 24,000 miles, with factory war r anty, CHECK YOUR AD business f ully l o aded, A l l Please check your ad on the first day it runs Wheel Drive, GPS, sunroof, etc. to make sure it is cor- a ROWI N G VW Bug Sedan, 1969, rect. Sometimes in$35,500. fully restored, 2 owners, 541-550-7189 s tructions over t h e with an ad in with 73,000 total miles, phone are misunder$10,000. 541-382-5127 The Bulletin's stood and an e rror "Call A Service can occur in your ad. 933 If this happens to your Professional" Pickups ad, please contact us Directory the first day your ad Chevy 1986, long bed, appears and we will four spd., 350 V8 rebe happy to fix it as ELK HUNTERS! Porsche 911 built, custom paint, Jeep 1979, orig. s oon a s w e ca n . Carrera 993 cou e great ti r e s and owner,CJ5 Deadlines are: Week87k only 3k on wheels, new t a g s, new 258 long block. days 12:00 noon for $5000 obo. C lutch p kg , W a r n next day, Sat. 11:00 541-389-3026 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. hubs. Excellent runner, very dependable. 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, Northman 6 8/s' plow, Need to get an ad Warn 6000¹ w i nch. please call us: 1996, 73k miles, in ASAP? 541-385-5809 $9500 or best reaTiptronic auto. sonable offer. The Bulletin Classified transmission. Silver, 541-549-6970 or blue leather interior, Fax it to 541-322-7253 541-815-8105. moon/sunroof, new quality tires and The Bulletin Classifieds BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS battery, car and seat Search the area's most covers, many extras. comprehensive listing of CRAMPED FOR Recently fully serclassified advertising... iphoto lorittuetretion only) CASH? viced, garaged, real estate to automotive, C hevy Malibu L T Z Use classified to sell looks and runs like merchandise to sporting 2010, V6, auto those items you no new. Excellent congoods. Bulletin Classifieds w/overdrive, leather, longer need. dition $29,700 appear every day in the loaded, 21 K m i les, Call 541-385-5809 541-322-9647 print or on line. Vin ¹103070 $17,988 Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com Porsche 911 Turbo S UBA R U Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD The Bulletin 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. SLT quad cab, short box, 877-266-3821 auto, AC, high mileage, tn Dlr ¹0354 $12,900. 541-389-7857
@®
Buick 1983
@®
BUBARUOFBEND COM
Luxury Sport Edition, V-6, automatic, U loaded, 18 new tires, 114k miles. $7,900 obo (541) 419-4152
(photo forillustration only)
Automo b iles
r----
I subject toFRAUD. For more informaI tion about an adver$17,988 Good classified ads tell you may call Q ) ' S U BUBARUOPBEND B A R UCOM. I tiser, the essential facts in an S UBA R U . the Oregon State I interesting Manner. Write 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. I Attorney General's t from the readers view - not 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Office C o n sumer 877-266-3821 the seller's. Convert the Dlr ¹0354 I Protection hotline at Dlr ¹0354 1-877-877-9392. facts into benefits. Show
brought to youby
GMC 1995 Safari XT, seats 8, 4.3L V6, studs on rims, $2300 obo. 541-312-6960
Toyota Avalon Limited 2007, V6, auto, FWD, leather, moon roof, A lloy w h eels. V i n ¹178907
This advertising tip
~ Oo MOre PiXat Beljdbljletilj.COm
The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting
541-322-6928
help them in someway.
The Bulletin
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500.
the reader how the item will
hoses, 2001 4x4, 4.8L V8. camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000.GMC Sierra 1977 short Dark green w/gray 541-820-3724 leather interior. bed, e xlnt o r i ginal cond., runs & drives Good condition. great. V8, new paint $3900. i Automotive Wanted and tires. $4950 obo. 541-390-3326 541-504-1050 DONATE YOUR CARp ump, 4 - 3
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super
Automobiles •
The Bulletin recoml
Porsche Carrera 911
fe,(tN
BMW X3
$19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171
I
•
541-480-3179
GMC PrgtOn 1971, Only
Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp U
matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call
Autngoarce
541-598-3750
engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in/out. $7500 obo.
541-419-4172.
35
FORD XLT1992 3/4 ton 4x4
Au t o mobiles
2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with
I
Oregon
trrM,
•
BUBARUOPBRND COM
I
I I I I
I I I
I ClaSSifiedS
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
1000
before the expiraLEGAL NOTICE Estate of M A RILYN tion of 30 days from the date of the first R. KROHN. Notice to Interested P e r sons p ublication of t h is (Case No. summons. The date 1 3PB0115). I n t h e of first publication in Court of the State of this matter is OctoOregon for the County ber11,2013. If you fail timely to appear of DESCHUTES. In and answer, plainthe Matter of the Estate o f MAR I L YN tiff will apply to the ROSE KROHN, De- above-entitled court c eased. N o tice i s for the relief prayed h ereby g i ven t h a t for in its complaint. R obert K rohn a n d This is a ju d icial a Janice Hammond has foreclosure o f been appointed as the d eed o f t r u s t i n which the p l aintiff personal representar equests that t h e tive of the above estate. All persons hav- plaintiff be allowed ing claims against this to foreclose your estate are required to interest in the following d e s cribed present them to the undersigned personal real property: PARrepresentative in care CEL 1 OF PARTIof the undersigned at: T ION PLAT N O . LO2915 NW Golf Course 2003-46, THE Dr., Bend, OR 97701 CATED I N within four m o nths SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF after the date of first SECTION 4, publication of this no15 tice, as stated below, TOWNSHIP or such claims may be SOUTH, RANGE 10 THE barred. All p e rsons EAST O F whose rights may be W ILLAMETTE M E RIDIAN, CITY OF affected by the proS ISTERS, DES ceedings in this estate may obtain addi- CHUTES COUNTY, Comtional information from O REGON.
t he records of t h e Court, the p ersonal representative or the attorney for the personal representative. Dated and first publ ished October 1 8 , 2013. Robert Krohn a nd J a nice H a m mond, 2915 NW Golf Course Dr., Bend, OR 97701.
LEGAL NOTICE Foreclosure Notice Brosterhous S t o rage, 61380 Brosterhous Road, Bend 9 7702. N otice o f foreclosure sale on Saturday N o vember 16th at 9:00 AM to sa t i sf y lie n against the followi ng u n i t : Dil l e n Wakefield ¹101. LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E
C I R CUIT
COURT FOR THE STATE O F O REGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES. U.S. BANK N A TIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE
FOR
M ASTR ASS E T BACKED SECURITIES TRUST 2006-NC1, MORTGAGE PASST HROUGH C E R TIFICATES, SERIES 2006-NC1, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. GEOFF C HISHOLM, A K A GEOFFREY JOHN C HISHOLM, A K A G EOFFREY C H ISHOLM; M. DENISE CH I SHOLM, AKA MARIE DENISE CHISHOLM; JP MORGAN CHASE BANK, NA; PORTF OLIO REC O V ERY ASSOCIATES; HOME F E D ERAL BANK; STATE OF OREGON; RIVERWALK HO LDINGS LTD.; AND OCCUP ANTS O F T H E PREMISES, Defen-
m only known a s : M a ple Lane, Sisters, Oregon 97759. NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS: READ THESE P A P ERS 362 North
CAREFULLY! A
l awsuit has b e e n started against you in th e a b ove-entitled court by U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for MASTR Asset Backed Securities Trust 2 006-NC1,
Mor t -
gage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-NC1, plaintiff. Plaintiff's claims are stated in the written complaint, a copy of which was filed with the a b ove-entitled C ourt. You mus t
"appear" in this case or the other side will win a u tomatically. To "appear" you must file with t he court a legal docus ment called a motion" or "answer." The "motion" or san-
swer" (or "reply") must be given to the court clerk or ad-
ministrator within 30 days of the date of first publ i cation s pecified her e i n along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof of service on t he plaintiff's a t t orney or, if t h e p l aintiff does not have an a ttorney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have any questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Ref e rral S ervice online a t www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metrop olitan a rea) o r toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. This summons is issued pursuant to ORCP 7. R C O LE G A L, P.C., Michael Botthof, OSB ¹113337, mbotthoforcolegal. com, Attorney for P laintiff, 51 1 S W 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205, P: (503) 977-7840 F: (503) 977-7963.
d ants. Case N o . 1 3CV0811. S U M MONS BY PUBLIC ATION. TO T H E DEFENDANTS: Geoff Chisholm aka Geoffrey John Chisholm aka G e offrey Chisholm and M . D e n ise Ch isholm aka M a rie Denise Chisholm: In t he name o f t h e State of O r egon, you are hereby required to a p pear a nd a nswer t h e complaint filed Need help fixing stuff? against you in the Call A Service Professional above-entitled Court find the help you need. www.bendbulletinicom a nd cause on o r
Legal Notices
•
LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R C UIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DES C HUTES. U.S. Bank National Association, as T rustee f o r As s e t Backed Sec u rities
Legal Notices tion specified herein a long with th e r e quired filing fee. The date of first publication of the summons is October 25, 2013. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an a t torney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service onl i n e at www.oregonstatebar. org or by calling (503) 684-3763 ( in t h e Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. Attorney for Plaintiff, /s/ Cara J. Rich t er. C ara J. Rich t er
C orporation H o m e Equity Loa n T r u st 2002-HE3, P l a intiff, vs. J O S EP H P. S PENCER; CAN DACE WOODBRIDGE, NOT INDIVIDUALLY BUT SOLELY IN HER CAPACITY AS T RUSTEE OF T H E T RUST AGRE E MENT DATED 3/1 9/2008, K N OWN AS TRUST NUMBER 1 8902; MELV I N ¹094855 [crichtero logs.com], WINNINGHAM; NORA WIN N I NG- SHAPIRO & S UTHERLAND, LLC, HAM; OTHER PER1499 SE Tech Center SONS OR PARTIES, i ncluding OCC U - P lace, S u it e 25 5 , Vancouver, WA PANTS, UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY 98683, RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, ( 360)260-2253; F a x (360)260-2285. S&S O R I NTEREST I N THE
PROP E RTY
DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN, Defendants. No. 13C V 1186FC. CIVIL SU M MONS. TO T H E DE F E NDANTS: Ca n dace
No. 13-112588. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the u n-
dersigned intends to
sell personal property from unit(s) listed below to enforce a lien Woodbridge, not indiimposed o n sai d vidually but solely in p roperty under t h e her c a p acity as Oregon Self Storage Trustee of the t rust F acilities Act ( O RS a greement dat e d 87.685). The under3/19/2008, known as signed will sell at pubTrust Number 18902. lic sale by competiNOTICE TO DEFEN- t ive bidding on t h e DANT: READ THESE 23rd day of NovemP APERS CARE - ber, 2013 a t 1 1 :00 FULLY! A lawsuit has a.m., on the premises been started against where said property you in the above-en- has been stored and titled Court by U . S. which are located at Bank National AssoBend Sentry Storage, ciation, as Trustee for 1291 S E Wil s o n, Asset Backed Securi- B end, State o f O r ties Corp o r ation egon, the following: Home Equity L o an Unit ¹37 Erin Harkin, Trust 2002 - H E3, Plaintiff. Pla i n tiff's claim is stated in the written Complaint, a
Unit ¹67 Ryan Steeley, Unit ¹251 Paula Chittenden, Unit ¹487 Ann Willis, Unit ¹354 Bobby Campbell, Unit ¹500 Jeanine Thort on, Unit ¹ 4 3 9 S a -
copy of which is on file at the Deschutes County C ourthouse. You must "appear" in vanna Ladewig. this case or the other LEGAL NOTICE side will win automatiPublic Auction cally. To "appear" you Public Auction to be must file with the court held on Saturday, Noa legal paper called a vember 9th, 2013 at "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or san- 11:30am at A-1 Westswer" must be given side Storage, 317 SW Columbia St., Bend, to the court clerk or administrator w i t hin Oregon 97702. (Unit 30 days along with the L-286 Shawn Ryan). required filing fee. It LEGAL NOTICE must be i n p r oper The undersigned has form and have proof been appointed pero f service o n t h e sonal representative plaintiff's attorney or, of the Estate of RUSif the plaintiff does not S ELL ARTHU R have a n at t orney, JOHNSON, Deproof of service on the ceased, by the Desplaintiff. The object of chutes County Circuit t he complaint is t o Court of the State of foreclose a deed of Oregon, pro b a te t rust dated June 5 , number 1 3 P B0108. 2002 and recorded as All persons having Instrument No. c laims against t h e 2002-31711 given by estate are required to Joseph P. Spencer, present the same with an unmarried man on proper vouchers property c o mmonly within four (4) months known as 18902 Riv- after the date of first erwoods Dr., Bend, publication to the unOR 97702 and legally dersigned or they may described as: LOT be barred. Additional FORTY (40), BLOCK i nformation may b e XX, DES C HUTES o btained f ro m t h e RIVER WOODS, DE- court records, the unSCHUTES COUNTY, dersigned or the atOREGON. The com- torney. Date first pubplaint seeks to forelished: October 18, close and terminate 2013. K E I T H G. all interest of C a n- JOHNSON, Personal dace Woodbridge, not R epresentative c / o individually but solely Ronald L. Bryant, Atin her c apacity as torney at Law, Bryant Trustee of the t rust E merson & Fit c h , a greement dat e d L LP, PO B o x 4 5 7 , 3/19/2008, known as Redmond OR 97756. Trust Number 18902 and all other interests Need to get an in the property. The ad in ASAP? "motion" or "answer" You can place it (or "reply") must be online at: given to t h e c o u rt clerk or administrator www.bendbultetln.com within 30 days of the 5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9 date of first publica-
. YOUR WREICLY GUIDE TO'CEkTRAL ORFGON EVEATS,• ARTS.AN'D ENT<RTAINMEQT ' •
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C ON T A C T
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EDITOR
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
insi e
Cover illustration by Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Ben Salmon, 541-383-0377
bsalmon ©bendbulletin.com
REPORTERS Beau Eastes, 541-383-0305 beastesObendbulletin.com David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasper©bendbulletin.com Megan Kehoe, 541-383-0354 mkehoe I bendbulletin.com Karen Koppel, 541-383-0351 kkoppelIbendbulletin.com Jenny Wasson, 541-383-0350 jwasson@bendbulletin.com
SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: eventsobendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804,
Attn: Community Life U.S. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
MUSIC • 3 • Soldier Songs connects veterans with music • Hoedown for Hunger at Bend's Community Center • The Dirtball performs at Bend Burn • The Defibulators visit Sisters • Betty and the Boy play McMenamins • Gaelic Storm blows into Bend • Halloween party at Pakit Liquidators
GOING OUT • 7
Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. ull
• Jackie Evancho of "America's Got Talent" fame performs in Portland • A guide to out of town events
• COVER STORY: Winter beers to warm your belly • Non-Oregon beers are good, too
ADVERTISING 541-382-1811
OUT OF TOWN • 22
• Paul McCartney, Sleigh Bells and more
DRINKS • 10
DESIGNER Althea Borck, 541-383-0331 aborck©bendbulletin.com
MUSIC RELEASES • 9
• Burnin' Moonlight and Downtown Brown are in Central Oregon • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more
Assistance League® of Begd-
HOLIDAY BAZAARS • 25 • This week's bazaars
ARTS • 12 • • • •
Wildfire Pottery Showcase returns First Friday Gallery Walk tonight The Nature of Words opens Thursday Art Exhibits lists current exhibits
CALENDAR • 16 • A week full of Central Oregon events
MOVIES • 27 PLANNING AHEAD • 18 • A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classes listing
RESTAURANTS • 20 • A review of La Magie in Bend • News from the local dining scene
• "Ender's Game,""Free Birds" and "Last Vegas" open in Central Oregon • "Monsters University,""R.I.P.D." and "Byzantium" are out on Blu-ray and DVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon
Special thanks to our sponsors and community partners
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
musie • Saturday brings 2 very different opportunities to go hear lots of music inBend By Ben Salmon •The Bulletin
Hoedown for Hunger T
he Hoedown for Hunger at Bend's Community Center has become a staple of fall in Central Oregon, featuring a
The Bend Burn ou know, it's pretty cool of Bend's Indoor Garden Station and Peapod Glass Design to throw a customer-appreciation party and invite the whole town. T hat's the impetus of T h e Bend Burn, as far as I can tell. The tw o g r een-thumb businesses are going all out Saturday, saying "thanks" to their patrons by putting together a free concert and other fun stuff on an industrial lot off Boyd Acres Road, just a stone's throw from the Northside Bar & Grill. Headlining the music is The Dirtball, a B en d n ative and member of Kottonmouth Kings known for his jaw-droppingly fast rapping style. Dirtball is currently home in Central Oregon between K o t tonmouth
day full of local people, bluegrass and Americana music gathered to try to help local folks in need. Saturday will bring the eighth annual Hoedown to the center, with all proceeds benefitting the its Feed the Hungry program, which prepares more than 2,000 meals per week for Central Oregon's homeless. Donations for the Keep Them Warm program will also be taken. The music schedule is below. The Hoedown will also offer a silent auction, plus all-you-can-eat chili donated by several local restaurants,and desserts provided by area bakeries and eateries. No-host beer and wine will be available as well. B efore you h e a d o v er, g o through your house and grab s ome stuff f o r K e e p T h e m Warm. Requested items include tents,tarps, bungee cords, camp
tours, and working on a short film and his upcoming fifth solo album, "Firestrike," expected to be released together in the
spring. Also on the bill: San Diego electro-hop alchemists Vokab Kompany and localhip-hop 'n' rock group Mosley Wotta, plus Strive Roots, Sol Seed, Back 40, Quark and more. There will be food carts on hand for grub, beer by 10 Barrel, arts and crafts, live glass blowing, other vendors and who knows what else. Plenty of stuff to stimulate your mind, I'd bet. The Bend Burn, with The Dirt-
ball, Vokab Kompany, Mosley Wotta and more; noon-9p.m. Saturday; free; 62870 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; wwwbendsindoor .com.
stoves, sleeping bags and pads, warm clothing, gloves, hats and ski bibs. Basically anything you think would be helpful if you had to sleep outside in our winter. "This is such a fun event celebrating local musicians and the change of seasons here in Central Oregon," said Linda Heatley, the executive director for Bend's Community Center. "It is also a vital fundraiser supporting one
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin file photo
Felly Smith performs during the 2011 Hoedown for Hunger at Bend's Community Center. of our most integral programs at BCC, helping us to feed the hun-
gry every Sunday." Hoedown for Hunger; 1-9 p.m. Saturday; $15, free for children
Hoedown for Hungerschedule 1 p.m. —Trees R4 Hugging 1:25 p.m. —Freddy Finney-Jordet 1:50 p.m.— Bobby Lindstrom with Ed Sharlet 2:15 p.m. —Joe B. Stevens 2:40 p.m.— Runway Ranch 3:05 p.m.— Mai and Dave+ Ted
3:30 p.m. —Bitterbrush 3:5 5p.m. — Felly Smith 4: 2 0p.m. — Burnin' Moonlight 4:45 p.m.— Banjo Gallimaufrey 5:10 p.m.— Extra Blue
5:35p.m. —Riley's Range Benders 6 p.m. — Wild Rye
12 and younger, tickets available at the door or in advance at 541-312-2069;Bend's Community Center, 1036 NE. Fifth St.; www .bendscommunitycenter org.
