Serving Central Oregon since190375
TUESDAY December3,2013
enra re On'$ P t;PP <Ie$ Fallprephighlights AT HOME• D1
SPORTS• C1
bendbulletin com TODAY'S READERBOARD
Director of Cover
MIRROR POND RECOMMENDATION
Winter games —Meet David Wise, a favorite for gold
in freestyle skiing whose style sets him apart.C1
By Hillary Borrud
Beetle woes —In NewJer-
The Bulletin
sey's famous Pinelands.A3
Public opinion might be split on the future of Mirror Pond, but the vote of committee members tasked with selecting a plan for the pond was unanimous onMonday: They want
WOIVOS —The Snake River
pack is oneattack awayfrom a potential state kill order.B3
to keep the pond. The Mirror Pond ad hoc committee voted Monday afternoon to continue negotiating with PacifiCorp to obtain ownership of the dam that created Mirror Pond, as long as that plan is financially feasible for
MBP~ inSide
the community.
Offic i als from
• See potential the city of Bend options,A4 and Bend Park 8 Recreation District will draft a resolution based on the ad hoc committee's decision.
The plan is for the park district board to vote on the resolution at a meeting tonight, and the City Council to vote on it during a Wednesday night meeting. Mirror Pond is a section of the Deschutes River. SeeMirror Pond /A4
— Find inspiration for festive
decorations from professional
ChlmP fightS —The Nonhuman Rights Project tries a nov-
am ussie e s
e ri
el tactic to get achimpanzee placed in asanctuary. A6
Amazon's delivery dronoS —What the compa-
l
ny has in mind.C6
.--a4
And a WedexclusiveA laptop stolen in D.C. ends up
in Louisiana, a testament to the underground pipeline that drives crime.
bendbnlletin.cnm/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
As hospital costs soar, even stitches cut deep
In a medical system notorious for opaque finances and inflated bills, nothing is more convoluted than hospital pricing, economists
The Bulletin
Counties
v
tepid on Wyden's forest plan
New Yorh Times News Service
everything, every pill."
By Lauren Dake
SeeCover Oregon/A5
By Elisabeth Rosenthal SAN FRANCISCOWith blood oozing from deep lacerations, the two patients arrived at California Pacific Medical Center's tidy emergency room. Deepika Singh, 26, had gashed her knee at a backyard barbecue. Orla Roche, a rambunctious toddler on vacation with her family, had tumbled from a couch, splitting open her forehead on a table. On a quiet Saturday in May, nurses in blue scrubs quickly ushered the two patients into treatment rooms. The wounds were cleaned, numbed and mended in less than an hour. "It was great — they had good DVDs, the staff couldn't have been nicer," said Emer Duffy, Orla's mother. Then the bills arrived. Singh's three stitches cost $2,229.11. Orla's forehead was sealed with a dab of skin glue for $1,696. "When I first sawthe charge, I said, 'What could possibly have cost that much'?"' Singh recalled. "They billed for
on leave PORTLAND — Starting today, the state's troubled health insurance exchange, Cover Oregon,willhave a new interim director. On Monday afternoon, the Cover Oregon board was expected to review Rocky King's job performance. King, however, announced he was seeking medical leave. Instead of a job evaluation, the board approved the request and granted King up to 12 weeks leave. Dr. Bruce Goldberg, the current director of the state's health authority, will temporarily oversee the exchange. Two weeks ago, the Cover Oregon board alerted King it was looking for more clarity on when the site would be functioning and more specifics on the problems that continued to plague the site. It was clear on Monday that the board remained unsatisfied with the level of transparency. "Part of what we want to know is what is getting in the way?" Cover Oregon Board Chairwoman Liz Baxter said after the meeting. The website was initially expected to launch Oct. 1. It is still not functioning, and Cover Oregon has started to enroll people through a manual process.
Christmas tree ideas decorators.D1
Oregon
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — The Association of 08 C Counties signaled Monday it is unlikely to support Sen.
Ron Wyden's proposal for a new management plan for more than 2 million acres of forest in Western Oregon. Since Wyden, D-ore., unveiled his plan last week, the association has been
going over the 188-page
gon State University-CascadesCampusto test thefeasibility of building onthe site in Bend. Carlson TestingandSubsurfaceTechnologiesonMondaybeganconductingthegeo-
legislation line by line, said Douglas County Commissioner Doug Robertson, the association's president. In a statement released Monday, the association indicated "doubt and skepticism" about Wyden's proposal. "The disappointment comes from what we mea-
technical survey as part of the university's due diligence period before closing on the site.
sured (in Wyden's bill)
Photos by Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Holes up to 30feetdeep are being drilled into the ground beneath the future home of Ore-
DSU-Cascadesaims to open its four-year campus in thefall of 2015, with the cam-
against our three bedrock principles," which are a dramatic reduction of litigation over timber sales, a steady output of timber and a reasonable level of funding for local governments, Robertson said. SeeCounties /A5
pus's initial buildings located on a10.44-acre wooded lot at1500 S.W. Chandler Ave. The university will expand over time onto an adjacent 46.29-acre site containing an inactive
pumice mine. The university has good reason to be cautious. In1999, Bend-La Pine Schools decided to construct an athletic facility for Summit High School on top of a former pumice
say. Hospital charges repre-
mine. During the 2006-07 school year, the ground gaveway, pocking the athletic field
sent about a third of the $2.7 trillion annual U.S. health
with small ditches. In the end, the district had to spend $7.2 million to fix the site. At right, a sample from the subsurface survey work done at the OSU-Cascades site.
care bill, the biggest single segment, according to government statistics, and are the largest driver of medical inflation, a new study in The Journal of the American Medical Association found. See Hospitals/A5
Partly cloudy High 27, Low 10
Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX
TODAY'S WEATHER At Home Business Calendar
D1-6 Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/StatewBf -6 TV/Movies
B5 Cf-4 D6
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 111, No. 337,
30 pages, 5 sections O
Q Weuserecyclednewsprint
IIIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
The Bulletin
NATION de%ORI.D
HOW to reaCh US STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
541-385-5800 Phonehours:5:30 a.m.— 5 p.m. Mon.-Fr i.,6:30a.m .-noonSat.-Sun.
GENERAL INFORMATION
541-382-1 811 ONLINE
www.bendbulletin.com EMAIL
bulletin@bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
54i-383-0367 NEW S R O O M FA X
54i -385-5804 N EW S R O O M
E M A IL
Business .....business©bendbulletin.com City Desk..........news©bendbulletin.com CommunityLife communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sports..............sports©bendbulletin.com
OUR ADDRESS Street ...........1777S.W.Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Mailing.........PO. Box6020 Bend, OR97706
ea si e'scrucia es By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar
programs for people whose The Associated Press health problems already were a W ASHINGTON — P r e s- barrier to getting private insurident Barack Obama's new ance before the overhaul. "The chances are almost and improved health care website faces yet another test 100 percent that someone who in just a couple of weeks, its would like to continue coverbiggest yet. If HealthCare.gov age next year and intends to becomes overwhelmed by an secure it is not going to be able expected year-end c r unch, to do it," said Mark McClelmany Americans will be left lan, who oversaw the rollout facing a break in their insur- of the Medicare prescription ance coverage. drug benefitunder President Until now, the main damage George W. Bush. "It's important to recognize from the website's technology woes has been to Obama's poll that none of these programs ratings. But if it chokes again, are going to work perfectly it will be everyday people feel- from the start and a big part ing the consequences. of implementation is having Some of those atrisk are mechanisms in place that anamong the more than 4 million ticipate problems and h elp consumers whose individual mitigate their effects," added policieshave been canceled be- McClellan, now a health care cause the coverage didn't com- policy expert with the Brookply with requirements of the ings Institution think tank in new health care law. A smaller Washington. number, several hundred thouBut on Monday, adminissand, are in federal and state tration officials projected re-
TB SCare —Dozensof passengers on a weekendUSAirways Express flight have beentold to get tuberculosis tests and possible vaccinations after a passenger in a face mask was taken off of the plane in Phoenix. The Maricopa County Department of Public Health was
still conducting tests to determine if the passenger was ill, a spokes-
newed confidence that they're on top of things. White House spokesman Jay Carney declared that the federal site serving 36 states got 375,000 visitors by noon. Even as fixes continued on back-end featuresof the system, enrollment counselors said the consumer-facing front end was working noticeably better — but still was not free of glitches or delays. As Carney acknowledged, some of Monday m orning's v i sitors were shuttled into a queue and advised when to return for speedierservice. That's actually an improvement to handle high volume, he said. The White House is aiming for 7 million people to enroll for private plans through new state-based marketplaces also called ex changes. L ow-income people will be steered to an expanded version of Medicaid in states accepting it.
person told the Los Angeles Times on Monday. But passengers told reporters over the weekend they were asked to check with their doc-
tors about precautions relating to tuberculosis exposure. Uki'Blne pi'OteStS —Protesters blocked access to the government's headquarters in central Kiev on Mondayanddeclared a general strike as Ukraine's most serious political crisis since the Orange Revolution of 2005 reached the country's far-flung regions and
towns. Ukraine's government hasbeenshaken in recent days with a massive outpouring of opposition to a decision by President Viktor
Yanukovich to forgo signing anagreement that would have given Ukraine closer economic ties with the EU. HepatitiS C SentenCe —A medical technician was sentenced on Monday to 39years in prison for infecting at least 45 hospital patients with hepatitis C by contaminating their syringes. The technician, David Kwiatkowski, 34, pleaded guilty in August to16 federal
charges, including tampering with a consumer product and obtaining controlled substances through fraud. Prosecutors said that while
he was working as atraveling medical technician in several states, including NewHampshire, Kansas and Maryland, Kwiatkowski injected himself with syringes of fentanyl, a powerful painkiller, then filled them with saline and put them back into circulation for patients.
Online ShOpping —Onperhaps the busiest online shopping day of the year, the SupremeCourt refused to wadeinto a dispute over state sales taxes for purchases onwebsites like Amazon.com, an outcome likely to prompt more states to attempt to collect taxes on Internet sales. Monday's court action means "it might be the last
Cyber Mondaywithout sales tax," said Joseph Henchman of the Washington-based Tax Foundation. The high court without comment
turnedaway appealsfrom Amazon.com LLC andOverstock.com Inc. in their fight against a New York court decision forcing them to remit sales tax the samewayin-state businesses do.
THAI POLICE REMOVE BARRIERS
SimpsoiiAve.
I ~
Mare Supreme COurt —The SupremeCourt will not reconsider the part of President Barack Obama's health care law that requires
employers to provide basic health insurance for their workers or pay a tax penalty. The justices on Mondaydismissed anappeal brought
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief
by a conservative Christian college, Liberty University, in Virginia that contended the "employer mandate" is unconstitutional.
s r'
Biden trip —Vice President Joe Biden arrived in Tokyo late Monday for a weeklong visit to Asia intended to reassure a close ally and
John Costa........................541-363-0337
demand answers from apotential adversary. But first, Biden may need to repair a perceived disconnect between the United States and Japan in their responses to China's declaration of a restricted flight
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising Jay Brandt..... 54t-363-0370 Circulation/Operations .... 541-385-5805 FinanceHolly West..........541-383-0321
zone over disputed islands claimed byboth Japanand China. Administration officials said earlier that Biden would leave no doubt in Japan or China that the United States views the Chinese move as a provoca-
HumanResources Traci Donaca .....................
tion and plans to disregard it.
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran.........541-383-0360 CitySheila G. Miller..........541-617-7831 CommunityLife, Health Julie Johnson....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe.....54t-363-0353 GD! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home, AllAges AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey.....541-383-0366 SporlsBill Bigelow............54t-363-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou ...........541-410-9207
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226N.W. Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address....PO. Box788 Redmond, OR97756 ................................ 541-504-2336 ................................ 541-546-3203
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0356.
TO SUBSCRIBE Home delivery and E-Edition: One mOnth: $17 (Print only:$16)
By mail in DeschutesCounty: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only:One month: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-385-5809 Advertising fax .................. 541-365-5802 Other information .............541-382-1811
OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints...................541-383-0358 Obituaries.........................54t-61 7-7825 Back issues ...................... 541-385-5800 All Bulletin paymentsareaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments
may beconverted toanelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, is publisheddaily byWestern Communications Inc., 1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR 97702.Periodicalspostage paid at Bend,OR.Postmaster: Send address changes to TheBulletin circulation depart ment,P.O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymaynot be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.
Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawnMonday night are:
ts Qst 4QsQoQ QsQ The estimated jackpot is now $7.4 million.
Saudi migrantS —Saudi Arabian authorities said Monday they had expelled more than110,000 migrants since theNov. 4launch of a campaign against foreign workers said to be violating labor regulations. The nationwide crackdown started last month after the end of a
seven-month amnesty for foreign migrants whosework permits had expired or who were not working for their official sponsors. — From wire reports
vincent Trrran/TheAssociatedpress
After a day of fierce clashes betweenanti-government protesters and police, Thai officials early today announced a new and novel tactic. Riot
police — such asthose above —cleared away barbed wire, put down their shields and openedthe doors to a police compound that the protesters had vowed to besiege.
5]ENN-AIR'
JO H NSON BROTHERS
"In every areawhere there has beenconfrontation, we have nowordered all police to withdraw," Bangkok's police chief, Kamronvit Thoopkrachang, said, according to the Reuters news agency. "It is government
policy to avoid confrontation." Protesters who entered the compoundwere greeted politely by the police and they even posed for photos together. As the protests appeared
to wind down, the police also openedthe gates to the prime minister's office. On Monday,Thai police hadaggressively stepped uptheir defense of government buildings in Bangkok, firing a hail of rubber bullets and tear
gas and using water cannons. Acriminal court issued an arrest warrant for Suthep Thaugsuban, leader of the demonstrations, on charges of rebellion, which is punishable by death or life in prison. — New York TimesNewsService
Train exceeded80 mph before crash,officials say By Matt Flegenheimer
north of the crash site permits speeds no greater than 70 mph. NEW YORK — The MetAsked if the safety board ro-North Railroad train that was looking into the possibilhurtled off the rails on a sleepy ity that the engineer, William holiday weekend morning was Rockefeller, fell asleep, was ustraveling more than 80 mph as ing his cellphone or was otherit approached one of the sharp- wise distracted,a spokesman est curves in the region's rail for the board, Keith Holloway, system, federal investigators said, "Part of our i nvestigasaid Monday — nearly three tion, as in all investigations, is times the s peed p ermitted to look at human performance through the turn. factors." The throttle was still enRockefelle r's cellphone was gaged — giving the engine recovered as "part of our roupower — u ntil si x s econds tineprocess,"Weener said,and before the locomotive, in the the results of drug and alcohol rear of the train, came to a stop testsconducted afterthe crash around 7:20 a.m. Sunday after were not yet known. Rockefelcareeringtoward the Harlem ler was treated at a hospital and River, killing four people and released. injuring dozens more, north of The authorities said t hat Spuyten Duyvil station in the the train' s brakes appeared to Bronx, officials said. have been operating effectively The National Transporta- shortlybeforethe crash. "We are not aware of any tion Safety Board is leading the investigation, and a board problems or anomalies with the member, Earl Weener, said brakes," Weener said. the train's sudden power shift Sen. Charles Schumer noted, came "very late in the game." "The train did make nine stops The board cautioned that it beforecoming tothis curve.So remained unclear if the speed clearly the brakes were workwas the result of human error ing a short time before." or faulty equipment. He added that he was told by Butthe extraordinary speed the safety board that the tracks shed new light on the deadliest in the area also seem to have New York Citytrain derailment been in proper condition. in more than two decades and The safety board's interview heightened the focus on the en- with Rockefeller, who lives in gineer at the center of the inves- Germantown, N.Y., was cut tigation. The maximum allow- short Monday afternoon and is ablespeed through the curve is to continue this week, officials 30 mph; even the straightaway said. New York Times News Service
Is y o u r
k it ch e n r e a d y f o r h o li d a y f e st i v it i e s ?
Take advantage now of outstanding Jenn-Air offers!
•
a
•
I '
I . •
•
•
•
.
•
•
I
I • d JTv APPL IANGE
TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries,breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Tuesday, Dec. 3, the 337th day of 2013. There are
28 days left in the year.
SCIENCE
HAPPENINGS
IeeS OIi
Li in
COt't'UptlOll — Transpar-
ency lnternational releases its annual report ranking 177
ee es
• .0
countries according to how corrupt their officials are per-
For years, the southern pine beetle hastried to spread through New Jersey'sPinelands,buta cold
ceived to be. BldOll —The U.S.vice pres-
winter was always able to defeat the bug. Now, with warmer winters, the infestation is out of control,
ident is scheduled to meet with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.A2
killing tens of thousands of acres of trees — and slowly spreading northward.
HISTORY Highlight:In 1984, thousands
of people died after a cloud of methyl isocyanategasescaped from a pesticide plant operated by a Union Carbide subsidiary in Bhopal, India. In1810, British forces captured Mauritius from the French, who had renamed the island nation off southeast
Africa "lle de France." In1818, lllinois was admitted as the 21st state.
In1828, Andrew Jacksonwas elected president of the United States by the Electoral College. In 1833, Oberlin College in Ohio — the first truly coeduca-
tional school of higher learning in the United States — began
holding classes. In1910, Mary Baker Eddy, the
founder of Christian Science, died in Chestnut Hill, Mass., at
age 89. In1947, the Tennessee Williams play "A Streetcar Named
Desire" opened onBroadway. In1967,surgeons in Cape Town, South Africa, led by Dr. Christiaan Barnard performed
the first human heart transplanton Louis Washkansky, who lived18 days with the new heart. The 20th Century Limited, the famed luxury train, completed its final run from
New York to Chicago. In1979,11 people were killed in a crush of fans at Cincinnati's Riverfront Coliseum, where
the British rock group The Who was performing. In1992, the first telephone text message was sent by British engineer NeilPapworth, who
transmitted the greeting "Merry Christmas" from his work computer in Newbury, Berk-
shire, to Vodafoneexecutive Richard Jarvis' mobile phone.
Ten yearsago:A U.N.tribunal convicted andsentenced a radio news director and anewspaper editor to life imprisonment for their role in promoting
the 1994 Rwandangenocide. Five yearsago:President-elect Barack Obama selected New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson as his com-
merce secretary. (However, Richardson withdrew a month
later when it appeared his confirmation hearings would
be complicated by agrand jury investigation over how state contracts were issued to polit-
ical donors; Gary Lockeended up being appointed.) Oneyearago:TheW hite House rejected aRepublican proposal to avert the "fiscal cliff," a plan that included $800
billion in higher tax revenue over10 years but no increase in tax rates for the wealthy.
BIRTHDAYS Movie director Jean-Luc Godard
is 83. Rocksinger DzzyDsbourne is 65. Actress Julianne
Moore is 53.Olympic gold medal figure skater KatarinaWitt is 48. Actress Amanda Seyfried is 28. Actor Michael Angarano is 26. Actor Jake T. Austin is19. — From wire reports
selective tree-cutting. Larry Ragonese, a spokesman for Ne w J ersey's Department of E n v ironmental Protection, said the state was working on a "new, comprehensive forestry management plan." Right now, the state is essentially spot-treating beetle outbreaks in hopes of slowing the infestation. State workers are searching from the air for the telltale red that signals dying pines. Recently, off Piney Hollow Road in the Winslow Wildlife Management Area, three part-
By Justin Gillie New York Times News Service
BLUE ANCHOR, N.J. "Heads up!" Deep in t h e w o ods, the whine of chain saws pierced the fall air, and Steve Garcia shouted a warning to fellow loggers as a 40-foot pitch pine crashed to the ground. He was c hopping d own trees to save the forest as part of New Jersey'seffort to beat back an invasion of beetles. In an infestation that scientists say is almost certainly a consequence of global warming, the southern pine beetle is spreading through New Jersey's famous Pinelands. It tried to do so many times in the past, but bitterly cold winters would always kill it off. Now, scientists say, the winters are no l onger cold enough. The tiny bug, firmly entrenched, has already killed tens of thousands of acres of pines, and it is marching northward. Scientists say it is a striking example of the way seemingly small climatic changes are disturbing the balance of nature. They see these changes as a warning of the costly impact that is likely to come with continued high emissions of
greenhouse gases. The disturbances are also raising profound q uestions about how to respond. Old battles about whether to leave nature alone or to manage it are being rejoined as landscapes come under stress. The New Jersey situation resembles,on a smaller scale, the outbreak o f m o u ntain pine beetles that has ravaged tens of millions of acres of forest across the western United States and Canada. That devastation, too, has been attributed to g lobal w arming — specifically, the disappearance of the bitterly cold winter nights that once kept the beetles in check. In contrast to t h e W est, where dying evergreens are splayed across steep mountainsides for all to see, the invasion in New Jersey has received barely any notice. The state's pine forests occupy relatively flat land, and the scope of the damage is obvious only from the air. "It's a t r emendously serious issue, but it hasn't gotten a nybody's a t tention," s a i d state Sen. Bob Smith, a Democrat from Piscataway and the chairman of the Environment and Energy Committee. Scientists and foresters say the lack of public pressure has meant that the state has been slow to mount an adequate response. They are worried that the beetles will not only devastate the Pinelands, but will also eventually attack coastal pinelands on Long Island and
Cape Cod. In New Jersey, the beetles hit a peak in 2010, when they killed trees across 14,000 acres of state and private land. More recently, the damage has been a few thousand acres per year. But with the beetle now endemic in New Jersey, experts
/
s
y
time loggers, including Garcia, revved their chain saws as they chopped down nearly an acre of pines on state land. Because most beetles do not fly far from the tree where they hatch, cutting out d i seased trees can slow their spread. Lynn Fleming, New Jersey's state forester, said she hoped to confine the beetles to the southernmost part of the state, south of the M u llica River, keeping them out of the heart Nick Bleyhl trims the limbs of of the Pinelands. But the beean infected pine tree damaged tles are not cooperating; they by southern pine beetles. A beetle invasion of New Jersey's keep jumping the river. Ayres said that if climatic Pinelands,said to be caused by global warming, has drawn little warming continues, nothing attention, and scientists say the would stop them from eventually heading up the coast. That state has been too slow in its means forest m a nagement response. is likely to become critical in many places where it has been Experience in the South has neglected for decades. "It's hard for some people to shown that such "overstocked stands," as foresters call them, accept — 'What,you have to are e s pecially v u l n erable cut down treesto save the forto beetle attack because the est?'" Ayres said. "Yes, that's trees are too stressed fighting exactly right. The alternative one another for light, water is losing the forest for saving and nutrients. Control of the the trees." Photos by Richard Perry / New York Times News Service A forest service worker holds a section of infected tree bark taken pine beetlehas been achieved from a tree damaged by southern pine beetles in Mays Landing, N.J. there by thinning the woods, leaving the remaining trees stronger. lN SCHNAB Williams, who is critical of do not think that reprieve will Jersey climatologist's office New Jersey's government, adlast. calculates that s uch b i tter "I'm worried about when nights used to happen several vocates a similar approach, inw e really get a super-stress on times per decade in the state. volving controlled burns and the trees," said George ZimBut the last night that cold in mermann, a forest ecologist the Pinelands was in 1996, and EDMOND at Richard Stockton College the beetle outbreak was first of New Jersey, in Galloway. "If noticed five years later. ~ I ND O W the beetle takes off, you could Ayres, one of the nation's gREATS be talking not tens of thou- top beetle experts, has studied •) l• sands of acres, but a hundred New Jersey closely for several 791 SW 10th • Redmond • (541) 548-8616 ' ~ I I i I www.redmondwindowtreats.com thousand or more." years and has published reHistorically, it was too cold search saying the rising temfor the beetles to live north peratures have made the invaof Delaware. In their native sion possible. "I think th e scientific inhabitat in the South, they are always present at low levels, ference is about as good as it surviving by a t tacking dis- gets," Ayres said. "This is a big eased or weakened pine trees. deal, and it's going to forever The beetles, no bigger than change the way forests have uncooked grains of rice, bur- to be managed in New Jersey." The region of southern New row through a tree's bark and consume a layer of tissue that Jersey once called the Pine provides the tree with nutri- Barrens — a term that has fallA Ballet for Everyone ents and water. As the ever- en out of favor — is the largest 0 greens starve to death, they remnant of a once-vast coasttake on the color of a broad- al pine ecosystem stretching Q along much of th e A t lantic leaf forest in autumn. Q H ealthy t r ees ca n f i g h t Seaboard. It is partially prooff small numbers of beetles tected by state and federal by exuding a sticky sap that law, with about 300,000 acres CI .Q pushes them out. But a large owned by the public. .4r beetle outbreak ca n o v erOn a recent tour, Robert Williams, one of New Jersey's whelm even vigorous trees. 0 0 ~o "The way they kill trees is most experienced private forthe way wolves kill a moose est consultants, pointed time M | c . P t L T ch & i o RY cho eographr:zygm«at d sa ah sawlel — they do it by numbers," said after time to dense stands of woods, thick with spindly pine Dr. Matthew Ayres, a DartSaturday, December 7, 2013 at 3 P.M. Sr.7 P.M . mouth biologist who studies treesand impenetrable underSunday, December 8, 2013 at 3 P.M. the beetles. brush — usually on state land. Long ago, fires would have Bend Senior High School Auditorium New Jersey has warmed by about 2.3 degrees Fahrenheit helped keep the forest more For questions call the Box Of6ce 541-213-0253 over the past century, but that open, but they have been supAdults: $18 • Children (12 & Under): $8 average obscures the change pressed across much of the At the Door — Adults: s22 • Children (12 & Under): $1 country for a century to prothat really matters. Winter nights of about 8 de- tect life and property. That has T O PURCHASE T I C K E T S ' grees below zero are needed left many forests in an overto kill most beetles. The New grown, unnatural condition.
,~'j4W~ 'Q
BiSlllBE UAI.IIi PBONISi
www.centraloregonlchoolotballet.com
St. Charles HEALTH SYSTEM at the NEWStCharlesHealthCare.org/give Miracles are happening every day. Thanks to the generosity of our supporters, they will continue to happen for years to come.
I
R
4
I
0
•
I
•
0
I
I
r
r
I
r
I r I I
I
I
•
r
I•
r
I
r
I
•
I
A4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
Mirror Pond
MirrorPondoptions
Continued from A1 PacifiCorp announced in late November that due to the deteriorating condition of the dam, it no longer makes financial sense for the company to continue operating the dam and hydropower plant. Local officials had been waiting for that decision because it is a major factor in how the c ommunity w i l l d e a l w i t h sediment that built up behind the dam. E arlier this year, the ad hoc committee selected two of its members, City Councilor Mark Capell and park district E x ecutive D i r ector Don Horton, to meet behind closed doors with PacifiCorp about the future of the dam. On Monday, Capell and Horton said they needed to know whether the committee wants to keep Mirror Pond or remove the dam and return this section of the Deschutes River to its free-flowing state. Capell urged the committee to tell PacifiCorp to seek other individuals or entities that might want to purchase the dam. Capell said he wants to preserve the pond but believes the u t i lity c o mpany wants too much money for a broken d am. P acifiCorp r epresentatives said i n r e cent years that they wanted to wait for the community to weigh in on the future of Mirror Pond. "I don't really think they g ave a ri p a bout what w e think or what we want," Capell s ai d M o n day. "Some corporations have a p u blic conscience, and some don't. I think PacifiCorp, if you look at their priorities, their priorities are to their owners, stockholders, and somewhere down the road from t here, their ratepayers. And as long as you know that going in, you know what you're dealing with." Capell said he did not believe any other entities would want to operate the dam, and only a c o nservation group with very deep pockets could afford to buy the dam and remove it. A c onsultant for the park d i strict estimated it would cost $11 million to remove the dam and restore that section of river, and that cost does not include a purchase price. Capell predicted PacifiCorp would eventually return to the negotiating table with local governments, and perhaps becloser to the deal Capell wants: for the utility to repair the dam and donate it to a local government. Capell's proposal worried two citizens who were recently appointed to the ad h oc c ommittee. Mike O li n a n d Ned Dempsey said they were concerned that if local officials told PacifiCorp to seek other buyers, they could lose their chance to obtain the dam. "I think that's a risky strategy," said Dempsey, a civil engineer who owns property across from Drake Park. Other committeemembers agreed. The ad hoc committee also h eard from one of the tw o businessmen w h o re c ently announced they s i gned a contract for an option to purchase land under Mirror Pond. Todd Taylor, president and CEO of the construction company Taylor Northwest, and Bill Smith, developer of the Old Mill District, formed a company to negotiate the purchase of the land because they wanted to ensure a local g overnment p r eserves t h e pond. Officials have said they n eed permission fro m t h e McKay family, which claims ownership of land under Mirror Pond, in order to dredge the pond. Meanwhile, Horton has said a public agency should own this land; if the dam was removed and water levels lowered, the park district could expand its riverfront parks.
of the removal of the dam that created Mirror Pond, but on Monday, a committee said it wants to keep the pond.
IN FOCUS:BIRTH RATE
Earlier this year, local officials selected four options for the future of Mirror Pond. One option called for removal These are the threeoptions for keeping the pond.
OptionA1:Donothing scenario (damin place) c'
gg Existing trees
y y~I
~ E xisting lawn/park space
a~t ' ct~ E b tj ~ , ct tl-
~g Former mudflats, erne'rgent vegetation~=0rake-Rd
1j ~
Fertility doctors aim for fewer twin births By Marilynn Marchione The Associated Press
.4~+ <Brooks .
j j~
BOSTON — In the five years since the "Octomom" case, big multiple births have gone way down but the twin rate has barelybudged. Now fertility experts are
Harmen Park
pushing a new goal: One. A growing number of couples ar e a t t empting pregnancy with just a sin-
gle embryo, helped by new
ph
cg
. g"'.
•
gt
'..
6
,T ' '" ~
Galveston Ave.-
g 0 Existing islands Q Channel 0 Existing beach access
G> FEET
~
© d
0 Pacific Power's hydro dam
~
OptionB1:Sediment removal (damin place) Lb.ii>,
oi-~
i.BgBBg Existing tswn/nsrkspscs'
x/ j
.t
~s Proposed emergent'riparian edge G~=
r =,~
"
stormwater treatm'eht J. Q Proposedveget'ated Bartnpn stormwater,facility Park "
. zdtgtgt tt
-'
.
,otdf t;
,
~
ga ~~~en
' lf~ r j g y ~ ~ ~<4~oks
+Iiio< x.
'
Ox~
/
s
Drake .J
~Pg %y~~ +P~g~ Q Channel Q Existing beachaccess FEET
Ga'Ives'ton Ave. g- ~'=,i , . —. Tuumafogve. w~i ' ~© l- g O i~
~
~
0
0 Pacific Power's hydro dam 400
g, =
Option Cl:Sedimentre-use onsite (damin place) Legend .'
fggExistinglawn/parkspace' ~ PtnnnnndtSWn/pntkSnnsn Proposed smsigsnt tssttsnd n,
'
vl
,> ~~ < p:o lc , , l, .4~+ > —gtnsnsnt d.. tgdkg n ~tt tg - -~ (f<8 ~ :. @ - , td> '
,
-
.
rnt
Q Proposedvepetated Harmen
gy' j
'+
r'~ ~ '
.@ P~C'
' . .
, pP
P'
r ~i ~ ~
'
@ / -v < 3 tagi'A~
'
.
> < ~
P Galveston Ave.
.