6:25 p.m. —Bend'N Strings 6:50 p.m.— Quincy Street 7:15 p.m. —Bill Keale 7:40 p.m.— Rusty Rayle li The
Rounders 8:05 p.m.— The Prairie Rockets 8:30 p.m. —High Plains Drifters 8:55 p.m.— Back from the Dead
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The Dirtball, a Bend native, is expected to release his fifth solo album in the spring.
music
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com TheBulletin
Get ATaste For Food. Home Sr Garden Every Tuesday In ATHOME TheBulletin
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From left, Dan Ericsson, Darin Darlington, Lenny Ferris and John Rinehold perform as Loose Gravel at Bend's Community Center last weekend. The band came together during meetings of the new Soldier Songs group in Bend.
• Members of local veterans'group will play tonight in downtown Bend •
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By Ben Salmon The Bulletin
or years,t Tom Leonard had ii been,1 ~~in his words,1 a "novice"1tt1 ~ u guitarist and "nonprofessional" musician who liked to play around with tunes and instruments, never very seriously. Then three months ago, the floodgates opened when he found Soldier Songs, a new local group that connects experienced songwriters with military veterans in an effort to make some music. "They encouraged me and they really liked my songs, and before I knew it, within just a couple of months, I had 20, 30, 40 songs in my head written down," he said. "They're just flowing. It's coming fairly easy for me," Leonard said. "I never really worked at it ... and all of a sudden they just started coming together. And before I knew it, I was ~
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Leonard, 54, tends to write country music; his topics so far include the rodeo and the military, among others. He'll perform three songs tonight during a showcase of local Soldier Songs participants in the atrium of the St. Clair Building in downtown
Bend (see "If you go"). His wife, Darlene, 62, is a classically trained violinist who is getting back to her instrument thanks to Tom's involvement with the group. She'll perform alongside her husband of 21 years tonight. "Tom always had ideas for songs but they wouldn't really come to fruition until he had the encouragement of a program like this, and other veterans who could really help encourage him to bring the songs to full development," she said. "That's wonderful encouragement for anyone, and particularly someone who's been involved in the military and has reengaged in civilian life and
If you go What:Soldier Songs performance When:6tonight Where: St. Clair Building atrium, 920 N.W. Bond St., Bend
Gost:Free Contact:badlands.bill©gmail. com, 206-227-0194
is looking for direction and creative outlets," Darlene Leonard said."I can't say enough good things about it." The Central Oregon chapter of Soldier Songs started six months ago after local singer-songwriter and veteran Bill Valenti — who has penned a song about an Iraq war veteran who commits suicide — heard about a similar program on the radio.
Continued next page
music
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
GO!MAGAZINEe PAGE 5
From previous page He requested a starter kit from the national Soldier Songs organization, then contacted local songwriters to see if they wanted to participate, secured a meeting spot — Bend's Community Center, third Monday of each month — and began pushing the group to the local Veterans' Affairs office and groups like Central Oregon Veterans Outreach. Over the past six months, the group has had as many as 12 to 15 people show up on a given night, overwhelmingly Vietnam-era vets, Valenti said. Attendees have ranged in ability, from those with basic guitar skills to experienced musicians looking to get back into playing. The sessions have also taken different forms, from one-on-one instruction to larger group jams, Valenti said. The camaraderie seems to be just as important as the music, he said. "I've always believed in the therapeutic power of music," said Valenti, who was drafted during the Vietnam War and served four years as a Chinese translator in Southeast Asia. "I think it's an enormously powerful thing to get involved in, playing music or, even more importantly, writing music, writing a song, telling the story you need to telL "Songwriting is not magic. It's just storytelling with a bit of structure," he continued. "I think if you get somebody who has really interesting stories to tell and you sit down side by side with an experienced songwriter who knows how to take out the junk and leavethe gems behind, you can get some really, really interesting songs that tell really good stories." Soldier Songs has even already produced one band, Loose Gravel, which will perform as part of tonight's show. The group — Dan Ericsson, Darin Darlington and John Rinehold, with Lenny Ferris on harmonica — plays a range of styles that reflect its members' different music backgrounds, Rinehold said. "Danny's a jazz guitar player, I'm a country bass player, Darin plays Dobro and Lenny plays blues harp," he said. "It's a mix. We try to keep it where it doesn't sound like the same thing over and over again." Rinehold, 68, discovered Soldier Songs about five months ago. An experiencedmusician who has released his own album, he called Valenti and began attending to tryto get back into playing music after manyyears away. Rinehold served in the Air Force from 1966 to 1970 and never went to combat, but he suffered his own trauma: His daughter died three decades ago, and he "went into a big shell" and "became a hermit for a while." Soldier Songs is helping him get out of that shelL "I went out and startedplaying with
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Local songwriter Tim Coffey, left, works with veteran and Soldier Songs participant Rod Napier on one of Napier's songs about the Vietnam War.
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Veterans, musicians and Soldier Songs members shoot the breeze at Bend's Community Center on a recent Friday night.
NOVEMBER 14 Barrere 8 Tackett ofLittle Feat 15-16 WarrenMiller Film
"It gives an opportunity for veterthese guys and it was good for me," he said. "They're really nice guys, and ans to be in a nonthreatening environwe're having a good time. I'm able to ment and to be able to express themshow them a few things and they're selves in a way that could bring them showing me a few things." a great deal of comfort," he said. "This He means that in more ways than might just be what makes them feel a musically. little bit better about themselves and oYou get old and single like I am maybe reveals some talents and gifts and you get to feeling sorry for your- they have that they weren't aware of. self," he said. "But then when you get This might be the outlet they need." out and see other people dealing with Soldier Songs is the outlet Rineproblems and you find yourself help- hold needed. Now that he's coming ing them and when you help other out of his shell, he's ready to conquer people you end up helping yourself." the next goal: performing in front of Darlene Leonard has already seen people. "I'm doing it, man," he said. "I'm the therapeutic benefit of Soldier Songs on her husband Tom. And nervous as hell, but it's gonna be Tom, who served in the Marines, be- fun." — Reporter: 541-383-0377, lieves the program can have the same effect on others. bsalmonC<bendbulletin.com
17 Pacific MamboOrchestra
19 T r ombone Shorty
21 Dr. Ira Byock Lecture 25 Jimi Hendrix: "Live atWoodstock"
DEGEMBER 3 Benoit's Charlie BrownChristmas 6 Todd Haaby
7 Harmony4Women
8 TheAmazing Kreskin JUSTADDED! 10 Take 6 11 Popovich PetComedy r
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The Defibulators visit Sisters
"the perfectsoundtrack for a family picnic, or a meth lab." And The Corner, a website Reading about The Defibuout of Auburn, Ala., called lators is almost as fun as listheir 10-track album "Debt'll Get'em," released in August, tening to them. In fact, when "'Hee-Haw' on mescaline." writing about the Brooklyn, "How can I play the DefibuN.Y., band, music w r i ters seem to have a pretty good lators game?" you ask. It's e asy! Just t h in k o f game of one-upmanship going. something punk, like Duane The way the game is played Peters, Social Distortion or is to take a country or redneck even Avril Lavigne's "Sk8er institution (say, the Grand Ole Boi," and something country, Opry) and a punk one (like such as Keith Urban, Brad CBGB) and link them with a Paisley or Toby Keith, and word such as "meets." How combine in a blender. Flip on 'bout some examples? All the switch, then say someMusic Guide dubbed The De- thing like, "The Defibulators fibulators "The Carter Family are like The Misfits hanging meets The Ramones." Twang out at Dollywood!" Nation called their m u sic, The Defibulators; 8 p .m.
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
Saturday; $10 plus fees in advance at www.bendticket .com, $12 at the door; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122.
they've picked up a few bandmates: Jon Conlon (upright bass), M i chelle W h i t lock (violin) and Nanci McDonald
(cello). Jaeger's bio at www.
b ettyandtheboy.com ta l k s about her lyrics being "reBetty and the Boy plete with animal and nature imagery ... a fairy tale more play McMenamins in the fashion of Grimm than Betty and the Boy is a band Disney." from Eugene whose pretty If you l i k e s weet-voiced music couldbe described as vocals and the strum-anda timeless blend of folk, bluetwang of string music, brothgrass and country. ers and sisters, McMenamins Gifted singer B e ttreena i s where you w ant t o b e Jaeger (I'm guessing that's Wednesday. "Betty" for short) and multiB etty and t h e B oy; 7 instrumentalist Josh Harvey p.m. Wed n e sday; free; met in Montana and formed McMenamins Old St. Francis Betty and the Boy as a duo. School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Since moving to Eugene, Bend; www . m cmenamins .com or 541-382-5174.
Gaelic Storm blows into Bend Gaelic Storm comes to the Tower Theatre on Wednesday as it tours in support of "The Boathouse," an album of traditional songs of the ocean. According to w w w.gaelic storm.com, the record has "twelve tales of plight and plunder, whiskey drenched pirates, flying cannon balls and ladies of ill repute." The album, which dropped — like an anchor! — in August, is the band's sixth on its own label and fourth to debut at No. I on Billboard's World Albums Chart. "The Boathouse" was recorded over the course of a "whiskey fueled week" in, fittingly, a Chesapeake Bay boathouse, because — actually, I don't know why. All I know is with all that whiskey around, I wouldn't want to be whoever had to clean up that boathouse. Gaelic Storm; 7 30 p . m . Wednesday, doors open 6:30
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Nov. 8-9 —Freak Mountain Ramblurs (roots-rock), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Nov. 9 —Grant Farm (jams),Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, Bend, www. bluepinebar.com. Nov. 9 —Rita Hoskins & Cousin Jack (folk), HarmonyHouse, Sisters, 541-548-2209. Nov. 13 —Casey Nuill & The Norway Rats(rootsrock),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Nov. 14 —Switchfoot (crossovur Christian rock),Hooker Creek Event Center, Redmond, www. j.mp/switchfootinfo. Nov. 14 —Slaid Cleaves (folk),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.com. Nov. 14 —Paul Barruru & Fred Tackutt of Little Feat (country rock),Tower Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.org. Nov. 15 —Latyrx (hip-hop), Domino Room, Bend.
ian/arts organization Rise Up will throw a Halloween party at Pakit featuring live-band hip-hop by Mosley Wotta and The HardChords, plus DJs Rada, Ells and Ill-Efekt. Also planned: food, drinks, a costume contest and a haunted barn. Can you i m agine a haunted barn at Pakit? Yeah ... sounds truly spooky. And it's all open to all ages. Bring the kids! There are m or e e vents coming to Pakit, too. On Nov. 15, the longtime home supp.m.;$25-$39 plus fees,avail- ply resale yard will host Seable through the venue; Towattle indie-rap duo Grayskul er Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., as part of a night of fashion Bend; www.towertheatre.org and music. On Dec. 5, Reno, Nev.-based Americana band or 541-31 7-0700. Moondog Matinee will play Halloween party there (along with locals WilAnd on Jan. I, Larat Pakit Liquidators derness). ry and His Flask will host an all-ages show at Pakit the day Remember a month ago when the Bend Roots Reafter their fourth annual New Year's Eve throwdown at The vival happened at a newly cleaned up Pakit Liquidators Old Stone. and it was pretty cool and a Rise Up Halloween Party, good time and you said, "This with Mosley Wotta and more; space is so great. They should 9 p.m. Saturday; $5; Pakit do morestuffhere"? Liquidators, 903S.E. Armour Good news! O n S a t ur- Road, Bend; 541-389-7047. — David Jasper and Ben Salmon day night, local humanitar-
GO! MAGAZINE + PAGE 7
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at www.bendbulletin.comlevents.
TODAY DA CHARA DUO: Celtic, jazz and pop; 5-8 p.m.; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 N.W. Lower Bridge Way, Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. SOLDIERSONGS SHOWCASE: Featuring performances by local veterans who have been working with songwriters on writing music; free; 6 p.m.; St. Clair Building atrium, 920 N.W. Bond St., Bend; badlands.bill©gmail.com or 206227-0194. (Pg. 4) CANAAN CANAAN:Folk-pop; 6 p.m.; Wabi Sabi, 830 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-633-7205. THIRD SEVEN:A homecoming show for the experimental cellist after months of international touring; 6 p.m.; Green Plow Coffee Roasters, 436 S.W.Sixth St.,Redmond; 541-516-1128. DOWNHILL RYDER:Americana, roots and country; 6-8 p.m.; Bend Brewing Co., 1019 N.W. Brooks St., Bend;541-383-1599. FIDDLEPLAY:Traditional Celtic; 6:30 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 N.W.Minnesota Ave.,Bend; 541-749-2010. SECOND SON:Folk;7 p.m.;Crow's FeetCommons, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Blues and rock; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. DAVE JONESAND SCOTT WEGNER OF STRINGSATTACHED:Covers and originals; 7-9 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095. DEREK MICHAELMARC: Blues, with Charles Button; 7 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588. BURNIN'MOONLIGHT: A CDrelease showfor the local bluegrass 'n' blues band; 7:30-11 p.m.; Kelly D's, 1012 S.E. Cleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. HILST ANDCOFFEY:Chamber-folk; 7:30 p.m.; Velvet, 805 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-728-0303. OPEN MIC NIGHT:8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend;541-323-1881. OUT OF THE BLUE: Rock; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889.
ASTRO BLACKLIGHT PARTY: featuring DJ Harlo; $3, ladies free; 9 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. DJ STEELE:9 p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-749-2440. MARV ELLIS:The Oregon-based hip-hop artist performs, with We Tribe and more; free; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541706-9091 or www.dojobend.com. STRIVE ROOTS:Reggae, with Sol Seedand a costume contest;9 p.m .; Silver Moon Brewing 8 Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331.
SATURDAY THE BENDBURN: Live music by The Dirtball, Vokab Kompany, Mosley Wotta and others, with glass blowing, food carts and more; free; noon-9 p.m.; Industrial Site, 62870 Boyd Acres Road; www. bendsindoor.com. (Pg. 3) HOEDOWN FOR HUNGER: Performances by local Americana, folk and bluegrass bands, with a chili feed and silent auction; proceeds benefit the center's Feed the Hungry Program; $15, free for children 12 and younger; 1-9 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www.bendscommunitycenter.org.
(Pg. 3) MIKE CHUBICK:Folk;3-5 p.m .; Strictly Organic Coffee Co., 6 S.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-330-6061. PAMELA MORTENSEN:The Seattle-based didgeridoo musician performs, with Dave Goodman; $15 suggested donation; 6 p.m.; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541330-0334 or www.hawthorncenter. com. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Bluesand rock; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. THE EDGE:Rock; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 S.W. 6th St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. DOWNTOWNBROWN:The Detroitbased punk-funk band performs, with The Beerslayers and The Hooligans; $3;8 p.m.;Big T's, 413 S.W. Glacier Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3864. THE DEFIBULATORS:The Brooklyn, N.Y., country band performs; $10 in advance, $12 at the door; 8-11:30
p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. (Pg. 6) OUT OF THEBLUE: Rock; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend;541-383-0889. BLACKFLOWERSBLACKSUN: Blues-punk, with Jaccuzi; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. DJ STEELE: 9 p.m .;The Sum mit Saloon 8 Stage, 125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-749-2440. JON PARDI:Country; $8 in advance, $10 at the door; 9 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com. RISE UP HALLOWEENPARTY: Featuring a costume contest, hauntedhouse and live m usic by Mosley Wotta, The HardChords and more; $5; 9 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. Armour Road, Bend; 541389-7047. (Pg. 6) MARV ELLIS:The Oregon-based hip-hop artist performs, with We Tribe and more; free; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541706-9091 or www.dojobend.com.
SUNDAY ORGANIC MUSICFARM:Americana, country and soul; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703.
MONDAY OPEN MIC:8 p.m., signups at 7:30 p.m; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.
TUESDAY LISA DAEANDTHE ROBERT LEE TRIO:Jazz standards; 6 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. MAI AND DAVE:Acoustic roots, blues and bluegrass; 6 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588.
WEDNESDAY OPEN MIC: 6:30 p.m .;M 8JTavern, 102 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-1410.
BETTY ANDTHEBOY:The Eugene folk band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. (Pg. 6) DOWNHILL RYDER:Americana, roots and country, with Friends of Lenny; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. OPEN MIC:7-9 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095. GAELIC STORM:The Celtic-rock group performs; $25-$39 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. (Pg. 6) BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rock and blues; 8 p.m.; The Pour House Grill, 1085 S.E. Third St., Bend; 541-388-2337.
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THURSDAY RENO ANDCINDY HOLLER: Pop; 5-8 p.m.; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 N.W. Lower Bridge Way, Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. BOBBY LINDSTROM AND DEREK MICHAEL MARC:Rock and blues; 6 p.m.; Cross Creek Cafe, 507 S.W.Eighth St.,Redmond; 541-548-2883. REDWOOD SON:The Portland Americana band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. OPEN MIC:8 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. BRYAN BRAZIERANDTHEWEST COAST REVIEW:Honky-tonk and country music; 9-11 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; www.bluepinebar.com or 541-389-2558. LADIES NIGHT WITH MC MYSTIC: 9 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. • TO SUBMIT:Email events@bendbulletin.
com. Deadline ie 10 days before publication. Please include date, venue, time and cost.
Burnin' Moonlight have been one of the
busier bands in Bend in recent years, playing their self-described "spirited bluegrass and blues" in restaurants and bars all over town. That's no surprise; its members are seasonedmusiciansScottFoxx,Maggie Jackson and Jim Roy — who know roots music in and out,
how to play it well, and how to get gigs. Venues have 'emback becausethey're easy on the ears, too. For evidence, visit Kelly D's Irish Pub tonight, where Burnin' Moonlight will hold a CD-release party for its new album "Good Wood," a tidy
collection of string-band jams with a healthy dose of swing. Expect 'em to warm up the dance floor right quick. Details atleft.
'Ow DOWNTOWNBROWNAT BIG T'S In recent years, it seems like all the news about Detroit has been negative:
urban blight, economic depression, mayoral corruption. Sometimes it's hard to remember Detroit is one of
America's great music cities. From thehome ofIggy,MC5, Motown and Eminem comes Downtown Brown, a three-piece funk-punk band that'll play Big T's in Redmond Saturday night. Their new album "Masterz of the Universe" is streaming in full at www.
downtownbrown.bandcamp.com. Details at left.
— Ben Salmon
PAGE 8 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
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GO! MAGAZINE ~ PAGE 9
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
musie releases Sleigh Bells
Pearl Jam
"BITTER RIVALS" Mom+ Pop Music Sleigh Bells is: A) A plot by the speaker industry to decimate your current set and force you to buy new ones; B) A concept developed in a secret cabal meeting of otolaryn-
"LIGHTNING BOLT" Monkeywrench Records Pearl Jam was always the most classic-rock-connectedof the early 1990s grunge bands. True, the Eddie Vedder-led crew can still come at you with punked-up fury, as on "Getaway" and "Mind Your Manners," the two lead tracks on the band's 10th studio album. But for all the frequent torment heard in Vedder's baritone, the band has always been about sustaining itself and its connection to its audience, in a way that their celebrated contemporaries Nirvana could not.
gologists looking for work; C) A lean, brutal band maybe just a bit tired of punching so hard. "Bitter Rivals" is the third album by Sleigh Bells, the New York duo — singer Alexis Krauss and guitarist-producer Derek Miller — that e merged f u lly formed four years ago with a straight-ahead concept: pulverizing guitars, block-rocking bass, sweet but durable vocals. It was music for construction sites and MMA bouts, shockingly intuitive and fresh. Imagine t he mig ra i n es, though. This third album is faithful to the band's idea, but toned down: Miller's guitars are less full and more abrasive, and the music has less swing than it did a
couple of years ago, even though at this album's best, it suggests turbocharged R8zB more than either of the group's prior albums did. On a couple of songs, "You
Don't Get Me Twice" and "Sugarcane," Krauss toggles between a brassy bark and a saccharine coo. There's tenderness in her voice — it has settings other than "detonate." There are still small howitzers exploding here and there — the savage " Minnie" r e calls t h e band's earliest, scariest songs. But the last third of the album, especially, shows off gentler impulses — "To Hell With You" is, by this band's standards, a love song, and "24" sounds like a new-age remix ofa 1990s Janet Jackson number. This is the sound of Sleigh Bells catching its breath, and a reminder that warfare is more fun. — Jon Caramanica, The New York Times
Panic! At The Disco "TOO WEIRD TO LIVE, TOO RARE TO DIE" Fueled By Ramen Records When Panic! at the Disco arrived onthe scene in 2005, a blur of carnival imagery and emoleaning pop with f l orid titles, few would have anticipated the Las Vegas band would bloom into one of rock's most eclectic
young acts. However, the band's fourth
Paul McCartney "NEW" Hear Music "We put a lot of energy and effort into making this album," Paul McCartney writes in the liner notes accompanying "New," his first album of new material in six years. "Hard work? No, not at all. We don't work music. We play 1l
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"Lightning Bolt" delivers its share of primal force, coming on strong withthe hard-riffing"Mind Your Manners" and the winning title track before settling back for
album, "Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die," solidifies that standing, as Brendon Urie and friends take elements of '80s synth-pop, '90s indie rock and emo from the Aughts to build a sound that is both comfortably familiar and uniquely theirs. On "Girls Girls Boys," they seem to update "Rio"-era Duran Duran, while "Nicotine" seems to imagine what Linkin Park would sound like at, well, the disco.
a mellower-groove second half. The shimmering "Pendulum" is a standout, the bluesy "Let the Records Play" is a misstep, and"Swallowed Whole" the requisite fanboy nod to The Who. Not a classic or, God forbid, an attempt at reinvention, just another rock-solid additionto a still-productive career. — Dan DeLuca, The Philadelphia Inquirer
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timistic music that seems to flow out of him effortlessly. On "New," he worked with young producers Mark Ronson, Ethan Johns, Paul Epworth and Giles Martin (son of George), all of whom add tasteful contemporary touches while having the good sense not to get in the way of Macca's way with a melody. As with last year's one-off collaboration with the surviving members of Nirvana, the singing bass player sounds energized. Which is not to say that many of the unfailingly agreeable, intelligently crafted songs on "New" will
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stick with you for very long, engaging as they are. The exception that proves the rule is "Early Days," a stripped-down remembrance in which Macca gets feisty about people who pretend to know his story better than he does himself. Reaching for high notes, he allows us to hear the strain in his voice as he sings about the "many times I had to change the pain to laughter," giving us a glimpse of what it's like to be the Beatle everyone expects to be cheerful all the time. — Dan DeLuca, The Philadel phia Inquirer
VINVL-CI-IVI-I'0$lERS / Becar(ie
831 Wall St. • Downtown Bend • 541-389-6116
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PAGE 10 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
rinks • Breweries deck the shelves with 2013's winter seasonal beers By Megan Kehoee The Bulletin h ristmas may still b e a couple of months away, but if you listen closely while standing in the beer aisle of
your local grocery store, you may just be able to hear the faint sound of caroling. That's because winter seasonals — those nostalgic, robust brews meant to keep you warm in the mean, chilly months ahead — are starting to flood the shelves of grocery stores and local specialty shops. Winter brews have a long and storied tradition in the world of craft beer: Sierra Nevada first brewed its revered Celebration Ale in 1981. Deschutes Brewery's Jubelale was the company's first seasonal when it was brewed for the first time 26
years ago.
For a lot of breweries, the annual winter tradition means big bucks. "It's our best-selling seasonal by far," said Jimmy Seifrit, brewmaster at 10 Barrel Brewing Company. "It's that way for most other breweries, too." While the labels on these beers depict snowy winter scenes, many of the bottles arrive on grocery stores in early October. Some, like 10 Barrel's Pray for Snow, were officially released in mid-September this year. Early release dates for winterseasonals seem to have become a trend in the craft beer industry, said Seifrit. John Van Duzer, head brewmaster at Cascades Lakes Brewing Co., said he has noticed this trend, though his brewery has, for the
most part, maintained an Oct. I release date for its winter seasonal. "It seems the distributors want it out there earlier and earlier," Van Duzer said. "It's a short season. Some other seasonals have about four months, but it's a three-month season for winter." Tom Gilles, co-owner of The Brew Shop and Platypus Pub in Bend, said that once the holidays are over, wi nter seasonal beer sales dip significantly, even though in places like Central Oregon, winter is far from over. "Similar t o p u m pkin b eers, there's a short window to sell these (winter) beers," Gilles said. "Once Christmas hits, the beer doesn't sell as much. It seems like they've been getting out there
earlier this season." But you won't hear beer lovers complaining that t heir f avorite winter warmers are on the shelves too early. Gilles said that even though it's a transitional period between seasons, winter brews are starting to pick up in popularity. Pray for Snow from 10 Barrel is one of the most popular with Brew Shop/Platypus Pub customers so far this year, Gilles said. Pray for Snow is in its third year of being bottled and its fifth year of being brewed, and unlike many other winter seasonals that rely on the same recipefrom year to year,the brewers at 10 Barrel prefer making Pray for Snow a unique experience every winter, Seifrit said. "We like making it different ev-
ery year because we like starting a conversation," he said. "We like people talking about the differences between years and which one is their favorite." While many winter brews are already on shelves, more will be released in the weeks ahead. And while seasonals vary from brewery to brewery, Seifrit said there is one thing that all winter brews should have in common. "It should be a hearty beer that gives you a sense of warmth," Seifrit said. "It should give you that hearty burn of alcohol in the chest and have a big full flavor. You want it to be like that nice winter jacket
you go for." — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoeCbendbulletin.com
Tom Gilles, co-owner of The Brew Shopin Bend, recommended the following local and nonlocal winter warmers to cozy up by the fire with:
LOCALS
NONLOCALS I
"That is the quintessential holiday beer for me," Gilles said. He goes so far
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classic in the realm of winter seasonal beerdom, Celebration Ale hasbeen
Dark, malty and with beautiful label art that changes year to year, this is
around for almost 32 years. Its claim to fame is its fresh, hoppy flavors and notes of citrus and pine. Chico, Calif.-based Sierra Nevada claims the ale
also the quintessential holiday beerfor plenty of Central Oregonians. Now available.
beer history.To be released in November.
as to save abottle each year and hasa14-year collection of the seasonal.
is one of the earliest examples of anAmerican-style IPA in American craft
Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin; Sierra Nevada, Anchor courtesy the breweries
This year's Pray for Snow is hoppier than last year's, with a nice malt balance; the 7ABV edition has received plenty of positive response from customers,
according to Gilles. "Thehopssnaps the beeroff," 10 Barrel brewmaster Jimmy Seifrit said. "What I mean by that is that it cleans the tongue so the tongue's not fatigued by the flavor. It makes you salivate for the next taste."Now available.
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Lovingly referred to as"A-Bomb" on the Portland-based brewery's website, the Abominable is a winter force to be reckoned with. At 7.3 percent alcohol content, this ale is brewed with six organic malts and three varieties of hops. In addition to 22-ounce bottles, Abominable comes in16-ounce cans with
great labels that makes it hard to pass up inthe grocery store. Nowavailable.
4
Formerly known as Santa's Little Helper in a slightly different form,
Slippery Slope is afull-bodied, 6.4 ABVale brewed with a generous amount of Cascade hops. "It's a classic winter seasonal ale," CascadeLakes brewmaster John Van Duzer said. "It's malty, and yet has a typically high
alcohol content that comeswith a winter beer." Nowavailable.
The name of this seasonal from SanFrancisco says it all. Though the recipe of this beer changesyear to year, it is typically a dark, richly spiced ale. Brewed since1975, the brewery keeps its recipes under wraps-
even the malts and hopsused in the beer aretop secret. Tobereleased in November.
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 11
making a list
what's happening?
Non-Oregon beer brethren regon makes the best beer on the planet.
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TODAY FIRST FIRKIN FRIDAY: A firkin keg of Epic Imperial Red will be tapped; proceeds benefit the Oregon League of Conservation Voters education fund; free; 4:30-10 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-7280703 or www.btbsbend.com. SATURDAY POWER &PEDALPOLARCRAWL: A pub crawl on a bike (bring your own or rent one) starting at Let It Ride Electric Bikes and ending at Silver Moon Brewing; proceeds benefit Bend Spay & Neuter Project; $20, includes three beer tokens; 5 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541-647-2331 or www.bendsnip.org. WEDNESDAY WINO WEDNESDAYWINE TASTING: Taste Faith, Hopeand Charity Vineyards wine; free; 6-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & AleCafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-7280703 or www.btbsbend.com.
Piper Canyon Scotch Ale, which clocks in at 7.9 percent ABV.
It's science. AndersonValley BrewingCompany, Boonville, Calif. But as the holidayseasonapproaches, it never hurts A nyone who tried AndersonValley's Wild TurkeyBourbon
to show some goodwill to others, especially our neighbors in Barrel Aged Stout at this year's Bend Brewfest knows what the Pacific Northwest. this brewery is capableof. Oneof the early pioneers in craft
Here's a list of some ofour favorite non-Oregon
brewing —AndersonValley started in1987 — AVBCbeers
breweries in the region:
Everydody'sBrewing,White Salmon,Wash. Located just across theColumbia River from Hood
are carried all over Bend, including Broken Top Bottle Shop &Ale Cafe, Newport Market, both Brother Jon's locations
"
and the newfood cart pod off GalvestonAvenue,TheLot.
River, Everybody's Brewing has had us hooked since it
Payette Brewing Ce., Boise, Idaho While Payette isn't yet available in Central Oregon
first started appearing ontaps around Bendfour years ago. The brewery's Country BoyIPAhas beena fa-
— the brewery is slowly making its waywest andits
vorite at the past few Bend Brewfests, and its Puckle Huddle Porter is that perfect dark-weather-drinking
beer. Best of all, Everybody's regularly has ahandle
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somewhere in Bend.
Laht NeppnrBrewing, Walla Walla, Wash. Brewing in atown best knownfor its wine, Laht
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Neppur is just another reason to head to Walla Walla , ~ jj ; > for a libation vacation. Famous for fruit ales such as "
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its PeachHefeweizenand Strawberry CreamAle,
beers can currently be found in Pendleton, Baker City and Ontario — it's worth the wait. The brewery's Outla w IPA, Rodeo Rye Pale Ale and Mutton Buster Brown Ale all hold their own against Bend's best beers.
r e at Basin BrewingSparks/Rene, Co., Nev. Nevada's oldest brewery is also its most decorated. GBBC's Whoop Ass Witbier and Outlaw Milk Stout both have won World Beer Cup medals over the last
five years.
Laht Neppur also makes solid big-boy beers like the
— BeauEastes
WEDNESDAY — NOV. 13 CRUX FERMENTATION BEER DINNER:Featuring a dinner with Crux beer pairings; $60 plus fees; 6 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; 541-3892558 or www.bluepinebar.com. THURSDAY — NOV. 14 WINE TASTING:Vintner to be determined; free; 5-7 p.m.; Cork Cellars Wine Bar 8 Bottle Shop, 160 S. Fir St., Sisters; 541-549-2675 or www.corkcellars.com.
TOUR AROUND THEWORLD BREWERS DINNER: Featuring a fivecourse meal inspired by different regions of the world paired with five Base Camp Brewing Co. beers; $50; 6 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703. • SUBMIT ANEVENT by emailmg dnnksO bendbulletm.com. Deadkne >s 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-3830377.
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pour over all the latest brew news at www.bendbulletin.com/drinks
PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
arts ', g
T h is fruit bowl by Linda Heisserman won the functional category of the 2012 Wildfire Pottery Showcase.
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meets function in this bowl by Janet Matson, one of more than 25 ceramic artists who will be on hand at this weekend's Wildfire Pottery Showcasein Bend.
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• Ninth annual Wildfire Pottery Showcase features demonstrations, sales ofceramicart By David Jasper
g This piece by Michael Gwinup of Blue Spruce Pottery won the sculptural division at the 2012 Wildfire Pottery Showcase.
works by more than 25 artists (see
The Bulletin
"If you go").
he Clay Guild of the Cascades will once again merge f unction an d b e auty a t this weekend's Wildfire Pottery Showcase. The free event — happening Saturday and Sunday at Highland Magnet School in Bend — offers ceramic demonstrations, a children'sarea and sales of ceramic
The ninth annual showcase will featurefree,hourly raffles for $25 to go toward purchasing pottery, as well as a gallery displaying the 25 participating artists' best work, to be judged by their peers in two categories: sculptural and functional. Last year's winners were Linda Heisserman and Michael Gwinup.
Gwinup, who took the Sculptural prize, appreciated the recognition from his peers. "In my business, you don't get a lot of accolades. My father-in-law was involved in soil-water conservation, and he had all kinds of plaques on his wall for different things he got awards for. In the arts, you really don't get a lot of that. So yeah, it felt pretty good," he said. In 1976, after graduating from Western Oregon University, Gwinup and his wife, Michele, opened Blue Spruce Pottery i n B e nd. In 2008, their daughter, Melissa Woodman, and her husband, Pat-
If yougo What:Wildfire Pottery Showcase
When:10a.m.-5p.m.Saturdayand 10a.m.-4 p.m.Sunday Where:Highland MagnetSchool, 701 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend Cost:Free admission Contact:www.clayguildofthecascades.com or 541-279-0343
rick Woodman, joined them in the family pottery business. Today, the four do their work from the Gwinups' home studio. "We have a whole line of stoneware, which is dinnerware, kitch-
en ware and that kind of stuff. And we have a line of Raku works that's more decorative. We'll have both those things there," Michael Gwinup said of this weekend's event.
Continued next page
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
arts
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 13
First Friday Gallery Walk takes over Bendagain For art openings, appetizers, wine and more tonight, head to downtown Bend or the Old Mill District, where the monthly First Friday Gallery Walk will take place between roughly 5 and 9 p.m. • Mockingbird Gallery, 869 N.W. Wall St., will hold an opening for "Western Influence," an exhibit featuring plein air and studio paintings by 10 artists depicting the beauty and diversity of the West's culture andlandscape. • At Franklin Crossing, 550 N.W. Franklin Ave., aA Decade in the Desert: Celebrating 10 Years of the Wild Desert Calendar" will display images from Oregon Natural Desert Association's 2014 Wild Desert Calendar, along with some of the best images fromthe past 10 years. • Tumalo Art Co., 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, will hold the opening for its November exhibit, "Sisterhood," which features paintings by sisters Lisa and Lori Lubbesmeyer and Helen Brown and Mary Burgess, who are also siblings.
The Nature of Words opens Thursday The Nature of Words literary festival gets underway with two events Thursday in Bend.