Q Existing islands Q Channel Q Existing beachaccess O Existing retaining wall adjacent to Mirror Pond on perimeter of HarmonParkto be removed Q Existing retaining wall adjacent to Mirror Pond on perimeter of DrakeParkto be removed Q Existing retaining wall adjacent to Mirror Pond on perimeter of Brooks Parkto be removed Q Pacif i c Power's hydro dam
FFET
~ © . <aW ~
~
~ xs
400
source: Bend park 8 Recreation Dtsvtct
"We didn't take t hi s endeavor on t o c apitalize on i t," Taylor told th e a d h o c committee on Monday. However, Taylor said that under the purchase option he and S mith negotiated wit h t h e McKay family, it would cost a local government roughly $225,000 to $327,000 to acquire the 23.5 acres of land under the pond. Taylor said this cost includes land title research, mapping and testing of the sediment in the pond. Officials a l s o d i s cussed how to obtain water rights necessary to maintain Mirror Pond, if a local government p urchases th e d a m fr o m PacifiCorp. The utility company holds water rights to generate power and remove ice and debris from the pond, but it does not hold rights to store water in a pond. Park district lawyer Neil B r yant
ways to pick the ones most likely t o s u cceed. New guidelines urge doctors to stressthis approach. Twins aren't always twice as nice; they have much higher risks of prematurity and serious health problems. Nearly half of all babies born with advanced fertility help are multiple births, new federal numbers show. Abigail and Ken Ernst of Oldwick, N.J., used the one-embryo approach to conceive Lucy, a daughter born in September. It "just seemed the most normal, the most natural way" to conceive and avoid a highrisk twin p regnancy, the new mom said. Not all couples feel that way, though. Some can only afford one try with in vitro fertilization, or IVF, so they insist that at least two embryos be used to boost their odds, and view twins as two for the price of one. Many patients "are telling their physicians 'I want twins,'" said Barbara Collura, president of Resolve, a support and advocacy group. "We as a society think t w in s ar e h ealthy and always come out great. There's very little reality" about the increased medical risks for babies and moms, she said. The 2009 case of a California woman who had octuplets using IVF focused attention on the issue of big multiple births, and the numbers have dropped, except for twins. The Centers for Disease Control and P r evention's most recent numbers show that 46 percent of IVF babies are multiples — mostly twins — and 37 percent are born premature. By comparison, only 3 percent of babies born without fertility help are twins and about 12 percent are preterm.
It's mostly a n A m e rican problem — some European countries that pay for fertility treatments require using one embryo at a time. The American Society for Reproductive Medicine is trying to make it the norm in the U.S., too. Its guidelines, updated earlier this year, say that for women with reasonable medical odds of success, those under 35 should be offered single embryo transferand no more than two at a time. The number rises with age, to two or three embryos for women up to 40, since olderwomen have more trouble conceiving. To add heft to the advice, the guidelines say women should be counseled on the risks of multiple births and embryo transfers and that this discussion should be noted in their medical records. "In 2014, our goal is really to minimize twins," said Dr. Alan Copperman, medical director of ReproductiveMedicine Associates of New York, a Manhattan fertility c linic. "This year I'm talking about two versus one. Several years ago I was talking about three versus two" embryos. The one-at-a-time idea is catching on. Only 4 percent of women under 35 used single embryos in 2007 but nearly 12 percent did in 2011. It's less common among older women, who account for fewer IVF pregnancies, but it is gaining among them,too. "Patients don't really want multiples. What they want is high delivery rates," said Dr. Richard Scott, scientific director for Reproductive Medicine Associates of New Jersey, which has seven clinics in that state. Better ways toscreen embryos can make success rates for single embryos nearly as good as when two or more are used, he contends. The new techniques include maturing the embryos a few days longer. That improves viability and allows cells to be sampled for chromosome screening. Embryos can be frozen to allow test results to come back and more precisely time the transfer to the womb.
Microwave Hood
Amassa 220CFM Exhaust
$1 69
Bu where the builders bu I
HNsoN
EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-OOOG www.evergreeninhome.t:om
TV.APPLIANCE
Andy Zetgert/The Bulletin
said the best option for a local government to obtain water rights necessary to keep the dam would be to ask the state Legislature to pass a bill. If the legislation applied narrowly to Mirror Pond, "I think the governor and Legislature would be pretty receptive to this," Bryant said. At the end of t h e m eeting,the Mirror Pond ad hoc committee heard public comments from a few people in the audience. Stan Roach, who lives in northeast Bend and also just bought property near the pond, asked how many people at the meeting lived on the east side of the city. The meeting was packed with dozens of people, but only a c ouple raised their hands. "I think this has become a west-side issue, not a community i ssue," Roach said
after the meeting. "Of course, I would like to see some preservation of the pond, but not a t a r i d iculous amount of money." When the park district conducted an unscientific survey earlier this year, nearly 47 percent of s u r vey r e spondents wanted to remove the Mirror Pond dam and roughly 43 percent wanted to keep the dam. Capell said he has spoken with other c it y c o uncilors, a nd they generally do n o t want the city to take on res ponsibility t o p a y f o r t h e dam and other work on Mirr or Pond. Horton said t h e park district also might not have enough money to pay for such a project, unless it asks voters to approve additional taxes. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
•
%
/
/
Run/ al
l. ArthritiS
Arthritis Foundation'
%%nd Annual Bend Jingle Bell Runl Walk for Arthritis Get in the spirit this holiday season at the Arthritis Foundation's Jingle Bell Run/Walk for Arthritis.
SaI,
2 )ec emker 2013 7, owntown Bend
SK Run or Walk 1 Mile Walk 8 Kids Fun Run with the Elves 11:00 AM 11:30 AM 11:40 AM
PreSentedby:
Holiday Costume Contest Kids Fun Run with the Elves Jingle Bell 5K Run/Walk Starts
:::~:.i THE cENTER !.f n . t s• ns s »
— ",
~QQ~ jg
+ AaTHRms. The Bulletin nt»n s
St. Charles HEALTH SYSTEM at the NEWStCharlesHealthCare.org/talk We know healing is more than just physical. We offer many support groups to encourage emotional and spiritual healing.
I
R
4
I
0
•
I
•
0
I
I
r
r
I
r
I•
r
I
r
I
•
I
TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Hospitals
Counties
Continued from A1 At Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, Daniel Diaz, 29, a public relations executive, was billed $3,355.96 for five stitches on his finger after cutting himself while peeling an avocado. At a hospital in Jacksonville, Fla., Arch Roberts Jr., 56, a former government employee, was charged more than $2,000 for three stitches after being bitten by a dog. At Mercy Hospital in Port Huron, Mich., Chelsea Manning, 22, a student, received bills for close to $3,000 for six stitches after she tripped run-
ning up a path. Insurers and patients negotiated lower prices, but those charges were a starting point. The main reason for high hospital costs in the United States, economists say, is fiscal, not medical: Hospitals are the most powerful players in a health care system that has little or no price regulation in the private market. Risingcosts of drugs, medical equipment and other services, and fees from layers of middlemen, play a significant role i n e s calating h ospital bills, of course. But just as important is that mergers and consolidation have r esulted in a couple of hospital chains d ominating many p a rt s o f the country, allowing them to
Max Whittaker / New York Times News Service
Nurses work in the emergency room at Sutter Health, California Pacific Medical Center's parent company, in San Francisco. "Sutter is a leader — a pioneer — in figuring out how to amass market power to raise prices and decrease competition," says Glenn Melnick, a professor of health economics at the University of Southern California.
'l •
/
Emer Duffy, who was billed $1,696 at California Pacific Medical Center to seal a cut on the forehead of Orla Roche, 2, her daughter.
basically arbitrary, not connected to underlying costs or market prices," Melnick said. Hospitals "can set them at any level they want. There are no market c o nstraints." O n ce perennial money pits, emer-
gency rooms have become big
moneymakers for most hospitals in the last decade, experts say, as they raised their fees and "managed" their patient command high prices from inmix. California Pacific MediFred R. Conrad surers and employers. New York Times cal Center has nearly doubled News Service Sutter Health, C alifornia itsemergency room fees since Pacific Medical Center's par2005, itschargemaster price ent company, operates more lists show. "Hospitals see where they're than two dozen community hospitals in Northern Califormaking money and try to do nia, almost all in middle-class more of that," said Dr. David or h i g h-income n e ighborGifford, a former health comhoods. Its clout has helped Calmissioner of R hode Island, ifornia Pacific Medical Center, who has studied how l abs the state's largest private nonprice their tests. profit hospital, also earn the Across California, Sutter highest net income in Califor- to be filed with health regula- They must constantly upgrade hospitals have proved expert nia. Prices for many of the pro- tors and disclosed. to the latest equipment and at the business of medicine. cedures at the San Francisco California Pacific Medical building standards to meet pa- "Our members are very exhospital are among the top 20 Center's 400-page c h arge- tients' expectations and state ercised about Sutter — it has percentinthe country,accord- master for this year contains mandates. They charge pay- increased prices disproporing to a New York Times anal- some eye-popping figures: ing or w ell-insured patients tionately," said David Lansky, ysis of data released by the from $32,901 for a n X - r ay more tocompensate for others chief executive officer of the federal government. study of the heart's arteries they treat at a loss. Pacific Business Group on "Sutter is a leader — a pio- to $25,646.88for gall bladder Some health e conomists Health, which represents 60 neer — in figuring out how to removal (doctor's fees not insay that even though most of California's biggest private amass market power to raise cluded) to $5,510 for a simple hospitals are nonprofit, they employers in its health care prices and decrease compe- vaginal delivery (not including nonetheless are often flush negotiations. "Sutter has been tition," said Glenn Melnick, a $731 for each hour of labor). with revenue and guilty of un- successful at leveraging their professor of health economics Even basic supplies or services necessary spending. huge size in dictating not just "Hospitals are self-fueling, price but contract terms." at the University of Southern carry huge markups: $20 for a California. "How do hospitals codeine pill (50 cents at Rite- ever-expanding m a c h ines," Chuck Idelson, a spokesset prices? They set prices to Aid or Walgreens), $543 for a said James Robinson, an econ- m an fo r t h e I n s titute f o r maximize revenue,and they breast-pump kit ($25 online), omist and professor of health Health and Socio-Economic raise prices as much as they $4,495 for a CT scan of the ab- policy at the University of Cal- Policy, the research arm of the can — all the research sup- domen (about $400 at an out- ifornia,Berkeley. "There is an California N urses A ssociaports that." patient facility nearby). Plenty infinite amount of stuff to buy tion, said Sutter prices were 40 — amenities, machines, new to 70 percent above its rivals' The "chargemaster," the of other hospitals set similar price list created by each hos- prices. wings, higher salaries, more for similar services. When pital, typically has more than Dr. Warren Browner, chief nurses." Sutter bought Summit Hospi"But," he asked, "to deliver tal in Oakland in 1999, rates 10,000 entries, and a l most executive of California Pacifnothing — even an aspirin, a ic Medical Center, said there good health care, what do you therewent up 29 to 72 percent, bag of IV fluid, or a visit from were good reasons hospitals need?" researchers found. Because of a physical therapist to help a charged what they did: They There is little science to how pricingissues,proposed insurpatient get out of bed — is free. must have highly trained pro- hospitals determine the prices ance plans under the AffordThose lists are usually secret, fessionals available 24 hours they print on hospital bills. able Care Act did not initially "Chargemaster prices are include Sutter hospitals. but California requires them a day, seven days a week. 1
Cover Oregon Continued from A1 To be enrolled by the first of the year, applicants' materials need to be postmarked by Wednesday. King had hoped the website would be fully operational for the public to use by Dec. 16, for Feb. 1 coverage. But Baxter, the board chairwoman, and Goldberg, the new interim director, immediately backed away from that date. "We've hadtoo many dates out there that we have had to pull back on," Baxter said. Goldberg said he needed more information before he setstarget dates. "It's unfair to make deadlines that aren't kept at this point," he said. In a news conference after the meeting, King said he had been struggling with health-related issues for a couple of years. He had planned to step down after the site's
®
launch in O ctober. But because the site failed to launch, he postponed his decision. " My heart and m y b o dy are in two different places," he said, noting he wished he could continue. King was recently grilled by lawmakers over the failure of the website, and Gov. John Kitzhaber has held several press conferences announc-
ing changes aimed at getting the site f u nctioning. M ore than 400 more people were brought on board to begin the process of enrolling people through manual applications. So far, the state has received more than 54,770 paper applications. About 219 have been enrolled in a private insurance plan and 3,250 in the Oregon Health Plan, the state's Medicaid, according to information from Cover Oregon. Enrollment is being defined as "consumer dataentered for transmission to carriers." In other words, their data has been en-
But the board did vote on Monday that King was not in compliance.The board wanted a detailed plan, outlining strategies and steps on how the most people possible could be enrolled by the coverage deadline using the manual system. The board asked for details on "which elements of the system are not functioning, specify the wrong people. King said when those elements will be a full investigation is under- fixed, and identify key progway, and the system has been ress and milestones" for the changed to p r event f u ture launch. They did not feel King similarerrors. Cover Oregon met those goals. officials will no longer mail When Baxter was asked if complete applications back to the board's conversation about people when they need more King would have been difinformation, but will instead ferent on Monday had he not send a blank application with announced he was asking for portions highlighted to alert medical leave, she said, "I'm applicants what is still neces- really bad at predicting what sary to fill out. the board will do." In a news conference with The Cover Oregon board reporters after the meeting, said it would form a commitKing said he didn't think his tee to search for a more longjob was in jeopardy, saying term replacement. n obody had talked to h i m — Reporter: 541-554-1162, about stepping down. IdakeCbendbulletin.com
AS
those determinations would be in effect for 10 years at a Continued from A1 time, an attempt to limit the leAt stake is the future of gal arguing over designations the 2.4 million acres of Or- to once a decade. egon 8 California Railroad Robertson sai d M o n day Grant lands — known as that Wyden's bill does not prothe O&C lands — in West- vide certainty that there will ern Oregon. Spanning 18 be a dramatic reduction of the counties, much in a check- amount of litigation, appeals erboard pattern, the land and lawsuits over timber sales. "If you can't implement (a was originally intended for development of an i n ter- forest management plan), if state railroad but was re- you can't get it out of the court claimed by the federal gov- system, it doesn't matter" what ernment. In 1937, Congress the management regime is, passed legislation requiring Robertson said. the lands to be managed Wyden also said his proposfor t i m be r p r o d uction, al would lead to the harvesting with the lion's share of the ofbetween 300 million and 350 proceeds going to county million board feet a year, more governments. than twice the average for the As timber harvests, par- O&C lands over the last 10 ticularly on federal lands, years. "We are not c o nvinced, decreased in recent years, the timber receipts for 0&C even under the management counties a ls o d r o pped, proscribed in the bill, that he leaving some counties on can get anywhere near to 300 the verge of bankruptcy. million feet," Robertson said. The O&C lands, which The ecological forestry model are overseen by the Bureau developed by forestry profesof Land Management and sors Jerry Franklin and Norm exist only in Oregon, re- Johnson and embraced by quire federal legislation to Wyden is very expensive and make any revisions to the time consuming to implement, management program un- Robertson said. "In the forestry emphasis der which they are logged. In September, the House areas, there are also a lotofarof Representativespassed eas excluded," he said. "We rea sweeping forest man- ally don't know what landbase a gement bill, w h ich i n - we'd be left with to manage." cluded a section drafted The association will release by Reps. Greg W alden, a detailed report of its analysis R-Hood River, Peter De- of Wyden's bill within a couple Fazio, D-Springfield, and weeks, he said. In the meanKurt Schrader, D-Canby. t ime, th e o r ganization r e Their plan, the 08 C Trust, mains a staunch supporter of Conservation and Jobs Act, the House plan developed by basically protected half the Walden, DeFazio and Schradarea and placed the rest in er, in no small part because of a public trust and managed the funds it would provide to to produce a s u stained struggling Oregon counties. "The level of funding that yield of timber. Wyden's plan would also we're looking at to be genleave roughly half the 0&C erated out of the trust would lands off limits for timber- probably start somewhere in ing. It would also create the area of $60 million (a year), or expand almost 90,000 and probably ramp up over acres of wilderness as well time to $90 (million) to $100 as extend the wild and sce- million (annually)," he said. nic designation on various "That is very doable." rivers by 165 miles. A ccording t o t h e B L M ' s The remaining forestry 2013 budget justification, the emphasis areas would be O&C lands produced revemanaged under the princi- nues of $17.3 million in 2008, ples of ecological forestry, decreasing to $14.3 million in where harvests attempt to 2011 and a projected $D.9 milcreate a healthier, more di- lion in 2013. The O&C counverse forest. In harvested ties receive 75 percent of the areas,loggers would be re- funds, equating to roughly $9 quired to leave at least one- million in 2013. third of the trees standing By doubling the h arvest, and old-growth stands in Wyden hopes to increase that moist forests would be left amount to between $17 million intact if they were more and $19 million a year. than 120 years old. Any tree — Reporter: 202-662-7456, more than 150 years old aclevengerC<bendbulletin.com could never be cut down. W yden's bill a l s o r e quires the BLM t o i ssue E HIGH DESERT BANK two environmental impact statements — one for wet forests, one for dry — within 18 months of the bill's II I I I I- c enactment. Once finalized, s
tered into the exchange. Several of the applications returned via paper have been i ncomplete, Kin g t o l d t h e board on Monday. King also t ouched upon three well-publicized security breaches that happened when Cover Oregon officials returned applications, including personal information, to
erry Christm !
i~
OWS Antiques <0 Vintage 4 G if ts
Holiday Hours: Dec 1 -Dec24
Mon thru Sat, 10 am to 5 pm! Sunday - 17am to 4pm! 87531 Christmas Valley Hwy Christmas Valley, OR 97641 Laura Parks
541-576-2199
Owner
St. Charles HEALTH SYSTEM at the NEWStCharlesHealthCare.org/shop A loved one at St. Charles Bend? Make them smile with a gift or flowers from our online store.
I
•
I
A6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
TODAY'S READ:APE ACTIVISM
s iou see in saus oica ivec im By James Gorman
rights. He argues that captive chimps are, in fact, enslaved, Chimpanzees are not peo- and that the same principles ple, no matter how they are apply to them as to humans dressed up for commercials, who were enslaved. "This petition asks this court but perhaps they are close enough that they deserve some to issue a writ recognizing that of the same rights humans Tommy is not a legal thing to have. be possessed by respondents, That is w hat a n a n i m al but rather is a cognitively comrights group claimed Monday plex autonomous legal person when it filed a classic writ of with the f u ndamental legal habeas corpus, that revered staple of American and English law and tired cliche of detective fiction — not for a human being held unlawfully, but for Tommy, a chimpanzee in Gloversville, N.Y. This is no stunt. The Nonhuman Rights Project has been working on this legal strategy for years, sifting through decisions in all 50 states to find one that is strong on what is called common law, and one that recognizes animals as legal persons for the purpose of being the beneficiary of a trust. New Yorh Times News Service
right not to be imprisoned," the court filing says.
they are already legal persons under New York law, he
free, but to be moved to one of the eight sanctuaries in the North American Primate Sanctuary Alliance. David Favre, a p r ofessor at Michigan State University College of Law, who teaches animal law but is not associated with the rights project or the legal action, said Wise's arguments are"a serious legal strategy," though one that had
argues.
The legal argument
He also marshalsevidence from various scientists that a chimpanzee has qualities, including awareness of self, past and future, that should provide it with a right to bodily liberty. The request is not for the chimps to be set completely
W ise is n o t a s k ing t h e courts to declare the chimps equivalent to human beings, any more than acorporation, also considered a legal person, is a human being. Because therights group has set up a trust for all four chimps,
not been tried before in the United States. "It is unique," Favre said. He added, however, that he would not comment on its chances of success. Laurence Tribe, a professor at Harvard Law School, said in an email that in seeking rights for nonhuman animals, "The classic writ of h abeas corpus is as good a place to
begin as any."
Yearofchanges The leader of the project, Steven Wise, who has written about the history of habeas corpus writs in the fight against human slavery and who views the crusade for animal rights as a lifelong project, said New York fit the bill. His legal action added a milestone to a year that has been remarkable for chimpanzees, with one federal agency taking steps to retire most chimps owned by the government and another proposing to classify all chimps as endangered, an action that would throw up new obstacles to experiments even o n p r i v ately o w n ed chimps. Activists have relished their successes, while some scientists have deplored restrictions on the use of th e animals, which have played a crucial role in some biomedical research, such as work on hepatitis C vaccines. Until now, all the actions have addressed the issue of animal welfare, not animal rights. But Wise filed papers Monday i n s t at e S upreme Court in Fulton County, N.Y., demanding that courts in New York recognize Tommy as a legal person, with a right to liberty, but one that has its limits. Tommy, the group says, "is
fp:~' '
gc
/.;
'
'
'
l~l' 4 (,r,
J
f tg~l.' ~ fj~
~50 er Save on your grocery purchase of $50 or more * with your Safeway Club Card and this Savings Award. *Use this Savings Award on any shopping trip you choose at any Oregon Safeway store (except MiltonFreewater) and S.W. Washington stores serving Clark, Wahkiakum, Cowlitz, Skamania and Klickitat counties by 12/10/13. This $10.00 Savings Award excludes purchases of Alcoholic Beverages, Fluid Dairy Products, Tobacco, US Postage Stamps, Trimet Bus/Commuter Passes, Money Orders, Container Deposits, Lottery, Gift Ca rds, Gift Certificates Sales, All Pharmacy Prescription Purchases, Safeway Club Savings, Safeway Store Coupons and Sales Tax. One Savings Award redeemable per household. COUPON CANNOT BE DOUBLED. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ.
SAFEWAYQQ COUPON
val i d 12/4/13 thru12/10I13 . SAFEWAY Q$ COUPON
0
IIIII II
0 0 0 0 0 78 0 0 8
val i d 12/4/13 thru 12/10/13. SAFEWAYQ$ COUPON
Valid 12/4/13 thru 12/10/13
being held captive in a cage in a shed at a used-trailer lot." The petition does not ask the court to set Tommy free to roam Gloversville, or to send him back to Africa after a life in captivity. It asks the court to remove him from his owners and place him in a sanctuary. The group said it intended to file suit this week on behalf of three more chimps in New York, also demanding their freedom. Two of the chimpanzees are believed to be owned by the New Iberia Research Center, at the University of Louisiana at L a fayette, but are housed at Stony Brook University for a study of locomotion. The fourth, according to the rights project, is owned by Carmen Presti of Niagara Falls, who runs the Primate Sanctuary, a nonprofit organization that has monkeys and the one chimpanzee. Patrick Lavery, the owner of Circle L Trailer Sales in Gloversville, where Tommy lives, said he heard about the petition from reporters' telephone calls. He said from his home in Florida that he had complied with all state and federal regulations, that Tommy had a spacious cage "with tons of toys," and that he had been trying to place him in sanctuaries, but that they had no room. He said he had rescued the chimp from his previous home, where he was badly treated. "People ought to use common sense,"he said. Of the Nonhuman Rights Project, a group he was not aware of, he said,"Ifthey were to see where this chimp lived for the first 30 years of his life, they would
gal strategyfor addressing unlawful imprisonment of human beings. Wise argues in a 70-plus-page memo rich with legal, scientific and philosophical references that being human is not essential to having
HoneysuckleWhite: Turkey Breast
16-oz. Selectedvarieties.
Bone-In. Frozen. While Supplies Last.
99
a
~rcsf
ea
This couponmusl bepresented at time of purchase. offer valid wsh card and Coupon.COUPONCANNOT BE DOUBLED. Coupon valid thru12/10/13. p
SAFEWAY(),couPON
ecNIN$TEIN
KEtPtllOIEH
WITH CARD AND COUPON
This couponmustbepresented at time of purchase. OfferValid vnth Card
!QQQQQ 'r74$4
r .
DOUBLEt.couponvalidthru12/10/13. p
va l id s214lathruuaon3: SAFEWAY () COUPON
time of purchase. OfferValid wilh Card and Coupon.COUPONCANNOT BE DOUBLED.Coupon valid thru12/10/13. p
QQQQQ 79'I62
0 0000 77 38 6
val i d 1214Iathrui211on3: SAFEWAY () , c o uPO N
Bornstein Oregon Cooked Shrimp Meat
Safeway® Kitchens Bread
99
49
Shanghai DinnerforYwo 2 regularEntrees 1 regular Chow Mein 1 regularFried Rice 2 Egg Rolls or 4PotStickers.
99 WITH CARD ANDCOUPON
WITH CARDAND COUPON
WITH CARDAND COUPON
00000 7 7 4 00
0 .
coupon must bepresented at timeof purchase.OfferValid with Card Coupon.COUPONCANNOT BE BLED.Coupon valid thru12/10/13. Dou
O
00000 77 4 88
This couponmust bepresented at time of purChase.Offer Valid with Card and CouponCOUPO N CANNOT BE 00UBLED Coupon vabdthru12/10/13
8
• •
•
•
'
'
IIIIIIIII I
o
I
00 0 0 0 1 4 8 4 6
I
I
BUY 2
, BUY1
Nestle 100%
Safeway' KitchensPeanut Butter
Juicy Juice 64-oz.
GET 1 FREE WITH CARD ANDCOUPON
< Gerber I z-pack, 3.5~z. i Plastic Tubs
iGET1 FREE
i Safeway'Kitchens Grape Jam , GET 2 FREE 18-0z.
I
I
I
I
I wITH CARDAND COUPON
I
BUY 1
I
2fo %p Q~
' Safeway'Farms I Sweet Yellow i Onions 3-lb. bag.
WITHCARDANO COUPON
I
7 '.
I
•
I
' euv4
7
val i d s21411sthru 12lsons:
24-oz. Selectedvarieties
ea
This couponmusl bepresented at time 01purChase.OfferValid with Card and Coupon.COUPONCANNOT BE DOUBLEO. Coupon valid thru12/10/13. p
ea
10-lb, bag.
WITH CARDAND COUPON
16-oz. bag. Frozen.
NEAtTIlbs5IQI
49
Oregon Grown Russet Potatoes
Ib
WITH CARD AND COUPON
WITNONDANDCDUFO N
MissionorGuerreroCornTortillas I 16-0z.
i GET 1 FREE
Safeway'Kitchens Brown Rice
16-0z. I WITHCARDANDCOUP ON
Ths coupoA fllust be
presenled albma ol
PUICINS! OffN VBINI wlth
Card andCoupon.COUPON CANNOT BE 00UBLED 0 CoupNI ValidIlru 12I10/13
jump up and down for joy about where he is now." The other people who are named in the petitions being filed this week did not immediately comment. The use of habeas corpus actions is a time-honored le-
Safeway Sausage Breakfast Rolls
Illlllllllllllllt:.:=;;-".'".'-:".=-. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII '00000 78092 e mM OteeOOumO o
:;
'00000 77111' s
Pricesin this ad are effective 6 AM Wednesday, December4 thru Tuesday,December 10, 2013 (unless otherwise noted) in all Safeway storesin Oregon(except Milton-Freewater) and 5 W Washingtonstoressewing Wahkiakum, Cowlitz, Clark, Skamaniaand KlickitatCounties. Itemsoffered for sale are not available to otherdealersor wholesalers. Sales of products containing ephedrine, pseudoephedrine or phenylpropanolamine limited by law. Quantity rightsreserved. SOME ADVERTISINGITEMS MAY NOT BE AVAllA8LE IN ALL STORES.Some advertised prices may be even lower in somestores. On Buy One, Get One Free("BOGO") offers, customer must purchase the first item to receivethe second item free.
BOGOoffers arenot1/2 price sales.If onlya single item purchased, the regular price applies. Manufacturers' coupons maybeused on purchased itemsonly — not on free items.amit one coupon per purchased item. customer will be responsible for tax and deposits asrequired by law on the purchased andfree items. No liquor sales in excessof 52 gallons. No liquor sales for resale. Liquorsales at licensedSafeway stores only. O 2013 Safeway Inc. Availability ofitemsmay vary bystore. Online and In-store prices, discounts and offers maydiffer.
PO
Ingredients for life.
'-
"
"
"
:
- :
...1IIIIIiIIII -
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2013
BRIEFING
U.S. HIGHWAY 97
Bend policeseek rodderysuspect Bend Policewere searching for asuspect late Monday in a bank
robberythatallegedly took place earlier in the
evening. According to Lt. Brian Kindel, police received a call of an attempted rob-
bery at 5 p.m.Monday from the Mid-Oregon Credit Union at the corner
of Northeast Second Street and Olney Avenue.
According to witnesses, a manwho didnot purport to have aweapon came int o thebankand
demandedmoney.Kindel said the man, described as being in his mid-40s,
By Elon Glucklich
levels allowed by Deschutes County
The Bulletin
code during night hours.
Oregon Department of Transportation crews will work nights next summer on a U.S. Highway 97 restoration project between Bend and Redmond. Deschutes County Commissioners on Monday approveda noise permit for ODOT to work night shifts on the project, resurfacing a 9.5-mile stretch of the highway that spans most of the length between the highway's intersection with Cooley Road in Bend and the Airport Way exit in Redmond. The special operating permit w ould let road crews exceed the noise
At a public hearing Monday, ODOT assistant project manager Jay Davenport said doing the work at night would have the least impact on travelers. Doing the work during the day would force commuters to deal with ODOTtrucks amid possible lane closures, backing up traffic. Safety is another factor, Davenport said. "With all the trucks that would be coming onand offthe roadway, the
safety (for the public) would be greatly improved with night construction," he said. But the trade-off is some noisy
nights for about 60 residents who live along the 9.5-mile stretch of highway. The permit gives ODOT approval to work between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m., next April through October. The work is part of routine pavement preservation ODOT does on highways across the state, called grind and inlay. Crews grind down and remove old asphalt, replacing it with a new layer every few years. The periodic workkeeps ruts and cracks from growing into hazards for drivers. Grind and inlay work would likely start near Redmond and move south toward Bend, according to ODOT's permit application. See Noise/B5
Night work / The Oregon Department of Transportation has received a noise permit to conduct late-night work next year on U.S. Highway 97
when it upgrades
) y ~~<~, Quarry Ave.
Work
area ' Morrill Rd.
umalo
asphaltand installs two
medians, oneat Yew Avenueand one at Deschutes Market Road. Source: ODOT
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
between 6feet2inches and 6 feet 6 inches tall and thin withblondhair, did not get away with any
money. Hewasreportedly last seentraveling
Following up onCentral Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com. Q»To follow the series, visitbendbulletin.cem/updates
HAPPENED TO ... •
south or southwest on foot away from the bank.
BEND
Another
Police set up aperimeter and used K-9 units to look for the man but were
notsuccessful. On Mondayevening,
officer
detectives and forensics investigators were still on scene at the bank. Kindel said that based
on eave
on witness descriptions, Monday's robbery was
By Shelby R. King
not likely to be connected
The Bulletin
to four previous, unsolved bankrobberies from 2011 and 2012.
Ski Inn employees looking forhelp An account hasbeen set up to acceptdonations for employees who havebeendisplaced after a tree fell on and
heavily damagedthe Ski Inn Restaurant in Sisters
on Sunday. Donations canbe m ade at any Bankofthe Cascades branch to the
"SkiInnEmployeeDonation Account."
The moneywill go to help employees —and their families — who won't be working while the restaurant is closed.
Woodpile burning set for today The Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District plans to start woodpile burning
south of Bendtoday and continue burning through
the week, aslong as weather allows. Pile burning is planned today for 71 acres of national forestland along U.S. Highway 97 between the High Desert M useum and Lava Butte, as well as 25 acres off the highway and Vandevert
Road nearSunriver, according to areleasefrom the Deschutes National Forest. The burning piles will likely put up smoke visible from U.S. High-
way 97. More pile burning is
planned forWednesday on 2,000 acreseast of Bend near Pine Mountain
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Susan McCreedy, an HIV specialist with Deschutes County Health Services, makes some opening comments Sunday during the World AIDS Day event held at the Central Oregon Social Justice Center.
Socia ustice center to ce e rate MADRAS 1 earofconnectin ri hts O'Ij. S Domestic By Tyler Leeds
The Center will host a celebration Friday, but technically e Central Oregon So- it passed the one-year mark cial Justice Center is ap- "somewhere in November," proaching its first anni- according to Dave Stranahan, versary of bringing historically a member of Jobs with Justice disconnected groups together CentralOregon, one ofthe Cenunder one downtown Bend roof. ter's anchors. The Bulletin
Those involved admit the center has a long origin story, buttheseed can be traced to a space-sharing agreement between the Human Dignity Co-
tice. Now the center is a space where labor, interfaith and progressive organizations can share rent and resources, while also providing meeting spaces for other groups not in need of a brick-and-mortar base. SeeJustice/B3
alition, a LGBTQ rights group; CAUSA Oregon, an immigrant rights group; and Jobs with Jus-
The Bulletin
DAILY HIGHS AND LOWS Average temperature: 38.0' (0.1 below normal)
HH
H H H KI H H KI E3 E H E HEHEHH E 3 EHEBE3K3 H H H K3 H K3 H K3 E I K t3&
61 —47 41 - - 48 45 4 9
5 5 5 3 55
63
each day is set to start
• I'll
around 9 a.m.
Spotted frog meetingsset
42 4 1- 5 9 - 5 8 4 6 4 2 45
46
49 49
33 32
35 36 -- 58 54- - 54 55- 5 5
SZ-
24
38 29
14
7
38
-
-
-
•
FREEZING
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is set this week to hold a pair of OrThe first meeting is today in Sunriver, and the
secondis Wednesdayin La Pine, according to the
agency. The Sunriver meeting is planned for 6to 8 p.m. today at the Sunriver
HomeownersAquatic and Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, and the La Pine meeting is planned for 6to 8
p.m. Wednesday atthe La Pine Senior Center, 16450 Victory Way in
La Pine. More briefing,B6
34 29
2 9 2 8 33
39
45 35
35
35
35 27
27
29 24
24 34
PRECIPITATION TOTAL: 0.26" Historical average precipitation for the month: 1.42" t«BH R K R R H H R KI R R R EHR R R R R R SNOW TOTAL: 0" Historical average snow for the month: 3.62" tNcu % % % % % % % % % % % % %
6
7
7
20
19 29 36
T= Trace
H K IR R R R R R R R R R H T= Trace
% % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % %
ALMANAC
temperature
Lowest temperature
Average high
Average low
Highestrecorded
Lowest recorded temperature for the month:
Monthly average
Monthly average
temperature for the month:
high temperature through the years:
through the years:
77' on Nov. 3, 1930
-14' on Nov. 15, 1955
49.1'
27.1'
Highest
incident ends in shooting By Shelby R King
November2013weather for Bend
and the PineMountain Observatory. Burning
egon spotted frog meetings in Central Oregon.
The Bend Police Department public information officer has been put on administrative leave, according to Chief Jeff Sale. Lt. Chris Carney was placed on paid administrative leave approximately three weeks ago while an internal "personnel investigation" is conducted. Sale declined to explain what the investigation involved. "We expect the investigation will be concluded within about two weeks," Sale said. Carney took over as Bend Police's spokesman approximately one year ago. As a lieutenant, he makes between about $40 and $57 per hour. See Police/B6
* Monthly averages calculated from 1928 through 2005, Western Regional Climate Center Sources: NOAA, Western Regional Climate Center, Bend Public Works Department
low temperature
Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
A Madras woman was shot Saturday evening during a domestic disturbance, according to a news release from Madras Police Department Assistant Chief Tanner Stanfill. Jessica Haynes, 23, K na p p was reportedly shot by her live-in boyfriend Thomas Knapp, 18, at their home in the Willow Creek Apartments on Northeast Oak Street in Madras. At approximately 10:07 p.m.,officers responded to the report of a shooting, according to Stanfill, and responding officers recoveredthe firearm used in the shooting inside the couple's apartment. Haynes was transported to St. Charles Madras
by responding Jefferson County emergency medical technicians, and then later flown to St. Charles Bend. See Madras /B6
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
E vExI '
ENDA R
The Bethlehem Inn; cash donations accepted or recyclable cans; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. GREEN TEAMMOVIE NIGHT:A Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 screening of the film "The Big Fix" or www volcanictheatrepub.com. about an investigation of the 2010 COCC'S BIGBANDJAZZ FALL BP oil spill; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; First CONCERT:The band performs music Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E.Ninth by Miles Davis, Charlie Parker and St., Bend; 541-815-6504. more; $10, $5 for COCC students A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS with I.D; 7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon WITH DAVIDBENOIT:Theacclaimed Community College, Pinckney Center pianist and his quartet perform in for the Arts, 2600 N.W.College Way, atribute to Charles Schulz; SOLD Bend; 541-383-7510. OUT; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 "EVIL DEAD THE MUSICAL (DEAD p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall FOR THE HELLIDAYS)": Join Ash St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. and his friends for a trip to a cabin in towertheatre.org. the woods where they accidentally unleash an evil force that turns them all into demons; $22 for adults, WEDNESDAY $19 for students and seniors, $25 for the splatter zone; 8 p.m.; 2nd EMPOWERINGFAMILIES Street Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette BREAKFAST: A breakfast fundraiser Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or for the Latino Community www.2ndstreettheater.com. Association; free, donations RIFFTRAX LIVE:"SANTACLAUS accepted; 7:15-8:30 a.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. ReedMarket CONQUERS THEMARTIANS": A tape-delayed look at the family Road; 541-382-4366. "classic"; $12.50; 8 p.m.; Regal CAROL WITHTHE BELLS: Featuring Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 an ensemble from TheBells of S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; Sunriver; free;1 p.m.; Sunriver Area 541-312-2901. Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; THE WHITEBUFFALO:The 541-593-1635. Los Angeles Americana singerROSELAND HUNTERS: The Portland songwriter performs, with funk-rock band performs; free; 7 McDougall; $15 in advance, $18at p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis the door; 8-11 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins. or www.belfryevents.com. com. MOONDOG MATINEE:The Reno, Nev.-based roots-rock band performs, with Wilderness; $5, THURSDAY benefits local art and music education programs; doors open BENEFIT DINNER:Featuring dinner, 8:30 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. auction, drinks and live music; Armour Road,Bend;541-389-7047 proceeds benefit the Residential or www.j.mp/moondoginfo. Assistance Programs' alternative NAIVE MELODIES: TheTalking to work program; $30 per person, Heads tribute band performs; free; $50 per couple; 6-8 p.m.; Aspen 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W.Brooks Hall,18920 N.W.Shevlin Park Road, St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www. Bend; 541-385-9902 or www. dojobend.com. residentialassistanceprogram.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:John O'Sullivan presents his book "ChangingtheGame:TheParents FRIDAY Guide to Raising Happy, High SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL Performing Athletes, and Giving Take aphoto with Santa, Youth Sports Backto Our Kids"; free; DISTRICT: 7 p.m.; Barnes 8 Noble Booksellers, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free, additional costfor 2690 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; take-home photos, $5 donation for 541-318-7242. children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; "THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR HOLMES SantaLand, 330 S.W.Powerhouse FOR THEHOLIDAYS":A1936 Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. whodunit about a Broadway star COMMUNITY CRECHE EXHIBIT: noted for playing Sherlock Holmes solving one of his guests' death; $19, Featuring Nativity displays from $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; around the world; free; 6-8 p.m.; Church of Jesus Christ of LatterGreenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. day Saints, 450 S.W. Rimrock Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. Way, Redmond; 541-788-7484 or lorriedp@hotmail.com. olg. "THE SANTALANDDIARIES" HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC PREVIEW:The one-man one-act GALA:The sixth annual event reading features Derek Sitter in the features a performance by the Crown David Sedaris play; proceeds benefit City String Quartet, dinner and a
TODAY
Email events at least 10days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event"at vttvtttvbendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
5-12, free ages 4andyounger; 9 a.m.; Methodist Church special project "Imagine NoMalaria"; free admission; High Desert Museum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-382-4754 or 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; United Methodist www.highdesertmuseum.org. Church, 680 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-1672. BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts CHRISTMASTREELANE:Visit and crafts, collectibles, antiques, Santa and purchase a noble fir children's activities, music and more; Christmas tree, with complimentary free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend face painting, hay rides, pony Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E.Third St.; rides, petting zoo and more; free 541-317-4847. admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; DD Ranch 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way FESTIVAL OF TREES: Featuring 33 Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www. decorated Christmas trees, with ddranch.net. live local music, raffles and visits with Santa; Theevening GalaEvent CROOKED RIVERRANCH OLDE & Auction features a live auction of FASHIONEDCHRISTMAS the trees, silent auction, raffles and CELEBRATION:Includes visits more; proceeds benefit the Hospice with Santa, a parade, aChristmas of Redmond; free daytime family bazaar and more; free; 11 a.m., 3:30 Submitted photo festivities, $40 evening event; 10 p.m. parade; Crooked River Ranch Roseland Hunters, a Portland funk-rock band, is set to perform 7 a.m.-2 p.m. family festivities, 5 p.m, Administration Building, 5195 S.W. p.m. Wednesday at McMenamins Old St. Francis School, located evening gala; Deschutes County Fair Clubhouse Drive; 541-548-8939. at 700 N.W. Bond St. For more information, visit mcmenamins.com. 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W.Airport HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: Way, Redmond; 541-548-7483 or Featuring crafters, artists and www.hospiceofredmond.org/events. nonprofit organizations; free silent auction; proceeds benefit High National Geographic photographer admission; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Desert Chamber Music programs; James Balog capturing the changing TOY ANDBAKESALEFUNDRAISER: Featuring gently used toys, games Centennial Park, Seventh Street $85, reservations requested; 6-9 glaciers across the Arctic; free, and books; proceeds benefit Family and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; p.m.; Broken TopClub, 62000 Broken refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; 541-923-5191. Access Network and First United Top Drive, Bend; 541-306-3988 or Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County www.highdesertchambermusic.com. Library, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541475-3351 or www.jcld.org. "HOLIDAYMAGIC": Central Oregon "THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR HOLMES Community College's Cascade Chorale performs; proceeds benefit FOR THE HOLIDAYS": A1936 Abilitree and CascadeChorale; free, whodunit about a Broadway star donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Summit noted for playing Sherlock Holmes High School, 2855 N.W.Clearwater solving one of his guests' death; $19, Drive, Bend; 541-383-7512. $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. "SCROOGE": A musical play based Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389on Charles Dickens' "A Christmas 0803 or www.cascadestheatrical. Carol"; free; 7-8:30 p.m.; TheChurch OI'g. of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, "EVIL DEAD THEMUSICAL (DEAD 450 S.W. Rimrock Drive, Redmond; p gO „,>t)' ,b 541-504-8925 or jessnsheen©gmail. FOR THE HELLIDAYS)": Join Ash g~ g N ~outh o g G roc e ry L es Schwa ss fro+ com. and his friends for a trip to a cabin in (Just 5 lot acro the woods where they accidentally "T00 WRAPPEDUPFOR t prineville o Startirtg unleash anevil force that turns them CHRISTMAS":A Christmas play by all into demons; $22 for adults, 4& the Bend Theatre for Young People, Grand R $19 for students and seniors, $25 directed by DaveBrandl; $5 at the for the splatter zone; 8 p.m.; 2nd door; 7 p.m.; First Presbyterian Street Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette We have the largest Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or 541-382-4401 or www.bendfp.org. s election o f F R E S H www.2ndstreettheater.com. A NOVELIDEA UNVEILED: W itness CUT Nobles 8t Nordmans KLOZDSIRKUT:TheSeattle electrothe unveiling of the book selection in Central Oregon. funk band performs; free; 9 p.m.; for this year's A Novel Idea .. Read ' 'T;.' Dojo, 852 N.W.Brooks St., Bend; 541Together program; free; 7-9 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library,601 706-9091 or www.dojobend.com. N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. PIANOCONCERT FUNDRAISER: SATURDAY Award-winning pianist John Nilsen "WOVEN WITHTRADITION: performs; proceeds benefit the church's free breakfast program; $10 PLATEAUINDIAN BAGS" EXHIBIT MwEp ~ c ~ p I at the door, freeforyouth; 7 p.m.; OPENS:Featuring a display of bags United Methodist Church, 680 N.W. made to carry roots and other foods Bond St., Bend; 541-382-1672. gathered during seasonal rounds; included in the price of admission; $12 TODD HAABY: Nuevo flamenco adults, $10 ages 65andolder, $7 ages guitarist Todd Haabyand his Latin group Sola Via perform; $24-$36; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.
P
Xort| oe
~ ~ sW f
auce Lo
g~+ 2
1
"CHASINGICE": Ascreening of the 2012 documentary (PG-13) about
Visa is the one cord,
you canafford to use!
NEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:59 p.m. Nov. 6, in the area ofNortheast Jackson Avenueand Northeast Shadow Brook Place. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at10:41 a.m.Nov. 14, in the 2600 block of Northeast Division Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:05 a.m. Nov. 20, in thearea of Southeast Marble Mountain Laneand Southeast Ruby PeakLane. Theft —A theft was reported at1:40 p.m. Nov. 20, in the 2700 block of Northeast 27th Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:22 p.m. Nov. 23, in thearea of Northeast Majestic Loop. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at3:58 p.m. Nov. 23, in the61200 block of Blakely Road. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:01 p.m. Nov. 24, in the1600 block of Northeast Woodridge Lane. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 7:41a.m. Nov.27, in the 63000 block of Marsh Orchid Drive. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 9:01 a.m. Nov.27, in the 20700 block of Nicolette Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at11:53 a.m. Nov. 27, inthe area of High Desert Lane andMorningstar Drive. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at11:22 a.m. Nov. 28, in the area ofNorthwest Saginaw Avenue andNorthwest Seventh Street. DUU —Daron ChadWard, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:56 p.m. Nov. 27, in the900 block of Northwest Galveston Avenue. DUU —Benjamin R. Doran,35, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:51 a.m. Nov. 28, in the area ofNorthwest Broadway Street andNorthwest Florida Avenue. DUU —Collin Lelie Fowler, 29, was
arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:50 p.m. Nov. 28, in thearea of Northeast Purcell Boulevard andNortheast Lotus Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at12:57 p.m. Nov.29, in the 2100 block of Northwest Sixth Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at1:41 a.m.Nov.30, in the 63400 block of Stacy Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:16 p.m. Nov. 30, in the 200 block of Northwest Jefferson Place. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at9:38 a.m. Nov. 19, inthe 63100 block of BoydAcres Road. DUII —Timothy Jon Bartels, 44, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:15 p.m. Nov. 24, in the 700 block of Northeast 11th Street. DUII —Colton Russell Gilbert, 22, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:51 a.m. Nov.27, in the1100 block of Northeast Third Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:38 a.m. Nov. 28, in the 2900 block of Northeast ConnersAvenue. DUII —Felix Elias Aleman, 38, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2 l1 p.m. Nov. 29, in the1400 block of Southwest Chandler Avenue. DUII —Ann Lynn Domanski, 5 I, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:28 p.m. Nov. 29, in the area ofSouthwest Colorado Avenueand Southwest Industrial Way. DUII —Cory Matthew Carrillo, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:18 a.m. Nov. 30, in the1000 block of Northwest Bond Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at10:39 a.m.Dec. 1, in the100 block of Northwest Vicksburg Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief and atheft were reported and anarrest madeat1:47 p.m. Nov. 27, in the3100 block of North U.S. Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at 5:16 p.m. Nov.26, in the 3100 block of North U.S. Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:38 p.m. Nov.14, in the1100 block of North Baldwin Avenue.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry — Avehicle was
reported entered with items stolen at11:19a.m. Nov. 29, in the areaof Northwest CainsRoad. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:19 p.m. Nov. 30, in the area ofNortheast 10th Street.
It's perfect for shopping, travel or those unexpected expenses.
JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE
Burglary — A burglary and atheft were reported at12:44 p.m. Nov.25, in the17300 block of Southwest BlueJay Road in Crooked River Ranch. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 6:04 p.m.Nov.25, in the area of Butte Avenueand Ninth Streetin Metolius. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:45 a.m. Nov.26, in the area of U.S. Highway 26near milepost 107 in Madras. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reportedstolenat8:30a.m. Dec.1,in the 800 block of Mountain Ridge Drive in Culver.
OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Gabriel JamesGeorge, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:29 p.m. Nov. 26, in the area ofU.S.Highway 97 near milepost106. DUII —Thia LynnJohnson,44, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:27 a.m. Nov. 29, in thearea of U.S.Highway 20 and Lance Road. DUII —Nicole Marie Jordan,28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:47 p.m. Nov. 29, in the area ofU.S.Highway97 and YewAvenue. DUII —Tasian EdwardWayne Collins,18, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:26 a.m. Nov.30, in the area of Third Streetand Powers Road in Bend. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at12:40 p.m. Nov.30, in the area of U.S.Highway 20 near milepost 134. DUII —Polly Juanha Guy,43, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:17p.m. Nov. 30, in thearea of BurgessRoad and Huntington Road in LaPine. DUII —Jess Franklin Reed, 44, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:35 a.m. Dec. 1, in the area ofSoutheast Third Street and Southeast Wilson Street in Bend.
Save Even Nore! With Mid Oregon's really low interest you can pay off higher interest rate credit cards and loans and enjoy friendly local service! Call or stop by Mid Oregon for details foday www.midoregon.com 541-382-1795
Ct -EOINI WNIW
--'- -
Thi s credit union is federally insured bythe National Credit Union Administration
Midare on Credit Union good friends. great service.'
TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
na e iver wo ac near I S IIYll 0 ives oc a acs By Jeff Barnard
ing collar put the pack in the area at that time. GRANTS PASS — The latNew rules established unest livestock attack by Ore- der a legal settlement allow gon's Snake River wolf pack o fficials to c onsider a k i l l puts it one bite away from a order after f our q u alifying potential state kill order. a ttacks by a w o l f p ack i n An O r egon D e partment s ix months. The m ost r e of Fish and Wildlife report cent attack makes three for r eleased Monday said t h e the Snake River pack since rancher who found a wound- October. ed cow Nov. 21 in the rugged Unlike other states trying country between the Imnaha to control wolves in c attle and Snake rivers had tak- country, Oregon has adopten required nonlethal steps ed specific r ules requiring to deter wolf attacks. Those ranchers to t ak e n o nlethal steps included cleaning up steps to deter wolf attacks beold cow carcasses, putting out fore the state can shoot a wolf radio-activated alarm boxes for attacking livestock. The and checking the cattle up to rules were the result of a legal five times a day. settlement of a lawsuit from T he r e por t s t a tes b i t e conservation groups. marks on t h e c o w's h i ndSteve Pedery o f O r egon quarters were characteristic Wild, one of plaintiffs, said of wolf attacks. The wounds the department is faithfully were estimated to be a week carrying out the new rules. or two old, and a GPS track- He noted that the number of The Associated Press
attacks by the Imnaha pack has gone down as nonlethal efforts have gone up. The Imnaha pack was Oregon's first and had the most livestock kills last year when a decision to shoot two of its members was blocked by court order. "I think t h e a gency deserves a lot of credit for following the letter of the plan, putting out reports and making them public, which is a big change over where we were a couple years ago," Pedery said. Russ Morgan, wolf coordinator for the department, said more ranchers have bought into nonlethal control in the range of the Imnaha pack, where they have been dealing with wolves for a longer time. However, it is still uncertain whether the n onlethal controlsare responsible,he said.
M organ added t ha t t h e Imnaha pack is made up of different wolves, except for the breeding pair, than when the pack was more actively attacking l i vestock. Young adults have moved on, and the pack has at least seven new pups. Rancher Rod Childers, who negotiated the kill order rules on behalf of the Oregon Catt lemen's A ssociation, s a id ranchers are stillfrustrated with the slow pace of the process, which can take a week or more to confirm a kill and determine whether it qualifies under the rules. " People are learning i t 's here, and we've got to deal with it," he said of the seven confirmed wolf packs in northeastern O regon. "We j ust want it dealt with in a m ore timely m a nner t h a n what it is."
AROUND THE STATE State WedSiteS dOWn — Mostwebsites forthe State of Oregon went down for hours on Monday. NIC, the company that handle's web
traffic for the state,saysproblemswith a server in Texasis causing delays andcrashes. Thecompany says about 90 percent of statewebsites went down. NIC said that the company has "all hands on deck" to try and
fix the problem. ParkS direCtOr retireS —Thedirector of the Oregon parks department is retiring. Theagency said Mondaythat 63-year-old TimWood's last day on the job will be Jan.10. The State Parks and Recreation Commission is to meet by phone Friday to name an interim director. The
department said recruitment for theagency's next director will beopen Dec. 9 to Jan. 10. Wood joined the department in1998 after a U.S. Army career, when he last served as commander of the Portland District of the
U.S. ArmyCorps ofEngineers. Hebecamedepartment director in 2004.
Klamath task force reaches water agreement —Ranchers and the KlamathTribes signed atentative dealMondayin Klamath Falls for sharing water in the drought-stricken Upper Klamath Basin. The rest
of a special taskforce on water issueswereto join themTuesday atthe Oregon Institute ofTechnology toannouncethe17-pageagreement in principle. Their goal is to reach a final agreement early next year that will
guide legislation to beoffered byU.S.Sen. RonWyden to breaka logjam in Congressover resolving Klamathwater battles. Republicans inthe House have blocked legislation to implement existing agreements to re-
move four damsfrom the Klamath River tohelp struggling salmon runs, restore environmental damagefrom a century of irrigation development in the Klamath Basin, and provide a higher level of certainty for farmers on a federal irrigation project straddling the Oregon-California border that
has had toshut off services toconserve waterfor protected fish. Fraod Is calllllg —Dozensof members of OldWest Federal Credit Union havereported that they weretargeted for fraud during theweekend. Ken Olson, president and CEO of the credit union that serves cus-
tomers in severalEastern Oregonlocations, posted anonline warning on its website towatchout for peopletrying to steal moneyout of people's bank and credit union accounts.
Cargo carrier still operating — Air cargocarrier EvergreenInternational of McMinnville was supposed to close Saturday but remained open as of Monday. Chairman Mike Hines of the airline's parent company
PORT OF UMATILLA
said that managerswere trying to savethe company. Hewouldn't say by what means. He said only that, "Everything's still status quo." Evergreen is a major employer in McMinnville and notified the state last month it
S ipmento reineryequipment oc e The Associated Press UMATILLA — P r o testers locked themselves to a transport rig bearing a 450-ton piece of oil refinery equipment, and blocked its departure Sunday itrs ' night from the Port of Umatilla. It was bound for a tar sands oil development in w e stern Canada. E n v i r onmentalists object to the shipment for its potential to worsen global warming, and tribal members say they're worried about the possibility of environmental damage in Eastern Oregon, where they assert a treaty interest and say they weren't adequately E.J. Harns/ East Oregonian consulted. A protester ralses hls flst In the alr after learnlng that Omega MorTwo protesters were arrest- gan called off moving a load of oll reflnery equlpment on Sundayat ed afterthey used heavy steel the Port of Umatilla. tubes to lock themselves to the truck. It took police two hours to re- "This can't be a major corridor through our move the men and by the time land. Everything through here hasa meaning they finished it was 11:30 p.m. Because it blocks traffic, the and purpose for everybody." 380-foot-long megaload is al— Linda Sampson, tribal member lowed to move only at night, mainly on Highways 395 and 26 through sparsely populated megaload shipments. A call to Environmentalists are fightparts of Eastern Oregon. a representative of the moving ing the shipment to draw attenA crowd estimated at about company, Omega Morgan of tion to fears that pollution from 50 environmentalists and tribal Hillsboro was not immediately developing the tar sand oil in members had gathered at the returned. western Canada will contribport. A departure last Tuesday ute to global warming. Once the shipment appeared also was protested. The comA member of the Confedready to hit the road, the group pany said the equipment didn't erated Tribes of the Umatilla crossed into the lot carrying move before the Thanksgiving Indian Reservation said the signs and chanting, "No tar holiday because it took longer load's route runs o n l a nds sands on tribal lands!" The two than expected to load and se- ceded in the Treaty of 1855. protesters were then able to cure it. A statement about the treaty lock onto the truck. The w a t e r pur i f ication on the tribal website said the An announcement that the equipment is destined for Altribes reserved rights to hunt, load would not move came berta. From Eastern Oregon, it fish and gather food on 6.4 shortly before midnight. will travel through Idaho and million acres in Oregon and It is the first of three planned Montana. Washington and "maintain a
Justice Continued from B1 "There had always been a lot of talks of getting all these g roups together around X cause or movement," said Bruce Morris, a coordinator with the center and former Human Dignity Campaign director. "Since moving in, we've discovered how helpful it is to be able to talk to each other on a daily basis. We know what everyone is up to and can help with something as simple as a flier and something as complicated as a
would lay off its131 workersandgoout of businessNov.30. Butlater that day, Evergreen founder and owner Delford Smith issued a statement
saying theairlinewas exploring alternatives. Thecompany is hobbled by debt and creditor lawsuits andhasbeenselling assets. — From wire reports
keen interest and involvement in the activities that occur in that area." Tribal member Linda Sampson, of Pendleton, said the concern is with a lack of consultation and the potential for environmentaldamage. "This can't be a major corridor through our land,"she said. "Everything through here has
Entertainment Every Friday In
a meaning and purpose for
g-p
PL
I FiVe BIB MOllilaifS allil lOtSOfPriZeStOWIN! I WIN YOUR CHOICE OFA
II I
PLAYS TATION3 ..
I I
HUTCeHh
OR AN
XBOX 360 wlNQNEOFTwo$150GIFTGARDs I F,lul
I
I I I
+
IEH. + ~BAZIK
GAMES •MOVIES •COLLECTIBLES BENDSOUTH:380 SE3rd St. 541-382-4059 BENDEAST:2085 E.Hwy 20 541-647-1131
HUTC~H5 BENDWEST:725 NW COLUMBIA St.541-382-9253 BEND EAST:820NE3RDSt. 541-382-6248 REDMOND: 827SW7THST. 541-548-8200
WINAN ELECTRIC GUITAR PACKA GE, ANACOUSTIC
I I I I
GUITAR PACKAGE, I ANAGCESSORYPAGKAGE, g
all want the same thing — a better, morejust community."
nity conversations and author visits. But for those involved, the greatest asset of the center is simply its ability to bring together different groups and causes. "Progressive groups in this state or any state tend to work in disparate or uncoordinated long, multi-day march." coalitions, maybe they come Morris cites the three-day togetherwhen there's one big "Walk for Citizenship" as one issue," said Yaju Dharmaraof the group's more impressive jah, council representative of collaborative accomplishments. the local American Federation "It was literally a walk from of State, City and Municipal Madras to Bend led by CAU- Employees,which rents space SA," Morris said. "It was easy in the center. "We're trying to do with everyone here. It to createa new precedent for started from a conversation in how community groups, interthe hallway and moved into a faith groups and unions can 250-person effort with all the pool resources, knowledge and logistical support needed to volunteers." move people down the highDharmarajah said the center way — places to sleep, food, is a unique organization in Orewater." gon but he also noted that coorThe center has more than dinating the efforts of such difan operational mission, often ferentgroups isalso unusual. "Immigrant rights groups hosting events such as commu-
MA G AzINE
TheBulletITI
everybody."
"We're trying to break down bamers because we
— Yaju Dharmarajah, AFSCME councll representative
I
Weekly Arts &
I I
WINONEOFTWO$150GIFTCARDS P M
,,„s
ORONEOF TENHARMONIGAS
I
Sp
I
are not always supporters of
LGBTQ groups, and often LGBTQ groups have poor outreach into labor and minority groups," he said. "We're trying to break down barriers because we all want the same thing — a better, more just community." The center's newest project is a unified calendar of all events and a website. "The first year was really just seeing if this experiment could w ork," D h a rmarajah said. "We had a paper calen-
dar where you could sign up to usethe board room forfree. We really had to just work on
•
I I I I I I I I I I I
becoming good managers. With the new calendar, smaller groups will be able to bring their events to a larger audience, and groups can avoid stagingevents when others are
I
going on."
I
— Reporter:541-633-2160, tleedsC<bendbulletirt.com
•
AMBASSADORSOF MOUNTAIH & TRAIL 255 SWCentury Dr, Bend541-385-8080
I
NEW •USED• BANDREHTALS 1531 NE3rd St, Bend541-323-2332
I I I Laat tu~ bzattss
WINONEOFTWO$150GIFTCARDS
I
haawfw~ bzaass
I I I I
%ey Co. TOYS•GAMES •BOOKS •PUZZLES• & MORE 953 NWWallSt,Bend 541-382-8326
I
I
I
Brought to yoo dyThe Bulletin and these great local dosioesses Ask about our holiday subscription offer, call 541-385-5800 To receive notification of these and other money saving offers, email your name andaddress to emailnotifications©bendbulletin.com
I
I
B4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
FDITO
S
au ionnee e inrevam in en sewer ees
Brrsr McCOOL
The Bulletin
JoRN CosTA RtcRARoCor,
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
I
uL
Mss
Edi tor fohdi tori ais
HOW cANYOU uLL YQURSEF A HAN CX &3D
'C(((p,
TRISUNE
CC3NTENT AGENCY
Chainooman Publisher Fdi tordn-Chi e f
CoRDoN BLAcK
wm RADtcALmws
sIJ
Nz THATPt
( s
rre
he Bend City Council is working on a plan to make the city's charge for wastewater more fair. We hope
I/
C(
/
that will be true. The decision before the council on Wednesday night is whether the city should move back the deadline for finalizing the new sewer charges to after July I, 2014. The council should move the deadline back. Sewer charges for many businesses may double under the new system. The bills for some of Bend's breweries could go up even more. And some landlords with business tenants may be locked in by leases into paying the higher sewer charges. Those are the known impacts. The city needs more time to make businesses aware of the changes and to learn what other changes the sewer charges may create. The city makes what sounds like a reasonable argument for changing the sewer charge. Basically, it's trying to better match the sewer charges to the costs of treating sewage. The city has 42 sewer users that make up only 0.16 percent of customers, but 8 percent of the city's cost. Those companies pay about $197,000 per year. The city esti-
mates it costs about $661,000 a year to treat their waste. Most businesses in the city pay a sewer charge based on their water usage, regardless of what is in the wastewater. The city says the bottom line is that residential customers end up subsidizing business customers. The city's plan for its "extra strength charge program" is to divide businesses up into five categories based on their type. Sewer charges would be based on those types. That could be good solution. It depends on how quick and costly it is for businesses that actually produce less to prove to the city that they should be charged less. It also depends on how the city implements the increases. A gradual increase in rates will make it easier for businesses to balance their books. And it also depends on what this means for Bend's businesses. For instance, some breweries are going to be the hardest hit by the increases. If the increases drive this growing industry out of Bend, it will be called the "extra stupid program."
Research bearsout onion growers' belief f onions, not the green ones but the onessuited forburgers,stews and soups, are a part of your diet, you have a stake in the current effort to persuade the federal Food and Drug Administration to change proposed regulations about irrigating those onions. Even if you skip the onions, you have a stake: They're an important part of this state's agricultural economy. Farmers inEastern Oregon and Idaho grow about a quarter of the bulb onions — the ones with a papery skin on the outside — sold in this country. They irrigate their crops with surface water, which is more likely to be tainted with E. coli than well water would be. Now the FDA, working to put new fresh produce safety rules in place, has proposed water cleanliness standards that would make growing onions here too expensive to be feasible. The agency has reason to be concerned about food-borne illnesses such as E. coli infection, particularly on things like lettuce, spinach and cantaloupe, which are generally served raw.
t
They can pick up E. coli bacteria from irrigation water as well as from improper handling in the field and elsewhere. And while the FDA cannot assure proper handling 100 percent of the time, it hopes strict new rules on irrigation water will help. All that makes perfect sense — to a point. But bulb onions, while they can be eaten raw, are not handled the way lettuce is, and the difference is crucial. Bulb onions, you see, are curedinthefield beforethey'reever sent to market, a process that an Oregon State University scientist has found leaves the onions E. coli free. In addition, the papery outer skin is virtually always removed before the onions are eaten. The FDA has gotten plenty of pushback from onion growers on the proposed changes, so much so that it is accepting comments on them even after its Nov. 22 deadline — though it's unclear if a second formal comment period is what the agency has in mind. That's good news. Onion growers have science on their side, and they need to be given time to make their case to the FDA.
d
$04e~
(
E
ss
E sss
E
ts
Z.