From previous page
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Submitted photo
Sean Bagshaw's "View of Steens Mountain from Alvord Desert," from the 2014 Wild Desert Calendar, displays in "A Decade in the Desert," a show of works opening tonight at Franklin Crossing in downtown Bend. First, at noon, Lawson Inada, a former Oregon poet laureate and professor emeritus of writing at Southern Oregon University, lectures onaAppreciating Diversity: A Literary Buffet." The event will take place at noon at Central Oregon Community College's Wille Hall, Campus Center, at 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend. Admission is $25, but it's free for stu-
dents with a valid ID. Then, at 7 p.m. guest author Karen Finneyfrock will host the Rising Star Creative Writing Competition Awards Ceremony, a free event at Hitchcock Auditorium, also on the COCC campus. Contact: www.thenatureofwords .org or 541-647-2233. — David Jasper
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"I'd like to see everybody eating out of handmade bowls and drinking out
they donate bowls for the Empty Bowls event," she said. al would like the public to know that there is a blend between us selling our work and us donating our bowls to Empty of handmade mugs. It's Bowls to help other people. It's just a whole different feeling kind of what potters do." than buying your mugs If Heisserman could shape a world and keep the good stuff, we'd and plates and stuff at all be eating and drinking from ceIkea." ramic ware. "For me,I'd like to see everybody — Linda Heisserman, potter eating out of handmade bowls and drinking out of handmade mugs. It's a whole different feeling than designs on the pieces by scraping away the unnecessary clay. Later in is really good with doing the num- buying your mugs and plates and the process, glaze accentuates the bers. We all pool our talents and put stuff at Ikea," she said. "When I go carvings. this show on." to my cupboards, I go, 'Hmm, who "They're both functional and, I Heisserman said she'd like for do I want to have tea with today?' And I'll go pick out that person's think, unique, because, at least in readers of GO! to know that the the area, there's nobody else doing folks b e hin d W i l d f ir e P o t tery m ug, and I'll d r in k te a an d I ' l l that," Heissermain told GO! Maga- Showcase are the very same ones have a fond memory of that person zine. She said that putting on the who make the ceramic bowls each while I'm drinking tea out of their mug." Wildfire show each year is a lot of year for Empty Bowls. The annual work. fundraiser, at which one gets an arOf course,she doesn't put aside "We don't turn this over to any tisan bowl of gourmet soup and gets her professional interests while sipshow manager or anybody who this to keep the bowl, raises awareness ping tea. aI might be looking at the mug is their job. It's actually all the pot- for hunger. This year's event takes ters that are doing all the work," she place Nov. 17. and going, 'I really like how they did "The potters who m ake those that. Now, how do I do it?'" said. "And we find out we all have — Reporter: 541-383-0349, strengths — like somebody's really bowls are the people who are in this good at advertising, somebody else show. They donate their time and djasperCbendbulletinicom Bend potter Linda Heisserman took the Functional category last year with one of her fruit bowls: "On the inside I have carved away some of the clay, so when the glaze is melting in the kiln, it fills in the carved spaces. It's kind of reminiscent of the spiral shells that you see on the beach," she said. Heisserman added that she's known for her technique of throwing a porcelain clay piece on the wheel and, once it's "leather hard," carving
•
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AMBIANCE ART CO-OP: Featuring gallery artists; 435 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-548-8115. ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring local artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building 19; www. artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. ATELIER 6000:Featuring "Broadsides," an exhibit of mixed media and two-dimensional works with an emphasis on text and image; reception 5:30-8 tonight; through Nov. 28; 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite 120, Bend; www.atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. BEND CITY HALL:"Reflections on Mirror Pond — Past, Present, Future," featuring multimedia artwork; through early March; 710 N.W. Wall St.; 541-388-5505 or rchristie©bendoregon.gov. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by Diane Reed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito;1024 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or 541-549-0366. CHASE BANK:Featuring pastel artist Beryl Foust-Hovey; reception tonight; through Nov. 29; 450 N.W. Franklin Ave.; 541-382-2866. CIRCLE OFFRIENDSART5
FEATURED ARTIST FOR NOVEMBER
Gillian Burton Michelle Oberg Libby McBride
Join uson First Friday
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Submitted photo
"Paintbrush Sunset," by Michael Jensen, is showing at the Sunriver Area Public Library through January. The opening reception is 1:30-4 p.m. Saturday. ACADEMY:Featuring mixed media, furniture, jewelry and more; 19889 Eighth St., Tumalo; 541-706-9025. DON TERRAARTWORKS: Featuring more than 200 artists; 222 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541549-1299 or www.donterra.com. DOWNTOWN BEND PUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring "Gratitude," a themed exhibit in various wallhanging media; through March 3; 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-9846. FRANKLIN CROSSING:Featuring photography from the Oregon Natural Desert Association's 2014 Wild Desert calendar and images from the last10 years; reception 5-8 tonight; through Nov. 30; 550 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-383-7511. GHIGLIERI GALLERY:Featuring original Western-themed and African-inspired paintings and sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.art-lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. HOT BOXBETTY: Featuring acrylic paintings by Brenda Reid Irwin; through November; 903 N.W. Wall St., 541-383-0050 or www. hotboxbetty.com. JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN WAREHOUSE:Featuring works by Jill Haney-Neal; Tuesdays and Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery.com or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAUL DESIGNS: Featuring custom jewelry and signature
G O Q CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING
A
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
834 NW Brooks Street Bend, Oregon 97701 Behind the Tower Theatre
541.382.5884
Find It All
Online bendbulletin.com
series with unique pieces; 1006 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www.johnpauldesigns.com or 541-318-5645. JUDI'S ARTGALLERY:Featuring works by Judi Meusborn Williamson; 336 N.E. Hemlock St., Suite 13, Redmond; 360-325-6230. KAREN BANDYDESIGN JEWELER:Featuring custom jewelry and contemporary paintings by Karen Bandy; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Suite 5, Bend; www.karenbandy.com or 541-388-0155. LA MAGIEBAKERY 8[CAFE: Featuring landscape watercolors by Patricia W. Porter; through December; 945 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-241-7884. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend;www.lubbesmeyerstudio. com or 541-330-0840. MARCELLO'S ITALIANCUISINE AND PIZZERIA:Featuring several local artists; 4 Ponderosa Road, Sunriver; 541-593-8300. MOCKINGBIRDGALLERY: "Western Influence," artwork featuring people, places and wildlife of the west from10 gallery artists; reception 5-9 tonight; through November; 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www.mockingbirdgallery.com or 541-388-2107. MOSAIC MEDICAL:Featuring mixed-media collage paintings by Rosalyn Kliot; 910 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite101, Madras; 541-475-7800. MUSEUM ATWARM SPRINGS: Featuring the annual tribal member art exhibit with a variety of art, bead work, weavings and silver jewelry; through Jan. 5; 2189 U.S. Highway 26, Warm Springs; www. museumatwarmsprings.org or
541-553-3331. ONE STREETDOWNCAFE: Featuring "Watercolors for the Fall" by Gillian Burton; through November; 124 S.W. Seventh St., Redmond; 541-647-2341. THE OXFORDHOTEL: Featuring expressionistic paintings by Paul Alan Bennett and Avlis Leumas; reception 5-8 tonight; through Nov. 30; 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend;541-382-9398. PATAGONIA@BEND:Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 N.W. Wall St., Suite 140; 541-382-6694. PAUL SCOTTGALLERY: Featuring abstract mixed media painter Judy Hoiness; reception 5-9 tonight; through Dec. 3; 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www.paulscottfineart.com or541-330-6000. PRONGHORN CLUBHOUSE: Featuring paintings by Barbara Slater and Mike Smith; through November; 65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, Bend; 541-693-5300. QUILTWORKS:Featuring the November Inspiration Small Quilt Show; reception 5-7 tonight; through Dec. 4; 926 N.E. Greenwood Ave., Suite B, Bend; 541-728-0527. RED CHAIRGALLERY:"Autumn Serenade" featuring fiber artist Denise Mahoney, fine jewelry by Suzy Williamson and watercolors by Sue Gomen-Honnell; reception 5-8 tonight; through November; 103 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; www.redchairgallerybend.com or 541-306-3176. REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring "Falling Leaves," work by Deer Ridge Correctional lnstitution Welding Program students and Central Oregon artists; through Nov. 8; 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1 050. ROTUNDAGALLERY: "Throught the Artist's Eyes," featuring multimedia work by the High Desert Art League; through Dec. 6; Robert L. Barber Library, Central Oregon Community College; 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7564. SAGE CUSTOM FRAMINGAND GALLERY:Featuring multimedia works by Gillian Burton, Michelle Ober and Libby McBride; reception 5-9tonight; through November; 834 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. SISTERS AREA CHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave.; 541-549-0251. SISTERSGALLERY 8IFRAME SHOP:Featuring landscape photography by Gary Albertson; 252 W. Hood Ave.; www.garyalbertson.com or 541-549-9552.
SISTERS PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring paintings of horses by Kimry Jelen in the community room and "Rusting Nostalgic," photography by Lynn Woodward, in the computer room; through December; 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070. ST. CHARLESBEND:Featuring "Interpretations: Working in a series," and feature works by the High Desert Art League; through Dec. 31; 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321. ST. CHARLESREDMOND: Featuring paintings by cowboy artist Faye Taylor; through Dec. 31;1253 N.W. Canal Boulevard; 541-548-8131. SUNRIVER AREA PUBLIC LIBRARY:"Jewels of Nature," featuring the work of photographer Michael Jensen and jewelry artist Teresa Bowerman; reception 1:30-4 p.m. Saturday; through January; 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. SUNRIVERLODGE BETTY GRAY GALLERY:Featuring oil paintings by AnnBullwinkelandJoanne Donaca in the upper gallery and fine art prints of Bullwinkel's work in the lower gallery; through Nov. 17; 17600 Center Drive; 541-382-9398. THUMP COFFEE:Featuring acrylic paintings and photographs by Brenda Reid Irwin; through November; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-388-0226 or www.thumpcoffee.com. TOWNSHEND'SBEND TEAHOUSE:"Unpredictable," featuring oil paintings by Elon Sharton-Bierig; through November; 835 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-312-2001 or www. townshendstea.com. TUMALO ARTCO.: Featuring "Sisterhood," paintings by Helen Brown and Mary Burgess, Lisa and Lori Lubbesmeyer; reception 5-9 tonight; through November; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco.com or 541-385-9144. VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIOAND GALLERY: Featuring glass art, photography, painting, metal sculpture and more; 222 W. Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www.vistabonitaglass.com. WERNER HOME STUDIO5 GALLERY:Featuring painting, sculpture and more by Jerry Werner and other regional artists; 65665 93rd St., Bend; call 541815-9800 for directions. THE WINESHOP AND TASTING BAR:Art inspired by Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) by Brenda Reid Irwin; through today;55 N.W. MinnesotaAve., Bend; 541-389-2884 or www. thewineshopbend.com.
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COLDW ELLBANKER
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This Week's Open H o u ses
ORRISEAL STA TE OPEN SATURDAY 11-2
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WBREYBUTTE-3 bedroom, 3 bath, 2985 sq.ft. custom home on .41 of an acre, framed by mature trees.,~~ - »
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Visit the Franklin Brothers award winning model home in SE Bend. Prices starting at S249,000. 5"v„~ DIRECTIONS:South 3rd St to east on Murphy Rd, south on Parrell Rd, right on Grand Targhee, 1st house on right. 60983 SE Geary Dr.
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Franklin Brothers New Construction - 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1800 sq.ft. single level, landscaped front & back. $259,900 • MLS 201305442 DIRECTIONS:South3rd St to east on Murphy Rd, south onParrell Rd, Right on Grand Targhee, left on Geary. 61182 Geary Dr.
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On the golf course, prIvIae'and gated Mountain High. Single level, open floor plan, great room, gorgeous setting.
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www. bendproperty.com 541-382-4123 • 486 SW Bluff Dr., Old Mill District, Bend, OR 97702
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PAGE 16 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDA
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FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m. (Story, Page13) COLUMBIARIVER CIRCUIT FINALS RODEO: Top cowboys in the Northwest compete in bareback, saddle back, roping, bull riding, barrel racing and more; $15, $10 for Saturday daytime; 5:30 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, Hooker Creek Event Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond;888-849-2723. SAINTS GALA: A Moulin Rouge-themed eventemceed by Mo sley Wo ttaand auctioneer, Fred Northup, Jr., with games, a gourmet dinner, live auction and postdinner afterparty; proceeds benefit the St. Charles Foundation's programs; $150, $1350foratable often; 5:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-706-6996 or www.stcharlesfoundation.org. SOLDIERSONGSSHOWCASE: Featuring performances by local veterans who have been working with songwriters on writing music; free; 6 p.m.; St. Clair Building atrium, 920 N.W. Bond St., Bend; badlands.bill@gmail.com or 206-2270194. (Story, Page 4) AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Rick Steber presents his new book"Red White Black: A True Story of Race and Rodeo"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; PaulinaSprings Books,422 S.W . Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. THE SCAREGROUNDS: A haunted house; recommended only for ages12 and older; $12 for one haunt, $20 for two haunts, $25 for three haunts; 7 p.m., gates open at 6:30 p.m.; old Parr Lumber buildings, 443 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-5484755 or www.scaremegood.com. "RAISE THEREDLANTERN": A screening of the1991 Chinese film (PG); free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org.
SATURDAY Nov. 2 VFW BREAKFAST: A breakfastof pancakes, eggs, sausage or ham; $8.50; 8-10 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend;541-389-0775. EXCEPTIONALRODEO: A rodeo for participants with mental or physical disabilities; free; 9-10:30 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www.rascalrodeo.org. LORD'S ACRE DAY:The 67th annual event
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features a craft sale, baked goods, live music, a barbecue dinner, an auction, 10K run, 5K walk and more; proceeds benefit Powell Butte Christian Church projects; free admission, $10 barbecue, $15 in advance or $20 day of event to race; 7:30 a.m. registration, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. events; Powell Butte Christian Church,13720 S.W. State Highway 126; 541-548-3066 or www.powellbuttechurch.com. ART PARTY:View and purchase works from a variety of artists; a portion of proceeds benefits St. Charles Foundation's Sara's Project, a breast cancer prevention and awareness
organization; free admission; 10 a.m.Dirtball, Vokab Kompany, Mosley Wotta 6 p.m.; Harkness-Williams home, 1 and others, with glass blowing, food carts Beech Lane, Sunriver; 541-788-2486 or and more; free; noon-9 p.m.; Industrial sunriversister©yahoo.com. Site, 62870 Boyd Acres Road; www. bendsindoor.com. (Story, Page 3) WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: Featuring ceramic demonstrations, potter COLUMBIARIVERCIRCUIT FINALS booths with pieces for sale, children's RODEO:1 and 5:30 p.m. at Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center; see Today's area, raffle and more, hosted by the Clay Guild of the Cascades; free admission;10 listing for details. a.m.-5 p.m.; Highland Magnet School, 701 HOEDOWN FORHUNGER: Performances N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-279-0343 by local Americana, folk and bluegrass or www.clayguildofthecascades.com. bands, with a chili feed and silent auction; (Story, Page 12) proceeds benefit the center's Feed the THE BENDBURN: Live music by The Hungry Program; $15, free for children12
andyounger;1-9 p.m.;Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www.bendscommunitycenter.org. (Story, Page 3) KNOW SWEAT:SWEAT LODGES: Learn how sweat lodges are atime for cleansing and purifying by Sweet Medicine Nation, founder and president of Four Winds Foundation; free; 2 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-3121032 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. DAYOF THEDEAD:Featuring Latino arts and crafts, music and refreshments; proceeds benefit Recursos; $5-$10
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 17
Y, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
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I'URDAY >thor presents in Is.
THE DIFIBULATORS:The Brooklyn,N.Y., country band performs; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 8-11:30 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com. (Story, Page 6) RISE UPHALLOWEEN PARTY: Featuring a costumecontest,haunted house and live music by Mosley Wotta, The HardChords and more; $5; 9 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. Armour Road, Bend; 541-389-7047. (Story, Page 6) MARV ELLIS:The Oregon-based hip-hop artist performs, with We Tribe and more; free; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www.dojobend. com.
SUNDAY Nov. 3
SUNDAY iowcase:Clay !Magnet School.
.r:Music and meals ty Center.
WILDFIREPOTTERY SHOWCASE: 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at Highland Magnet School; see Saturday's listing for details. CRANKSGIVINGBICYCLE RIDE:A scavenger hunt and race on bicycles to purchase food items for the Bethlehem Inn, followed by an awards ceremony; $20 for food donations; 11 a.m., registration at10 a.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541322-8768 or www.bethleheminn.org.
suggested donation; 4-8 p.m.; Liberty Theater, 849 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541390-6213 or greg©causaoregon.org. KNOW SWEAT:LAVA CITY ROLLER DOLLS:Watch two home roller derby teams square off at Deschutes Public Library appreciation night; show your library card for a $2 discount; $10 in advance, $12 at the door; 4:30 p.m. for junior derby, doors open 4 p.m., adult derby 6 p.m.; Cascade Indoor Sports, 20775 High Desert Lane, Bend; 541-3121032 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. POWER 5 PEDALPOLAR CRAWL: A
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Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.
WEDNESDAY Nov. 6 HIGH DESERT PERSPECTIVES:A screening of "The OregonStory: Ranching," an Oregon Public Broadcasting documentary; free for members, $3 for nonmembers, reservation requested; 6 p.m.; High DesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend;541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. BETTYANDTHEBOY:The Eugenefolk band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins. com. (Story, Page6) GAELICSTORM:The Celtic-rock group performs; $25-$39 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. (Story, Page6) GEOCACHING IN SPACE:Watch a rocket launch followed by apossible experience in geocaching; free, registration requested; 7:30-8:30 p.m.; BaseCampPizza, 8060 11th St., Terrebonne; 541-450-9776 or www.geocaching.com.
MONDAY
THURSDAY
Nov. 4
Nov. 7
"LED ZEPPELIN: CELEBRATION DAY LIVEFROM LONDON 2007": A screening of the concert film; $12 general admission, $48 club pass, plus fees;7 p.m.,doors openat6 p.m .;Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. (Story, Page 28)
"HONORFLIGHT": A screening of the documentary about four living World War II veterans and aMidwest community coming together to give them the trip of a lifetime; $10, free for WWII veterans and spouses; 6 p.m., doorsopenat5p.m .;Bend High School, 230 N.E.Sixth St.; 541-610-8683 or www.bendheroes.org. "FREETO BE ...YOU AND ME": Musicand drama students present songs, stories and comedy sketches; $5; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:15 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-335-4401. REDWOODSON:The Portland Americana artist performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. RISING STAR CREATIVEWRITING COMPETITIONAWARDS CEREMONY: Honoring emerging writers ages15 and older in various genres with a lecture by guest author Karen Finneyfrock; free; 7-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-617-2233 or www. thenatureofwords.org. (Story, Page13)
TUESDAY Is:Hark! The ns.
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Nov. 5 GREENTEAMMOVIE NIGHT:A screening of the film "Chasing Ice"; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. pub crawl on a bike (bring your own or presents his new book"Red White Black: rent one) starting at Let It Ride Electric A True Story of Race and Rodeo"; $5; 6:30 NATIVEAMERICAN STORIES AT FAMILY FEST:Rosemary Charley of the Warm Bikes and ending at Silver Moon Brewing; p.m.;Paulina SpringsBooks,252 W .Hood Springs Reservation will present stories Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. proceeds benefit Bend Spay8 Neuter and activities of her heritage; free; 6:30Project; $20, includes three beer tokens; TRIAGE:The comedy improvisational 7:30 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 5 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541-647-2331 or troupe performs; $5; 7:30 p.m., doors N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; www.bendsnip.org. openat7 p.m .;Greenwood Playhouse,148 541-447-7978 or www.crooklib.org. PAMELAMORTENSEN:The SeattleN.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389AN EVENINGOF EMPOWERMENT: based didgeridoo musician performs, with 0803 or www.cascadestheatrical.org. A fundraiser featuring empowering DaveGoodman;$15 suggested donation; DOWNTOWNBROWN:The Detroitspeakers and live music; proceeds 6 p.m.; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 based punk-funk band performs, with benefit Sparrow Club, Family Access N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541-330-0334 The Beerslayers and The Hooligans; $3; Network and Kids in the Game; $35, or www.hawthorncenter.com. 8 p.m.; Big T's, 413 S.W.Glacier Ave., $20 students16 and younger, plus AUTHORPRESENTATION:Rick Steber Redmond; 541-504-3864. fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.
• SUBMIT AN EVENTat www bendbulletin. com/submitinfo or email events@bendbulletin.com. Deadhme is 10 days before pubhcauon. Questions? Contact 541-383-0351.
PAGE 18 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
planning ahea NOV. 8-14 NOV.8-10— "MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET":Bend Experimental Art Theater's production of the Christmas classic; $15, $10 for children18 and younger; 7 p.m. Nov. 8-9, 2 p.m. Nov. 9-10; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.beatonline. Ol'g.
NOV.8-10— THE NATURE OF WORDS: Literary festival featuring readings, lectures and more; various costs and various locations in Bend; www. thenatureofwords.org. NOV. 8-10 — "KILL ME,DEADLY": A comic play set in the film noir style of the1940s; $8, $5 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m. Nov. 8-9, 2 p.m. Nov. 9-10; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-383-6290. NOV.8-10,14— "THE GAME'S AFOOT: OR HOLMES FORTHE HOLIDAYS": A1936 whodunit about a Broadway star noted for playing Sherlock Homes solving one of his guests' death; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m. Nov. 8-9, 14; 2 p.m. Nov. 10; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. NOV. 9, 13 — "THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: TOSCA": Starring Patricia Racette in the title role of jealous diva opposite Roberto Alagna as her lover, Cavaradossi; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m. Nov.9,6:30 p.m .Nov.13;RegalOld Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. NOV.9-10— CASCADE HORIZON BAND FALL CONCERT:The band performs Richard Rodgers' "Victory at Sea," Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture, marches, Broadway music and more; free, donations accepted; 2 p.m.; Sisters High School,1700 W. McKinneyButte Road;541-330-5728, cascadehori zonband@aol.com orwww. cascadehorizonband.org. NOV. — 8 FREAK MOUNTAIN RAMBLERS:The Portland altcountry band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. NOV. — 8 THE NATURE OF WORDS: Guest author readings and book signingsby Lawson Inada,James Prosek, Karen Finneyfrock and Jim Lynch; food donations benefit Neighborlmpact; $30 plus canned food donations accepted;7 p.m.,doorsopen at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700. NOV. 8 — "APLACEATTHETABLE": A screening of the 2012 documentary followed by a discussion with community
Rob Kerr/The Bulletin file photo
Vietnam veteran Ron Guthrie with his dog, Thunder, at the Bend Veterans Day parade in 2011. This year's parade is set for Nov. 11. groups that deal with hunger; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org. NOV. 8 — KALYA SCINTILLA: The Australian electronic artist performs, with Bird of Prey, Plantrea, Shwex and Cymatics, plus live art; $10 before10 p.m., $12 after; 9 p.m.; The Warehouse, 1330 N.E.1st St., Bend; www.facebook. com/slimpatscience. NOV. 9 — SENSATIONALSATURDAY: Discover the art and technique of printmaking by creating your own stamp; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 10 a.m.-noon; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. NOV. 9 — MINING DAYS: Experience the life of a placer miner and pan for gold;$2 panning fee,plus museum admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. NOV. — 9 "HONOR FLIGHT":A screening of the documentary about
four living World War II veterans and a Midwest community coming together to give them the trip of a lifetime; proceeds benefit Daughters of the American Revolution scholarship programs; $5; 3 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-322-0898 or jsbean2004@ juno.com. NOV. 9 — HARMONYHARVEST:An a cappela program featuring Portland's CODA quartet, with Harmoneers, Sweet Adeline's Showcase Chorus and Summit High's Skyline Jazz; $12$15, $12 for students; 3 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-548-4628 or www.harmoneers.net. NOV. 9 — SLEDFILM 2013: A screening of snowmobile films; $6; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. NOV. 9 — FREAK MOUNTAIN RAMBLERS:The Portland alt-country band performs to celebrate Old St. Francis School's ninth birthday, with Sassparilla; free; 5 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.
mcmenamins.com. NOV. 9 — LATRICEROYALE& THE CARAVAN OFGLAM: The Portland gay cabaret show comes to Bend with burlesque, comedians, live singers and more; $20 in advance, $25 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; www.j.mp/caravanofglam. NOV. 9 — GRANTFARM:The Boulder, Colo.-based roots band performs; free; 9 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; 541-389-2558 or www.bluepinebar.com. NOV. 10 — SECOND SUNDAY: Emily Carr presents "Footnote to Forfeit: Autopsy of a Murder"; free; 11 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or lizg© deschuteslibrary.org. NOV. 10 — AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Arthur Lezin reads from his book"A Case of Loyalty: A Veteran Battles McCarthyism in the U.S. Navy Department"; free;1 p.m.; Barnes 8 Noble Booksellers, 2690 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242 or patgivens©bendcable. com. NOV. 10 — KNOW SWEAT: SWEAT LODGES:Learn how sweat lodges are
a time for cleansing and purifying by Sweet Medicine Nation, founder and president of Four Winds Foundation; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. NOV. 10 — AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Leonard Gross reads from his novel "The Memoirs of JFK"; free; 3 p.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers,2690 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242 or pat givens©bendcable.com. NOV. 10 — HOOPS FOR THE HOUSE: A basketball game between the Harlem Ambassadors and the Ronald McDonald House Defenders; $10, $8 for students and seniors in advance, add $2 at the door; $5 children ages 4 through high school; free for children younger than 4; 4-6 p.m.; Trinity Lutheran Church 8 School, 2550 N.E. Butler Market Road, Bend; 541-3184950 or www.rmhcofcentraloregon. 0 I'g.
NOV. 10 —POETRYREADING: Featuring original poetry by High Desert Poetry Cell; free; 4:30 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 N.W .MinnesotaAve.,Bend; 541-749-2010 or dudleysbookshopcafe@ gmail.com.
planning ahead
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
NOV. 10 —BOOKTALK:Bend Jewish Library facilitates a book discussion aboutMarkusZusak's "The Book Thief"; free; 5 p.m.; Barnes 8 Noble Booksellers, 2690 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-3187242 or patgivens©bendcable.com. NOV. 11 —BENDVETERANS DAY PARADE: Theannual event is sponsored by Downtown Bend Business Association; free for spectators; 11 a.m.; downtown Bend; 541-480-4516, rabbine© aol.com or www.downtownbend. org/veterans-day-parade. NOV. 11 —REDMONDVETERANS DAY PARADE:Parade honoring veterans runs down Sixth Street; free; 11 a.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-280-5181. NOV. 12 — "AFIERCEGREEN FIRE: THE BATTLE FOR A LIVING PLANET":A screening of the documentary on five decadesof the environmental movement; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way,Bend; 541-322-3116 or www.afiercegreenfire.com. NOV. 13 —CASEYNEILL& THE NORWAY RATS:The Portlandbased Americana group performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. NOV. 14 — AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Rebecca Skloot, author of "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks," will speak;$20-$75;7 p.m.;Bend High School, 230 N.E.Sixth St.; 541312-1027 or www.dplfoundation.org. NOV. 14 —SLAIDCLEAVES:The Austin, Texas, singer-songwriter performs; $18 in advance, $20at the door; 7-9p.m.; The Belfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. NOV. 14 —SWITCHFOOT:The Grammy award-winning rock band performs along with a screening of its new film "Fading West"; $25$35, $30-$40 day of show, plus fees; 7 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, Hooker CreekEvent Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711 or www. j.mp/switchfootinfo. NOV. 14 —PAULBARRERE8 FRED TACKETTOFLITTLE FEAT: The country-rock group performs; $35-$45 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org.
NOV. 15-21 NOV.15-17 — "MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET":BendExperimental Art Theater's production of the well known Christmas classic; $15, $10 for children18and younger; 7 p.m. Nov. 15-16, 2 p.m. Nov.16-17; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette
Talks 8 classes KNOW SWEAT:SWEAT EQUITY:Learneasyand affordable ideas to remodel your home; free; 2 p.m. Sunday; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; 541312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. LOOKINGINSIDETHE BOOK: DRUM LEAF BINDING:Learn to be author, illustrator and book designer; Tuesdays and Thursdays Nov. 5-21; $140; 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Atelier 6000, 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; 541-330-8759 or www.atelier6000.org. CREATINGSURFACE, EXPANDING SPACE: Learn plate inking techniques with a single plate; $35; 6-9 p.m.Wednesday;Atelier6000,389S.W .Scalehouse Court, Suite 120, Bend; 541-330-8759 or www. atelier6000.org. LAWSON INADAMULTICULTURAL LECTURE: The former Oregon poet laureate will look into the Ave., Bend; www.beatonline.org. NOV. 15-17, 21 — "THEGAME'S AFOOT;OR HOLMES FOR THE HOLIDAYS":A1936 whodunit about a Broadway star noted for playing Sherlock Homessolving one ofhis guests' death; $19, $15seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m. Nov. 15-16, 21; 2 p.m. Nov. 16-17;Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. NOV. 15-16 — "TICKETTORIDE": A screening of the Warren Miller ski film; $19 plus fees; 6 p.m. and9
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19
racially diverse authors and poets who haveshaped literature and poetry followed by a Q-and-A session; $25,registerbyW ednesday;noon-2p.m .Thursday; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend; www.2013natureof wordsfestival.eventbrite.com. LUNCHANDLEARN: David Kinker presents "Unlimiting Your Limited Palette"; $3 donation; noon-1 p.m.Nov.8; SageBrushers Gallery,117 S.W.Roosevelt Ave., Bend; 541-383-2069 or www.sagebrushersart.net. THE NATUREOF WORDS LITERARY FESTIVAL WORKSHOPS:Guestauthors Jim Lynch, Lawson Inada, Ellen Waterston, Jim Prosek and Karen Finneyfrock speak on various topics in different workshops throughout the day; $35-$45, register by Thursday; 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Nov. 9; OSU-Cascades Campus,Cascades Hall,2600 N.W .CollegeW ay, Bend; 541-322-3100 or www.2013natureof wordsfestival.eventbrite.com.
p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. NOV. 15-16 — "MIDDLEAGES: STRUGGLE,DEVOTION, MERRIMENT!":Central Oregon History Performers re-enact various periods in history using music, art, dance anddrama; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.;TheBridge Church of the Nazarene,2398 W.Antler Ave.,Redmond;541-548-6821 or rebeccacentraloregon@hotmail.com. NOV. 15 —AUTHOR PRESENTATIONAND BOOK
LAUNCH:Ellen Waterston reads from "Via Lactea, A Woman of a Certain Age Walks the Camino"; illustrator Ron Schultz and typography and book designers, Thomas Osborne and Sandy Tilcock, share their experience on collaboration; free; 5:30 p.m.; Atelier 6000, 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; 541-330-8759. NOV. 17 — EMPTY BOWLS: Features gourmet soup and a selection of artisan bowls; proceeds benefit Neighborlmpact; $32; Seating One sold out;12:45 p.m.,
doors open at12:15 p.m. for Seating Two,2 p.m .,doors openat 1:30 p.m. for Seating Three; Central Oregon Community College, CampusCenter,2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7700 or www. neighborimpact.org/empty-bowls. NOV.17 — PACIFICMAMBO ORCHESTRAWITH TITO PUENTE JR.:The19-piece big band performs Latin music; $30-$45 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre. org. NOV. 19 — TROMBONE SHORTY 8 ORLEANS AVENUE:Upbeat jazzfrom New Orleans; $38-$60 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. NOV. 21— "GETTING THE BEST POSSIBLECARE":A presentation on what end-of-life care could look like if we overcome our cultural aversion to talking about dying; $25 plusfees;6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. NOV. 21 — BRETT DENNEN:The Northern California folk-pop singer performs; $20 plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. randompresents.com.
theNatureofWords C ENT RA L O R E G O N ' 5 PR E M IE R LITERARY E V E N T
NOV. 7-10, 2013 2013 Literary Festival Guest Authors LAWSON INADA POETRY; OREGON POET LAUREATE 2006-2010
KAREN FINNEYFROCK SLAM POETRY AND YOUNG ADULT FICTION
JAMES PROSEK CREATIVE NONFICTION
JIM LYNCH FICTION
E LLE N WATE RSTON POETRY
EMILY CARR POETRY
Tickets & Info: www.thenatureofwords.org The 2013 Literary Festivalis supported by many generous sponsorsincluding
DANA AND GERALD BARRON
The Bulletin
Serving Central Qregon since 1903
THE 8
CQLLINS I OUi ioATtoN
M J Murdock Chantable Trust
ARTwoRKs. QfIS.QOV
PAGE 20 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
restaurants
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Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Employees help customers at La Magie Bakery & Cafe, which has expanded into a larger space in downtown Bend.
• La Magie Bakery 5 Cafe thrives in its expanded downtown space
La MagieBakery8 Cafe
Contact:www.lamagiecafe.com, 541241-7884, 800-71 8-9681
Location: 945 N.W.Bond St.,Bend By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin
i Long is a baker, but she is so much more. She is an all-around chef and a fine businesswoman. When she opened La Magie Bakery in downtown Bend in January of last year, she found a stage from which to offer the delectable French-style pastries and other baked goods that she had been trained to make under the tutelage of Marda Stoliar, owner of the International
School of Baking. Long has since won plenty of attention for he r c u l inary magic: "La magie" in French. Her croissants are both buttery and flaky, their crust a golden brown. Her eclairs and brownies are rich and tasty. But her commercial kitchen was off-site, making it necessary to shuttle freshly baked goods to the little bakery several times a day. That situation changed following a decision to close an
adjacent Long family r estaurant, Soba Food of A sia, enabling La Magie to expand into that space. (Di Long, who pronounces her first name "Dee," is a member of a family of local restaurateurs that include her parents, Dan and Ma i L o n g, her brother Howie and his wife
Aida.) The bakery never closed, but it took longer than expected to complete the expansion, due in part to permitting questions.
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Hours:7:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. every day Price range:Breakfast and lunch, $8 to $12 Credit cards:American Express,
Scorecard
Discover, MasterCard, Visa
disappointing. Service:A-. Table service is fast and friendly, but kitchen be slow in turning out dishes.
Kids' menu: Onrequest;youcan'tgo wrong with cookies! Vegetarian menu:Consider the
garden omelet or ameatless salad Alcoholic deverages:Full bar Outdoor seating:A few sidewalk tables
Reservations:No
OVERALL:B+ Food:B+. Breakfasts and baked goods
are outstanding, but lunches maybe
Atmosphere:B. Rambling dining spaceshaveacasualcharm butlack cohesive ambience. Value:A-. Excellent breakfasts are a much better bargain than at other,
fancier cafes.
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
restaurants
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 21
From previous page Finally, this summer, La Magie Bakery 8r Cafe became a full-service breakfast-and-lunch restaurant as well as a purveyor of fine baked goods. The commercial kitchen is now in-house, and there's a charm to the rambling, interconnected dining rooms, whose large windows face Bond Street just south of Oregon Avenue.
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Breakfast My favorite meal at La Magie is breakfast, and my favorite breakfast is stuffed French toast. When I dropped by one morning with m y d i n in g companion, she zoned in on this dish — two big slices of freshly baked brioche bread, thickly stuffed with mascarpone cheese with marionberries, dipped in an eggy custard batter and grilled. I had one taste, then another, and wished that it had been my order. The French toast floated on a pool of house-made marionberry syrup, which was not cloyingly sweet as some commercial brands can be. But I was not disappointed with my Spanish omelet. Three eggs were folded around ground chorizo sausage, cheddar cheese, onions and a variety of peppers — bell p eppers, b anana p e ppers a n d green chilies — then topped with house-made salsa, highlighted by big chunks of tomato, and a dollop of sour cream. It was served with a m o dest
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Casual mood Flyers promoting local events plaster the wall of a t w i n-doored anteroom where patrons enter La Magie. Straight ahead, they are tempted by a large display case featuring the day's fresh baked goods. To its right, a cash register doubles as a host stand where diners may ask to be seated. Behind then, to the left, a coffee bar also has a limited selection of alcoholic beverages available. Two rows of tables run along the north side of the spacious kitchen; several more are spread through the original bakery, which once served as a convenience store. The decor is simple, enhanced by landscape art and other works by local oil and watercolor painters. On several recent visits, I have found table service to be impeccable — although the kitchen can be slow. One cannot blame a server, very friendly and prompt in recommending dishes and taking orders, when the cooks take extra time to prepare ordinary dishes.And it's nice if two espresso drinks, ordered simultaneously, aren't delivered five minutes apart.
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Andy Tullie/The Bulletin
ExpLorethe worksof over 25
The stuffed French toast at La Magie Bakery & Cafe in downtown Bend.
premierOregonclay artists amount of country potatoes and a buttered brioche, although the latter was delivered warm from the oven just as I wa s f i nishing my omelet. For takeout, I l ik e L a M a gie's breakfast burrito. It's not the best I've had in Bend (I credit Taqueria los Jalapenos with that), but it is nevertheless good — eggs, sausage, bacon, ham, onions, bell peppers and cheddar cheese wrapped in a flour tortilla. Salsa and sour cream may be requested on the side. And th e b r eakfast sandwich, with egg and meat on a t oasted English muffin, is far better than anything offered by a f a st-food restaurant.