M Nickel's Worth Reward bicycle owners
ions too often also fail to clean up after their best friends. This can and does cause civic discord — and can lead to personal confrontations, all of which can be completely avoided by keeping all dogs off all lawns. The author should take the good advice offered, just like he should take other good advice that may be offered, such as "Don't smoke cigarettes!n or "Don't drink and drive!" R ather t ha n c o n sidering t h e gentleman of a certain age to be "grumpy," the author should consider the voluntary offering of such good advice as a public good and celebrate it. Consider how many other gentlemen of a certain age drove by and did not offersuch good advice.The gentleman who did should be regarded as a civic hero and not a "grumpy old man.n
A recent Bulletin editorial wondered how much bicyclists should pay for roads, even suggesting that a $10 feeimposed on new bicycles might be a good start. I agree, but let's take it a step further; mandate a fee on all bicycle operators, thereby setting up a state registry. With current technology, bicycle mileage accrued can be sentbiannually to Salem by each owner. In return, they would get a check in the mail with a thank you note for reducing vehicle miles, decreasing the pounds of carbon dioxide emitted into our clean Oregon air and, of course, the gallons of gas saved, helping to lessen our dependence on foreign oiL In short, let's start to recognize the positive effects of bikes and pedestrians (that latter group is next ... after all, sidewalks aren't free either) by financially rewarding their efforts. Seems only fair for those who are treading a little lighter on this Earth. Thanks for sharing my thoughts — and the road. Bill Groesz Redmond
better ally for wilderness than The Great Old Broads for Wilderness? Enhanced by lifeexperience and tempered by a sense of humor, there is a uniqueness to the nurturing power of mature women in any culture. Everyone,thank the elder women you know for the many things they do for everyone in their lives. Women of wisdom, join the Great Old Broads in their mission. You will be energized and rewarded by meaningful work, fun and advocacy. Monica Welch, Great Old Broads for Wilderness member Bend
Study tax bill details
Most of us can be a bit complacent about property taxes, but I think it would be a good idea to suggest Dennis Sienko that we all look a bit more closely at Bend them. Several items caught my attenRoads make tion this year (besides the usual increase); namely how little our city wildernessvulnerable receives, how much Bend Park & I've heard Edward Abbey being Recreation District r eceives and credited with saying, "It's not the how the bond total is significant. beer canbeside the road I' m worried If you examine the statement, you about; it's the road beside the beer will see that the city of Bend receives can." His observations are still timely. about 20 percent of the total, but the Population p r essure t h reatens park district receives almost 10 permore and more wild places with cent. Think about it — 20 percent for much more than litter; the perma- roads,sewers, water and nearly half nence ofroads with increased access that just for parks. An imbalance, I to wilderness make it vulnerable. The believe. absence of roads help to protect it. Also, the 12 different bonds add Wilderness designation also means up to nearly 20 percent of the total. you will not encounter anyone felling Remember that the next time you a tree (or trees) or riding an ATV. The hear that a bond is only going to cost sublime landscapes of wilderness, a tiny amount. Without them, your accompanied by seemingly unfal- taxes wouldbe 20 percent lower. tering, natural processes of the enviAbout one-third of our property ronment,are treasures to protect and taxes actually go to schools. enjoy. Can we make sure it's there for All food for thought. all who follow us, without commitKen Egan ting ourselves to preserving it? What Bend
Civic hero, not grumpy old man I have a few comments on the article in the Sept. 27 issue of The Bulletin about understanding grumpy old men. I fear that the writer may have misunderstood the intent of the comment that begins the article. It was merely the good, fatherly advice of a concerned fellow citizen. It is very good adviceto "Keep your dog offm y
lawn" (or any lawn). Dogs do things on lawns and never clean up after themselves. Their walking compan-
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more
In My View submissions should be between 550 and 650 words, signed and
Pleaseaddressyour submission toeither
than 250words andinclude thewriter's signature, phonenumberandaddress
include thewriter's phone numberand
send, fax oremailthemto TheBulletin.
for verification. We edit letters for brevity,
grammar,tasteandlegal reasons.WereIect poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those
appropriate forothersections ofThe Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or
Op-Ed pieceevery 30days.
My Nickel's Worth or In My View and
address for verification. We edit submisWrite: My Nickel's Worth/In My View sions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal P.O. Box 6020 reasons. We reject those publishedelseBend, OR97708 where. In My View pieces run routinely in Fax: 541-385-5804 the space below, alternating with national Email: bulletin©bendbulletin.com
columnists. Writersarelimited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30days.
Government going on a diet would do us all a favor By Mark Wolford his is in response to my liberal friend who asked if one Republican would stand up to defend the government shutdown. I will and so did the brave Republicans who stood up and shut down our overspending over-taxing government for a few days. Some of the numbers that my liberal friends like to throw around should be looked into a bit closer. I have noticed, though, most people throw numbers out and shout loudly, hoping that no one questions them because they are the loudestperson speaking; but here are the facts behind the $24 billion cost to the shutdown. The truth is that in that very same time period, if the government would have been operating, it would have
T
I am no mathematician but I think that adds up to $168 billion. So if you do the math like I did, that is actually a net savings of $144 billion. In fact, while I know some small business did feel a crunch around the national parks, Americans in general flew through that temporary shutdown pretty much like normal. Even though Obama tried to make it as awful as he could — staffing generally unstaffed monuments to keep veterans from the very monument that were built to honor them and hiring law enforcement to try and prevent fishermen from heading into international waters to fish — the truth in this whole mess is that the government shutdown, just like the sequester, did not cost the U.S. econ-
omy one dime. And federal employees will be getting paid their salaries,
cost $10.5 billion a day (according which was voted on and unanimousto the 2011 Congressional Budget Office) for the same period of time.
ly passed by the Republicans. Now they are trying to sue for
IN MY VIEW more money; they are actually mad that they got a two-week paid vacation.Now, they want even more
money. That brings me to my next point: Those "crazy Republicans" voted to fund every government program but one — that was Obamacare. Looking at the rollout of Obamacare, I wish they would have succeeded in their attempt to shut it down. This law will cost more than it's worth and regulate us into a single payer system. We will end up with socialized medicine; that is exactly what the liberals want. So yes, this Republican is standing up and shouting his support — and
Some of the numbers that my liberal friends like to throw around should be looked into a bit closer. I have noticecf, though, most people throw numbers out and shout loudly, hoping that no one questions them because they are the loudest person speaking; but here are the facts behind the $24 billion cost to the shutdown.
disagree all day long about what are ultimately the right or the wrong policies. In the end, we have the right to fire the officials we put there to represent us. That is why it is so important to vote. The Republicans who are fighting to defund Obamacare and cut spending are doing what they hoping more people will, too. were put there to do. As citizens in This country was founded on a this great nation, we have to look republic-style government, w h ich around and stop spending money enablesthere to be checks and bal- we don't have. It is a crime to write ances. That is one of the things that checks knowing that we don't actumakes this country great. We can ally have the money to pay for what
we are buying. I want to help people as much as the next guy, but let's do it the right way. We have overspent; we have to stop not just keep adding to the debt. We need to fix the overspending, so we can support our needy families. There is so much we could trim. Let's get real, so we can truly discuss what is going on here. Our problem is we like to gorge, and that is exactly what our government
has been doing. We need to go on agovernment diet. — Mark Wolford lives in Redmond.
TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Garmin plans Salem expansion
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES
Jphn Aythgy (:egj[
FEATURED OBITUARY By Jonathan J. Cooper
July13, 1927 - Nov. 22, 2013
Albert "Ray" Raymond Kilpatrick, of Bend Dec. 12, 1921 - Nov. 26, 201 3 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Beth Eleanor Griffin, of Bend Sept. 10, 1936 - Nov. 27, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private gathering of family and close friends will be held in the Summer of 2014.
Clajre Elizabeth Kanzjg
Linda Kay Snodgrass, of Bend Aug. 14, 1951 - Nov. 30, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Tuesday, December 3, 2013, at 10 AM at St. Francis Historic Catholic Church in Downtown Bend. Concluding interment will immediately follow, at Deschutes Memorial Gardens. Contributions may be made to:
National Multiple Sclerosis Society www.natinalmssociety.org
Delpha Pauline Barrett Dec. 1, 1927- Nuv. 27, 2013
Delpha w e n t h o m e to h eaven on N o v ember 2 7, 2 013, three days short o f July 2, 1992 - Nuv. 19, 2013 her 86th birthday. She had Claire E l izabeth K a nzig, b attled ly m phoma f o r 1 4 21, passed away surrounded ears. She is survived by by her family Tuesday, Noer husband, Gerold Barvember 19 in Bend follow- r ett; t h r e e s o n s , G a r y , i ng a s u dden turn i n h e r Bruce, and M ar k B a r r ett, health. a ll of w h o m w e r e a t h e r R Cl a i re was side. She is also survived born in by her sister, Norma Jean Silverton, S tone, as w e l l a s s e v e n Oregon as grandchildren a nd tw o t he t h i r d great-grandchildren. She is child t o predeceased by her father, Charlie William L o ew e n , h er and D e i rm other, A n na L o ew e n d re K a n - W yatt, an d h e r b r o t h e r , zig. The William Loewen II. Clalre Kanzig f amily a r The m e m orial service r ived in celebrating her life will be Sisters in 1994 and Claire's held I:00p.m. Wednesday, impact in the area began. D ecember 4 at C it y V i e w Claire c a m e in t o th e F uneral H om e a n d C e m w orld w it h f l ai r a n d w a s etery in Salem, located at well known f o r h e r s p a r - 3 90 Hoyt Street, and w i l l kling personality, efferves- be officiated by Pastor Syd cence, ability t o c o n n ect Brestel, Foundary Church, w ith people, and he r u n - Bend, OR. mistakable style. Her love Delpha was born Decemfor her family and f r iends ber I , 1927 in S alem, Orwas undeniable. egon. Her father worked at Health issues diagnosed Kay Woolen Mills and her at an early age didn't stop mother was a successful Claire from living life fully. r estaurant and mot el T hroughout h er sch o o l owner. D e l ph a a t t e nded years she remained active Phagan's Beauty School in m sports, m u sic, t h eater, S alem an d s h e a n d h e r a nd n um e r ou s ser v i c e mother owned a s u ccessclubs. She graduated from f ul h ai r s t y l in g s a lo n i n Sisters H i g h Sc h o o l i n S alem. Delpha w a s m a r 2010 among a c l ass filled ried to Gerold in 1950 and with her friends. followed h i m i nto th e Claire generously shared m ountains during h i s c a w ith o t h er s h e r g i f t s o f reer in the timber industry. s inging, baking an d k n i t - They eventually moved to ting. She put her heart into Bend, Oregon, where she everything s h e d i d and was involved i n s u p p ortshowed a genuine interest ing her family as a stay at in people from all walks of home mother, devoting her life. Her g r aciousness t ime t o h e r f a m i l y . S h e c oupled w i t h h e r b r i g h t w as h eavily i n v o l ved i n shine made Claire impossupporting her sons' early sible to forget. entrepreneurial a c t i v i t i es In her adult years, Claire as well a s h e r h u sband's a ttended A l l e gheny C o l - p olitical l if e a s m a yo r o f lege briefly, but health isR edmond. S he w a s a l sues forced herto return to ways busy volunteering in her family i n O r egon. She the kitchen at First Baptist worked to get back to colC hurch. H e r l i f e b e a u t i l ege, an d h a d pl a n s t o f ully p o r t r ayed h e r l o v e re-enroll locally in January. a nd continued support o f I n addition t o h e r p a r - her family as she modeled ents, Claire is survived by t he love o f C h r ist i n h e r h er s i b lings P e ter, E r i n , service to others. She enNoah, and Izaak. joyed gardening, cooking, T he f a m i l y has bee n making p i es, c ak e d e c ooverwhelmed by the genur ating, cr o c h etin g an d ine thoughtfulness and gen- passing on her legacy and erosity of the Sisters Commany talents to other fammunity. H e r m e morial on ily members. She enjoyed Sunday, November 24 was serving others in her home attended by hundreds. and always had coffee and Burial t oo k p l ac e T u es- pie available t o w h o ever day November 26 at Camp s topped by . S h e w i l l b e Polk Cemetery. lovingly missed by all.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Andre Schiffrin, 78: Literary editor who gave readers Art
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday
specific guidelines must be
through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m.
Friday for Sundaypublication.
They maybe submitted by
Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through
phone, mail, email or fax. The
Thursday for publication on
Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please
the second day after sub-
include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these
king
12-hour days amid h ot l ea d John Cecil and printer's ink, which sparked a l i f e-long l o v e of t he printed word. Drafted into the British Army in 1946 he served a tour of duty in the Royal Army Service Corps in Egypt and Palestine. After completing his military service John travelled to central Africa where he w orked a s a pr i n t e r i n Lusaka, N o rthern R h odes ia ( n o w Za m b i a) , a n d w here he m e t h i s f u t u r e wife, Margaret. Their f i r st s on, Jonathan j o i ned t h e family in 1958 foIlowed by a second son, Paul, i n 1 960 a fter the family m oved to Dar e s S a l a am , T a n g anyika (now Tanzania). I n 1961 t h e f a m il y r e t urned t o E n g land w h e r e son Peter was born. In 1968 J ohn and hi s f a m ily e m i grated to the United States where he accepted a printing position with a newspaper in Montpelier, Vermont. Other printing jobs in Houston, T exas, an d E u g ene, Oregon followed. John retired after 22 years worki ng at th e Eugene Register-Guard. While living i n O r egon's Willamette Valley John and his family d i scovered th e wide open spaces and natural beauty o f t h e P a c ific Northwest. This chapter of John's life was fi lled wi th h ikes w i t h hi s fami l y ; mountain c l i m bs, c o astal walks, canoe trips, camping trips and visiting new p laces. W h e n J o h n a n d Maggie retired they built a home in T u malo Iust outside of Bend. John loved to photograph, sketch and write about his hikes, often a c companied b y his d ogs i ncluding hi s latest faithful c o m panion, Teddy. J ohn wa s a l o n g ti m e member of t h e O b sidians h iking c l u b w he r e he served a term as president. H e volunteered w i t h t h e U.S. Forest Service where he spent many happy hours working with his son Peter r epairing h ik i n g tr ai l s , camp sites, and f ir e l o okouts. John accomplished much in his life, but when asked what his best accomplishment was h e n e ver h e sitated saying, " Moving t o America and becoming a U.S. citizen." John's appreciation of n a t ure, seeking adventure and meeting new friends, and living life to the fullest is his legacy. He will be deeply missed. John was predeceased by h is w i f e , Ma r g aret; h i s brother, Peter; his parents, Arthur and Emily; and his daughter-in-law, Mi c h e al. He is survived by hi s sisters, J oa n a n d B a r b a r a; three s o n s an d th ei r spouses, Jonathan (Mary), Paul, (Terry) and Peter; and four grandchildren, Christopher, K atharine, N i cholas and Zachary. A memorial w i l l b e a r ranged a n d not i f i c ation given at a later date.
Hamilton, drummer, was hard to classify
SALEM — GP S device maker Garmin AT Inc. announced Monday it will expand in Salem with the help of state incentives. The company, which designs and builds aircraft navigation equipment and runs a call center in Salem, said it plans to hire at least 65 new
employees. Garmin already has about 400 employees at two locations there.
mission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday
By Peter Keepnews Chico Hamilton, a drumm er an d b a n dleader w h o helped put California on the modern-jazz map in the 1950s and remained active into the 2lst century, died Nov. 25 in New York City. He was 92. His death was announced b y A p r i l Th i b eault, h i s publicist. Never among the f l ashiest or most muscular of jazz drummers, Hamilton had a subtle and melodic approach that made him ideally suited for the refined, understated style that came to be known a s cool jazz, of w h ich h i s hometown, Los Angeles, was the epicenter. He was a charter member of baritone saxophonist Gerry Mulligan's quartet, which helped lay the g roundwork for the cool movement. His own quintet, which he formed shortly after leaving the Mulligan group, came to be regarded asthe quintessence of cool. With its quiet intensity, its intricate arrangements and its uniquely pastel instrumentation of flute, guitar, cello, bass and drums, the Chico Hamilton Quintet became one of the most popular groups in jazz. The ensemble was a mainstay of t h e n i g htclub and jazz festival circuit and even appeared in movies. It was p rominently featured in t h e 1957 film "Sweet Smell of Success,"with Burt Lancaster and Tony Curtis. (One character in that movie, a guitarist played by Martin Milner, was a member of the Hamilton group on screen, miming to the playing of the quintet's real guitarist, John Pisano.) And it was seen in "Jazz on a Summer's Day," Bert Stern's acclaimed documentary about the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival. Cool jazz had fallen out of favor by the mid-1960s, but by then Hamilton had already altered the sound and style of his quintet, replacing the cellist with a trombonist and adopting a bluesier, more aggressive approach. In 1966, after more personnel changes and more shifts in audience tastes, Hamilton, no longer on top of the jazz world but increasingly interested in composing, disbanded the quintet and formed a company that provided music for television shows and commercials. But he continued to perform and record occasionally. And by the mid-1970s, he was once again on the road as a bandleader — full time. He was never again as big a star as he had been in the 1950s but he remained active for the rest of his life. And his music became increasingly difficult to categorize, incorporating elements offree jazz, fusion and other styles.
Noise Continued from B1 The pavement projectbetween Bend and Redmond was originally scheduled for 2015, but was moved up a year because of deteriorating road conditions on that stretch of the highway. "The pavement in this section of highway between Redmond and Bend is severely rutted and in poor condition," according to ODOT's permit application, increasing the likelihood of cars sliding
display ads vary; pleasecall
Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
geting a Sept. 15 completion date. During that time, trucks would be delivering material to and from the site. Heavy equipment like asphalt rollers and pavers would also be working. ODOT did similar work on the Bend Parkway in 2009, pouring new asphalt during the night to keep lanes open
during the day.
Deschutes County Community Development staff recently sent letters to the residents who could be impacted by the noise from night work, and hydroplaning in wet, icy senior planner Paul Blikstad conditions. said Monday. "We r eceived no c o m In addition to the asphalt work, ODOT crews are ex- ments" from those residents, pected to install new median Blikstad said. The proposbarriers around Deschutes al fo r n i gh t c o nstruction Market Road and Yew Ave- "doesn't appear to be contronue, and update some road versiaL" Just two people atSlgrls. tended Monday's public hearD avenport s ai d O D O T ing and neither spoke. likely wouldn't start the proj— Reporter:541-617-7820, ect until mid-to-late June, tareglucklich@bendbulletin.com
I
I
I
Publishing Wednesday, December 25, 2013 in The Bulletin Central Oregon communities continue to grow due to a nationallyrecognized appreciation for the region's quality of life. From providingthe most basic needs of food, shelter and security, to creating and maintaining positive social, educational, recreational and professionaL environments, Central Oregon's nonprofit community is a foundation for our area's success and sustainability.
Hundreds oforganizationsandthousandsofvolunteersmakeupthis nonprofit network. Through the publication of Connections, The Bulletin will both
defineand profile the organizations that make up this network. Connections wiLL provide readers with a thorough look at nonprofi t organizationsin Deschutes,Jeff erson,and Crook Counties.
SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 5 CALL 541.382.1811 To RESERVE YOUR SPACETODAY.
The Bulletin Serving CentralOregon since 1903
DEscHUTEs MEMQRIAL S41.382. S S92 ~e .
E pge ~zi ~ G M u i Z
Deschutes Memorial now displays obituaries on our website. Please go to www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com to leave condolence messages for the family and to learn about funeral/ memorial services.
ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS The Bulletin is in the process of verifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon. Please fill out this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail back to: The Bulletin, Attn: Kari Mauser, P.O.Box6020, Bend, OR97708.
E-mail information tokmauser©bendbulletin.com orcall 541-382-1 811 ext. 404
Nameof Nonprofit Group ContactPerson
publication. Deadlines for
services orabout the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Garmin executives s aid they'll b u ild a n e w 66,000-square-foot building near the company's existing property at the Salem airport, where they'll consolidate and expand their staff. The state lent Garmin $500,000 that will be forgiven if Garmin meets job-creation targets. The company must create at least 65 jobs at 150 percent of the statewide average wage and maintain the jobs for at least two years.
New York Times News Service
63875 N. HIGHWAY97 ' BEND
Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but
by families or funeral homes.
John Arthur Cecil passed away s u d denly on t he e vening of N o v ember 2 2 , 2013. He was 86 years old. Born July 13, 1927 in Brighton, Sussex, England, John lived a n ad v e n ture-filled life. J ohn a p prenticed as a p rinter a t the age of 1 4, w o r -
CHAPEL 4 GARDENs
Obituary policy followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted
The Associated Press
Spiegelman, Michel Foucault and Studs Terkel. Died Sunday in Paris. — From wire reports
BS
Phone
for details.
Nonprofit MissionStatement/Purpose FUNERALS ~ BURIALS ~ CREMATION
LOCALLY FAMILY OWNED 4 OPERATED Wehonor all pre-arranged plans including Neptune Society.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.
I
'
i
~
'
I
• gz
i I
•
W W W
gz
•
Today: A few early morning snow show-
Tonight: and cold
ers, then becoming
partly cloudy and cold
27 I0
10
C * S ~l I
WEST
39/30
Hillsboro
•
38/23
5aem I
•
2904
30/11
Camp Sherman
39/23
Yachats•
Redmp 25/3 SunriVer Bend 28/5
Eugene• ""'
45 m
240 3 Union 24ii2
8 IC CCity Baker
• Mitchell 24/ti
zwa
Partly to mostly cloudy with some morning snow south.
2U7
Day
26I9
25/9
«Paulina 25/7
•
EAST
Partly to mostly ntario cloudy with some 3302 morning snow Vale« 33/17 • south.
• John
Nyssa 32/1 9
Juntura
40/22
Coos Bay
26/8
• Bandon
Jl R Chemul+ JX
Roseburg
45/29
39/26
~ Port Orford
+25/fk + 4F Jk-
~I
• 45/28
J k Jk
Grants
3f IF
Jk- Jk -
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
• Jk Christmayn/agev+
silver3k'• 28/7 JIF JP JJF JP JIF Jk Lake; Jk- Jk- Jk- 34 JK- Jk JkJk Jk Jk 3 1 6
28/1 0
Frenchglen J on o
•
,
Rome
• 57« Ontario
Medford~
• 28'
" RF .IF I Fields• • vlalyl'aeh' JkJkJkXF«Lakeviewk8 "' JIF Jk-' 3203 + JKFallS32/10 Jk Jk 312702 Jk Jk IF aF RF %' JK "
~ Brppkjo s
Ashland ~
35/2 3
"
Q
Meacham
Jk 31 Mcoermitu;
'
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Vancouve
Yesterday's extremes
•
(in the 48 contiguous
2os I
Dryden,Texas • 90 Alamosa, Colo
Boise
12/3
Thunder Bay
' Halifax
18/12
Bismarck
BI — ""
st. Paul
'4 „
w8 Cheyenne
2«8/Q
w
' ~
M
'''~ /42«
+
'
44
•
'
' ' 3os
- Des Mom 5
~+ Vegas ffN , x $4 723 "f<~3 ue»« ~ i' x « x 4 «)9/5
« •
„
0/44i 4 4
'
• 6S/32 •
H AW A I I
mm
Chihuahua 73/51
os ps -os - os
80/65
Juneau 29/17
D
Continued from B1 Haynes was listed in critical condition, according to the news release. St. Charles B end s p okeswoman L i s a Goodman could neither confirm nor deny Haynes' conditioTT, citing federal health-privacy regulations. Police di d n o t in d i cate where or how m any t i mes Haynes was shot. Knapp was arrested and booked into t h e J e fferson C ounty jail, w h ere h e r e mained Monday evening.He was suspected of second- and third-degree assault and Unlawful use of a weapon. He is being held in lieu of posting 10 percent of $450,000 bail. The case is under investigation, according to Stanfill.
( 76/64 •
•
lando 7/57
70s
Sos
Mazatlan • 82 /69
• Miami 77/67
85/66Q
CONDITIONS .W+
FRONTS Cold
Madras
•
Monterrey
La Paz
Anchorag
2 ALASKA
g
63/54
.
Tijuana 64/s2
21/11
iladelphia 52/39
«
i Nashville II Phoenix Albuquerque O k lahoma City • 6 7/36 , ILittle Rock . 74/54 59/38 ' Blrmlnghatn2~ ~65/54 7O • Dallas c BtusgI 67/582~42~~,
~ CO
Sos -~
columbu ~
65/47 -I
, L.
Honolulu I«-S ~ 82/70 >~
: II
ton '• uBffal«M 4 4/3 2 42/34 b ew w York
• Lo uisville
QS xv 64/4
62/48
45/41 «ortland
w y " "- « ' " '« v" " "
Rwa,.dc,.+ 2osv
33/17
'+ + + + i ~
Brookings, Ore
CI"'bec'
Winnipe
I
Os Q
• 88'
• 1.30
38/29
5
Mostly sunny and not as cold
and cold
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
21 7
27 8
25 10
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunnsetoday...... 7:23 a.m Moon phases Sunset today...... 4:28 p.m Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:24 a.m Sunsettomorrow... 4:27 p.m Moonset today.... 5:38 p.m
F irst Full
L a st
•
•
Dec. 9 Dec. 17 Dec. 25 Jan. 1
PLANET WATCH
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....6.1 5a.m......3.45 p.m. Venus.....10;33 a.m...... 7:17 p.m. Mars......12:56 a.m...... 1:19 p.m. Jupiter......656 pm.....10:10 a.m. Satum......5:11 a.m...... 3:16 p.m. Uranus.....1:29 p.m......1:59 a.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low.............. 52/32 24 hours ending 4p.m.*. . 0.01" Recordhigh ...... 66in1972 Monthtodate. . 0.0 1 " Recordlow......... -2 in1985 Average month todate... 016" Average high.............. 41 Year to date............ 4.59" Average low............... 24 Average yearto date..... 9.32" Barometric pressureat 4 p.m29.90 Record 24 hours ...1.33 in 1980 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
OREGON CITIES
S K IREPORT
Y esterday Tuesday We d . The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing City Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W Hi / Lo/W the need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m. for solar at noon. Snow accumulation in inches Astoria ....... 47/39/0.15 ....39/30/s..... 36/27/s Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Baker City......47/29/0.06.....25/8/pc.......21/1/s Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0. . .no report L Brookings......52/46/1.30....49/32/pc.....49/30/pc Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Burns..........49/30/0.01 .....28/5/sn...... 22/-1/s 0 Mt.Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0., no report Eugene........ 54/39/0.61 ....41/22/pc......34/1 5/s Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 . . . . 2 5-36 Klamath Falls ...46/40/0.11 ....32/10/sn......28/2/pc M t. Hood Meadows...... . . . . . 3 . . . . . . . . 1 8 Lakeview.......46/37/0.00....27/12/sn..... 23/-1/pc Mt. Hood Ski Bowl..... . . . . . . 0.0. ..no report La Pine ........46/28/0.43.....25/3/sn.....20/-1/pc Snow levelandroadconditions representing condiTimberbne...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . . . . 20 at5p.m.yesterday.Key:TT.= Traction Tires. Warner Canyon...... . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Medford.......53/42/0.14....39/24/pc.....36/18/pc tions Newport.......50/41/0.83.....43/31/s......36/26/s Pass Conditions Willamette Pass ...... . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report North Bend.....54/46/0.80....46/29/pc.....42/26/pc 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit....... . Carry chains or T.Tires Ontario........ 57/35/0.02....33/1 7/pc......28/12/s 1-84 at Cabbage Hill...... . . . . . .Chains > 10,000 lbs. Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .19 22 Pendleton......50/35/0.08....32/11/pc......23/8/pc Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T.Tires Mammoth Mtn., California..... 0.0... . . .16-20 Park City, Utah ..... . . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 18 Portland .......51/41/004 ....37/24/s..... 32/21/s Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Prineville.......49/29/0.37....28/1 0/sn......21/4/pc Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T.Tires Squaw Valley, California....... 0.0... . . . . .1-8 Redmond.......47/29/0.21 .....28/5/pc......20/0/pc Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Sun Valley, Idaho...... . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .13-16 Roseburg.......45/42/0.06....39/26/pc.....34/21/pc Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake......Chains > 10,000 lbs. Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . .29-32 Salem.........53/41/0.38....40/22/pc......34/16/s Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . . . . 21 Sisters.........47/30/0.00.....25/3/sn......20/1/pc For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The Dalles......50/40/0.06....35/17/pc.....26/1 5/pc www.tnpcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:Wi weather,Pcp-precipitation,s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clouds, h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurnes,sn snow, i-ice, rs-ram-snow mix,w-wind, f-fog,dr-dnzzle,tr-trace
1
WOAD CONDITIONS
: +++ + • ++++
« 4 •
*
x 4 x
* +
W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from ST In August the Fishand Wildlife
Service proposedlisting thefrog as threatened under theEndangered Species Act, alTd the agency will take
*
4 4 4 « ** * * 3 8 4 4 i' * * * * *
'
+
F l urries Snow
Ice
Officials aresetto outline strategies for adopting recommendations provided in July by the South Deschutes/North Klamath Groundwater Protection Project
Steering Committee.TherecommendatiolTs are intended to protect
public commentatthemeetings.
groundwateraround LaPinefrom
Groundwater meeting Wednesday in LaPine
sanitation authorityand ongoing
The Oregon Department of EITvironmental Quality plans to hold a meeting Wednesday IITLaPine
to addressgroundwater nearthe
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/L0NI City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/yy Abilene,TX ......72/42/0.00..79/44/pc. 64737lpc GrandRapids....41/30/0.00..43/39lsh ..48731/rs RapidCity.......53/28/0.00...24/3/sn...11/-3/c Savannah.......68/49/0.00..70/55/pc. 71/59/pc Akron ..........40/32/0.00...46/41/c. 55/42/sh GreenBay.......38/28/0.00 .. 39/36/rs..39720/rs Reno...........63/30/0.00..32/15/sn.. 29/6/pc Seattle..........45/39/0.01...35/26ls.. 32/24/s Albany..........39/32/0.00..43/28/pc.43/33/pc Greensboro......59/30/0.00..59/43/pc.. 63/53/c Richmond.......59/30/0 00..57/41/pc. 61/52/pc Sioux Falls.......48/31/000..37/15/sn...18/2/sf NY....41/35/000..36/32/pc. 48/36/sh Spokane .......38/30/trace..27/13/pc... 19/9/s Albuquerque.....52/31/0.00..59/38/pc..52/36/c Harrisburg.......44/36/0.00..49/34/pc.50/44/pc Rochester Anchorage .......13/0/000 21/11/pc. 25/18/c Hartford,CT.....43/35/0.00..46/28/pc.46/36/pc Sacramento ...65/37/000.. 56/33/c 52/28/s Springfield MO ..60/42/0.00..66/39/pc. 46/27/pc Atlanta .........54/45/008..65/54/sh. 69/59/sh Helena..........42/17/016... 6/ 7/sn...7/ 11/c St Louis.........59/39/000...65/47/c .. 51/29/c Tampa..........70/57/000..77/63/pc. 82/65/pc AtlanticCity .....51/26/000..54/39/pc. 55/52/pc Honolulu........79/69/000..82/70/pc. 83/70/sh Salt Lake City....60/44/000 .. 34/23/sn.. 25/12/c Tucson..........72/44/000 .74/52/pc.. 64/47/c Austin..........81/50/000..83/59/pc. 78/60/pc Houston ........77/61/000..80/65/pc. 81/65/sh SanAntonio.....81/59/000 ..82/60/pc. 76/62/pc Tulsa...........59/45/000 ..69/34/pc. 45/25/pc Baltimore .......49/39/0.00 ..53/36/pc. 54/47/pc Huntsville.......58/47/0.18...63/Smc.69/56/sh SanDiego.......76/53/000..60/56/pc. 60/51/pc Washington,Dc..50/41/000 ..54/36/pc. 56/48/pc Billings .........48/32/0.51 .. 12/-3/sn...6/-9/sn Indianapolis .....48/34/0.00... 58/50/c. 60/37/sh SanFranosco....62/46/0.00..55/41/pc .. 51/40/s Wichta.........56/30/0.00..57/28/pc. 34/19/pc Birmingham.....56/48/0.20 ..67/58/sh. 72/62/sh Jackson,MS.....73/53/0.00..73/61/pc. 78/64/sh SanJose........64/42/0.00..54/36/pc .. 50/33/s Yakima.........46/34/0.16..32/11/pc... 25/5/s Bismarck........32/21/0.10... 23/3/sn....6/-7/c Jacksonvile......70/52/0.00..72/55/pc. 76/58/pc SantaFe........48/30/000 .. 52/29/pc.46/28lsn Yuma...........77/50/000 ..76/51/pc .. 62/45/c Boise...........56/35/0.04 ..33/17/pc .. 26/11/s Juneau..........29/15/000...29/17/s. 31/I7/pc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........41/37/000..44/32/sh . 46/37/pc Kansas City......57/36/0.00..65/32/pc. 37/22/pc Bridgepoit,CT....45736/0.00..48/33/pc. 49/42/pc Lansing.........40/29/0.00...42/39/c...49/31/r Amsterdam......32/30/0.00...36/33/c. 45/38/sh Mecca..........79/77/0.00...88/69/s .. 87/69/s Buffalo.........37/34/000...41/34/c. 50/37/sh LasVegas.......63/43/0.00..64/43/pc.48/33/pc Athens..........68/59/0 51..52/49/sh. 48/45/sh Mexico City......75/39/0 00..74/53/pc .. 73/46/s Burlington VT....3I29/000..39/25/pc. 38/35/pc Lexington.......56/35/0.00...62/52/c. 63/47/sh Auckland........72/57/000 ..70/62/sh...71/62/r Montreal........32/27/003...34725/c ..32/32/sf Caribou,ME.....32/22/0.12..33/29/pc.35/20/pc Lincoln..........65/24000...51/20/c.29/10/pc Baghdad........62/46/000 ..73/60/pc.. 63/54/c Moscow........19/18/000 ..27/25/sn. 31/28/sn Charleston,SC ...67/51/0 00..68/55/pc 70/59/pc Little Rock .... 65/51/0 00 68/59/pc.. 71/49/c Bangkok........73/70/000 ..85/69/pc. 86/68/pc Nairobi.........59/57/000 ..76/55/sh. 75/58/sh Charlotte........61/28/000..59/47/pc.64/51/pc LosAngeles..... 73/54/0 00 62/48/c. 61/45/pc Beijing..........39/277000..47/24lpc..47/21/c Nassau.........81/70/000..76/69/pc.76/71/pc Chattanooga.....54/45/0.08...64/53/c. 70/57/shLouisville........58/38/000...63/54/c. 63/45/sh Beirut..........68/66/000...72/62/c. 66/57/sh New Delhi.......57/52/000...78/57/s .. 78/55/s Cheyenne.......51/41/0.00...28/3/sn..5/-13/sn Madison,WI.....40/20/0.00..44/38/sh. 39/21/sh Berlin...........32/32/000..33/30/pc.34/30/sh Osaka..........46/37/000..54/46/pc.55747/pc Chicago.........44/29/0.00..50/44/sh. 50/27/sh Memphis........61/50/0.00...67/61/c. 71/47/sh Bogota .........64/52/0.01... 77/51/t...75/49/t Oslo............37/37/0.00... 34/25/c. 28/26/pc Cinonnati.......52/36/000...61/51/c. 66/45/sh iybam ..........77/66/0.00..77/67/pc. 79/70/pc Budapesl .......34/30/000...35/23/s .. 34/24/c Ottawa.........30/27/0.07...34/25/c..34/30/sf Cleveland.......42/34/0 00...46/43/c. 53/41/sh iyblwaukee......41/25/0.00..45/43/sh. 45/25/sh BuenosAires.....93/63/000... 71/52/s .. 87/53/s Pans............34/34/000... 31/28/c. 41/38/pc ColoradoSpnngs.58/39/0.00...42/6/pc..10/-1/sn iybuneapobs.....38/28/0.11.. 38/26/rs.. 28/9/sn CaboSanLucas ..86/66/000... 82/64/s .. 82/65/s Rio de Janeiro....86/75/000 ..87/71/sh.. 78/68/c ColumbiaMO...5273470 , 00..65/40/pc. 43/27/pc Nashville........56/47/000...65/57/c. 68/54/sh Cairo...........75/73/0.00... 87/66/c .. 79/58/s Rome...........52/52/0.00... 56/41/s .. 56/47/s Columbia, SC....62746/000..66/50/pc. 70/57/pc NewOrleans.....73/54/0.00 ..76/64/pc. 77/67/sh Calgary..........21/7/000... 5/2/sn....5/9/s Santiago........86/52/000...81/64ls.. 76/60/s Columbus, GA....63747/001..68/57/sh. 73/61/pc NewYork.......49/41/0 00..51/38/pc. 51/44/pc Cancun.........81/68/000 ..81/73/pc...83/78/t Sao Paulo.......86/68/000 ..83/63/sh.80/66/pc Columbus, OH....47/34/0.00 ..57749/sh. 62/46/sh Newark,NJ......51/38/0 00..51/36/pc. 52/44/pc Dublin..........46/41/000..47/37/sh .. 41/36/c Sapporo ........34/32/003 ..34/32/pc.36/28/lx Concord, NH.....39/33/0.00..43/23/sh. 42/2Ipc Norfolk,VA......54/32/0.00..57/40/pc. 63/52/pc Ediuburgh.......46/46/000 ..46/33/sh. 39/36/pc Seoul...........41/32/000...37/33/s.38/327pc Corpus Christi 78/55/000 82/66/pc 80/63/sh OklahomaCity.. 63/38/000 67/36/pc 43/26/pc Geneva.........27/25/000...40/22ls ..41/31/s Shanghai........52/45/000 ..60/48/pc. 60/48/pc DallasFtWorth...70/40/0 00.. 79/51/pc 62/36/pc Omaha.........56/30/0.00... 53/22/c. 27/11/pc Harare..........63/63/000...84757ls.86/62/pc Singapore.......79/7$/1 02...86/78/r. 87/77/sh Dayton.........47/33/0.00..58/50/sh. 63/42/sh Orlando.........73/62/000.. 77/57/pc. 81/60/pc HongKong......66/63/000...68/55/s .. 69/51/s Stockholm.......37/37/000 ..40/29/sh.. 32/29/s Denver..........62/33/0.00...39/5/pc..11/-3/sn PalmSprings.....75/49/000..66/47/pc.59/42/pc Istanbul.........50/48/0.00 ..43/39/sh.. 50/45/s Sydney..........77/63/0.00 86/50/pc. 88/50/sh DesMoines......54/34/0.00...53/32/c.35/14/pc Peoria..........45/33/0.00... 58/43/c..50/26/rs Jerusalem.......75/60/000 ..72/59/sh. 68/54/pc Taipei...........63/55/000...68/59/s. 67/57/pc Detroit..........40/31/0.00...43/41/c. 48/37/sh Philadelphia.....51/39/0.00 52/39/pc. .. 54/45/pc Johannesburg....75/58/276..73/56/sh .. 79/56/s TelAviv.........70/66/000..80/62/sh. 79/57/pc Duluth..........32/23/0.23..31/23/sn.. 25/7/sn Phoenix.........70/48/0.00..74/54/pc. 62/46/sh Lima ....... 75/64/0 00 . 72/64/c. 76/64/c Tokyo...........52/45/0.00 56/43/pc .. .. 55/46/s ElPaso..........67/32/0.00..71/51/pc.70/49/pc Pittsburgh.......46/37/000...49/42/c. 56/44/sh Lisbon..........57/41/0.00... 58/43/s .. 61/45/s Toronto.........36/34/0.00... 39/34/c ..43/39/rs 00....-1/ 6/c....3/ 9/s Portland,ME.....37/33/0.01..44/31/sh. 44/31/pc London.........43/43/000...38/36/c.. 41/33/c Vancouver.......43/37/000...38/29/s. 34/21/pc Fairbanks...... -16/ 24/0 Fargo...........31/28/026..29/12/sn..13/ 3/sn Providence......44/36/0.00..45/29/sh. 47/36/pc Madrid.........30/30/0.00 ..50/42/pc.. 57/43/s Vienna..........30/27/0.00..32/26/pc.. 34/30/c Flagstaff ... 60/20/0 00..42/25/pc. 31/14/sn Raleigh .........60/36/0.00..59/43/pc. 64/54/pc Manila..........81/77/0.11 ..83/73/pc. 84/73/pc Warsaw.........25/25/0.00..34/29/pc.. 33/29/c
•
.
— Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletirt/com
•
•
•
residential septic system contamIITatioit and include establishing a monitoring. The meeting is set for 6:30 p.m. W ednesday attheLa Pine High School auditorium, 51633 Coach
Road. — Bulletin staffreports
town south of Bend.
Premier Retirement L//eary/ea
1010 NE Purcell Blvd. Bend, OR 97701
cfIAMiPABNE
Continued from B1 Several law e n forcement agencies in Central Oregon currentlyhave employees on paid a d ministrative l e ave. Bend Police Officer E r i ck Supplee is on p aid administrative leave during an inv estigation into his r ole i n a fatal shooting last month. Prineville Police Chief Eric BuSh iS OTL Paid adminiStrative leave during an investigation into his conduct and former D e schutes C ounty Sheriff's Capt. Mike Espinoza resigned his position in November. An internal investigation is underway relating to Espinoza's resignation.
and cold
20 5
— Reporter: 541-383-0376, sfeiitg@bendbulfetin/oom
Police
Mostly sunny
JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
-20I gl0~gO I $105( /20Sf (30s/ (405/ So~ 60s 70s $805( /gos(f100$ QOI
-40S (-30s
«$4
HIGH LOW
Moonrisetoday.... 7:57 a.m
CENTRAL
18/6
• Prilteville zai0
44I3i
Florence•
• Madras
Ente rpris • 21/6
Jose osep
Gramte
%•
Warm Springs•
41/22
•
La Grande•
23/9 —-
willowdale
• Meacham 19/6
• 23/11 ondon
•
28/I 1
Alb ""
43/31
32ni
Ruggs
Maupin
40/22•
Newnpyt •
«Wksco 28/1 2
Government Camp 20/12g
•
Bi
•
Sa n dy 3709
McMinnvige
Lincoln City 42/30
37/24
'
I
30/1 5
RiVer The
41/32
Becoming sunny to partly cloudy and cold.
Umatilla
Hood
Seaside« 40/31 •«Cannon Beach
40/27
Mostly sunny
BEND ALMANAC
,Astoria
Tillamook•
Mostly sunny and cold
Partly cloudy
4
CHAMPAGNE DINNER
Thursday December 5th, 2013
at Broken Top Club
Pf, '
THURSDAY DEC. 19, 2013 5:80 C ocktail s
2:00 to 4:00 PM
6:80 D i n n e r Happy IIoiidays.f
•
•
•
•
«
•
Where Buyers And
Sellers Meet 1000's Of Ads Every Day
•
Seating is li/ni/ed v/r NNVI I IJy phone olzfonfinr Iodny!
ww«.Le«abuu«u««om
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
One table top item per household, must be placed between 1:30and 2:00 pm. For information Call
J oin us in ou r l , o u nge or Aw ar d Winning Restaur ant .' es auran ours: e ltes ay- a ur ay : am - : pm Breakfast served Saturday 7:00am - 2:00pm
5 41-385-85 0 0
Opeguoday +: 0 0a~ : 00pm,~g nqe~ r ' 62000 Broken Top Dr. • 541>383-8200
t laSBtftf:dS
•
www.brokentop.uom I«
n
IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S W Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2
NHL, C3 NFL, C3
NBA, C3
College basketball, C3 O< www.bendbulletin.comisports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2013
PREP FOOTBALL
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL: BIG SCHOOL PREVIEW
Ravens sweep district honors
Summit hungry for more after a breakout season
The Ridgeview Ra-
vens, Class 4Afootball statechampions, have
swept the top postseason honors in 4ASpecial District 1.
Junior running back Tanner Stevens, who
Ill
w
rushed for more than 1,110 yards during and scored a total of 10 touchdowns, was
named the league's offensive player of the
year. ColemanAamodt, a senior linebacker who logged 86 tackles to go along with five sacks,
was the SD1defensive player of the year. The the year. Crook County, the
Inside
The Bulletin
• A breakdown of all big schools, C4
By Ryan Cruz's estimation, in the three or four years leading up to last season, Summit struggled to close out games. Painfully often, the Storm would find themselves in a closely contested battle, only to come up short on the scoreboard. Not last season. Despite a lack of size — no player on the Storm's 2012-13 girls basketball roster stood taller than 5 feet 9 inches — Summit reeled off 18 wins,
the regular season
Ravens' Andy Codding was tabbed the coachof
By Grant Lucas
Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
Summit sophomore Sarah Heinly, middle, is flanked by seniors Raja Char, left, and Emily Hasenoehrl in a quest for post season success.
posting an 11-3 record in games decided by fewer than 10 points. It was their execution late in games
that helped the Storm post the second-most wins in program history. "That was a difference-maker for us last year," says Cruz, the sixthyear Summit coach. "Our girls believed that those last two minutes of the game, we were going to win. We won a lot of those games. If we can continue to have that mindset this year ... I think there's going to be a lot of close games, but it's going to be whether or not we make the right decisions down the stretch." See Summit i C4
only other team in the two-team district,
placed eight players on the offensive and defensive first teams. Collbran Meeker highlighted the Cowboys' selections, as the junior
PREP SPORTS
was a first-team running back as well as a first-
team cornerback.
i > LW ) ]
In the 4A Tri-Valley
Conference, Madras running back Jered
~WI.
Pichette was named to the all-league first
team after averaging 104.6 rushing yards per
game during the regular season and scoring a total of six touchdowns. White Buffaloes wideout
7
Devon Wolfe was a first-team selection on
offense, andVernon Jackson-Smith (defensive line) andEthan Short (linebacker) were named to the defensive first team.
Four Sisters players were second-team selections for the 4A Sky-Em League:Logan Schutte at running back,
Lane Gladden atwideout, Lane Adams at of-
fensive guard andNate Kaping at linebacker.
Matthew Aimonetti / For The Bulletin
Ridgeview players celebrate winning the Class 4A football state championship this past Saturday in Hillsboro. State title celebrations happened at a high rate for Central Oregon teams this fall.
Complete all-SD1
teams can befound in Scoreboard, C2. — Bulletin staff report
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
ASU coach picked best by Pac-12
• Central Oregonhadits best fall seasonwith seven state champions
SAN FRANCISCO-
Todd Grahamhas won Pac-12 Coach of the Year after leading No. 11 Arizona State to a10-2 record and the Pac-12
idgeview's Jacob Johnson struggled to find w ords. There was no describing his emotions, or this moment in which he an d th e Ravens found themselves on Saturday afternoon. Less than 30 minutes earlier, Ridgeview defensive back George Mendazona grabbed the Ravens' fifth interception of the day, and the sophomore returned it 99 yards for a touchdown, sealing Ridgeview's 50-31 win over
championshi pgame against seventh-ranked Stanford.
The leaguealso announced Mondaythat Arizona running back
Ka'DeemCarey is the offensive player of the year and SunDevils defensive tackle Will Sutton is the defensive
Soon after, Ridgeview's Boomer Fleming led a charge into the GRANT southeast end zone, where he LUCAS was rushed by t eammates, a 20-some-player dog pile forming with Fleming somewhere at the Cottage Grove in the Class 4A bottom. football state championship at This was the Ravens' first state Hillsboro Stadium. title, in any team sport. And that Ravens coach Andy Codding scene at Hillsboro Stadium was was doused on th e sidelines, a common sight when it came to Johnson being one of the players Central Oregon prep sports this upending the water cooler over fall. the team's second-year coach. See Champions /C3
Fall 2013 OSAA
state champions FROM CENTRAL OREGON Summit girls cross-country Summit boys cross-country Crook County volleyball Summit girls soccer
Summit boys soccer Sisters boys soccer Ridgeview football *Non-OSAAchampion:OHSWP
Mountain View boyswater polo
player of the year. UCLA running back
and linebacker Myles Jack won both freshman
WINTER SPORTS
offensive anddefensive player of the year awards. It's the first time since the awards were introduced in 2008 that a player has won both. Arizona State hosts Stanford in the Pac-12 title game Saturday night. For a complete list
ofleague honors,see Scoreboard, C2. — The Associated Press
NBA
Blazers get big win over Pacers LaMarcus Aldridge leads Portland to a 106-102 victory over the team with the best record in the NBA, C3
n the hafpipe with the undude By John Branch New York Times News Service
RENO, Nev. — The light from the Monster Energy refrigerator, squatting on the floor below the framed wedding photos and X Games gold medals, cast a steady glow in the living room. The Smith Optics sunglasses come in handy in the high-desert autumn sun, just as they will in the snow-blinding mountains of winter. Pairs of 4Frnt skis stood in various corners of the house, awaiting deployment. Among David Wise's sponsor-gifted goodies, however, none might prove as useful as Pampers. The promised supply from Procter & Gamble was expected anytime. Until then, Wise and his wife, Alexandra, were stuck buying diapers by the boxful at Costco for their 2-year-old daughter, Nayeli, a chatterbox in
pigtails. "No, they didn't come today," Alexandra
said when Wise arrived home one recent afternoon. Freestyle skiing in the halfpipe will make its Olympic debut in Sochi, Russia, in February, and Wise is a gold-medal favorite, a twoplanked version of the snowboarder Shaun White. Mainstream audiences await, but Wise — married at 20, now a family man raising a toddler at 23 — has long stood out for more than his acrobatic accomplishments. Many snowboard and freestyle contestants seem molded from the same assembly line, models of branded dishevelment marketed as easygoing and athletic slackers, usually longhaired and clothed in flannel, like guitarists from a jam band enjoying a day in the snow. In the niche of the action-sports world that he now dominates, Wise is counterculture to the counterculture. He is the undude. See Undude /C4
David Calvert/The New York Times
David Wise, a freestyle skier who is a gold-medal favorite for the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, with his wife, Alexandra, and daughter, Nayeli, in Reno in November. David Wise has stood out in the niche of action sports for being well grounded in a business where many snowboard and freestyle contestants are marketed as easygoing and athletic slackers.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY BASKETBALL
Time
Men's college, Indiana atSyracuse Men's college, lllinois at GeorgiaTech Men's college, PennState at Pittsburgh Men's college, TexasTechatArizona Men's college, Michigan at Duke
4:15 p.m. 4:15 p.m.
Men's college, Notre Dame at lowa Men's college, Florida State at Minnesota Men's college, UC Santa Barbara at UCLA HOCKEY NHL, Dallas at Chicago SOCCER English Premier League, Crystal Palace FC vs West Ham United FC
4:30 p.m. 6 p.m. 6:15 p.m. 6:15 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
8 p.m.
TV/Radio ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU Pac-12 ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU Pac-12
5 p.m.
NBCSN
noon
NBCSN
WEDNESDAY BASKETBALL
Time
Men's college, Maryland at OhioState Men's college, Wisconsin at Virginia
4 p.m. 4 p.m.
Men's college, Northwestern at N.C. State Men's college, Pennsylvania at Villanova
TV/Radio ESPN ESPN2 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5 p.m. Fox Sports 1
Men's college, North Carolina at Michigan State
Men's college, Boston College at Purdue
6 p.m. 6 p.m.
ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU BlazerNet
Men's college, Miami at Nebraska NBA, Oklahoma City at Portland GOLF
6:30 p.m. 7 p.m.
European PGATour, HongKongOpen
9 p.m.
Golf
HOCKEY NHL, Philadelphia at Detroit SOCCER
5 p.m.
NBCSN
noon
NBCSN
English Premier League, Manchester United FC vs Everton FC
Listingsare the mostaccurateavai/ab/e. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechanges made by TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL SarkiSian aCCePtS USC jod —Washington's Steve Sarkisian has accepted the Southern California coaching Iob, aperson familiar with the decision told TheAssociated Press. The person spoke Monday on condition of anonymity because no official announcement had been made by either school. Sarkisian is a former USC assistant
under PeteCarroll and hasbeenat Washington for five seasons, going 34-29 in Seattle. He will be the permanent replacement for Lane Kjffjn, who was fired after five games this season and replaced on an
interim basis by EdOrgeron. Orgeron resigned Monday. It's unclear who will coach the Trojans in their bowl game later this month, but it could be Sarkisian. The Trojans went 6-2 under Orgeron, with losses
to rivals Notre Dameand UCLA. NFL StateS OffiCialS erred ln game —The NFLsays Sunday night's officiating crew should havestopped play andeliminated confusion about the down and distance at the end of the New York Giants' 24-17 victory at Washington. A 4-yard completion to the
Redskins' Pierre Garconwas spotted short of a first down. Referee Jeff Triplette signaled third down. But the head linesman, with Wash-
ington in a hurry-up offense, incorrectly motioned for the crew to advance the chains, which causedthe down boxes to read first down. League officiating director Dean Blandino said Monday in a statement that "in this situation where there is obvious confusion as to the sta-
tus of the down, play should havebeenstopped prior to third down and the correct down communicated to both clubs. This should have occurred regardless of the fact that Washington had no timeouts and it was inside two minutes."
BASEBALL A'S CIOSing ln OR deal fOr lefty KBZmlr —A person with knowledge of the negotiations says free-agent left-hander Scott Kazmir is closing in on a $22 million, two-year contract with the Oakland Athletics. The new contract would be pending a physical. The
person spoke oncondition of anonymity Monday because theteam hadn't finalized the deal or formally announced interest in Kazmir. The 29-year-old Kazmir went10-9 with a 4.04 ERA in 29 starts and158
innings last season for the Cleveland lndians. It marked his return to the big leagues for the first time since making one poor outing for the Angels in 2011, which followed a 9-15 performance in 2010 for Los
Angeles. Ryan, YankeeS agree tO COntraCt —Intielder Brendan Ryan has agreed to a two-year contract to remain with the New York Yankees in a deal that includes a mutual option for 2016.
The 31-year-old was acquired from Seattle on Sept. 10, a day before the Yankees said captain Derek Jeter would be sidelined for the rest of the season. Ryan hit.220 with one homer in 17 games and finished the season with a.197 average, four homers and 22 RBls.
TigerS trade RHP FlSter to NatlOnalS far 3 PlayerS — The Detroit Tigers traded right-hander DougFister to the Washington Nationals for three players Monday night, opening a spot in their rotation
andperhapssavingsome money tokeepMaxScherzerbeyondnext season. Detroit received infielder Steve Lombardozzi, minor league lefty Robbie Ray and reliever lan Krol for Fister, a14-game winner for
the AL Central champions. PirateS PrOSPeCt ChamderS dieS at 24 —Pittsburgh Pirates minor league prospect EvanChambers died in his sleep over the weekend. He was 24. Pirates general manager Neal Huntington had no additional details, but he said in a statement the team was
"shocked"and "saddened"byChambers'passing.Athird-round draft pick in 2009, Chambers spent five years in the team's minor league system. The outfielder moved up to Double-A Altoona in 2012. Chambers spent most of the 2013 season dealing with a foot injury
and played in just four gamesfor the team's Gulf Coast League affjljate as part of a rehab assignment.
HOCKEY U.S. HockeyHall of Fameinducts Weight andGuerin — Doug Weight recalls his father putting him on skates at the age of 2 because he could barely walk due to a childhood condition that rel-
egated him to wearing braces onhis legs. Four decadeslater, Weight was inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame. The two-time Stanley Cup champion, three-time Olympian and four-time NHL All-Star was inducted Monday night at the Motor City Casino in Detroit. Weight says it was icing on the cake to share the honor with former team-
mate Bill Guerin, a StanleyCupchampion, three-time Olympian and four-time All-Star. Carolina Hurricanes ownerPeter Karmanos, former college coachRonMason and Cindy Curley, one of the pioneers inwomen'shockey,alsowereinducted. — From wire reports
ON DECK Wednesday Boys basketball:Grants PassatBend,6 p.m.;Crook CountyatBurns,7p.m. Girls basketball: Bend atGrants Pass, 6p.m.; Burns at CrookCounty,7p.m. Thursday Swimming: SistersatMadras,4:45p.m. Friday Boys basketball: MountainViewat Red LionClassic in Pendleton,TBD;Redmond at Sweet Home, 7 p.m.; Madras at CrookCounty, 7 p.m.; La Pine at La Pine Tournament, TBD;Central Christian vs. Gilchrist atGilchrist Tournam ent, 8 p.m.; Culverat Sherman Invitational, 3 p.m. Girls basketball: Summit at AlohaTournam ent, TBA; Bendat Springfield, 7 p.m.; MountainView vs. Clarkston(Wash.) at Red LionClassic inPendleton, 2:30p.m.;Redmondat Sweet Home, 5:30 pm.; LaPinevs LostRiveratLaPine Tournament, 6:30 p.m.;CrookCounty at Madras, 7p.m.; Trinity Lutheran vs. Mt. Rainier Lutheran(Wash.) at Saints Pride Lutheran Tournament at Seattle Lutheran,3 pmJ Culvervs. Weston-McEwen at ShermanInvitationa,3:30p.m.;Central Christianvs. Grlchrist at GilchristTournam ent, 6:30 p.m.
PREP SPORTS Football Class 4A Special District1 AH-League Offensive player of the year —TannerStevens, jr Ridgeview Defensive player oftheyear —ColemanAamodt, sr., Ridgeview Coach of theyear —AndyCodding, Ridgeview First team offense — JacobJohnson,jr., QB, Ridgeview;BoomerFleming, sr., RB,Ridgeview; CogbranMeeker, jr., RB, Crook County;Cole Johns, sr.,FB,Ridgeview;Jack Bowman,sr.,WR, Ridgeview;ReeceRollins, sr.,TE,Ridgeview, Tanner Stevens, jr., ATH,Ridgeview; ChrisSteffey,so., DL, Ridgeview;.SamHester, sr., OL,Ridgeview; Tim Lieberenz, sr., OL,Ridgeview;JasonWiliams, sr., OL,CrookCounty; Trevor Rassmussen,jr., OL, CrookCounty. First team defense —SamHester, sr, Dl., Ridgeview; Pheland Lund,sr.,DL,Ridgeview;Gunnar Robirts, jr., DL, CrookCounty; SethFlegel, sr., DL,CrookCounty; ColemanAamodt, sr., ILB, Ridgeview; TyHovey,sr., ILB, Ridgeview;Zach Smith, Ir., ILBCrookCounty; ColtonJolley, Ir., OLB,Ridgeview;ClarkWoodward, jr., OLB,Crook County;GeorgeMendazona,so., CB,Ridgeview, CoUbranMeeker,jr., CB, Crook County;Jack Bowman, sr., S, Ridgeview;Trayton Libolt, jr., S, CrookCounty First team specialists — CalvinRodman, sr., K, Ridgeview.
Honorable mention offense —Austin Alexander, so., QB,Molal a Michael Duarte, jr., QB,LaSalle; PaytonDobbs,sr., WR,Molala; CodyShepherd, jr., TE,Madras;Alex Keeth, sr., OT,Estacada;Luke Youngberg,sr, OT,Estacada;JordanKendag, jr, OT,NorthMarion;Rafael Saldivar, so., OG,North Marion; NickFilaroski, sr.,OG,Estacada; Osvaldo Galvan, jr., OG,Madras;Phillip Cipolla, sr., C, Estacada Honorable mention defense — Trask Telesmanich, jr., DL,Gladstone, CodyKibbons, jr., DL, Molaga;Wyatt Douglas, jr., DL, Molala; Cody Shepherd,jr., LB,Madras;AnthonyRose, sr., DB, La Salle;EricProm,jr., DB,Gladstone.