Afternoonmeals I am not as big a fan of La Magie lunches as I am of its morning meals. A case in point was the teriyaki burger. Although I got exactly what the menu promised — all-natural Angus beef with grilled pineapple and house-made teriyaki sauce on a brioche bun — it was less appetizing than I had expected. The lightly grilled bun was delicious, and I w o uld expect any La Magie baked good to be. But it had nothing upon it, save an overc ooked, cardboard-like patty o f meat slopped with t h ick b r own sauce and that slice of pineapple. I would have appreciated lettuce and tomato, even presented on the side, and perhaps an additional spread of some kind. When I lunched with my dining companion, sheenjoyed an entree of ziti pasta in a light tomato sauce with a splash of vodka with cherry tomatoes, spinach and zucchini. A grilled chicken breast laid atop the pasta was perfectly cooked. My Russian Mob sandwich again
Next week: TUmaloFeedCo. Visit www.denddulletin
.cam/restaurants for readers' ratings of more than150 Central
Oregon restaurants. left me disappointed, although it was far superior to the burger. It was served not on black bread, as the menu promised, but on heated brown rye; I was expecting something grilled, akin t o a R euben. Instead, this was a cold ham-andcheese sandwich. That said it was a GOOD hamand-cheese sandwich. There was ample Black Forest ham, and the s preads an d c o n diments w e r e good. I got my lettuce and tomato, along with spreads of mayonnaise and honey-mustard dressing. Only a tasty black-olive tapenade was not evenly spread. An accompanying house salad featuredfresh spring greens, along with dried cranberries, pear tomatoes, red onions and house-made croutons. And the champagne vinaigrette dressing was delicious.
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— Reporter: j anderson@ bendbulletin.com.
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Owners Jason and Judy Fuentes closed their popular family Mexican restaurant, The Original Ei Burrito, on Oct. 22 after more than seven years in business. New owners are already working to reopen another, as-yetunnamed Mexican restaurant in the same location — just off Northeast Third Street in Bend — before the end of November. 335 N.E. DeKalb Ave., Bend.
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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."
CONCERTS
• Jackie Evancho of 'America's t ot Talent' fameperformsin Portland By Jenny Wasson
more than a million copies of her debut album, "0 Holy Night." lthough she did not win the fifth season Bil l b oard Magazine placed Evancho on its list of the "America's Got Talent" television o f music movers-and-shakers under the age of show, singerJackie Evancho won the 21 in 2012 because the soprano's "spellbinding, hearts of millions of fans from around the world. o p eratic vocals possess a power and poignancy The sky is the limit for the 13-year-old, who t h at often moves listeners multiple times her age has already appeared in a feature film ("The t o t ears,"accordingtoherwebsite. Company You Keep") and is a platinum-sellRele a sed in 2012, her most recent album "Songs from the Silver Screen" features 12 ing artist. Oregonians will be able to see the child s o ngs used in popular films. Her Portland prodigy in action when she presents "Songs p r o gram will feature songs from this album, fromthe Silver Screen"withthe Oregon Sym- i n c luding "My Heart Will Go On" (from "Tiphony on Nov. 30 at the Arlene Schnitzer Con- t a n ic"), "Can You Feel the Love Tonight" ("The cert Hall in Portland. Lion King"), "Pure Imagination" ("Willy WonThe young soprano from Pittsburgh was se- k a and the Chocolate Factory") and "Music of lected to appear on "America's Got Talent" after t h e Night" ("Phantom of the Opera"). winning the show's 2010 Ticketprices range from $35 to $200, de~ =~ YouTube competition. ~~ pen ding o n seat location. To purchase She remains t h e , :~ ~~ +~ ~ : . ti ck e t s a n d fo r m ore information, --.'Q g :~Q ' ' . y~~ . ~ '-most successful visit www.orsymphony.org or call 'W~, 800- 2 28-7343. recording artist . ~~<;: ~~ ~ . The Bulletin
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Soprano Jackie Evancho will perform with the Oregon Symphony on Nov. 30 at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in Portland. I
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Through Nov. 2 —Greensky Bluegrass/Fruition,Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF ThroughNov.3 — "Fineand Mellow: The Billie Holiday Songbook": Featuring Siri Vik; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.541-434-7000. Nov. 1 —CutCopy, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Nov. 1 —Medium Troy, McDonald * Theatre, Eugene; TW Nov. 2 —BuddyGuy, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Nov.2— Ir on and W ine,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT; *
CT
Nov. 2 —The Parson RedHeads & Friends,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Nov. 3 —M. Doughty, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Nov. 3 —Mazzy Star, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Nov.4— Em mylouHarris8 Rodney Crowell,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Nov. 7 —Gaelic Storm,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Nov. 7 —OfMontreal, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Nov. 8 —Bill Frisell's Big SurQuintet, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www. theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Nov. 8 —The Frategis, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Nov. 8 —Samite — Journey to the Soul of Africa,Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www.stclairevents.com or 541-535-3562. Nov.8— Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Nov.8— Jonathan Richman, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Nov. 8-10 —Yachats Celtic Music Festival:Featuring Young Dubliners and Kevin Burke & Cal Scott; Yachats; www. yachatscelticmusicfestival.com. Nov.9— Atlas Genius,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Nov. 9 —Bill Frisell's Big SurQuintet, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Nov. 9 —Mayday Parade, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Nov. 10 —AnAcoustic Evening With Ben Harper,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Nov. 11 —Graham Hash,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF*
Nov. 12 —SOJA,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Nov. 13 —Switchfoot, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Nov. 13 —Toro YMoi, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Nov.14 —Latyrx, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Nov. 14 —Rootdown, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Nov. 15 —Cults, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Nov. 15 —Overthe Rhine, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Nov. 16 —Fruit Bats, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Nov. 16 —Jessie Ware, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Nov. 16 —Michael Buble, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Nov. 16 —Pacific Mambo Orchestra with Tito Puente Jr.,Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Nov. 16 —The Polish Ambassador/DJ Vadim,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Nov. 18 —2CELLOS,Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Nov. 18 —Nine Inch Hails, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Nov. 19 —Bill CaHahan, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Nov. 19 —Lyle Lovett & John Hiatt, Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Nov. 20 —Balkan Beat Box, Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF Nov. 20 —HotButtered Rum,Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www.stclairevents. com or 541-535-3562. Nov. 21 —30h!3, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Nov. 21 —Frank Vignola & Vinny Raniolo,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Nov. 21 —James Blake, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Nov. 21-22 —Mannheim Steamroller Christmas,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Nov. 22 —Brett Dennen, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Nov. 22 —Polica, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Nov. 22-23 —Scotty McCreery, Chinook Winds Casino Resort, Lincoln City; www.chinookwindscasino.com or 888-624-6228. Nov. 23 —Bostich+ Fussible, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW
out of town
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
Nov. 23 —PrettyLights, Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Nov. 24 —Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673.
LECTURES 8K COMEDY Nov. 5 —Garrison Keillor, Newmark Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273- I530. Nov.9— MW Women's Comedy Festival, Wildish Theater, Springfield; 541-688-1674. Nov. 15 —Jason Alexander, Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Nov. 15 —Margaret Cho,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530.
SYMPHONY 8K OPERA Nov. 1 —Vienna BoysChoir, Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Nov.1,3, 7, 9 —"Salome". Opera by Richard Strauss; Portland Opera; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.portlandopera.org or 866-739-6737. Nov. 2-3 —"Britten's War Requiem": Celebrating the100th anniversary of Britten's birth; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Nov. 16, 18 —"RomeoandJuliet": Featuring music by Verdi, Ravel and Berlioz; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Nov. 23 —Brandi Carlile: Performing with the Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or800-228-7343. Nov. 24 —"A Musical Feast": Kids Series Concert; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Nov. 30 —"Jackie Evancho: Songsfrom the Silver Screen":Young singer from "America's Got Talent"; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343.
THEATER8KDANCE Through Nov. 2 —OregonShakespeare Festival:"A Streetcar Named Desire" (through Nov. 2), "The Tenth Muse," (through Nov. 2), "My Fair Lady" (through Nov. 3) and "The Taming of the Shrew" (through Nov. 3) are currently running at the Angus Bowmer Theatre; "The Unfortunates" (through Nov. 2), "King Lear" (through Nov. 3) and "The Liquid Plain" (through Nov. 3) are currently running atThomas Theatre; Ashland; www. osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. Through Nov. 10 —"9 to 5: The Musical": Based on the1980 hit movie "Nine to Five"; featuring music and lyrics by Dolly Parton; Stumptown Stages; Brunish Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530.
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 23
*Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www.ticketswest .com or 800-992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticketfly.com or 877-435-9849
CT:Cascade Tickets, www .cascadetickets.com or 800-5143849 Through Nov. 30 —"Fiddler on the Roof": Tevye, the loquacious father of five daughters, fights to maintain his family and their traditions while outside influences encroach upon their lives; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through Dec.1 —"Foxfinder": Play by Dawn King; U.S. premiere; Artists Repertory Theatre; Alder Stage, Portland; preview performances Oct. 29-Nov.1; opening night Nov. 2; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. Nov. 2 —Dance Theatre of Harlem:First Oregonappearance in morethantwo decades; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Nov.6-30— "Who Am IThisTime?":Three early comic masterpieces by Kurt Vonnegut are sewn together into a seamless evening of hilarity and humanity; Oregon Contemporary Theatre, The Lord/Leebrick Playhouse; www. octtheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Nov. 12-17 —"American Idiot": Based on Green Day's GrammyAward-winning multiplatinum album and featuring the hits "Boulevard of Broken Dreams," "21 Guns" and "Wake Me UpWhen September Ends"; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.portlandopera.org or 503-248-4335. Nov.16-Dec. 22 —"Twist Your Dickens": A complete send-up of the holiday classic, fully festooned with the improvisational genius behind the legendary comedy troupe The Second City; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Nov.19 —"AmericanIdiot": Based on Green Day's Grammy Award-winning multiplatinum album and featuring the hits "Boulevard of Broken Dreams," "21 Guns" and "Wake Me Up When September Ends"; Hult Center, Eugene, www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000.
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Fou Must Have A Reservation to Attend Call 541-312-9690 by November 5th THE BEST FOOD IN TOW N
OPEN DINING ' (® .
EXHIBITS Through Nov. 3 —"Nature's Beloved Son: Rediscovering JohnMuir's Botanical Legacy":Featuring high-resolution images of Muir's plant specimens on canvas and paper prints, historic images and a video about Muir; World Forestry Center Discovery Museum, Portland; www.worldforestry.org or 503-228-1367. Through Nov. 15 —MaryhiH Museumof Art:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Kenneth Standhardt: Impressions" (through Nov. 15), "Windows to Heaven: Treasures from the Museum of Russian Icons" (through Nov.15) and "Arthur Higgins: Prints" (through Nov.15); Goldendale, Wash.; www. maryhillmuseum.org or 509-773-3733.
Continued next page
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out of town
PAGE 24 . GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
From previous page
Sage CustomFraming & Gallery Featured Artists: Gillian Burton, Michelle Oberg, Libby McBride First Friday Reception Nov. 1st, 5-9 pm
Show runs - Nov. 1st - Nov. 30th I
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Paul Scott Gallery JUDY HOINESS Specializing in contemporary works from the Northwest and beyond!
Come Celebrate November1st, 5-9 pm We arejust down the breezeway off Wall St.
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Karen BandyStudio Custom Jewelry and Fine Art by award-winning artist Karen Bandy Reception First Friday November1st, 5-9 pm Tucked between ThumpandAlleda on upper Minnesota I
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MockingbirdGallery "Western Influence" A Group Showfocusing on Western Culture and Landscape OpensFriday,November1st,5-9 pm
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Red Chair Gallery
103 NW OregonAve. www.redchairgallerybend.com
"Autumn Serenade" Featuring: Suzy Williamson, Fine Jewelry Denise Mahoney, Fiberware Sue Gomen-Honnell, Watercolor Paintings Reception 5 to 9 pm November1st Exhibit runnin thru November
Through Nov. 17 —"A Distant View: The Porcelain Sculpture of Sueharu Fukami with Photographs by Jean Vouum":Part of the "Art in the Garden" series; Portland Japanese Garden, Portland; www. japanesegarden.com or 503-223-1321. Through Nov. 17 —Portland Art Museum:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Cover to Cover: Ed Ruscha" (through Nov.17), "Ordinary World: American LandscapePhotographyand ModernDocumentary Style" (through Dec. 15), "Samurai! Armor from the Annand Gabriel Barbier-Mueller Collection" (through Jan.12) and "2013 Contemporary Northwest Art Awards" (through Jan.12); Portland; www.portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. Through Dec. 8 —Jordan Schnitzer Museumof Art: The following exhibits are currently on display: "New American Acquisitions" (through Dec. 8), "Traditional and Contemporary Korean Art from the Mattielli & JSMA Collections" (through Jan. 26), "Korda and the Revolutionary Image" (through Jan. 26), "Ave Maria: Marian Devotional Works from Eastern andWestern Christendom" (through July 20), "Transatlanticism" (through Feb. 9) and "Art of the Athlete II" (through Feb. 9); Eugene; jsma.uoregon.edu or 541-346-3027. Through December —"The Sea GMe": A new children's interactive exhibit; Oregon Coast Aquarium, Newport; www.aquarium.org or 541-867-3474. Through Jan. 5 —"The International Exhibition of Sherlock Holmes":World premiere; Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Through Jan. 11 —"The Toolat Hand": The Chipstone Foundation invited14 contemporary artist to make work a of art using only one tool; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through Feb. 8 —"Quality is Contagious: John Economakiand Bridge City ToolW orks":The company's products, sketches and tools from the past thirty years will be on view; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Nov. 2 —Oyster Cloyster: Featuring oyster dishes from regional chefs; fundraiser; Oregon Coast Aquarium, Newport; www.oystercloyster.org or 541-867-3474. Nov.11 —FreeAdmission Day,Portland Japanese Garden, Portland; www.japanesegarden.com or 503-223- I32 I.
MISCELLANY Through Oct. 27 —Reel Music Festival 31: Featuring recent restorations of Alfred Hitchcock's surviving early silent films, accompanied by live performance by Portland musicians; NW Film Center, Portland; www. nwfilm.org or 503-221-1156. Through Oct. 27 —Beer101: Featuring lectures, brewery tours and food and drink specials; various locations on Oregon's north coast; www. visittheoregoncoast.com/north. Through Nov.1 —FrightTown,Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Nov. 6 —America's Test Kitchen Live, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Nov. 8-10 —GemFaire, Lane County Events Center, Eugene; www.gemfaire.com or503-252-8300. Nov. 12-15 — RinglingBros. and Barnum & Bailey, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Nov. 16 —The Northwest Food andWine Festival, DoubleTree Hotel, Portland; www.nwwinefestival.com.
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 25
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
holi ay a zaars TODAY
Bayit, 21555 Modoc Road, Bend; 541-385-6421.
CHRISTMAS GOOSEBOUTIQUE: Featuring handcrafted arts and wares including jewelry, pottery, Christmas items and more; a portion of proceeds benefit Wendy's Wish; free admission; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-420-1717 or teresa.hueresen© gmail.com. AUTUMN FESTBAZAARAND LUNCHEON: Featuring handcrafted itemsand baked goods;vegetable chowder lunch; free admission, $5 for lunch, $2.50 for children younger than 6; 10a.m.-3 p.m.; Prineville Presbyterian Church,1771 N.W. Madras Highway; 541-447-1017 or www.prinevillepc.org. SNOWFLAKE BOUTIQUE:A holiday arts and crafts show arranged by theme; proceeds benefit Family Access Network (FAN); $3;1-8 p.m.; North Sister, Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541389-4429 or www.snowflakeboutique. ol'g.
NOV. 8
SATURDAY BEND LADIESOF ELKS HOLIDAY BAZAAR:Featuring handmade items, jewelry, baked goods and more; proceeds benefit local scholarships and charities; free admission; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Elks Lodge, 63120 N.E.BoydAcres Road; 541-480-5880. CHRISTMAS GOOSEBOUTIQUE: Featuring handcrafted arts and wares including jewelry, pottery, Christmas items and more; a portion of proceeds benefit Wendy's Wish; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; St. Charles Bendconference center, 2500 N.E.Neff Road; 541-4201717 or teresa.hueresen©gmail.com. LORD'S ACRE DAY:The67th annual event features a craft sale, baked goods, live music, a barbecue dinner, anauction, 10K run, 5K walk and more; proceeds benefit Powell Butte Christian Church projects; free admission, $10 barbecue, $15 in advance or $20 day of event to race; 7:30 a.m. registration, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. events; Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 S.W. State Highway126; 541-5483066 or www.powellbuttechurch.com. SNOWFLAKE BOUTIQUE: A holiday arts and crafts showarranged by theme; proceeds benefit Family Access Network; $3; 9a.m.-4 p.m.; North Sister, Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541389-4429 or www.snowflakeboutique. OIg.
SUNDAY CHANUKAH &SHABBATBAZAAR: Gifts, candles, menorahs and more; free admission; 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.;Shalom
HOLY REDEEMER HOLIDAYBAZAAR: Featuring homemade gift items, baked goods, crafts and more; cafe is open; free admission; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Holy Redeemer Catholic Church,16137 Burgess Road, La Pine; 541-536-1291 or roco1152©crestviewcable.com. THE TAYLORHOUSE CHRISTMAS: The annual holiday bazaar features handcrafted items, decor, homemade goodies, stocking-stuffers, ornaments and more; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Taylor House, 61283 Robin Hood Lane, Bend; 541-382-8370. HOLIDAYBAZAAR AND CHILIFEED: Featuring handcrafted goods, local author books, raffle, Millie's chili for lunch and more; proceeds benefit museum exhibits, programs and operations; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m., lunch available11 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-389-1813 or www.deschuteshistory.org.
NOV. 9 CRAFT ANDGIFT BAZAAR: Featuring handcrafted gift items; refreshments available; free admission; 8 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Vintage at Bend, 611 N.E.Bellevue Drive; 541-550-7554. "SNOWFLAKES ANDSUGARPLUMS" HOLIDAYBAZAAR& BAKESALE: Featurin g homemade baked goods, raffle, silent auction, handcrafted items, kid's craft table and more; free admission; 9 a.m.-7 p.m., kid's craft table10a.m.-5 p.m. and Chizzythe Clown balloon art1-3 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-593-3580. HOLY REDEEMER HOLIDAYBAZAAR: Featuring homemade gift items, baked goods, crafts and more; cafe is open; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Holy Redeemer Catholic Church,16137 Burgess Road, La Pine; 541-536-1291 or roco1152©crestviewcable.com. HOMESPUN HOLIDAYBAZAAR: Featuring a country store, Grandma's Attic, handmade items, religious gifts and ala carte lunch; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; lunch served 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Thomas Church, 1720 N.W. 19th St., Redmond; 541-923-3390. NEWCOMERS CLUBOF BEND ARTISAN SHOWCASE:Featuring handcrafted quality gift items and more; free admission; 9a.m.-3:30 p.m.;Elks Lodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road; 503-910-1033. PRINEVILLESOROPTIMISTS' CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Featuring
Submityourbazaar This is a list of bazaars submitted to The Bulletin. It will publish weekly in GO! Magazine through the holiday
season. To submit a bazaar that does not
alreadyappear,sendinformation
to communitylife@bendbulletin. com or mail it to The Bulletin, Holiday Bazaars, PO. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. Information must be received no later than a week before each Friday's list. ShalomBayit,21555 Modoc Road, Bend;541-385-6421.