Betting line
Polls Women's APTop25 The top25teamsin TheAssociated Press'women's collegebasketball poll withfirst-placevotesin parentheses,recordsthrough Dec.1, total points basedon 25 pointstor atirst-placevotethrough onepoint tora 25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking: Record Pls Pr v
1. Uconn(36) 2 Duke 3.Tennessee 4 NotreDame 5. Kentucky 6. Stanford
9-0
8-0 7-0 6-0 8-0 7-1 7-1 7-1 6-0 5-1 6-0
900 8 64 80 7 76 9 75 2 7 37 67 5 6 50 6 42 5 28 4 80
1
2 3 5 7 6 4 8 9 13 14
NFL 7. Louisvile (Home teams inCAPS) 8. Maryland Favorite Opening Current Underdog 9 Baylor NFL Thursday 10.PennSt. Texans 2.5 3 JAGUAR S 11. Colorado NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE Sunday 12. SouthCarolina 7 - 0 442 17 AU TimesPST Chiefs 3 3 REDSKINS 13. LSU 6-1 4 41 15 RAVENS 7 7 Vikings 14. Oklahoma St. 7 0370 19 AMERICAN CONFERE NCE P ATRIOTS N L N L Browns 15. Nebraska 6-1 3 3 0 10 East JETS 3 2.5 Raiders 16. Purdue 5-1 2 9 3 16 W L T Pct PF PA 5.5 Colts 17. Oklahoma 4-2 2 90 18 NewEngland 9 3 0 .750 322 261 BENGALS 5 NL NL Panthers 18 NorthCarolina 62 283 11 Miami 6 6 0 .500 252 248 SAINTS E AGLES 3 3 Lions 8-0 2 8 0 22 19. Georgia N.Y.Jets 5 7 0 .417 189 310 S TEELERS 3.5 3 Dolphins 6-0 2 4 9 23 20.lowa St. Buffalo 4 8 0 333 267 307 BUCCAN EERS 2.5 2.5 Bigs 21. Calrlornia 5-2 2 1 6 20 South 12 . 5 Titans 22. Syracuse 8 -0 13 2 W L T Pct PF PA B RONCOS 12.5 6.5 Rams 23.TexasA8M 4-2 131 12 Indianapolis 8 4 0 .667 285 274 CARDINALS 6 5 C HARG ERS 3 3 Giants 4-1 1 25 24 24.Gonzaga Tennessee 5 7 0 .417 264 267 NL NL Seahawks 25.lowa 8-1 93 Jacksonvile 3 9 0 250 174 352 49ERS NL Falcons Othersreceivingvotes: MichiganSt.88,Florida St. Houston 2 10 0 .167 230 323 PACKERS N L Monday 33, ArizonaSt. 31, Texas 19,Arkansas10, Marquete North B EARS N L N L Cowboys 9, West Virginia 8,GeorgiaTech6, UTEP6, NorthW L T Pct PF PA western5, MiddleTennessee2, SanDiego2, BYU1, Cincinnati 8 4 0 667 292 216 College BowlingGreen1 Baltimore 6 6 0 500 249 235 Thursday Pittsburgh 5 7 0 .417 263 278 Louisville 3 5 . 3.5 C IN CINNATI Cleveland 4 8 0 .333 231 297 HOCKEY Friday West MAC Championship W L T P c t PF PA 3 3 B o w l ing Green NHL Denver 1 0 2 0 8 3 3464 317 Saturday KansasCity 9 3 0 . 7 50298 214 NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE IJCONN P K P K Me mp h is SanDiego 5 7 0 . 4 17279 277 AH TimesPST 6 S. Flo r ida Oakland 4 8 0 33 3 237 300 RUTGERS 7 B AYLOR 1 3. 5 13. 5 Texas NATIO NAL CONFERE NCE Eastern Conference IJL-Lafayette 2 2 S. AL ABAMA East Atlantic Division C. Florida N L NL SMU W L T Pct PF P A OKLAHOMAST 10.5 10.5 Oklahoma GP W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 7 5 0 583 329 303 Boston 2 7 18 7 2 3 8 75 55 Confere nceUSAChampionship Philadelphia 7 5 0 .583 300 281 Marshall 2 8 16 9 3 3 5 76 59 55. 5.5 RICE Montreal N.Y.Giants 5 7 0 .417 237 297 Detroit 28 14 7 7 35 78 73 SEC Championship Washington 3 9 0 .250 269 362 A uburn T ampa B a y 26 16 9 1 33 76 66 1.5 2 Missou ri South Toronto 2 7 14 10 3 3 1 75 73 ACCChampionship W L T Pct PF PA F lorida St 28 5 2 7 10 13 4 2 4 78 90 29. 5 Duke Ottawa NewOrleans 9 3 0 750 312 230 Florida 2 7 7 1 5 5 1 9 59 91 Pac-12 Championship Carolina 9 3 0 .750 285 157 ARIZONA Buffal o 2 8 6 2 0 2 1 4 48 85 ST 3.5 3 Stanf o rd TampaBay 3 9 0 .250 217 285 Metropolitan Division Big 10 Championship Atlanta 3 9 0 .250 261 340 Ohio St GP W L OT Pts GF GA 5.5 5.5 Mic h igan St North Pittsburgh 2 8 1 8 9 1 37 86 64 Mountain WestChampionship W L T Pct PF PA FRESNO W ashi n gton 27 14 11 2 3 0 82 78 ST 3.5 3.5 UtahSt
FOOTBALL
5 0 583 326 287 6 0 500 323 332 6 1 .458 294 305 Class 4A 8 1 .292 289 366 Sky-EmConferenceAH-League West Offensive player of the year —ScottyHitner, sr., W L T Pct PF PA CottageGrove x-Seattle 11 1 0 .917 340 186 Defensive player of the year — BoHighburger, SanFrancisco 8 4 0 667 297 197 sr., Elmira Arizona 7 5 0 .583 275 247 Coach ofthe year —GaryRoberts, CotageGrove St. Louis 5 7 0 .417 279 278 First team offense — Scotty Hitner, sr., QB, x-clinchedpayofs pot
CottageGrove;Bo Highburger, sr., RB, Elmira; BrandonBoxberger, sr., RB,Cotage Grove; Bryon Brown,jr., RB,Junction City;BradBonds, sr., WR, Cottage Grove; MalikRichardson,jr., WR,Cottage Grove;Austin Rice,sr., WR,Sweet Home; Oscar Rauda,sr., SR,Cotage Grove;Garrett Bryant, sr., TE, Elmira;ZaneWardwel, jr., OT, Elmira;Tyler Lehman,sr., OT,CottageGrove; JeffersonPhemister,sr., DG,Cotage Grove;Austin Horner,sr., OG,SweetHome; NathanParsons,sr., C,Cotage Grove. First team defense — ZaneWardwell, jr., DL, Elmira,BenTerry,sr., DL,Sweet Home; Tyler Lehman, sr.,DL,CottageGrove; NathanParsons, sr., DL, Cottage Grove;BoHighburger, sr., LB,Elmira; Matt Engholmjr., , LB, Elmira; AustinHorner, sr., LB,SweetHome,Brandon Boxberger, sr., LB, CottageGrove; Hunter Jutte, jr., DB,Sweet Home; BryonBrown,jr., DB,Junction City; OscarRauda, sr., DB,CottageGrove; BradBonds, sr., DB,CottageGrove. First team specialists — Brad Bonds, sr., K, Cottage Gorve;HunterJutte, jr., P,Sweet Home; Brad Bonds,sr., R,CottageGrove; BryonBrown,jr., R, JunctionCity. Second team offense —MikeyLangner, jr., QB, Elmira;ColeHorner, sr., QB,Sweet Home; Taj Wilson, jr.,RB,Emira; BradleySilver,sr., RB,Junction City; LoganSchute, so.,RB,Sisters; DrewPedder, jr. WR, Elmira;Eric Flierl, sr., WR,Sweet Home, LaneGladden,jr., WR,Sisters; HunterJutte, jr., SR, SweetHome;BrycenMitten, jr., TE,Sweet Home; Troy Hazelton,sr., OT,Sweet Home; LaneAdams, sr., OT, Sisters; Matt Engholmjr., , OG, Elmira; BenTerry,sr., OG,Sweet Home; CugynBlum, jr.,
Young,LB,sr., ArizonaStc Dion Bailey, DB,jr., USC; OsahonIrabor,DB,sr, ArizonaSt.; MarcusPeters, DB, soph. ,Washington;RashaadReynolds,DB,sr.,Oregon St. First TeamSpecialists Zane Gonzalez,PK, frosh., ArizonaState; Tom Hackett, P, soph., Utah;TyMontgomery, RS,jr., Stanford; Soma Vainuku, ST,soph., USC SecondTeamSpecialits Vincenzo D'Amato, PK, sr., California; Travis Coons,P,sr., Washington; NelsonAgholor, RS,soph., UCS,ErickDargan,ST, jr., Oregon.
Detroit
Chicago GreenBay Minnesota
7 6 5 3
Monday's Game Seattle34, NewOrleans7 Thursday's Game HoustonatJacksonvile, 5:25p.m.
Sunday'sGames
AtlantaatGreenBay, 10am. MinnesotaatBaltimore,10 a.m. KansasCityat Washington,10 am. Buffalo atTampaBay,10am. Miami atPittsburgh, 10a.m. Detroit atPhiladelphia,10a.m. IndianapolisatCincinnati,10 a.m. CevelandatNew England,10a.m. OaklandatN.Y.Jets,10a.m. Tennessee at Denver,1:05 p.m. Seattle atSanFrancisco,1:25 p.m. N.Y.GiantsatSanDiego, I:25 p.m. St. LouisatArizona,1.25 p.m. Carolina atNewOrleans, 5:30p.m.
Monday,Dec. 9
Dallas atChicago,5:40p.m.
Monday's Summary
BASKETBALL Men's college Monday's Games East Boston U. 69, Quinnipiac66 Uconn65,Florida64 IJMBC64, Md.-EasternShore59 WestVirginia96, Loyola(Md.)47 South Georgia87,Chattanooga56 MoreheadSt.74,Wright St.69 North Florida90,Edward Waters68 SouthAlabama91,Spring Hil 41 Troy 73,AlcornSt. 70,20T Midwest BowingGreen74,WKentucky62 lowa St.99,Auburn70 N. DakotaSt.86, Valley City St.43
SIU-Edwardsville55,Texas-PanAmerican 49 SouthDakota71, UtahValley 67 Southwest Arkansas St. 86,Niagara61 Oklahoma 96,Mercer82 SMU88,McNeeseSt. 59 Texas 70, Vanderbilt 64 Far West California73,UCIrvine 56 LoyolaMarymount73, UcRiverside69 Seattle 77,UCDavis 53 Wyoming 79, BlackHils St. 65
Polls AP Top25 The top25teamsinTheAssociated Press' college basketbalpoll, l with tirst-placevotesin parentheses, New Orleans 0 7 0 0 — 7 records throughDec. 1, total points basedon 25 Seattle 1710 7 0 — 3 4 points for a tirst-place votethrough onepoint for a First Quarter 25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking: Sea FG Hauschka 26,747 R ecord Pts Pr v Sea —Bennet 22 fumbe return (Hauschkakick), 1. Michigan St. (63) 7- 0 1, 6 2 3 1 6:27. 2. Arizona (2 ) 7-0 1,5 4 7 4 Sea —Miller 2 passfromWilson (Hauschkakick), 3. Kentucky 7-1 1 , 473 3 1:55. 4. Syracuse 7-0 1 , 375 8 C, Elmira Second Quarter 5. OhioSt 6-0 1 , 34 0 7 Second teamdefense —TroyHazelton, sr, DL, NO — G ra ham 2 pass from Brees (Hartl e y ki c k), 6. Kansas 6-1 1 , 240 2 SweetHome;DesmondWalker, sr., DL,Junction 8.45. 7. Loui s ville 6-1 1 , 13 9 9 City; MarcusBailey,sr., DL,CottageGrove,Brad Sea—FGHauschka20,3:41. 8. Wisconsin 8-0 1 , 094 10 Geisler,so., DL,CottageGrove; Cole Horner,sr., Sea — B a ld wi n 4 pass from Wi l s on (Hauschka 9. Oklahoma St. 7-1 1 , 070 5 LB, SweetHome;BradleySilver, sr., LB,Junction kick),:13. 10. Duke 6-2 1 , 021 6 Crty; Nate Kaping, sr., LB,Sisters; DarrenVoigt, sr., Third Quarter 11. Wi c hita St. 8-0 91 12 LB, CottageGrove; Russell Grzeczkewski, jr., DB, Sea—Coleman 8 pass fromWilson (Hauschka 12. Uconn 7-0 8 36 13 Elmira;Austin Rice,sr., DB,SweetHome; RyanAd13 Oregon 7-0 8 01 14 ams, jr., DB, Sweet Home; Malachi Ward, sr., DB, kick), 7.07. AM8,387 14.Viganova 7 -0 78 5 JunctionCity. 15. Florida 6-1 7 8 5 15 Second teamspecialists — BradleySilver, sr., K, NO S e a 16. Memphis 5-1 7 84 21 JunctionCity OscarRauda,sr., P,CottageGrove, 12 23 17. IowaSt. 5-0 62 3 17 HunterJutte, jr., R,Sweet Home; Oscar Rauda, sr., First downs Total Net Ya rd s 1 88 42 9 18. IJCLA 7-0 548 19 R, CottageGrove 17-44 38-127 Rushes-yards 19. Gonzaga 7-1 3 8 0 11 Honorable mention offense —JensStadeli, sr., 1 44 30 2 20. Baylor 7-1 37 18 SR, Sisters;MalachiWard, sr., TE,Junction City; Passing 1 -0 5- 1 7 21 UMass 6-0 274 24 Nick Gibson,jr., TE,Junction City; TristenCregan, PuntRetums 3 -54 2 - 4 0 22. Michigan 5-2 22 3 22 Ir., OT, Elmira;RoryPeterson, so., OT,Sisters; KickottReturns 0-0 0-0 Intercepti o ns Re t . 23. Iowa 7-1 1 7 1 23 HunterWeast, sr., OG , Elmira; SamTrotter, sr., OG, Comp-Att-Int 23-38 0 22-30-0 24. SanDiegoSt. 5 1150 JunctionCity; AustinLoper,sr., C,Junction City. 1 -3 1 -8 25. Dayton 6-1 90 Honorable mention defense —Eric Uphold,sr., Sacked-YardsLost 6-49.0 3-40.0 Others receivingvotes: Indiana74, Virginia 73, DL, Elmira;PatrickBell, jr., DL,SweetHome; Alex Punts 1 -1 1 -0 Fumbl e s-Lost New Mexi c o 71, North Carol i na 62, Fl orida St. 40, Johnston,jr, DL,JunctionCity; DevinSlaughter, 7 -52 8 - 6 6 Boise St. 36, Pittsburgh36, VCU30, Charlotte 20, so., DL,Sisters; Arishi Wahl,jr., LB,Elmira;Mason Penalties-Yards 26;22 33:38 Colorado17, Creighton17, Missouri 16,Harvard10, Erager,jr., LB,Junction City; ShaneCormalis, jr., Trme ofPossession glinois10,Cincinnati8,Mississippi 3, GeorgeWashLB, Sisters,ReilyBoyce,so., LB,CottageGrove, INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS ington 2,SaintMary's (Ca) 2, Xavier1. AshtonStutzman,sr., DB,Sweet Home; NickGibRUSHING —New Orleans: Ingram8-22, Collins son, jr.,DB,Junction City;LoganSchute, so.,DB, 1-12, Sproles3-11 Thomas4-0, Brees1-(minus1). USA TodayTop25 Poll Sisters. The top25 teams inthe USATodaymen's college Second team specialists — HunterJutte, jr., K, Seattle: Wilson 847, Lynch16-45, Turbin 11-34, Coleman 2-3, Locke tte I-(mi n us 2). basketbal poll, l with tirst-placevotesin parentheses, SweetHome;Tristen Kirshner, sr., P,Sisters. PASSING — New Orleans: Brees 23-38-0-147. recordsthroughDec. 1,points basedon25points for Seattle: Wilson22-30-0-310. afirst-placevotethrough onepoint for a 25th-place Class 4A RECEIVING —New Orleans: Sproles 7-32, vote and previousranking: Tri-VaHeyConferenceAH-League Colston 4-27, Thomas 4-21, Graham 3-42, Moore R ecord Pls Pv s Offensive player of theyear—HandsomeSmith, 2-12, Meachem 1-7, Col l i ns 1-3, Stills1-3. Seattle: 1. Michi gan State (31) 7-0 799 1 jr., Gladstone (1 ) 7-0 758 3 Defensive player of theyear —Trevor Brownrng, Miller 5-86, Baldwin4-77, Tate4-45, Lynch 3-12, 2. Arizona Kearse2-26, Lockette1-33, Robinson1-21,Coleman 3. OhioState 6-0 69 5 6 sr., Gladstone 1-8, Willson1-2. 4. Kentucky 7-1 6 8 3 4 Coach ofthe year —DougBilodeau, North Marion MISSED FIELD GOALS— None. 5. Syracuse 7-0 6 82 7 First team offense Austin Galvin, sr., QB, 6-1 60 7 9 6. Louisville Gladstone;ShaneMcKilip, jr, RB, North Mari7. Kansas 6-1 59 7 2 on; Handsome Smith, jr., RB, Gladstone;Isaiah College 6-2 5 4 7 5 Bilbrey, jr., RB,Molala; Jered Pichette, jr., RB, 8. Duke 9. Wisconsi n 8-0 5 1 7 11 2013 AH-Pac-12 Football Team Madras; Alec Barstad,sr., RB, Estacada;Kyle 8-0 484 12 Offensive Player of the Year:Ka'DeemCarey, 10. WichitaState Wi liamson,sr., WR,North Marion; Austin Salley, 11. Oklahoma State 7- 1 476 8 so., WR,Moalla; DevonWolte, jr., WR,Madras; RB,Arizona 12. Florida 6-1 4 2 6 13 Defensive Player of theYear: Will Sutton,DL, JacobMeek,sr., TE,LaSale; BrennanPaterson, 7-0 4 1 7 15 Arizona St a te 13. Oregon sr., OT,North Marion; BrandonFalk, jr., OT,La 7-0 410 14 FreshmanOflensive Player of theYear: Myles 14. IJConn Salle; ColtonAnderson,jr., OG,Gladstone; Hunter 15. Memphis 5-1 311 19 Jack,RB,UCLA Beachy,jr., OG,NorthMarion; Austin Krieger,jr., 7-1 FreshmanDefensive Player of theYear: Myles 15. Gonza ga 3 11 10 C, Gladstone. 17. UCLA 7-0 2 61 21 First team defense — SamTwigger,sr., DL, Jack, LB,UCLA 5-0 24 5 22 Coach oftheYear: ToddGraham, Arizona State 18. IowaState Gladstone, BrennanPatterson, sr., DL, North 7 -0 20 1 First TeamOffense 19. Viganova Marion;VernonJackson-Smith, sr, DL, Madras; 7-1 1 5 9 17 Marcus Mariota, qb, soph., Oregon;Ka'Dee m 20. Baylor Nick Johnson, sr., DL,LaSale; TristanWampole, 5-2 1 65 20 sr., DL,NorthMarion; RyanCavanagh,sr., LB,La Carey,RB,jr., Arizona;BishopSankey, RB,jr., Wash- 21. Michigan 6 -0 12 2 Salle; ZachSmith, jr., LB, Gladstone; Brandon ington;BrandinCooks,WR,jr., OregonSt.; PaulRich- 22. UMass 6-1 76 25 ,jr., Colorado;ChrisCoyle, TE,sr.,Arizona 23.lndiana Beck, sr, LB,Estacada;EthanShort, jr., LB,Ma- ardson,WR 7-1 63 23 dras;EmryPatterson, jr., LB,NorthMarion;Trevor St.; EvanFinkenberg,OL, sr., ArizonaSt.; Hroniss 24.lowa Grasu, OL, j r ., Oregon; Marcus Ma rti n , OL, j r ., USC , 2 5. North Carol i na 4 2 62 16 Browning, sr., LB,Gladstone; HandsomeSmith, Othersreceivingvotes.Virginia 42,NewMexico jr., DB,Gladstone;BrodyOlsen, sr. DB,Molala, XavierSu'a-Filo, OL,jr., UCLA;David Yankey, OL,sr., 36, SanDiegoState 35,VCU35, Pittsburgh 33, DayStevenWeaver, sr., DB,Estacada; Conner Green, Stanford. First TeamDefense ton 26,BoiseState 21,Creighton17, Saint Mary's13, jr., DB,Moalla. Ben Gardn er, DL, sr., St a n f o rd, Tre vor R ei l y , DL, sr., FloridaState10, Missouri10, Colorado8, Charlotte First team specialists — Steven Weaver, sr., K, 6, Marquette4, NotreDame2,GeorgeWashington1. Estacada, BenCrumley, sr., P,NorthMarion; Kyle Utah; Will Sutton,DL,sr., ArizonaSt.; LeonardWilliams, DL, soph., USC;Anthony Barr, LB,sr., UCLA; Williamson, sr., R,North Marion. Second team offense Ben Crumley,sr, QB, Trent Murphy,LB,sr., Stanford; ShayneSkov, LB,sr., Women's College NorthMarron;ZachSmith, jr., RB,Gladstone; Tyler Stanford;DeoneBucannon, DB,sr., Washington St.; Saucedo, jr., RB,NorthMarion; BrandonBeck, sr., Alden Darby,DB,sr., ArizonaStz Ifo Ekpre-olomu, Monday's Games RB, Estacada;Justin Frideg,jr., WR,Gladstone, DB, jr.,Oregon;Robert Nelson,DB,sr.,ArizonaSt.; Ed East TristanWampole, sr., TE,NorthMarion; TraskTe- Reynolds,DB,sr., Stanford. Penn64,LaSale 54 Second Team O f ense lesmanich, jr., OT,Gladstone; Hunter Zivney,jr., DT, South TaylorKelly, qb.,jr., ArizonaStJ TylerGafney, RB, Bethun Gladstone;Brian Hogan, sr., OG,LaSale; Kordell e-Cookman63,EdwardWaters53 McPherson, jr., OG,Estacada; Coop Early, jr., 0, sr., Stanford MarionGrice, RB,sr., Arizona State, Campbel72, l Radtord58 Ty Montgomery,WR,jr., Stanford; Jaelen Strong, Co I. ofCharleston66, George Mason 64 Molalla. Secondteam defense Fagon Child,sr.,DL, WR,soph., ArizonaSt.; AustinSererian-Jenkins, TE, Nicholls St.80,LouisianaTech78 Molalla; DylanWallace,jr., DL, Gladstone;Bren- jr., Washington;Jamil Douglas, OL,jr. Arizona St.; Northwestern St. 71 JacksonSt. 52 dan Quinn,so., DL,LaSage;Chris Smith, sr., DL, CameronFleming,OL,sr., Stanford AndrusPeat, OL, SouthCarolina79, Nc Central27 Estacada; Sterling Berks,jr., LB,Gladstone,Austin soph,Stanford;Isaac Seumalo,OL,soph.,Oregon Stetson101,FloridaABM66 Keller, sr., LB,Molala; LukeYoungberg, sr., LB, State;Khalil Wilkes,OL,sr., Stanford. UNCAsheville 61,CharlestonSouthem46 Estacada;Josiah Ramon, so., DB,NorthMarion; SecondTeamOffense Midwest RowdyEdwards, jr., DB,Molala; BrodyGragg, sr., Scott Crichton, DL, jr., OregonStc Taylor Hart, S. DakotaSt.71, NJIT46 DB, NorthMarion;E.J. Penn,jr., DB, Gladstone, DL, sr.,Oregon;DevonKennard, DL,sr., USC;Hau'oli Southwest Willie Blankenshipj,r., DB,Estacada. Kikaha,DL,jr. Washington; TennyPalepoi, DL,sr., S. Illinois 39,Cent.Arkansas37 Secondteamspecialists — SeanWilliams, jr., P, Utah; CarlBradtord, LB,jr. ArizonaSt.; MylesJack, Far West Gladstone;George Lrgy, sr., P,LaSalle. LB, frosh.,UCLA;HayesPullard, LB,jr., USC;Chris Gonzaga 82, Fairfield 42
Seahawks34, Saints 7
N Y Rangers 28 14 14 0 N ewJersey 28 11 12 5 P hiladelphia 27 12 13 2 C arolina 27 1 0 1 2 5 C olumbus 2 7 1 0 1 4 3 N Y Islanders 27 8 1 5 4
Chicago St. Louis Colorado Minnesota Winnipeg Nashville Dallas
2 8 62 71 2 7 61 67 2 6 57 65 2 5 57 78 2 3 67 80 2 0 72 93
Western Conference Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA
2 8 20 4 4 4 4 102 76 25 18 4 3 39 89 57 2 5 19 6 0 3 8 76 52 29 16 8 5 37 70 67 2 9 13 12 4 3 0 78 82 2 7 13 11 3 2 9 62 75 2 5 12 9 4 2 8 70 73 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA SanJose 2 6 1 8 3 5 41 92 60 Anaheim 2 9 1 8 7 4 40 91 77 LosAngeles 27 16 7 4 3 6 70 58 Phoenix 26 1 5 7 4 34 85 84 V ancouver 29 1 4 10 5 3 3 77 77 Calgary 26 9 13 4 22 70 93 Edmonton 2 8 9 17 2 20 73 95 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime
loss.
Monday's Games Winnipeg 5, N.Y.Rangers2 Montreal3, NewJersey2 Minnesota2, Philadelphia0 St. Louisat LosAngeles,10:30 p.m. Today's Games San Jose at Toronto, 4 p.m. Pittsburghat NY Islanders 4pm CarolinaatWashington, 4 p.m. Tampa Bayat Columbus, 4p
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER Time PST MLS CUP Saturday,Dec.7: Real Salt LakeatSporting KC,I p.m.
DEALS
TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C3
NHL ROUNDUP
NFL
Wildbreak late deadlock, beat Flyers
Seahawksrout Saints, clinch playoff berth
The Associated Press ST. PAUL, Minn. — Someone has to score first and for the first time in eight games the Minnesota Wild beat their opponent to the punch. Jason Pominville and Charlie Coyle scored goals57 seconds apart early in the third period to break open a defensive standoff and lift the Wild to a 2-0 victory over Philadelphia on Monday
By Tim Booth The Associated Press
night.
"We'd been giving up the first goal so many times lately," Wild coach Mike Yeo said. "I figure if we're not going to score it, don't let them." Josh Harding made 21 saves for his third shutout of the season. "Better start," Yeo said. "And again, that's something we've talked about." In their previous seven games, the Wild had immediately fallen behind and were outscored 15-4 in the first two periods. They were 2-4-1 in those games. Although it took a while for the Wild to get anything going offensively, they effectively kept the Flyers locked down. Playing without leading goal scorer Vincent Lecavalier (back spasms), Philadelphia had only six shots on goal and no real scoring chances in the first 33 minutes. The Wild didn't really, either, until Pominville collected Mikko Koivu's pass in the crease and flipped it past Ray Emery 3:52 into the third period. Koivu was skating around the back of the net when he spun and passed behind his defender. "I didn't know if it was Poms or Zach (Parise), but once I saw someone was there, I tried to get it on tape and I did," Koivu said. "Obviouslyhe made a good shot, getting it up high. It was pretty tight for him. Good shot." On the ensuing shift, Coyle tapped a rebound off Jared Spurgeon's slap shot into an empty corner at 4:ll to make it 2-0. Also on Monday: Jets 5, Rangers 2:NEW YORK — Olli Jokinen broke a tie with 7:18 left in the third period and then netted an insurance goal moments later to lead Winnipeg to the win. Canadiens 3, Devils 2: MONTREAL — Alex Galchenyuk scored midway through the third period to help Montreal get the victory.
MEN'5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
Don Ryan/The Associated Press
Portland Trail Blazers guard Wesley Matthews reacts after sinking a 3-point shot during the second half of Monday night's game against the Indiana Pacers in Portland. Matthews scored15 points as the Trail Blazers won 106-102.
azers con inue oro • Portland hands Indiana its second loss of theseason
NBA ROUNDUP
Frank Vogel said of Portland. "Hopefully that's what it's go3-pointers that narrowed it ing to take to beat this teamto 98-96 with 1:37 left. Lillard making impossible shot after answered with a 3-pointer and impossible shot." Nicolas Batum made a pair Earlier Monday, the NBA The Associated Press of free throws for the Blaznamed Vogel the Eastern ConPORTLAND — After Port- ers beforeGeorge hit anoth- ference coach of the month l and had w i thstood a l a t e er 3-pointer that got Indiana for November. Portland's Terbarrage from t h e I n d i ana within 103-99 with 21 seconds ry Stotts was named coach Pacers and Paul George, the to go. of the month for the Western Trail Blazers gathered at midLillard hit free throws and Conference. court and raised their hands George made yet another 3 Also on Monday: together. with 10 seconds left to make Spurs 102, Hawks 100:SAN It might be early in the sea- it 105-102, but t h e P acers ANTONIO — Ti m D u ncan son, but this was a statement couldn't get closer. Portland made a jumper with 0.4 secwin for the Blazers. (15-3) is off to its best start onds left to lift San Antonio to LaMarcus Aldridge had 28 since the 1998-99 season. a victory over Atlanta. "I really wanted to get this points and 10 rebounds and Pelicans 131, Bulls128:CHIPortland downed Indiana 106- win," said George, one of just CAGO — Jrue Holiday made a 102 Monday night, snapping four Indianaplayers to score three-point play with 2.6 secthe Pacers' seven-game win- 43 or more points in a game onds remaining in the third ning streak. Damian Lillard since 2000. "I was trying to overtime, giving New Orleans added 26. will us into the game." a victory over Chicago. "It was a tough one, and Both teams were playing the Jazz 109, R ockets 103: we knew it was going to be a second of a back-to-back. The SALT LAKE CITY — Marvin tough one going in," Lillard Blazersbeat the short-handed Williams scored five points in said. "They're a good team, Los Angeles Lakers 114-108, the final two minutes, Gordon they only had one loss. But snapping a seven-game losing Hayward broke out of a shootwe're a good team too, and we streak to the Lakers at the Sta- ing slump to score 29 points wanted to prove that." ples Center. and Utah beat Houston. P aul George had a c a The Pacers (16-2) were comW izards 98, M a gic 8 0 : reer-high43 points for the Pac- ing off a 105-100 victory over WASHINGTON Trevor ers (16-2), who own the NBA's the Los Angeles Clippers on Ariza scored 24 points, John best record. Sunday to open a five-game Wall had 16 points and 13 asThe Blazers pulled in front road trip. sists, and Washington beat Or"They're a great offensive lando to get to .500 for the first early in th e fourth quarter, but the Pacers kept it close team and they made big shots time since it split its first four and George hit consecutive all game long," Indiana coach games of the 2009-10 season.
No. 12 UConn
stays undefeated The Associated Press STORRS, Conn. — Shabazz Napier hit a jumper from the free-throw line as time expired to keep No. 12 Connecticut undefeated with a 65-64 victory over No. 15 Florida on Monday night. Napier, limping on a left ankle he hurt during a four-point play with 33 seconds left, escaped a trap around 30 feet from the basket and got off a wild shot that missed but was tipped blindly back by DeAndre Daniels. Napier grabbed the ball and let go a left-handed jumper that went through as the horn sounded and set off a deafening cheer from the sellout crowd of 10,167 at Gampel Pavilion. Napier finished with 26 points on 9-of15 shooting including making 5 of 8 from 3-point range. The Huskies (8-0) and Florida (6-2), which had a five-game winning streak snapped, battled down the stretch exchanging the lead six times in the final 6 minutes. In other games on Monday: No. 17 lowa State 99, Auburn 70: AMES, Iowa — Dustin Hogue set career highs with 22 points and 16 rebounds, and Iowa State pounded Auburn for its sixth straight win. Melvin Ejim added 14 points and 10 rebounds for the Cyclones (6-0), who are the Big 12's last unbeaten team. California 73, UC Irvine 56: BERKELEY, Calif. — David Kravish had 19 points and 10 rebounds, Jabari Bird added 14 points and California beat UC Irvine. Kravish went 9 of 15 from the floor, most of them on mid-range jumpers.
Champions Continued from C1 B anners drape down t h e walls of gymnasiums to commemorate them. Trophies line encased shelves in high school hallways honoring them. State championship teams are not hard to come by around here. Since the inception of the Oregon School Activities Association fall state championships — dating as far back as the state's first state football final in 1940 — Central Oregon has produced 76 team state ti-
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION AllTimesPST
EasternConference W L 16 2
d-Indiana d-Miami
Atlanta Charlotte
Chicago Detroit
Boston Orlando Ph>ladelphia Cleveland Brooklyn NewYork
L 3 3 3 6 6 6 B B 8 8 B 9 10 11 15
WesternConference
d-Portland
d-SanAntonio Oklahoma City d-LA. Clippers Houston Denver Dallas GoldenState Phoenix NewOrleans Memphis LA. Lakers Minnesota Sacramen to Utah
W 15 15 12 12 13 10 10 10 9 9 8 9 9 4 4
14
Washington d-Toronto
Milwaukee
9 6 9 8 7 7 7 6 6 5 5 3 3
Pct GB 889 3 824 1'i~ 9 500 7 10 375 9 10 474 71/2 10 444 8 9 438 8 10 412 8'/z 1 2 368 9 i/z 1 1 353 91/2 12 333 10 1 2 294 10'/z 1 2 294 10'iz 1 3 188 12 1 3 188 12
d-divisionleader
Monday'sGames
Washington98,Orlando80 NewOrleans131, Chicago128,30T SanAntonio102,Atlanta100 Utah109,Houston103 Portland106,Indiana102 Today'sGames Orlando at Philadelphia, 4p.m. Denver at Brooklyn,4:3t p.m Milwaukee at Boston,4:30 p.m. Detroitat Miami,4:30p.m. PhoenixatMemphis, 5 p.m. CharlotteatDallas,5:30 p.m. Dklahoma City atSacramento, 7p.m. Toronto atGoldenState, 7:30p.m.
tles (in fall sports). But never before has a Central Oregon fall season been decorated like this. From Crook County volley-
ball logging its Oregon-record eighth straight state title to the boys soccerteams at Sisters and Summit claiming top-dog rights for the first time ever, this season has been one for the record books. Individual c h ampionships aside, such as Summit's Hannah Gindlesperger and Matthew Maton f i n ishing f i r st overall at the girls and boys
Pct GB 833 833 800 1'/z 667 3 684 2'i~ 625 4 556 5
556 5 529 5'/~ 529 5'/z 500 6 500 6 474 6'/~ 267 9'/z 20 0'/~
Wednesday'sGames DenveratCleveland, 4p.m. L.A. ClippersatAtlanta, 4:30 p.m. Phoeni xatHouston,5p.m. Detroitat Milwaukee,5 p.m. Dallas atNewOrleans, 5p.m Indianaat Utah 6p.m. San Antoniovs. Minnesotaat MexicoCity, Mexico, 6:30 p.m. Oklahoma City atPortland, 7 p.m.
Summaries Monday'sGames
Blazers 106, Pacers102 INDIANA (102) George16-304-4 43, West6-14 0-012, Hibbert 6-13 4-516, G.Hill 1-83-4 6,Stephenson1-3 0-02, S.Hill 0-00-00, Scola5-10 0-010, C.Watson 3-7 4-4 10 Mahinmi0-00-0 0, Johnson 1-30-0 3. Totals 39-88 15-17 102. PORTLAND(106) Batum2-53-48,Aldridge11-196828, Lopez2-6 4-4 8, Lillard 7-1710-1026, Matthews5-0 4-515, Williams6-120-013, Freeland1-10-02, Robinson 2-30-04, Wright0-22-22,E.Watson0-00-00.Totals 36-76 29-33106. Indiana 23 23 26 30 — 102 Portland 20 25 27 34 — 106 3-PointGoals—Indiana9-22 IGeorge 7-15, G.Hil 1-2, Johnson1-3,We st0-1, Scola0-1), Portland5-13 (Lillard 2-4,Matttews1-2,Batum1-2,Wiliams1-4, Wright 0-1). FouledOut Stephenson.Rebounds Indiana 51(Hibbert 14), Portland 44(Aldridge 10). Assists — Indiana 25 (G.Hil 11), Portand 17 (Aldridge,Matthews,Batum3). Total Fouls—Indiana 28, Portland20.A—19,023(19,980)
Pelicans131, Bulls128 (3OT) NEINORLEANS (131)
Aminu6-101-414,Anderson12-205-536, Smith 6-170-012, Holiday9-221-1 19, Gordon7-23 7-8 23, Evans 5-103-313, Amundson0-0 0-20,Morrow 3-61-28, Withey1-20-02,Roberts1-32-24.Totals 50-113 20-27 131.
CHICAGO (128) Deng1527 7-1137,Boozer2-60 0 4, Noah8-12 3-519,Hiinrich4-155-513, Snell 2-4 0-06, Gibson 10-19 6-826, Dsnleavy7-143-5 23,James0-3 0-0 0,Mohammed 0-10-0 0,Teague0-0 0-0 0.Totals 48-101 24-34 128. New Orleans 24 26 27 26 6 13 9 — 131
cross-country state championships in early November, Central Oregon boasted one of the premier fall seasons ever. Each of the past two years, five teams from the region claimed first-place trophies. In 2011 (as well as 2007 and 2008), eight teams from the area w er e s t at e f i n a lists. Heading i nt o t h e 2 0 13-14 school year, those were the high-water marks in Central Oregon history. Make room at the top of the list. This f al l w e ha d two
Chicago 21 35 24 23 6 13 6 — 128
Jazz109, Rockets103 HOUSTON (103)
Garcia 5-10 0-0 13, Jones1-5 0-1 2, Howard 7-121-415, Beverley 4-100-0 8, Harden12-221010 37,Casspi5-81-313, Brewer0-0 0-0 0 Brooks 5-12 2-213,Asik1-4 0-0 2.Totals 40-83 14-20 103.
UTAH(109) Jefferson1-40-0 3, Williams4-10 0-0 10, Favors 6 6 2214, Burke9-180-0 21, Hayward12-18 5-5 29, Evans1 41 2 3,Burks7-114-5 21, Kanter 1-31-2 3,Garrett2-50-0 5. Totals 43-79 13-16 109. Houston 23 27 24 29 — 103 Utah 36 17 29 27 — 109
SPIlrs102, Hawks100
SEATTLE — The rest of the top NFC teams better get ready to visit the Pacific Northwest in January. After Monday night's rout, the road through the NFC playoffs is almost certain to go through Seattle. Russell Wilson threw for 310 yards and three touchdowns, and the Seattle Seahawks became the first team to clinch a spot in the NFC playoffs with a 34-7 victory over the New Orleans Saints on Monday night. More important than just clinching a spot in the postseason, the Seahawks (11-1) moved two games ahead on the rest of the NFC in the race for home-field advantage and hold the tiebreakers over New Orleans (9-3) and Carolina (9-3), the two closest pursuers. Wilson was outstanding, picking apart the Saints' defense. He threw touchdown passes of 2 yards to Zach Miller and 4 yards to Doug Baldwin in the first half as Seattle built a 27-7 lead. Wilson added a pinball 8-yard TD pass to Derrick Coleman in the third quarter. "Attention to details is where it's at," Wilson said. "We had a great balanced attack.We
made some huge plays." Michael Bennett had a 22-yard fumble return for a touchdown in the first quarter to give Seattle a 10-0 lead and the Saints never threatened. It was a dominating performance by the Seahawks, making up for a lackluster effort the last time they were given a national television spotlight and were taken to the final yard and final play by St. Louis. Not this time. The most anticipated game in the NFC this season was a laugher. Wilson completed 22 of 30 passes and finished with a quarterback rating of 139.6. He has 22 regular-season wins in his first two seasons, tied for the most ever by a second-year QB. Drew Brees and the Saints were stymied the entire night as he lost for the first time on Monday night after nine straight wins, and continued the belief New Orleans can't win outdoors late in the season. New Orleans didn't crack 100 yards of total offense midway through the third quarter. Jimmy Graham was nearly invisible outside of his franchise-record 12th TD catch of the season in the second quarter that pulled the Saints to 17-7. Breesfinished 23 of38 for 147 yards.Graham had threecatches for 42 yards.Darren Sproles led New Orleans with seven catches, many of those check downs. The seven points were tied forthe fewest scored by the Saints since Sean Payton became coach in 2006 and the 188 total yards were the fewest in his coaching tenure. "Lot of things to look at," Payton said. "Lot of things we didn't do well." The Saints went three-and-out on their first possession and that was just the start of their struggles. On their next possession, Brees was hit from behind by Cliff Avril and fumbled into the arms of Bennett, who returned it for the touchdown. Brees was unable to take advantage of Seattle'sdepleted secondary. The Seahawks were without Brandon Browner (injury) and Walter Thurmond (suspension) but Byron Maxwell and Jeremy Lane played well in their places. The Saints couldn't find way to exploit the backups and the pressure from Seattle's defensive line had Brees rushing his throws much of the night. "We try to make it about us playing disciplined, sound football. Everybody do their assignment and we should be good," Seattle cornerback Richard Sherman said. "And that's what we did tonight." Seattle used the bye week to add wrinkles to its offense. Wilson was a threat not only passing but running with the zone read again becoming an addition to the playbook. Wilson carried five times in the first half, three of those
designed keepers.
ATLANTA (100)
Carroll 7-0 0-017, Millsap6-201-1 15,Hotford 9-16 0-018, Teague 6-134-419, Williams 5-140-0 10,Martin2-70-0 6,Brand3-40-0 6,Mack3 70 0 7 Scott0-1 0-00, Jenkins1-3 0-0 2. Totals 42-96 5-5 100.
sAN ANT0NI0I102)
Leonard 2-70-0 4, Duncan10-153-423, Splitter 591-1 11, Parker 7110015, Green1-70 03, Ginobili 2-75-610, Diaw7-91-216,Ayres0-01-21, Belinelli 6-9 0-013,Mills 2-41-2 6,Bonner0-00-0 0. Totals42-7812-17102. Atlanta 23 26 22 29 — 100 San Antonio 25 25 23 29 — 102
Wizards 98, Magic 80 0RLANDO Isol
Aftlalo 10-16 1-121, Davis 1-8 0-0 2,Vucevic 5-11 0-0 10, Moore1-8 4-4 6 Olad>po4-12 5-6 13, Nicholson0-24-4 4, Price1-42-2 5, Harkless 7-13 1-2 16, Maxiell 0-0 0-0 0, Lamb 1-2 0-0 3, Jones 0-10-0 0,O'Quinn 0-0 0-00.Totals 30-77 17-19 80. WASHINGTON (98) Webster 2-6 0-05,Nene5-12 4-514,Gor tat4-7 5-613, Wa I 5-14 4-416, Ariza 8-9 4-4 24, Vesely 0-3 2-6 2,Singleton4-72-2 11, Maynor1-40-0 2, Booker3-60-0 6, RiceJt 1-3 2-2 5 Seraphin0-1 0-00, Temple0-10-00.Totals 33-7323-2998. Orlando 22 19 20 19 — 80 Washington 22 30 23 23 — 98
cross-country team titles and a pair o f r u n ners-up. Five programs in the team sports advanced as faras the state c hampionship. All f i v e f i n ished as champs. And those are just in OSAA-sanctioned sports. (Throw in boys and girls water polo, of Oregon High School Water Polo, and one more state winner is added as well as two runners-up.) Overall, there were three first-time w i nners (Summit boys soccer, Sisters b o ys soccer, Ridgeview football), a b a ck-to-back c h a mpion
Elaine Thompson /The Associated Press
Seattle Seahawks' defensive end Michael Bennett returns a fumble for a touchdown against the New Orleans Saints in the first half of Monday night's game in Seattle.
(Summit girls soccer), and a three-time state title holder
(Summit boys cross-country). Central Oregon is home to a six-time champ (Summit girls c ross-country) and t h e p e rennial powerhouse of Crook County volleyball. Beneath blankets of snow, the highways carving through the mountains from Eugene and Hillsboro toward Central Oregon are paved in gold and layered with red carpet. Never before has this region boasted as much fall success. It has set a precedent, almost
an expectation, for the winter sports — such as the Summit boys and girls swim teams, both two-time defending state champs heading into the season. Last year, there were four state championships won as well as two second-place trophies. It was the most decorated winter season in Central Oregon history, as far as team titles are concerned. Perhaps it is time to make room at the top of the winter sports list. — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucasC<bendbulletin.com.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
Summit
Prep girlsdasketdall at aglance A look at the Central Oregon teamsplaying in Class 5Afor the upcoming season: BEND Head coach:ToddErvin (fifth season) 2012-13 record:19-7 overall, 8-1 IMC (first); lost in consolation round of Class 5A state tournament Outlook:DelaneyCrook, a first-team all-IMC selection last season, and Jessica McClay,an honorable mention wing player, lead six Lava Bearseniors into the 2013-14 campaign. That group, Ervin says, will be relied upon for leadership as Bendinstalls a newstyle of play. After graduating all-league seniors 6-footers Mekayla Isaak and Molly Maloney, the lone players standing 6 feet or taller, the Bears will lack height this season, meaning Bend will be focusing more on the perimeter rather than in the paint. But with Crook and
McClay at the forefront of a strong senior class, the LavaBears havetheir eyes set on athird straight IMC title and a fourth trip to the state tournament in the past five years. "They're a real cohesive group with great work ethic and chemistry," Ervin says. "They're trying to pick up things that we haven't really had to do the last couple years, so that'll be key. We just try to come and play every night
and be competitive, try to make areally good run through our conference." MOUNTAINVIEW Head coach:Steve Riper (fifth season) 2012-13record:16-9overall, 5-4 IMC (third); lost in Class 5A play-in round Outlook:The Cougars graduated nine seniors from last year's squad, but that does not lower Riper's expectations for the 2013-14 sea-
son. EmmaPlatner, a first-team all-IMC guard, returns for her senior year asMountain View looks to snap atwo-year streak of losing the play-in round. Senior Natalie Warren and junior Sarah Bailey join Platner as the only three returners for the Cougars, but the tight-
knit group of younger players gives Mountain View astrong dose of chemistry heading into preseason play. Riper concedes that the first month of gamescould deal the Cougars some "bumps andbruises," but by January, when IMCplay kicks off, Riper expects his young squad to compete in the IMC. "I think that we'll surprise some people," Riper says. "I'm hoping that these kids will come around. ... That's our goal, to get to the playoffs and try to get to (Matthew Knight Arena — the final site of the 5A state tournament). Those
goals are kind of the sameevery year. Wejust have to play the gamesand seewhere wefall out." REDMOND Head coach:Angela Capps (second season) 2012-13record:10-15overall, 0-9 IMC (fourth); lost in Class 5A play-in round
Outlook:The Panthers are young, Cappsemphasizes. Seniors Chantel Dannis, Shelby Bergum andCiara Lennie are the lone returners for Redmond, andtheir experience and leadership will be key to develop the inexperienced players jumping to the varsity level for the first time. According to Capps, focus will be on everyday improvement as well as maturing quickly to adjust to the speed and
physicality of varsity play. ThePanthers have quickness, Capps notes, leading the second-year coach to believe that Redmond could be surprising this season asthe Panthers aim for a berth in the play-in round. "They're really starting to come together in practice," Capps says. "They're learning to trust each other as far as who's doing what on the court, because they don't know each other.... Just to kind of mesh and jell as a group is big. We've seen some strides with that this week."
SUMMIT Head coach:Ryan Cruz(sixth season) 2012-13 record:18-8 overall, 5-4 IMC (second); lost in first round of Class 5A state playoffs Outlook:After posting the second-most wins in program history last season, the Storm are back for more behind first-team all-
IMC guards RajaChar, asenior, and sophomore Sarah Heinly. Cruz expects his group to be more disciplined on the offensive end, using more clock to find better shooting opportunities to limit the amount of possessions opponents have during games. According to Cruz, the key to success will be getting stops defensively and closing out games in the fourth quarter. That, he says, will ultimately decide if the Storm reach the state playoffs for a second straightyear.
Undude
They were engaged within a year, on Alexandra's 19th Continued from C1 birthday, in February 2011. " There's an i m ag e t h ey Wise took her to nearby Lake want," Wise said. "And I didn't Tahoe for snowshoeing under fit that for a long time. Even a full moon and p resented after I won the X Games the to her a poem he had writfirst time, they said: 'We don't ten in glow-in-the-dark ink. know what to do with this guy. He dropped to one knee and H e's dif ferent.'" proposed. "They called him vanilla," "Of course," she said. Alexandra said, sitting close Wise was due to leave for to him on the couch. the European X Games two Wise said: "My rebuttal days later. The couple called to that is: Why do you want five close friends the next something that has been done morning and told them to meet before'? It's the people who are at the Arch of Reno Wedding different who end up shaping Chapel. They married, went the culture." bowling, ate dinner at Johnny He is not a nerd, and he is Rockets and stayed at the Pepnot an outsider. There is noth- permill hotel and casino. Wise ing like w inning X G a mes left for Europe before dawn gold the past two years to but booked Alexandra a ticket build respect and credibility. to France, too. "Life's a grand adventure," He can hang with the dudes, because he is nice and funny Wise said. "I'm all about tryand smart and young. For a ing to do the next thing somelong time, he had long hair, how different. And she emtoo. He played high school braced that." football and baseball until skiTheir parents slowly foring commandeered his sched- gave them for eloping. But for ule. He plays on two softball months, the couple hid the seteams in the summer. He rides cret from most in the skiing m ountain bikes and a m o - community. "I was worried about what torcycle. He drives fast — so fast that he was pulled over, a people would t h i nk," W i se reporter in the front seat, on said. "Will I b e b lacklisted? the way to lunch at his favorite Am I too different?" Mexican dive after an hourNayeli was born m onths long session with a physical b efore Wise wo n h i s f i r st therapist to work on his neck, X Games gold medal in the which he hurt last summer halfpipe in 2012, a title he dewhile doing flips into water off fended in Aspen this year. He a rope swing. No. Not a nerd. But Wise is different, surprisingly grounded for some-
credits his breakout to broader perspective.There is less pressure when you know that there is more to life. "It's not a big coincidence that all the big events that I've won were after Nayeli was born," Wise said. "I think it's kind of cheating, because it's something none of my competition has." O n Tuesday n ights, t h e Wises often invite friends and relatives for dinner at their rented split-level home. It was a bachelor pad before Wise married, but the foosball table has since been moved from the dining room to the basement. The dart board in the living room was replaced by wedding pictures. Back then, Wise and his roommates went entire winters without turning on the heat, initially to save money, then to prove that they could. "I'd come home sometimes and the house was so warm," said James Furman, who lived in the room that now belongs to Nayeli. "That's how I knew Lexi was here. It would smell nice, and it was heated." Nayeli sat in a highchair at the head of the table. Kathy Wise, David's m other, sat alongside Jonna Read, Alexandra's mother. Furman and his wife, Jessie, sat on one side of the table next to another friend, Nick Timko. They held hands and prayed
"Amen!" Nayeli shouted — then ate lasagna and elk steaks pulled from the freezer. Wise was a couple of weeks from heading to Colorado for the start of the competition s eason, which w i l l c u l m i -
games." The Storm are driven, Cruz emphasizes, and Heinly points out that they are more committed to the cause. "(Compared with) the past, this year I can definitely see the girls want it more," Char says. "We're all in it, we're all focused, we all know what our goal is. And noth-
ing, really, is going to stop us.... We want this goal. We want to make it to state." With Char and Heinly leading the way, and w ith H asenoehrl added to the mix, Cruz says this Summit team is hungry for more. "In the last four or five years, I think that this is probably the hungriest group I've had in terms of wanting to compete, wanting to get better day in and day out," Cruz says. "More importantly, they all get along. I think the team chemistry is there. .. . I b elieve that this is a team that's full of winners and will compete every night." "Last year, we wanted it so bad, and we almost had it," Heinly says of the IMC title. "Now that we've seen how close we got, I think we can definitely apply ourselves and do it."
nate in Sochi. Alexandra and Nayeli will be with him most of the way. "People look at me and say: 'Man, you're married and have a kid? Your life is over,' " Wise said. "And I think, 'My life is
— Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucasCbendbulletin.com.
just beginning.' " He scooped his daughter into his arms and carried her upstairs for bed. He put her in pajamas and a fresh diaper, hoping the Pampers would arrive soon.
0 00 gRCTIC SLED
cw
wrecked Sled.After z<xag~otor uPg<~
verr Past andFun!
Have au Service records uov'mg forces sa ' $2000 OBO
Replacethat old bustedsled for your dreamhill climbing machine! Item Priced at: You r Total Ad Cost onl: • Under $500 $29 • $500 to $99 9 $39 • $1000 to $2499 $49 • $2500 and over $59
s4<-ooo-eoo
The Bulletin
Servrng Central Oregon smce 1903
541-385-5809 Some restrictions apply
includes upto 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • The Bulletin, • The Central OregonNickel Ads • Central Oregon Marketplace + bendbulletin.com
'Privatepartymerchandiseonly - excludespetsLlivestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes,andgaragesalecategories.
AI
one who makes a living flying
0~~A Oregon Newapaper
through the air. He hunts, less for the thrill of the capture (he brought home a bull elk this year) than for the chance to be alone with his thoughts. He is a voracious reader (his favorite author is C.S. Lewis) and an occasional writer of poetry. During his travels, near and far, hecollects heart-shaped rocks for Alexandra and places them amid a collection on the brick windowsill outside their front door. Like Alexandra, he is a youth pastor. Writing and missionary work are potential future occupations. "There's a lot more to life t han s k i i ng," W i s e s a i d .
~+
A Free Public Service
, P l i b l i S h8f L ASCdCI8tk n
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
"We're just flipping and skiing
in the halfpipe. It's not an eternally lasting thing." David a n d A le x a ndra, whom he calls Lexi, were two grades apart and grew up on opposite sides of Reno, which a downtown arch amid the casinos has long proclaimed "The Biggest Little City in the World." They met during one flirtatious summer a t c h u r ch camp. Romance was interrupted for nearly three years by distance and life, including Wise'sburgeoning skicareer. They reconnected at church, a chance re-meeting, then through a d e e p F acebook chat.
Continued from C1 With all-Intermountain Conference guards Raja Char and Sarah Heinly returning — along with Emily Hasenoehrl, an IMC honorable-mention guard last season as a junior — Summit looks to springboard off a standout 201213 campaign, during which the Storm took second in the IMC and reached the state playoffs for the first time since 2009. But Summit's exit in the first round of the Class 5A state playoffs, Char says, is still fresh on the Storm's minds. "We want to do better than we did last year," the senior says, noting that Summit's quick end to the 2012-13 season — a 57-29 loss to Corvallis — left a bitter taste. "With our group, I think there's the potential to d o b etter and make it to (Matthew Knight Arena, the final site of the 5A state tournament)." The toolsare there to advance to the state tourney, especially with Heinly, a sophomore, and Char — the top two single-season scorers in Summit's history — on the floor. Still, the Storm are in a similar position as last year's group, with only two players listed taller than 5-8. "We'll be small. We don't have a whole lot of size, but we hope to use our basketball smarts to put us in a position to be in every game," Cruz says. "I think the key, again, is going to be the defensive end, and whether or not we give up second- and third-chance opportunities on the glass." With a lack of size, Cruz says the Storm wil l b e m ore disciplined offensively. Rather than taking the first available shot, he expects his squad to be patient, which could provide a better scoring opportunity w h ile l i miting
the number of possessions for opponents. That deliberate offensive approach will be key, Cruz says, as will the Storm's late-game defense. Fortunately, Summit will be able to rely on its bench. "This will be a d eeper team than what we had last year in terms of what we can provide off of the bench," Cruz says. "We've been limited the last four or five years with t h at. A l though we won't have a lot of size, if we can s tay disciplined with w hat w e need to do, I think we'll be in most
I
I
I
o ©3ggl •
l 3iil or use the
•
0 QKgQKgg) service to be automatically emailed of notices that match your needs.
®g]
i
,
I
•
,
' g ip .
pa pa
C5 © To look upindividual stocks, go tobendbulletin.comn/buiinss. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2013
16 QQ 877
+
NASDAQ 4,045.26
Toda+
+
S&P 500
+
g4 53
1,840
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Eye on auto sales
1,800 "
Automakers are due to report their latest L.S. sales figures today. Analysts anticipate that sales accelerated in November to a faster pace than a year earlier. J.D Power and LMC Automotive estimate that sales reached a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 16.1 million last month, up from 15.4 million in the same month last year. That would be far above the 2009 bottom of 10.4 million.
1,760 ' '
4 9~
1,800.90
" •
2.80%
S&P 500
16,200.
Close: 1,800.90
16 020
Change: -4.91 (-0.3%)
10 DAYS
.
.
.
.
+ -28.30
$1,222.30
.
,
t
.
'
' 10 DAYS
16,400: "
16,000:
.
15,600:
.
1,680 15,200 1,600 '
14,800 -" A
StocksRecap
14,400
S HIGH
NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 3,033 1,647 Pvs. Volume 1 ,515 8 2 2 Advanced 8 69 7 4 6 Declined 2211 1845 New Highs 1 61 169 New Lows 67 24
DOW 16098.00 DOW Trans. 7304.49 DOW Util. 488.72 NYSE Comp. 10191.66 NASOAQ 4068.49 S&P 500 1810.02 S&P 400 1315.03 Wilshire 5000 19237.06 Russell 2000 1142.89
LOW 15986.23 7231.22 482.72 10127.77 4040.88 1798.60 1296.87 19115.77 1127.71
A
C LOSE C H G. 16008.77 -77.64 7254.07 + 18.38 485.15 -1.98 10137.01 -46.22 4045.26 -14.63 1800.90 -4.91 -0.54 1303.64 19137.39 -64.57 1129.12 -13.77
S
N
%CHG. WK MO OTR YTD -0.48% T L L $-22.1 7% +0.25% L +36.69% -0.41% T T +7.08% -0.45% T +20.06% -0.36% L $-33.97% -0.27% T +26.27% -0.04% T $-27.75% -0.34% L +27.62% -1.20% L $-32.95%
Faring better? Bob Evans Farms has been struggling lately with sluggish sales as manyconsumers have reined in spending. The company, which owns its namesake restaurant chain and sells food products, also has had to cope with higher food costs and large one-time expenses. Wall Street will be looking at Bob Evans' latest quarterly results, due out today, for any signs that sales trends may be improving. $60
BOBE
$55.05
$37.82 50 40 30
•
13 I •
Operating EPS
0.53 2Q '12 2 Q '13
Price-earnings ratio:Lost money based on past 12 months' results
Dividend: $1.24 Div. Yield: 2.3% source: Factset
Sales tracker The weekly Johnson Redbook retail sales index has been declining in recent weeks. The index tracks data on stores open at least a year. That's a key indicator of a retailer's performance since it measures growth at existing stores rather than from newly opened ones. The Redbook index was down 0.5 percent two weeks ago. The reading from last week's index is due out today.
Redbook index Month-over-month percentage change -0.5% 0% -0.3 -0.6 -0.9
NorthwestStocks NAME
ALK 42,05 — 0 AVA 2 3.52 ~ BAC 9,77 — 0 BBSI 32.95 ~ BA 72,68 — $$CACB 4.94 COLB 16.85 COLM 47.72 COST 96.51 —0 BREW 6.03 FLIR 19.70 HPQ 12.82 — 0 HOME 10.84 INTC 19.50 KEY 7 . 81 — 0 KR 2 5 .20 LSCC 3.71 LPX 14.51 MDU 20.38 — $$MENT 13.21 MSFT 26.26 — 0 NKE 48.31 — 0 JWN 50.94 NWN 39.96 PCAR 42.87 PLNR 1.19 PCL 41.94 PCP 180.06 SWY 16.64 — $$SCHN 23.07 SHW 146.49 SFG 33.88 — 0 SBUX 49.56 — 0 TQNT 4.31 UMPQ 11.43 — 0 USB 31.28 WAFD 15.64 — 0 WFC 32.41 — 0 WY 2 6 .38
78,53 76 .94 29.26 2 6.9 9 15,98 15 .73 9 0.70 8 4.1 3 142,00 134.16 7.18 5.00 27.95 27.05 69.97 67.40 126 ,12 123.69 18.70 16.56 33.82 29.35 27.78 27.32 16.03 15.12 25.98 23.70 13,10 12.76 43.85 41.79 5.77 5.47 22.55 16.32 30.97 29.58 23.77 22.10 3829 38.45 79.87 79.09 63.72 61.79 46.55 41.81 60.00 57.13 2.75 2.56 54.62 43.74 270.00 257.78 36.90 34.59 32.99 30.37 195.32 181.14 64.80 64.72 8250 81.07 8.98 7.86 18,47 18.26 39.61 39.21 2380 23.41 44.79 44.18 33.24 29.60
-.80 .26 .09 .39 .09 08 67 1.99 1.74
-1 0 T -1.0 T -0.6 T -0.5 T -0.1 T -1.6 T -2.4 T -2.9 T -1.4 T T T 03 -0.1 T 16 -1.0 T -.14 -0.6 +.01 +0.1 L +.04 +0.1 -.16 -1.8 T 08 -0.5 T 09 -0.3 T -.43 -1.9 T +.32 +0.8 L -.05 -0.1 T -.42 -0.7 T 72 -1.7 T 18 -0.3 T +.11 $.4.5
67 -0.3 38 -1.1 T -.26 -0.9 T 1.89 - 1.0 T +.61 +1.0 -.39 -0.5 T -.02 -0.3 T -.15 -0.8 T 01 +.02 +0.1 L +.16 +0.4 L -.53 -1.8 T
L L +78 6 + 83.4 490 1 3 0 . 80 T L +11.9 $.20.4 324 1 7 1. 2 2 L L +35.5 +61.2 90422 21 0 . 04 T L +120. 9 +154.2 3 6 34 0 . 72f L L +78.0 +83.7 3235 24 1 . 94 T T -20.1 -1.9 34 5 L L +50.8 +61 .6 2 3 6 2 3 0. 4 4f L L +26. 3 +20 .9 70 24 1. 0 0 f L L +25. 3 +3 1 .2 1 379 2 7 1. 2 4 L L +155 . 6 + 178.2 1 0 8 cc L T + 31 5 +4 78 68 8 19 0 3 6 L L +91.7 +1 16.51 3898 9 0.5 8 T L +21 . 6 + 39 .1 20 8 9 0.24 T L +14 . 9 +26 .7 2 4534 13 0 . 9 0 L L + 51. 5 +5 9 .7 1301714 0. 2 2 T L +60 . 6 +61 .4 30 33 1 4 0. 6 6f L L +37. 1 +4 0 .3 4 7 5 78 T T -15.5 -5.6 1834 10 T L +39.3 +47 .7 43 4 4 5 0. 7 1f L T +29.8 $.5 3.2 8 7 0 2 5 0.1 8 L L +44.0 +45 . 1 41711 14 1. 1 2 L L +53.3 +61 . 6 31 27 2 7 0 . 9 6f L L +15.5 +16 .6 1 1 36 1 6 1. 2 0 T T -5.4 +1. 2 10 9 2 0 1. 8 4f L L + 26.4 +3 3 .3 87 5 1 9 0 . 80a L L + 79 0 + 1 09 4 2 1 2 dd T T - 1.4 + 7 . 3 1 022 2 8 1 . 76 L L + 36. 1 $. 4 1.2 3 7 9 2 4 0.1 2 T L +91. 2 + 1 09.5 5164 19 0 . 8 0 L L +0.1 +11. 2 1 81 dd 0.7 5 T T + 17. 8 +2 0 .4 4 3 0 2 5 2. 0 0 L L +76. 5 + 92.0 1 9 8 14 1.10I L L +51.2 +59.0 2817 36 1.04I L T +62. 7 +60.2 2423 dd L L +54.9 +60.2 1470 19 0.60a L + 22.8 +23.7 5938 13 0.92 L L +38 8 +47.3 251 16 0.40( L L +29.3 +36 .2 16402 12 1 . 2 0 T L + 6.4 +15. 5 4 1 77 2 6 0. 8 8
Oividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, Lut are not included b - Annual rate plus stock c - uqndatmg dividend. e - Amount declared or paid m last12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement n Sum of dividends paid after stock split, nt$ regular rate ] - Sum of dividends paid this year Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears m - Current annual rate, which was decreased bymost recent dividend announcement. p - Imnal nnCerL annual rate rot known, yield 8 u shown r - Declared or paid m precedmg 12months plus stock dividend t - Paid m stock, approximate cash value on ex-nsunutnn datePEFootnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds99. dC -Loss in last12 months
18 25
I Nov. t~ 8
Biogen Idec said Monday that regulators extended COInpany approval for hemoph ilia B and hemophilia A their review of a drug designed for hemophilia B. $petllgltt tr eatments. HemophiliaAoccurs in about one The Food and Drug Administraout of every 5,000 male births. tion extended its review of Alprolix Hemophilia B is less common and I' by threemonths. The move came can aff ect men and women. after the agency asked Biogen for Biogen shares have more than more information about the drug's doubled this year. Earlier this bloeenrd60 manufacturing. Hemophilia is a month,the stock had a one-day rare, inherited disease that affects surge of 13 percent on reports that blood clotting. the company won market exclusivThe company is seeking ity for its multiple sclerosis drug.
Total return 1-YR: 98% AP
source Factset
3-Y R*: 64%
FundFocus
turns for its investors, consistentMarketsummary ly ranking near the top of its peer Most Active group. Its 10-year performance NAME VOL (Qgs) LAST CHG ranks in the top 10 percent. 904215 797813 649336 629073 500096 497822 417107 390517 385604 385114
15.73 180.53 41.46 20.90 47.06 14.20 38.45 112.37 10.01 12.03
Gainers NAME BOS Ltd rs Camtek h BiostarPh DirGMBear XOMA MethesEng
LAST 7.60 5.75 2.50 75.00 5.84 2.49 Dynatrn rs 4.84 Ever-Glory 5.88 DirDGdBr s 49.22 Gogo n 31.31
CHG %CHG +3.19 + 7 2.3 +1.64 + 3 9.9 + .69 + 3 8 .1 +14.00 + 2 3 .0 C) +1.06 + 2 2.2 +.42 + 2 0.3 +.80 + 1 9 .8 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +.96 + 1 9 .5 Vertical axis represents average credit +7.36 + 1 7 .6 quality; horizontal axis represents +4.64 + 1 7 .4 interest-rate sensitivity CHG %CHG -1.66 -25.7 -3.21 -23.2 -4.10 -21.1 -5.79 -17.8 -3.69 -16.6
Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG -9.40 —.22 4,285.81 London 6,595.33 -55.24 -.83 -3.34 -.04 Frankfurt 9,401.96 Hong Kong 24,038.55 + 157.26 + . 6 6 —.85 Mexico 42,138.55 -360.58 Milan 18,732.56 -288.92 -1.52 -6.80 -.04 Tokyo 15,655.07 Stockholm 1,304.58 -3.13 —.24 -40.80 —.77 Sydney 5,273.50 Zurich 8,257.32 -6.88 -.08 NAME Paris
10-Y R*: 22%
299
Ma r ket value: $69.6 billion
*Annualized
Source: FactSet
SelectedMutualFunds FAMILY
American Funds
-.09 -.47 —.89 BlackRockHiyldlnvA m BHYAX -1.38 + . 05 LIMITED MODERATE EXTENSIVE -1.74 +.32 -1.14 Dodge 8 Cox -.18 -.03 Fidelity
Losers NAME LAST ZoomTch rs 4.80 R F Inds 10. 5 8 DirGMnBull 15.35 DxGldBII rs 26.81 CobaltlEn 1 8 . 54
$140
5-Y R*: 48%
Total returns through Dec. 2
A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP This fund has produced strong re-
BkofAm S&P500ETF iShEMkts MktVGold Facebook Petrobras Microsoft iShR2K Penney iShJapan
52-WEEK RANGE
onday 's close: $294.84
Price-earnings ratio (Based on trailing 12 month results):41
15 22
-.O O44
1.3539
StoryStocks
DOW Close:$39.98L0.92 or 2.4% The chemical company said it is looking to spin off or sell about 40 commodity manufacturing plants from its business.