NOV. 22 Tninkstcck
handcrafted quilts, candy, jewelry, handmadetoys,babyclothingand more; food available for purchase from11 a.m.-1 p.m.; proceeds benefit the Soroptimist Club programs; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Soroptimists Senior Center,180 N.E. Belknap St.; 541447-4342 or karoles@crestviewcable. com. THE TAYLORHOUSE CHRISTMAS: The annual holiday bazaar features handcrafted items, decor, homemade goodies, stocking-stuffers, ornaments and more; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Taylor House, 61283 Robin Hood Lane, Bend; 541-382-8370. DESERT MEADOWS HOLIDAY BAZAAR:Featuring handmade gifts, Avon, Scentsy, engraving and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Desert Meadows Clubhouse, 520 N.E. Shoshone Ave., Redmond; 541-923-2198. HOLIDAYBAZAAR AND CHILIFEED: Featuring handcrafted goods, local author books, raffle, Millie's chili for lunch and more; proceeds benefit museum exhibits, programs and operations; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m., lunch available 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-389-1813 or www.deschuteshistory.org.
NOV. 15 COUNTRYCHRISTMASBAZAAR: Featuring homemade items by12 vendors; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; private residence, 69427 Crooked Horseshoe Road, Sisters; 541-410-3858. RED KETTLECHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Featuring one-of-a-kind vintage and collectibles, hostess and holiday gifts
and Christmas decor and silentauction; located in the Community Hall; proceeds benefit the local Bend Salvation Army; free admission; 5-9 p.m.; Salvation Army, 515 DeKalb Ave., Bend; 541-647-7743.
NOV. 16 ANGELFEST:Featuring handcrafted items including quilts, candies and baked goods; proceeds benefit the church mission work; lunch available; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Community Presbyterian Church, 529 N.W.19th St.,Redmond; 541-548-3367. HOLIDAYCRAFT AND GIFT BAZAAR: Featuring unique and handmade gifts from more than 70 local artisans, crafters and gift sellers; free admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133, Brenda©bendparksandrec.org or www. bendparksandrec.org. COUNTRYCHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Featuring homemade items by 12 vendors; free admission; 10 a.m.4 p.m.; private residence, 69427 Crooked Horseshoe Road, Sisters; 541-41 0-3858. RED KETTLECHRISTMASBAZAAR: Featuring one-of-a-kind vintage and collectibles, hostess and holiday gifts and Christmas decor and silent auction; located in the Community Hall; proceeds benefit the local Bend Salvation Army; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Salvation Army, 515 DeKalb Ave., Bend; 541-647-7743.
NOV. 17 CHANUKAH8(SHABBATBAZAAR: Gifts, candles, menorahs and more; free admission; 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.;
COUNTRY CHRISTMAS8tMO RE:A Western-theme bazaar featuring antiques, decor, homespun crafts, baked goods and more; free admission, nonperishable food donations welcome; 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; Smith Rock Community Church, 834411th St., Terrebonne; 541-419-8637. GINGERBREADBAZAAR: Featuring handmade quilts, table runners, homebaked goods andmore byCommon Thread Quilters; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Private residence, 4410S.W.Ben Hogan Dr., Redmond; 541-279-0635.
NOV. 23 CHRISTMAS BAZAAR:Featuring 34 local arts and crafts vendors; free admission; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Elks Lodge,151 N. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-7088. HOLIDAYCRAFT BAZAAR: Handcrafted items, quilts, holiday decor, wooden toys, jewelry and more; free admission; 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; RedmondAssembly of God Church, 1865 W.Antler Ave.; 541-5484555 or www.redmondag.com. COUNTRY CHRISTMAS &MORE: A Western-theme bazaar featuring antiques, decor, homespun crafts, baked goods and more; free admission, nonperishable food donations welcome; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Smith Rock Community Church, 834411th St., Terrebonne; 541-419-8637. GINGERBREADBAZAAR: Featuring handmade quilts, table runners, homebaked goods andmore byCommon Thread Quilters; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Private residence, 4410S.W.Ben Hogan Dr., Redmond; 541-279-0635. HOLIDAYS& HAPPENINGS CRAFT FAIRE: Featuring handcrafted gifts, soaps, jewelry, sweaters andgloves, holiday ornaments, baby gifts and more; lunchavailable; one nonperishable food item; 9a.m.-4 p.m.; Grace First LutheranChurch, 2265Shevlin Park Road,Bend;541-610-7589.
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THE BULLETIN'SHOLIDAY BID-N-BUY ONLINE AUCTION EVENTRETURNS BRINGING QUALITY PRODUCTSAT LOWAUCTION PRICES TOCENTRAL OREGON. ()oii+~' g]t)gg]~g ~ a+ onNove eeber 3, Browse,Bid AndguyTheseand Other Greaat Auction he ,v~
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Central Oregon's LOCAL On-line Auction Event THE BULLETIN'SLOCAL ONLINE AUCTION EVENT
Is Coming hlovember 3rd
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 541-3 8 2-1 81 1
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 27
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
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Asa Butterfield, left, and Harrison Ford star inuEnder's Game," based on the book by Orson Scott Card.
I • • The allegorical events are often over the top, but the scenes,acting andvisuals are powerful t times, "Ender's Game" throws so many metaphors and moral dilemmas our way we almost forget to appreciate the stunning and gorgeous visuals covering every inch of the screen. Almost. Based on the beloved novel of the same name, "Ender's Game" is a bit of a gloomy mess at times, and therewere moments when it almost implodes under the weight of its own self-importance. But director Gavin Hood ("X-Men Origins: Wolverine") and a first-rate cast of wily veterans and freshfaced youngstersdeliver a rousing, challenging adventure that should satisfy most young fans of the book while keeping the adults engrossed as well. Like so many futuristic sci-fi thrillers, "Ender's Game" begins
with narration telling us of a great war that transpired in the past, which is still the future for those of us watching in 2013. In this case, there was an alien invasion in the year 2086 when insect-like aliens known as Formics (aka Buggers because they look like bugs, as do about 75 percent of aliens in all science fiction) filled the skies above Earth and took out tens of millions of humans. All seemed lost until a pilot named M azer Rackham took out t h e alien mother ship, thus destroying the enemy fleet. Now it's 50 years later. No one has seen Mazer Rackham since that legendary battle (he's presumed dead), and schoolchildren cheer when they watch video of the great war of the distant past. But trouble could be lurking. The International Fleet helmed by the
RICHARDROEPER
"Ender's Game" 114 minutes
PG-13, for someviolence, sci-fi action and thematic material gruff Col. Hyrum Graff (Harrison Ford) is scouting recruits for Command School in preparation for the next invasion by the Formics, who have overpopulated their planet and just might be building weapons of mass destruction in preparation for another invasion of Earth. Do we wait for them to attack, or launch a pre-emptive strike? This is one of the many allegories presented in "Ender's Game," usually in a way that will strike adults as a bit heavy-handed while still sailing over the heads of the very
youngest ofviewers who are just digging the sight of all these kids in cool u niforms engaging in zero-gravity war games. A sa Butterfield ( "Hugo") i s Ender Wiggin, a slight but intense boy who has the compassion and intelligence of his sister, Valentine (Abigail Breslin), and the unforgiving fierceness of his older brother, Peter (Jimmy Pinchak). Under the watchful tutelage of Col. Graff and his second in command, Maj. Gwen Anderson (Viola Davis), Ender is put to the test in any number of ways, including a hand-heldvideo game in which members of his own family pop up, real-world fights manipulated by the commanding officers and psychological warfare. Ender's classmates include the usual roster of archetypes, from the surly rival who hisses "I'll kill you!" to the loyal sidekicks and the beautiful young lass (Hailee Steinfeld) who instantly takes a liking to this mysterious, sensitive boy. Sometimes it seems as if
Maj. Anderson exists only so Col. Graff has someone he can bark at while explaining why he does the things he does. (Ford, who can be so stiff in roles like this he seems like a cardboard cutout in the theater lobby, gives an animated performance, at least for him. It's one of his better recent roles.) What a great-looking film this is. The simulated battles are beautifully shot and expertly choreographed, with teams facing off in video game-type battles in which they're the actual players. When Ender gets lost in that hand-held video game that seems to be tapping into his own subconscious, "Ender's Game" g et s p r e t ty freaky and even a little Freudian. It's all pretty awesome, if at times a bit confusing for someone who hasn't read the books. Asa Butterfield does a terrific job of conveying Ender's dilemmas. He's a victim of bullying who turns the tables in a manner both effective and chilling.
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'Free Bir s'isun ercoo e ree Birds"is more proof, as if 2013 needed it, that Hollywood has almost killed the animated goose that laid
From previous page He's a brilliant tactician who recognizes a leader must command the respect of hi s team and must delegate responsibility — but he also has the instincts of a loner. In simulated battles, Ender is quite willing to sacrifice a thousand soldiersin order to save tens of millions, but will he be so ruthlessly efficient when the real war comes? Col.Graff believes so. Others in the command room aren't so sure. Even though "Ender's Game" explains why children are tapped
O N LOCA L S CRE E N S Here's what's showing onCentral Oregon movie screens. For showtimes, see listings on Page 31.
the golden egg. No matter that in this case, the goose is a turkey. You didn't need to be told that. But a year that has produced the clever and heartfelt "The Croods" and the passably amusing "Despicable Me 2" has also had a healthy dose of sausage factory about it. "Epic," "Monsters University," "Planes," "Escape from Planet Earth," "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2" and "Turbo" — all major pictures that hint at a talent pool spread absurdly thin and an industry with sneering contempt for its audience. ("Animate it, charge 3-D prices and their parents will grit their teeth and bear it!") A start-up division called Reflex Animation did "Free Birds." Relativity is releasing it. They make the same mistakes that generations of animators made before them, having a cute idea and a feeble script to go with it, lining up a "name" voice castto over-compensate. O wen Wilson, Woody H a r relson, Amy Poehler and George Takei — funny folks, one and all. Yet there's barely a laugh in it. The strain shows, right at the opening credits, when a title tells us this "is loosely based" on a true story — "unless, of course" you take into account the talking turkeys who talk turkey. Well, guffaw. Wilson voices Reggie, a scrawny Jeremiah at his turkey farm, the one guyto figure out why he and his flock are being fattened up. "Turkeys are dumb," he narrates as his peers clap as friends and family are dragged off to "turkey paradise." But Reggie is that lucky bird
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
Reviews byRichard Roeper or Roger Moore, unlessotherwisenoted.
HEADS UP
. II ~ ~ 1 %wlCourtesy Reel FX and Relativity Media
Reggie (voiced by Owen Wilson), left, and Jake (voiced by Woody Harreison) travel back to the first Thanksgiving in "Free Birds."
ROGERMOORE
are starving — save for the portly Gov. Bradford (Dan Fogler). Myles Standish (Colm Meaney) is a trig-
ger-happy menace who figures he
"Free Birds" 91 minutes PG, for some action/peril and rude humor who wins a presidential pardon. The gag writers thought it would be cute to make this Southern president with the bratty daughter Clintonian. Hellooo, 1996. Reggie has barely settled into a pampered life of pizzas and TV watching at Camp David when the demented Jake (Harrelson) shows up to birdnap him and enlist Reggie in his mission — to steal the secret Camp David time machine, travel back to early America and change Thanksgiving history, "to get turkey OFF the menu." In 1621 Plymouth, the Pilgrims
to lead the fleet, it's still a bit of a stretch to see the likes of Harrison Ford, Viola Davis and Ben K ingsley looking on f r o m t h e space equivalent of a luxury skybox while kids who look like their children or grandchildren do all the real fighting. But of course real wars are fought by young m en and w omen only a f e w years older than these kids, and the "Ender's Game" books are so popular in large part because the readeristhe same age as the warrior. With echoes of "War Games"
can turkey-hunt the colony to safety. And the Massachusetts turkeys themselves'? They're natives — as in painted up, like Washington Redskins mascots. Jake and Reggie must win over the native flock (Poehler and Keith David among them) to save them and turkeys of the future. The few gags there are seem borrowed frombetter,earlierfilm s — short attention span turkeys inspired by Dory of "Finding Nemo," "Braveheart" battle scenes, mismatched "buddies" from a hundred betterbuddy comedies. But the sight gags fall flat and much of the screenplay seems like a rough draft that the filmmakers — Jimmy Hayward directed the superior "Horton Hears a Who" — expected the actors to fix. And they didn't. — Roger Mooreis a film critic for McClatchy-Tribune News Service.
and "Star Wars" and even a little bit of "The Matrix" and "The Last Starfighter," this is the story of a young man thrust into the center of a great struggle that could decide the fate of his people. There are multiple sequels to the book, and we will see more of Ender on the big screen as well. His jour-
neys — physical, psychological, ethical — are just beginning. "Ender's Game" works as a contained story and as a table-setting first chapter. — Richard Roeper isa film critic for The Chicago Sun-Times.
"Led Zeppelin:Celebration DayLive fromLondon2007"— On December 10, 2007, LedZeppelin took the stageat London's 02 Arena toheadline atribute concert for dear friend andAtlantic Records founder AhmetErtegun. What followed was atwo-hour-plus tour de force of theband's signature blues-infused rock 'n' roll that instantly became part of the legend ofLed Zeppelin .Founding membersJohnPaul Jones, Jimmy Pageand Robert Plant were joined byJason Bonham,theson of their late drummer John Bonham,to perform16 songs from their celebrated catalog including landmark tracks "Whole Lotta Love," "Rock AndRoll," "Kashmir," and "Stairway ToHeaven." Part of the Rockumentary Film Club series, the film screens at 7p.m. Mondayat the TowerTheatre in Bend. Cost is $12, plus fees. (noMPAArating) — Synopsis from band's website "Thor:TheDarkWorld" —Alan Taylor, whodirectedsomeof the most memorableepisodes of "Gameof Thrones," "MadMen,""TheSopranos" and "Deadwood," makeshis feature film debut with this secondmovieabout the adventures of thehammer-wielding god of Thunder(Chris Hemsworth). Natalie Portman, Idris ElbaandAnthony Hopkins all return. Sodoesthe dastardly Loki (Tom Hiddleston).Thefilm opens Nov.8 with afew early screeningsThursday and is available locally in 3-D.(PG-13) — Synopsis from ReneRodriguez, The Miami Herald
WHAT'S NEW "Ender's Game" — A first-rate cast of wily veterans (Harrison Ford, Ben Kingsley) and fresh-faced youngsters (Asa Butterfield of"Hugo") deliver a rousing, challenging adventure that should satisfy most young fans of the beloved sci-fi novel while keeping the adults engrossed aswell. The simulated battles against scary aliens are beautifully shot andexpertly choreographed. This film is available locally in IMAX. Rating: Three stars. 114 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "Free Birds" — A start-up division called Reflex Animation did "Free Birds." Relativity is releasing it. They makethe same mistakes that generations of animators madebefore them, having acute idea and afeeble script to go with it, lining up a "name" voice cast to over-compensate. Owen Wilson, Woody Harrelson, Amy Poehler andGeorgeTakei — funny folks, one andall. Yet there's barely a laugh in it. Wilson voices Reggie, a scrawny Jeremiah at his turkey farm, the one guytofigure out why heand his flock are being fattened up.The
Michael Gibson /Sony Pictures via AP
Juiianne Moore, background at left, and Chloe Grace Moretz star in the horror remake "Carrie." few gags there areseemborrowed from better, earlier films — short attention span turkeys inspired by Dory of "Finding Nemo," "Braveheart" battle scenes, mismatched "buddies" from a hundred better buddy comedies. But the sight gags fall flat and much of the screenplay seems like a rough draft that the filmmakers — Jimmy Hayward directed the superior "Horton Hears aWho" — expected the actors to fix. And they didn't. Frozen, under-cooked andsorely lacking much in the way of "all the trimmings," this turkey isn't ready to serve. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: One and ahalf stars. 91 minutes. (PG) —Moore "Last Vegas" —There's virtually nothing subtle or surprising about this story of old guys at a LasVegas bachelor party, and yet onecan't but smile throughout, watching Michael Douglas, Robert De Niro, Morgan Freeman,Kevin Kline and Mary Steenburgen —AcademyAward winners all — breezetheir waythrough an obvious but lovely and funnyadventure. Rating: Three stars.104 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper
STILL SHOWING "Big Ass Spider!" — A 50-foot alien arachnid escapes from a military lab and rampages across LosAngeles. With Greg Grunberg, Lombardo BoyarandRayW ise. Written by Gregory Gieras. Directed by Mike Mendez. Areview was not available for this film. 80 minutes. (PG-13) — Synopsis from LosAngeles Times "Captain Phillips" —Director Paul Greengrass ("The BourneSupremacy") delivers another intense, emotionally exhausting thriller with amazing verite camerawork andgut-wrenching realism. Smack in the middle is TomHanks in a career-crowning performance as aworldly sea captain taken hostage bySomali pirates. Even as Greengrass' signature kinetic style renders us nearly seasick and emotionally spentfrom the action, it's the work of Hanks that makes this film unforgettable. Rating: Four stars. 134 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "Carrie" —When Brian De Palmaadapted Stephen King's novel "Carrie" for film in 1976, he turned the simple story of a bullied teenagegirl with telekinetic powers into a dreamy pop-horror fantasia.
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
From previous page De Palma's "Carrie" became soiconic that it remains fresh and vital 37 years later and casts an imposing shadow over the newversion by director Kimberly Peirce. Instead of trying to outdo the grandness of the original, Peirce takes amore grounded approach, treating the characters of Carrie White (Chloe Grace Moretz) and her religiousfanatic mother Margaret (Julianne Moore) with more emotional gravity and empathy. Peirce is good at illustrating the complexities and contradictions inherent in all her characters. Shefares much worse with the horror elements in the film, relying too heavily on cheaplooking CGIfor ineffective shocks. The beauty of DePalma's movie is that the crazier the story became, the scarier and moreunnerving the film got, building to an enormous "Gotcha!" scare in its final scene. This "Carrie" becomesless involving as it goes along, ceding its emotional power to special effects and unconvincing gore, andculminating with a closing shot so lameand uninspired, it's as if the filmmakers just gave up andcalled it a day. Rating: Twostars. 100 minutes. (R) — Rene Rodriguez, The Miami Herald "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2" — The Herculeantask of any sequel is repeating the experience of the original film, or improving on it. That's nigh on impossible due to the simple fact that you only get to take the viewing public utterly by surprise once. The out-of-nowhere novelty and delight of Sony Animation's "Cloudy With aChanceof Meatballs," based on Judi and RonBarrett's children's book, is missing in "Meatballs 2." Thedesign and color palette is as glorious as ever. But the laughs arefewand innovations fewer in this generally winded knock-off. It's all more cynical than silly, the sort of movie youget when the corporate desire for a sequel precedes the creative team's great ideafora sequel. Which, in this case, they didn't have. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Twostars. 93 minutes.(PG) —Moore "The Counselor" — Director Ridley Scott and screenwriter Cormac McCarthy havefashionedasexy, sometimes shockingly violent, literate and richly textured tale ofthe Shakespeareanconsequences of one man's irrevocable act of avarice. As the self-assured lawyer of the title, Michael Fassbender is brilliant, circulating through aworld populated with some of the best-written characters imaginable, including Penelope Cruz,Cameron Diaz,Javier Bardem and Brad Pitt. Rating: Four stars. 117 minutes. (R) — Roeper "EnoughSaid"— The lateJames Gandolfini delivers one of the richest performances of his career asa middle-aged manwhofalls in love with a middle-agedwoman (Julia Louis-Dreyfus). Writer-director Nicole Holofcener ("Friends With Money") again gives usmature, sometimes sardonic, authentic people moving about in aworld we recognize. Rating: Threeand a half stars. 93 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "Escape Plan" — Sylvester Stallone was always abetter actor than Arnold Schwarzenegger.That burning
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is available locally in 3-D. Rating: L Three and ahalf stars. 91 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "Jackass Presents: BadGrandpa" — Strip the danger out of "Borat" and the injuries out of "Jackass" and you've got a beadon"Bad Grandpa," a fitfully funny, semi-scripted "Jackass" outing built around elaborately staged pranks played onthe unsuspecting. JohnnyKnoxvilledonsold-age makeupand becomes IrvingZisman. The scripted interludes aren't funny at all. The gagsare moreembarrassing thananythingelse.As"Jackass" japes go, "BadGrandpa" was better Jaap Buitendiik/ Universal Pictures via The Associated Press in concept and in its short, punchyTV commercials than it is as afeature. James Hunt, played by Chris Hemsworth, celebrates a victory in Rating: Twostars. 92 minutes. (R) "Rush." — Moore "Percy Jackson: Sea ofMonsters" — Any thoughts that a secondPercy Jackson and the Olympians film would drag Rick Riordan's "Greek Godchildren" franchise out of the shadow of Harry Potter are dashed the moment Percy andhis "halfblood" friends pile into a supernatural taxi in "Sea of Monsters." Thecab may be driven bythe three haggling, wisecracking Graeaeof Greek myth — blind women with one eye between them —but it's a pure Potter picture moment.
question, forthose old enough tohave askeditanddeludedenoughto have never figured it out, is answered once and for all in "EscapePlan," avintage prison escapemovie in the classic Sly and/or Arnold mold. They're both in it, both locked upand both looking for a way out of a super prison that has all the escape-proof conveniences that private enterprise cancook up. The old pros hit their marks, andeach other. Theyspill some bloodand have theirs spilled. Villains are atad too obvious andthe finale you can see coming from miles off. Soyeah, it's undemanding. But the tempered violence, the nature of the villains, the easy bonhomie of our leadsanda cast pepperedwith great supporting players make"Escape Plan" go down easier than the other "Rambo"/"The Last Stand"I"Expendables" pictures that brought these two agedaction stars back from the dead.Rating: Two stars. 112 minutes. (R) —Moore "Gravity" — An accident sets two astronauts, a veteran (George Clooney) and arookie (Sandra Bullock), adrift in space. Both a stunning visual treat andan unforgettable thrill ride, director Alfonso Cuaron'samazingspace adventure evokes"Alien" and "2001: A Space Odyssey." During some harrowing sequences, you'll have to remind yourself to breathe. This film
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Act now to take control of this school year.
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and confidence.
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This event filled up fast last year, so make your reservations early. •
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Redefining a classic neighborhood style on Bend's westside i
Two and three-bedroom luxury cottages from 1,221 to 1,541 square feet share a xeriscaped
common area. Designed for low-maintenance living, they feature high-end finishes and distinctive architectural treatments. A vibrant community of shops 8 restaurants is at your doorstep. L OC A T E D A T 1 90 0 N W
M O N T ER E Y P I N E S D R .
Disney-Pixar via The Associated Press
Mike Wazowski (voiced by Billy Crystal) returns to his starring role in the prequel "Monsters University."
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"Monsters University" — A slight and underwhelming prequel that isn't nearlyas inventive, funny or involving as the original, "Monsters lnc." (2001). Thoughcolorful and sweet-natured andoccasionally capable of producing the mild chuckle, this is a safe, predictable, edge-free, nearly bland effortfrom Pixar, a studio that rarely hedges its bets. It's better than "Cars 2," but not in thesameleague as the "Toy Story" sequels. DVDExtras: Featurette and audio commentary; Blu-ray Extras: Additional featurettes anddeleted scenes. Rating: Twoanda half stars. 110minutes. (G) — Roeper "R.I.P.D." — Detective Nick Walker (Ryan Reynolds), much to his dismay, is dead —shot dead, in fact, by his own partner (Kevin Bacon as Hayes) on theforce. But death is merely a recruitment tool for the R.I.P.D., anelaborate undead police force tasked with exposing and eliminating rotting souls who torment the living under the guise of normal, living people. That's the cool part. But then Nick meets his new partner: Roy (Jeff Bridges), a lawmanfrom the1800s who apparently spent no part of his extremely lengthytenure learning hownot to be
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a caricature. And with eachpassing exchange between Nick andRoy, we're treated to a little dismay of our own, because "R.I.P.D." is similarly incapable of any kind of ability to just move on. Nick is the straight manwith surprisingly few questions about his newfound afterlife, Roy is the tough-talkin' ol' cowboy with a spin-the-wheel assortment of spoutable cliches, and every conversation they haveserves no other purpose than as aspringboard for Bridges to ham it up hard. It's funny at first, cute shortly after that, and increasingly more tiresome themore it repeats itself without going anywhere. Anyhopes of a rescue from outside grow dimmer by the minute: Following an extremely promising introduction, "R.I.P.D." loses its appetite for clever fiction and just kinda settles for being a loud mix of abuddy comedy on atreadmill, a predictable andbinary good-versus-evil chase, and amonster movie that's loaded with guns and special effects that amount to lots of empty noise andmaybea headache. DVDExtras: Featurette, gag reel and deleted scenes; Blu-ray Extras: Fiveadditional featurettes and alternate openings. This film was not given a star rating. 96 minutes. (PG-13) — Silly O'Keefe, McClatchy-Tribune NewsService ALSO THISWEEK:"Byzantium" COMINGUP: Movies scheduled for national release Nov. 5 include "As I LayDying," "Girl Most Likely," "Grown Ups2," "Lovelace," "Parkland" and"W hiteHouse Down." — "OVOandSlu-ray Extras" from wir eandonlinesources
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And with every magical creature that turns up, the comparisons to Harry & Co.grows. The quest, which takes our heroes to theSeaof Monsters, aka The BermudaTriangle, is generic in the extreme. Thefights/escapes all lack any sense of urgency andperil. Rating: Two stars. 106 minutes. (PG) —Moore "REO2" — The joy of "RED" was seeing a cast packed with Oscar winners (Helen Mirren, Morgan Freeman, Richard Dreyfuss, Ernest Borgnine) and very good actors (John Malkovich, Mary-Louise Parker, Brian Cox and Karl Urban) flesh out and class up a Bruce Willis action film."Codgers make the coolest killers" was its motto. And if anything, this "Retired, Extremely Dangerous" sequel ups the ante. There's a new acronym — "ICE: Incarcerated, Cannot Execute." They've replaced killed-off Oscar winners with Anthony Hopkins as an addled old scientist and Cather ine Zeta-Jonesasa Russian agent
and one-time lady love of Frank's. And the change in directors to comedy-specialist Dean Parisot ("Galaxy Quest") means there's a laugh a minute amid all this mayhem. Rating: Two and a half stars. 108 minutes. (PG-13) — Moore "Rush"— "Rush"ranksamongthebestmovies about auto racing evermade,featuring great performances from Daniel Bruhl as detailobsessed FormulaOnedriver Niki Lauda and Chris Hemsworth as his cocky rival, James Hunt. Even if you don't know FormulaOnefrom the Soap BoxDerby, RonHoward's "Rush," like all great sports movies, is foremost about getting to know and understand the characters. This is one of his most impressive efforts. Rating: Four stars. 123 minutes. (R) — Roeper "The Summit" — Much remains unclear about the events of Aug. 1 and 2, 2008, on the mountain known asK2, except that11 climbers died there.
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
From previous page As a possible result of disorientation from high altitude sickness, darkness and the physical separation thatexisted between multiple mountaineering teams from many different countries, even eye-witness accounts of the tragedy that is the focus of the documentary "The Summit" are, at best, contradictory and, at worst, hopelessly confusing. Onething is as clear as the crystalline sky that greeted 25 climbers on thosefateful days. The accident — theworst since the summit of K2 was first conquered in 1954 — was a nightmare. "The Summit" adequately captures that horror. To referto the episode as asingle accident is misleading. It was a series of largely unrelated accidents, as thefilm lays it out, using a mostly seamless mix of found footage, survivor interviews and re-enactments. Because"The Summit" jumps around in time, andbecause theeventsonthe mountainhappened over two daysandat locations often far apart, the already garbled chronology of deaths is madeeven more confusing. This in someways enhances the dramaand mystery of the film, not to mention the atmosphere of pandemonium. At the same time, it's frustrating not to know exactly what occurred when, howandto whom. Of course, some of this is due to thefact that nobody really knowseverything thathappened,except,assomeone notes, the mountain itself. Rating: Two and a half stars. 99 minutes. (R) — Michael O'Sullivan, The Washington Post "Touchy Feely" — In "TouchyFeely," the transformations undergone by characters, areabrupt and mystifying. The new-agecomedy is a detour into the ozone for LynnShelton, whose hardheaded,sharply written satires "Humpday" and"Your Sister's Sister" explore the booby traps in intimate relationships. But wherethe sensibility of her earlier movies is solidly grounded in psychological reality, "Touchy Feely," whose title conveys anundertone of sarcasm, wobbles into uncharted psychic territory. The two main characters, Abby(Rosemarie DeWitt), a massagetherapist, and herolder brother, Paul (Josh Pais), adentist, live in Seattle. Abby, who regularly visits her friend Bronwyn (thealways wonderful Allison Janney) for reiki sessions, suddenly develops arevulsion to human touch that coincides with pressure from her longtime boyfriend, Jesse(Scoot McNairy), who owns abikeshop, for them to move intogether. Paul, a plodding, laconic milquetoast whose dental practice isfailing, acquires mysterious healing powers. Rumorsof his gift quickly spread,and, before long, his office is overflowing with clients. This film was not given astar rating. 90 minutes. (R) — Stephen Holden, The NewYork Times "The World's End" — In the best film yetfrom director Edgar Wrightand writer-actor Simon Pegg,old friends converge for a20th-anniversary pub crawl that takes anunexpected turn. "The World's End" succeedsfirst as a reunion movie andthen asa sci-fi satire with some of the funniest stunts and battle sequences in recent memory. Starring Peggandthe invaluable Nick Frost. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 109 minutes. (R) —Roeper
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T I M E S • For the zoeekof Nov. 1 lES SCNWAN
• There may be an additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
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• Accessibility devices are available for some movies at RegalOld Mill Stadiumf6 tl IMAX.
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 800-326-3264 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) Fri-Sun: 12:15, 3:20, 6:25, 9:25 Mon-Thu: 12:55, 4:15, 7:30 • CARRIE(R) Fri-Sun: 3:15, 10:10 Mon-Thu: 4:35, 10:10 • CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 (PG) Fri-Wed: 1, 4:20, 6:55 Thu:1 • CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 23-D (PG) Fri-Wed: 9:20 Thu: 4:20 • THE COUNSELOR (R) Fri-Wed: 1:10, 3:50, 6:30, 9:15 Thu: 1:10, 3:50, 6:30 • ENDER'SGAME(PG-13) Fri-Sun: 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:30 Mon-Thu: 1, 3:45, 6:45, 9:30 • ENDER'SGAMEIMAX (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 1:15, 4, 7, 9:45 • ENOUGHSAID (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 12:20, 3, 7:45, 10:10 Mon-Wed: 1:20, 4:25, 7:45, 10:10 Thu: 1:20, 4:25, 7:45 • ESCAPEPLAN(R) Fri-Wed: 1:55, 4:40, 7:25, 10:05 Thu: 1:55, 4:40 • FREE BIRDS (PG) Fri-Sun: 12:30, 3:30, 6, 8:45 Mon-Thu: 1:05, 3:30, 6, 8:45 • FREE BIRDS 3-D (PG) Fri-Wed: 1:25, 3:55, 6:15, 9 Thu: 1:25, 3:55, 6:15 • GRAVITY(PG-I3) Fri-Sun: 3:05, 9:05 Mon-Thu: 3:25, 9:05 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13) Fri-Sun: 12:50, 2:05, 4:50, 6:50, 7:40, 10 Mon-Thu: 1:05, 2:05, 4:50, 6:50, 7:40, 10 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BADGRANDPA(R) Fri-Sun: 12:15, 1:35, 3:10, 4:10, 6:35, 7:35, 9:15, 10:15 Mon-Wed: 1:35, 3:10, 4:10, 6:35, 7:35, 9: I5,10 Thu: 1:35, 3:10, 4:10, 6:35, 7:35, 9:15 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 12:35, 1:45, 3:35, 4:30, 6:10, 7:10, 8:50, 9:50 Mon-Thu: 1:45, 3:35, 4:30, 6:10, 7:10, 8:50, 9:50 • RUSH (R) Fri-Sun: 12:25, 7:20 Mon-Thu: 1:10, 7:20 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13) Thu:8,9,10 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD3-D (PG-I3) Thu:8,9,10
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Gru's Minions enjoy a vacation in the sequel "Despicable Me 2." • J
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271 • BIG ASSSPIDER! (PG-13) Fri:9 • THE SUMMIT(R) Fri:4 Sat: 4, 8:15 Sun: 7:15 Mon-Tue, Thu: 8:15 • TOUCH FEELY(R) Sat, Mon-Tue, Thu:6 Sun:5 • The "Spaghetti Western" will screen at 6:30p.m. Wednesday(doors open at 6 p.m) andincludes anall-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • THE COUNSELOR (R) Fri: 4:15, 6:45, 9: l5 Sat-Sun: 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Mon-Thu: 4:15, 6:45 • ENDER'8 GAME (PG-I3) Fri: 4:30, 7, 9:30 Sat-Sun: 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 Mon-Thu: 4:30, 7 • FREE BIRDS (PG) Fri:3,5,7,9 Sat-Sun:11 a.m.,1,3,5, 7, 9 Mon-Thu: 5, 7 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BADGRANDPA(R) Fri: 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Sat-Sun: 11:30 a.m., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Mon-Wed: 5:30, 7:30 Thu: 5:30 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD (PG-13) Thu:8
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG) Sat-Sun: 11:30 a.m. Wed: 3 • PERCYJACKSON: SEAOF MONSTERS (PG- l3) Sat-Sun: 2:30 • RED 2(PG-13) Fri-Sun, Tue-Thu: 6 • THE WORLD'SEND(R) Fri-Sun, Tue-Thu: 9 • The NFL football game screens at 5:40 p.m. Monday. • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 21mayattend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompaniedbya legal guardian.
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Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) Fri: 4:45 Sat: 2:30, 3:45, 7:45 Sun:1:30, 3, 7 Mon-Wed: 6:45 Thu:4:15 • THE COUNSELOR (R) Fri: 7:30 Sat: 5:15, 7:45 Sun: 4:15, 6:45 Mon-Wed: 6 Thu:7 • ENDER'SGAME(PG-13) Fri: 5:15, 7:45 Sat: 2:30, 5, 7:30 Sun: 1:30, 4, 6:30
Mon-Wed: 6:15 Thu: 5 7:30 • FREE jIIRDS (PG) Fri: 4:45, 7 Sat: 1:45, 3:45, 5:45 Sun:1,3,5 Mon-Wed: 5 Thu: 5:45 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) Fri: 5:15, 7:30 Sat: 1:45, 6:15, 8: l5 Sun:1,5:30,7:30 Mon-Wed: 6:30 Thu: 4:30, 7 • THOR: THEDARK WORLD (PG-13) Thu: 8
Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) Fri: 4, 6:45, 9:35 Sat: 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:35 Sun: 1:15, 4, 6:45 Mon-Thu: 4, 6:45 • THE COUNSELOR (R) Fri-Sat: 2:35, 5, 7:20, 9:45 Sun: 2:35, 5, 7:20 Mon-Wed: 5, 7:20 Thu:5 • ENDER'SGAME(PG-l3) Fri-Sat: 2:05, 4:35, 7:10, 9:40 Sun: 2:05, 4:35, 7:10 Mon-Thu: 4:35, 7:10 • FREE BIRDS (PG) Fri, Mon-Thu: 4:50, 7 Sat-Sun:12:40,4:50 7 • FREE BIRDS 3-D (PG) Fri-Sat: 2:45, 9 Sun: 2:45 • JACKASSPRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) Fri: 3:30, 5:30, 7:40, 9:50 Sat: 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:40, 9:50 Sun: 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:40 Mon-Thu: 5:30, 7:40 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD3-D (PG-I3) Thu: 8 Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., Prineville, 541-416- I 014 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(Upstairs — PG-13) Fri:4,7 Sat-Sun: 1, 4, 7 Mon-Thu: 6:15 • THE COUNSELOR (R) Fri-Sun:8 • FREE BIRDS (PG) Fri: 3:40, 6 Sat-Sun: 1, 3:40, 6 Mon-Thu: 6:30 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
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PAGE 32 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2013
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