$42
Sotheby's
BID Close: $52.22%0.96 or 1.9% The auction house said that a mod-
ern and contemporary art auction in Beijing brought in over $37 million.
$55
40
50
38
S 0 52-week range $29.03 ~
N $41.74
S 0 52-week range $28.89~
N $84.00
Vol.:14.3m (1.8x avg.) PE:1 7 . 2 Vol.:1.4m (1.2x avg.) P E: 34 .4 Mkt. Cap:$48.49 b Yie l d : 3. 2% Mkt. Cap:$3.59 b Yie l d : 0.8% MMM Forest Lab. FRX Close:$127.68 V-5.83 or -4.4% Close:$56.32L5.01 or 9.8% A Morgan Stanley analyst lowered The drugmaker said that it plans to his investment rating for the maker cut 500 jobs as part of a plan to trim of glues, adhesives and Post-it $500 million in costs over the next notes, citing slower growth. two years. $140 $60 130 120
S 0 52-week range $89.60~
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 BalA m 24.0 7 - . 06+19.5 +20.7 +13.2+15.3 A A B CaplncBuA m 57.88 -.22 +12.6 +13.2 +9.7+12.8 C A C CpWldGrlA m 44.51 -.17 +21.9 +24.3 +11.1+15.8 C C O EurPacGrA m 48.39 -.24 +17.4 +20.6 +7.3 +15.3 C C 8 FnlnvA m 51. 4 8 - . 13+27.3 +29.2 +14.8 +19.1 C C 8 GrthAmA m 44 . 58 - .11+ 29.8 +31.7 +15.2 +19.1 B B 0 IncAmerA m 20.41 -.06 +15.9 +16.7 +11.8+15.4 C A A InvCoAmA m 38.27 -.12+28.4 +29.6 +14.5+16.9 C C O NewPerspA m 38.69 -.15 +23.8 +26.3 +12.4+18.7 C B 8 WAMutlnvA m39.54 -.10 +28.6 +29.5 +16.8+17.2 C A C Income 1 3.62 -.03 +0.5 + 0.6 +4.5 +8.3 A 8 8 IntlStk 42.73 -.29 +23.4 +30.3 +8.8 +18.5 A A A Stock 164.72 -.07 +36.7 +40.4 +18.5 +20.9 A A A Contra 160.2 8 - . 34+30.5 +30.7 +15.2+19.6 C B C GrowCo 124. 49 - .20+33.5 +33.6 +17.4+24.3 A A A LowPriStk d 49 .54 -.14+ 31.7 +35.6 +17.3+24.3 8 A 8 500 l dxAdvtg64.05 -.17+28.7 +29.9 +16.2+18.8 C B B
Fidelity Spartan FrankTemp-Franklin Income C x 2. 4 0 -. 02 +11.7 +13.7 +9.9+16.3 A A A IncomeA x 2.3 8 -. 0 1 +12.3 +14.5 +10.4+16.9 A A A FrankTemp-TempletonGIBondAdv 13 . 01 -.01 +1.1 + 2 .6 + 5.2+10.1 A A A Intl I Oakmark 26.75 -.13 +27.8 +35.8 +13.8 +22.5 A A A Oppenbeimer RisDivA m 21. 28 - .04+23.2 +24.2 +13.4+15.3 E D E RisDivB m 19. 24 - .03+ 22.2 +23.1 +12.4+14.3 E E E RisDivC m 19 . 14 - .04+ 22.4 +23.3 +12.5+14.5 E E E SmMidValA m43.17 -.21 + 33.2 +35.8 +11.8+21.5 8 E C SmMidValBm 36.17 -.18+32.2 +34.6 +10.9+20.5 C E D CATEGORY High Yield Bond PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 85 -.03 -1.6 - 1.4 +3.9 +7.4 C B C MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.05 -.11 +26.6 +28.9 +15.4 +17.9 D B 8 RATING™ * * * * N GrowStk 50.69 -.08 +34.2 +34.6 +16.9 +23.5 A A A ASSETS $4,056 million HealthSci 6 1.47 +.11 +49.1 +50.2 +31.7 +30.8 8 A A EXP RATIO 0.93% Vanguard 500Adml 166.62 -.45 +28.7 +29.9 +16.2+18.8 C B 8 500lnv 166.59 -.45 +28.6 +29.7 + 16.1+18.7 C 8 8 MANAGER James Keenan CapOp 47.12 +.11 +40.2 +42.8 $ -16.7+23.3 A A A SINCE 2007-12-31 Eqlnc 30.02 -.09 +26.8 +27.5 +18.0+17.8 D A B RETURNS3-MO +4.4 StratgcEq 29.35 -.09 +36.8 +40.3 $ .19.0 $.24.5 A A A YTD +8.3 TgtRe2020 27.20 -.10 +14.1 +15.6 + 9.6+13.9 8 A C 1- YR +10.6 Tgtet2025 15.79 -.05 +16.2 +17.8 + 10.3+14.9 8 B C 3-YR ANNL +10.0 TotBdAdml 10.63 -.03 -1.8 -2.0 + 3.2 +5.0 D D E 5-YR-ANNL +19.1 Totlntl 16.59 -.10 $-12.9 +17.7 + 5.7 $-14.3 D E C TotStlAdm 45.58 -.14 $-29.7 +31.3 + 16.4+20.0 8 B A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 45.55 -.15 $-29.5 +31.1 + 16.2+19.8 8 B A Hilton Worldwide lnc Mezzanine F F-7a1.58 USGro 27.80 -.05 +30.8 +31.4 + 16.2+19.7 8 8 C General Motors Co 1.38 Welltn 39.09 -.08 +17.7 +18.6 + 12.1+14.8 8 A B Engy Future Inter Hldg Co LI 10% 1. 37 Fund Footnotes b - ree covenng market costs 1$paid trom nnd assets d - Deterred sales charge, or redemption Gmac Cap Tr I Pfd 1.17 fee f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a manetmg fee acd either a sales or Dana Hldg Pfd 144A 1.16 redempuon tee Source: Momngstar
N
52-week range $134.16
$3481 ~
$86 7 7
Vol.:6.6m (2.6x avg.) P E:19 .6 Vol.:7.0m (4.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$85.96 b Yie l d : 2 .0% Mkt. Cap:$15.17 b
P E: .. . Yield: ...
American Eagle
AEO Deckers Out. DECK Close:$16.28LO.Dt or 0.1% Close: $83.96L1.32 or 1.6% A Janney Capital Markets analyst A Canaccord analyst says demand raised her investment rating for the for the footwear maker's Ugg boots teen retailer and said it may take seemed strong during the weekend back market share next year. despite few promotions. $18 $100 16 80 60
S 0 52-week range
52-week range $13.14 ~
$22.63
N
$34.00 ~
$88.6 8
Vol.:6.1m (1.4x avg.) P E:14.5 Mkt. Cap:$3.14 b Yie l d : 3 . 1%
Vol.:1.5m (1.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.9 b
P E: 30 .3 Yield: ...
OpenTable
eBay
OPEN
Close:$80.59 V-2.98 or -3.6% A Goldman Sachs analyst lowered his investment rating for the online restaurant reservations provider to "Neutral" from "Buy." $90
55
70
50
S 0 52-week range
EBAY
Close:$51.35L0.83 or 1.6% A Stifel Nicolaus analyst said that he thinks the online retailer saw its sales grow during the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. $60
80
S 0 52-week range
N
N
$41.68 ~
$87.48
$48.06~
$88.04
Vol.:768.2k (1.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.88 b
PE:62.5
Vol.:24.8m (2.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$66.48 b
PE: 24.6
Yield: ...
Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
-1.2
-1.5 Oct.
' ""' ~
'
Stocks finished lower on Monday, reflecting investor disappointment over a retail trade group's forecast of consumer spending during the critical Thanksgiving holiday weekend. Shoppers turned out in record numbers in the four days ended Sunday. Even so, the National Retail Federation predicted that spending during the period fell for the first time ever, down 2.9 percent to $57.4 billion. Traders reacted by selling all types of retailer stocks, from department stores to specialty chains. Meanwhile, investors are waiting for a government report on jobs Friday for clues about whether the Federal Reserve might begin tapering its stimulus efforts.
FDA extends review of Biogen drug mi 8
Biagen ldeC (BIIB) M
+i .i O
3M
52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1 YR V OL TICKER LO HI C LOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank ofAmerica Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp ColumbiaBnkg Columbia Sportswear Costco Wbolesale Craft Brew Alliance FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard Home FederalBncpID Intel Corp Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Microsofl Corp Nike Inc 8 NordstromInc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarInc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Safeway Inc Schnitzer Steel Sherwin Wms Stancorp Fncl StarbucksCp Triquint Semi UmpquaHoldings US Bancorp WashingtonFedl Wells Fargo & Co Weyerhaeuser
~
$93.82
Dow Chemical
.
1,520
'""" "
-.75
$1 9.23
Dow jones industrials . Close: 16,008.77
Change: -77.64 (-0.5%)
15,840 '
1,840
1,760 "
.
' + +.05
[]
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.80 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO DTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
. 07 .06 . 1 0 .10 .11 .11
2-year T-note . 29 .28 5-year T-note 1 . 4 2 1 .37 10-year T-note 2.80 2.75 30-year T-bond 3.86 3.82
BONDS
+0 .01 L ... L +0 . 0 1 + 0.05 + 0.05 + 0.04
L L L L
L L
L L
.08 .13
L
T
.16
T L L L
T .25 T .62 L 1.61 L 2.81
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.64 3.59 +0.05 L L L 2.48 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.11 5.16 -0.05 L L T 3 95 . Barclays USAggregate 2.33 2.32 +0.01 L L T 1 70 . PRIME FED Barcl ays US High Yield 5.60 5.60 ... T T T 6 .49 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.62 4.59 +0.03 T L L 3.56 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.64 1.60 +0.04 L L T .91 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3 .15 3.15 . . . T T T 2.69 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities
FUELS
Oil prices rose Monday on encouraging manufacturing data from the L.S. and China. Silver, gold, platinum and palladium all posted declines. Crops were mixed.
METALS
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Oil (bbl) 93.82 92.72 $ .%19 $ . 2 .2 Ethanol (gal) 2.20 2.05 +0.5 Heating Oil (gal) 3.05 3.05 + 0.63 + 0 . 2 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.99 3.95 +0.86 +19.0 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.68 2.68 +0.58 -4.8
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1222.30 1250.60 19.23 19.98 1346.80 1368.80 3.22 3.23 712.40 718.00
%CH. %YTD -2.26 -27.0 -3.74 -36.3 -1.61 -12.5 -0.40 -11.6 - 0.78 + 1 . 4
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.33 1.33 - 0.16 + 2 . 6 1.09 1.10 -0.77 -23.9 Corn (bu) 4.17 4.15 +0.30 -40.4 Cotton (Ib) 0.77 0.78 -1.11 $ - 2 .8 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 362.80 364.80 -0.55 -3.0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.39 1.40 -0.29 + 20.0 Soybeans (bu) 13.21 13.37 -1.14 -6.9 Wheat(bu) 6.50 6.55 -0.80 -16.5 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the
euro, Japanese yen and other currencies as new data suggested the L.S. economy continues to recovereven though Thanksgiving holiday sales were mixed.
h5I4 QG
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USO per British Pound 1.6352 —.0009 —.06% 1.6022 Canadian Dollar 1.06 3 5 + .0022 +.21% . 9 9 31 USO per Euro 1.3539 —.0044 —.32% 1.2998 Japanese Yen 1 03.09 + . 6 5 + . 63% 82 . 41 Mexican Peso 13. 1 968 +.0803 +.61% 12.9526 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5290 +.0054 +.15% 3.8142 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1 206 —.0121 —.20% 5.6712 SouthAfrican Rand 10.2638 +.0680 +.66% 8.9035 S wedish Krona 6.5 6 0 9 —.0001 —.00% 6.6586 Swiss Franc .9086 +.0019 +.21% .9274 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0988 + .0012 +.11% .9 5 95 Chinese Yuan 6.0945 +.0020 +.03% 6 .2278 hong Kong Dollar 7.7522 -.0006 -.01% 7.7501 Indian Rupee 62.300 -.105 -.17% 54.265 Singapore Dollar 1.2560 +.0012 +.10% 1 .2211 South Korean Won 1060.21 +2.01 +.19% 1083.10 -.03 -.10% 2 9 .08 Taiwan Dollar 29.61
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/business
BRIEFING
Bend's0utback Steakhousecloses OutbackSteakhouse, the Australian-themed franchise restaurant at 1180 S.E. Third St. in Bend, closed Saturdayaf-
ter15 years inbusiness. "Closing arestaurant is nevereasy,"Jon Lakefish, director of franchise marketing for Evergreen Restaurant Group, the franchisee of Outback Restaurant Partners Inc., wrote in an email M onday. "This decision
workers wereremoving signs Monday,anda person workinginsidethe
What it does:Ma kes
Google AdWords work efficiently for clients
Pictured:Theresa Baiocco
to Evergreen Restaurant
Group.
Comcasttesting new payTVads Pay TVcustomers who are used to watching
fewer ads onon-demand shows mayhaveto put up with longercommercial breaks. Comcast Corp., the nation's largest cable TV provider, said it is testing outasystem with its NBCUniversal subsidiary to use full commercial
loads onolder episodes — while disabling fast-forwarding of adsif consumers watch them
within threedaysafter a new episodeairs. Currently, if people binge-watch tocatch up on shows like "The Blacklist" or "CSI," they see the full ad load on only the most recent episode.
Older episodeshavefew if anyads. Comcastsaid putting
COLl
and Richard Farr Where:210 S.W. Wilson Ave., Bend
Employees:Eight Phone:888-659-2680
Ol' efS Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin
By Andrea Chang do you Q •.Where see the busi-
aximizin
eve c
ness in five years? . We have
• office space in the Old Mill and six full-time employees. All that has
1C
happened in the past year. Becausethere is demand andwe're showing good results for our clients,
we see good growth in this area. There's
By Joseph Ditzier • The Bulletin
certainly potential for it.
In the Internet advertising jungle, it helps to have a
. Istherea
someone cutting a path to profitability.
• unifying theme amongyour employees?
If your company pays to advertise on Google, ConversionMax partners Richard Farr and Theresa Baiocco say they will help you get the most bang for your buck. Any company can spend the money on Google ads and show up high on search results. What happens next, when the client clicks on that ad, is really what counts. ConversionMax, from a suite in the Old Mill District, works in the
I think it's A ..peoplewho
world of landing pages, site analytics and sales funnels. The firm, Baiocco said, will analyze your data and test your website to determine if it takes prospective clients to the right page and the right message. If not, she said, they'll fix those issues. Farr and Baiocco started in business in Colorado in 2008 but came to Bend a few years ago on a Western tour, Baiocco explained. A thief broke into their car on their last night in town, a fortuitous
event, it turns out, for the next night was the annual Bend Brewfest. The event sold the pair — that and Bend's reputation as a mecca for practitioners of search engine optimization. Nine months later they relocated. ConversionMax is no simple SEO consultant, explained Baiocco. It divines the data to funnel those using search engines to the proper site, then turns that search into action: either contact or an actual purchase. "It's built into our company's DNA, that it's based on data," she sard. Baiocco handles the marketing side; Farr analyzes the data. They typically work with clients
are constantly will-
ing to learn, because the industry changes fast. They have a natural curiosity
and they never get complacent. You have to be willing to
figure things out for yourself.
spending $20,000 to $100,000 a month on Google AdWords. Their employees are all Google certified, she said. — Reporter: 541-617-7815; jditzlerC<bendbulletin.com
full ad loads on older
shows will helpgenerate more revenuefor networks andencourage them to makemore shows availablefor on-demand viewing. "Thetrade-off is
(consumers)aregetting access tomuchmore content," said Matt
Strauss, Comcast'ssenior vice presidentof video
services. Strausssaid that
consumersappearnot to mind theads.Evenwhen consumerscanfast-forward pastthem,they do so only about half of the time, he said.
FCGheadeyes telecommarket Thechairman ofthe
FederalCommunications Commissionsaid Monday that he intended to
aggressively promoteand
Oil glut loomsover OPECnations By Grant Smith Bloomberg News
LONDON — Even with OPEC forecast to keep its output quota unchanged at a meeting this week, falling oil demand and prospects for increasedsupply from some member states mean the group's leader, Saudi Arabia, will have to cut production
anyway. The kingdom and its allies Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates will need to produce about 2 million barrels a day less in 2014 to prevent a glut, the Centre for Global Energy Studies predicts. That's equal to annual revenue of about $80 billion at Monday's prices. The 12-nation group meets in Vienna on
Wednesday and will reaffirm its collective limit of 30 million barrels a day, according to 22 of 24analysts and traders surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries is already producing above target, even with output disrupted in member states Iraq, Libya and Iran. Demand for the group's crude will decline by about 900,000 barrels a day in 2014 as the U.S. pumps the most in almost a quarter century, the International Energy Agency said. A glut would lower prices that are averaging more than $100 a barrel for a fourth year, curbing revenue for Persian Gulf nations that on averagerely on the salesfor
protect competition in the telecommunications industry, including making sure that smaller mobile
phone companieshave a reasonablechanceof winning the auctions of
public airwavesscheduled for nextyear. The chairman,Tom Wheeler,also saidthat the FCCwould continue to ensure that the Web
remainedfully open,allowing users"to accessall lawful content," regardless
of what companyprovides the Internet service. The remarks, which Wheeler made atTheOhio State University, his alma mater, are the first public outline ofhis priorities
since hewasinstalled as chairman. — From staff and wire reports
e IVel'
Gooale
Website:www. conversionmax.com
restaurant said the busi-
ness closedSaturdaybut declined furthercomment andreferred questions
roneS
What:ConversionMax
was madebasedsolely on business circumstances. We enjoyedbeinga part of theBendcommunityand serving somanyof our neighbors overtheyears." The group, acorporation registered in Washington, identifies itself as a franchisee for Outback and Bonefish Grill restaurants in the Northwest. At the Bend location,
AMAZON
EXECUTIVE FILE
about 80 percent of government revenue. "Next year OPEC's going to have to act," said Seth Kleinman, the head of energy strategy at Citigroup Inc. in London. "There's a lot of crude that's coming. Iraq is coming in 2014, there's no sign of the U.S. stopping, and you have to believe you're going to see more leakage from Iran. It could be anywhere from I million to 2 million barrels a day that the market could be looking for Saudi Arabia" to cut, he said. Brent, the benchmark grade used to price much of the crude OPEC produces, averaged $108.55 a barrel this year, the third-highest level in data starting in 1988.
Los Angeles Times
Delivery drones are on their
way. Amazon.com Inc. on Sunday introduced Prime Air, a futuristic delivery system that the company said will getpackages into customers' hands in half an hour or less, delivered via unmanned aerial vehicles. The online retail behemoth posted a video on its website thatshows images ofa recent Prime Air test flight. In the 80-second clip, a shopper buys an item on Amazon. The item is then placed into a yellow plastic Amazon container and picked up at the end of a conveyor belt by an Amazon drone, which takes off and soarsover a grassy field before depositing the package with a thud outside the shopper's doorstep. "One day, Prime Air vehicles will be as normal as seeing mail trucks on the road today," the company said in a brief Q&A on its website. Amazon saidthe company has been working on Prime Air in its next-generation research and development lab, but cautioned that it would be a while before customers could choose it as a delivery option. "Putting Prime Air into commercial use will take some number of years as we advance the technology and wait for the necessary (Federal Aviation Administration) rules and regulations," the company said. Amazon added that it hoped the agency would put in place rules for unmanned aerial vehicles by 2015. "We will be ready at that time," it said. Amazon founder and Chief Executive Jeff Bezos introduced the delivery-by-drone concept during a segment on CBS' "60 Minutes" on Sunday. He said Prime Air would be available for packages weighing 5 pounds or less. Already known for free, two-day delivery via its Amazon Prime membership program, the company has lately been experimenting with same-day delivery. It has also expandeditsgrocery delivery offerings and, most recently, announced that it is teaming with the U.S. Postal Service to deliver Amazon packages on Sundays.
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Is It Better to Rent orto Buy?Presented byJim Mazziotti of Exit Realty; free; 6 p.m.; webinar; www.spreecast.corn/ events/should-i-rent-orshould-i-buy. • Holiday Marketing Success Series: Learn about successful holiday marketing campaigns; 10 a.m.-noon; Redmond Chamber ofCommerce, 446 S.W.Seventh St.; 541-335-1846, hollysaid@gmail.com or www.7-touchmarketing. com. FRIDAY • BusinessHop: Networking event hosted bythe Redmond Chamber ofCommerce and CVB; free admission; 8-10 a.m.; Juniper Golf Course, 1938S.W. Elkhorn Ave.,Redmond; 541-923-5191 or www. visitredmondoregon com. MONDAY • Introduction toFinding Funding:Learnabout funding for nonprofits using "Foundation Directory Online;" led by community librarian Nate Pedersen; free; registration required; 9-11 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/ nonprofits. DEC. 10 • OregonAlcohol Server Permit Training:Meets Oregon Liquor Control Commission minimum requirements to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Round TablePizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining.com. • What ShouldBe In YourNewHome Warranty?Home warranty issues for contractors, subcontractors and homeowners; registration required; $20 for nonmembers, freefor Central OregonBuilders Association members; 10 a.m.-noon; COBA, 1051 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-1058, gretchenp©coba.org or www.coba.org. • DeschutesCounty ePermittingSystem Training:Learnto create an account, submit plans for electronic review, track permits and other information; satisfies continuing education requirements; $20 for nonmembers, freefor COBA members; 1-3 p.m.; COBA,1051N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541389-1058, gretchenp© coba.org or www.coba. ol'g. • Obamacare: Its Impact onIndividuals and BusinessOwners: Learn to remain in compliance and avoid penalties; registration requested;free; 3-4 p.m.; COBA,1051 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541389-1058, gretchenp@ coba.org or www.coba. OI'g.
• General Certificate in Brewinginformation session:Learn aboutthe new exam-preparation course to earn the Institute of Brewing and Distilling General Certificate in Brewing registration required; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270.
"One day, Prime Air vehicles will be as
normal as seeing mail trucks on the road today." — Amazon website
• Forthe complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
DEEDS Deschutes County • Brooks Resources Corporation to Richard C. Hunt, trustee for the Richard C. Hunt Revocable Trust, North Rim on Awbrey Butte, Phase4, Lot 72, $205,000 • Andrew and Rachel Heyer to Heather A. Schaab andTyler P.McMeekin, Foxborough, Phase 6,Lot291, $300,000 • Corey A. Rosenburg to David D. and Kern J. Shanks, First Addition to Whispering PinesEstates, Lot15, Block 7, $160,000 • Peggy and Margaret Huffman, trustees for the Margaret Huffman Trust, to Michael J. and Deborah R. Sullivan, Rivers EdgeVillage, Phase 6, Lot 38, $359,900 • Chet Joye to Travis L. Harrer, Centennial Glen, Lot16, $185,000 • Pacwest II LLCto Danette Schlapfer, Madison Park, Lot 8, $222,165
• Wittmer Construction lnc. to Curtis H. and Angela J.Tucker, Majestic Ridge, Phases1 and 2,Lot 25, $311,000 • Margaret L. Copp, trustee for the Margaret L. CoppTrust, to John Davis, Fairway Island, Lot10, Block 4, $289,000 • Anitra M. Moon to Patrick M. Walsh and Dawn M.Patience, Elkai Woods Townhomes, Phase 5,Lot 33, $350,000 • Choice OneBuilders LLC to Paul R. and Phyllis F. Caisse, Renaissanceat Shevlin Park, Lot15, $439,55707 • lan Patrickto Whiskey Tango Investments LLC,Canal Crossings, Lot 18, $179,999 • Henry J. and Mary L. Ahrens to John M. and Judith A. Gallaway, trustees for the John andJudith Gallaway Living Trust, Tanglewood, Phase7, Lot 12, $440,000 • Steve Carlson to Henry J. andMary
L. Ahrens, Brightenwood Estates, Phase 4, Lot 2, Block 4, $225,500 • Henry F. Kreminski, trustee for the Kreminski Family Trust, to Francine K. Fisher, trustee of the Francine K. Fisher Marital Disclaimer Trustand the Francine K.Fisher Survivors Trust, Ridge at EagleCrest 28, Lot 171, $375,000 • John R. Herlocker Jr. and Denise K. Herlocker to Western Title and Escrow Co., for the benefit of Ron Lulich, Sherwood Estates, Lot A, $205,000 •Pahli sch Homes lnc.andAndrew S. and Carolyn A. Deenik, Newport Landing, Lot16, $358,250 •Thomas D.and JuliaA.Brooksto Martis G. Jans, NorthWest Crossing, Phases 9 and10, Lot 488, $335,000 • Kathryn Lilienthal to Terry B. and Terri J. Johnson, Tetherow, Phase2, Lot 17, $617,400 • Nils and DagmarEriksson to Michael
Wilson and DanaHardy, ParkAddition to Bend, Lots11 and12, Block15, $1,175,000 • Bradley M. and Sara J. Moffitt to Charlene M. Halsey, Northpoint, Phase 3, Lot113, $192,500 • Perry L. and lrene A. Walters to Boyd W. andLaura I. Peterson, Ahern Acres, Lot1, Block 3, $330,000 • Moore Rhodes II and Merritt L. Gandin to Douglas W.and Kathleen A. Young, PalmerAddition to Awbrey Road, Lot10, $255,000 • Selco Community Credit Union to Hayden HomesLLC, Lawson Crossing, Lots1-22, $572,000 • Bradley and Caroline Bischel, also known as BradandCarrie Bischel, to Tommy C.and Tamara Norton, Oregon Water Wonderland, Unit1,Lot 26, Block 6, $155,000 • Eric L. and Sharon L. Skinner, trustees of the Skinner Family Trust, to Christina A. Kralis and BradenW.
Sharp, Starwood, Lo135, Block6, $240,000 • William F. RootCompanyto CPT Legacy LLC,SothmansAddition, Lots 5-7, $450,000 • Linda L. Klaastad, who acquired title as Li nda L.Chaponot,toAngelaM. Drake, Starwood, Lot13, Block11, $201,100 • Michael T. and Andrew T.Rundle to Gary W.andJanet L. Thorley, Stonehaven, Phase 3,Lot 82, $402,950 • Don Denning Building and Design LLC to Peter C.and Marilyn K. Adams, Three Pines P.U.D., Phase 5,Lot 37, $160,000 • Theodore H. Meiclerto Jeffery R. and Karen L.Harding, trusteesfor the Harding RevocableTrust, Park Addition to Bend, Lot7, Block15, $345,000
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D4 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2013
O< www.bendbulletin.com/athome
HOME
Central Oregon's
Decorate your tree with a little inspiration By Penny Nakamura For The Bulletin
Yes, it's time to start thinking about getting your Christmas tree decked out for the holiday season. This year, find inspiration from professional Christmas tree decorators who have been decorating and designing trees for years, all for a
The winner Of The Bulletin's cookie contest is a bit Of a surprise. The top honor goes to 8-year-old Wyatt Chance. His Fairy Drops, shortbread cookies with a
good cause.
peppermint frosting, were simple but well-executed and, frankly, scrumptious. Photos by Rob Kerr i The Bulletin
They beat out dozens of other cookies, from chocolate chip to molasses to snickerdoodle.
Bend 8-year-old Wyatt Chance loves to bake.He was the winner of this year's Bulletin cookie contest, with his frosted shortbread Fairy Drops.
A panel of eight judges sampled the cookies and determined winners in each of five categories.
Judging This year's cookie contest included eight judges. Twowere assigned to eachcategory. Cookies were evaluated primarily on taste — but originality, texture,
Another standout were the painted cookies from
We spoke with three designers who decorate 7-foot firs for the Festival of Trees. It's an annual event at the Deschutes County Fair 8r. Expo Center that benefits Hospice of Redmond — and this year's event takes
place Saturday (see "If you go").
Rika Turel. Her simple sugar cookies were tasty-
The Christmas trees are auctioned off, some fetching thousands of dollars, which all goes to benefit the hospice and its Camp Sunrise, a summer camp for grieving children. Donna and Frank Porfily are a good design team when it comes to the Festival of Trees. Frank gives his wife the credit for being the brains behind the creativity
but it was the impressive painted scenes of Central Oregon that really wowed us. Her cookies were truly works of edible art.
appearance andskill were also factors, depending on thecategory. The judges then tasted the
winning cookie in eachcategory and voted for a favorite. Thefan favorite cookie was determined during a cookie social, after the
official judging had concluded. Contestants and Bulletin employ-
eesvotedonwhichcookiethey liked best.
and design work,
This year's judges
while Donna credits her husband for being the brawn and skilled carpenter. They start planning their Christmas tree designs in the summer, and by July they start making ornaments and sketching out designs. "We decided to do a country Christmas theme for this tree, in memorial to Frank's mother, who passed away in 2004, because hospice was so good to her
Alandra Johnson Editor of The Bulletin's At Home
section and cookie contest founder
Heather Adendroth Culinary student and winner of
last year's cookie contest Elise Hurley Co-owner of Fearless Baking (1 900 N.W.
during her declining
Division St., Suite 102, Bend, www.
months," said Donna. See Trees /D5
fearless-baking.com, 541-508-7469)
Photos onD5
Sean Lannin Co-owner of Bend Cookie Co. (www.bend cookie.com, 541-977-9177)
Theresa Whitney Owner of Bliss
Baking Company (www.blissbaking company.com, 528 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond, 541-316-1614)
DiLong Owner of La Magie Bakery andCafe (www.lamagie cafe.com, 945 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-241-7884)
If you go What:Festival of Trees benefiting Hospice of Redmond When:Saturday, 10 to 2 p.m. for family festivi-
Lindsey Bivens Longtime judge
of baked goods atthe Deschutes County Fair
ties; 5 p.m. gala Where:Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center Adout:Family festivities, including live en-
Riley MacKenna Glenn This year we included
a kid judge. Riley, 10, was the perfect
tertainment andSanta
pick, as she
Claus, with decorated
recently started her
Christmas trees on display; gala andauction
own baking business, Better Than Donuts, which sells items to local friends and family.
>4ea - <A'--
take place at 5 p.m. Cost:Admission is free;
gala costs $40
The Bulletin would like to thank all of this year's participants and judges for making it another great cookie contest.
Contact:541-548-7483,
hospiceofredmond.org
D2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
•
-
-
and first-place
youth category:
>•
•
•
•
Fairy Drops
First place:
First place:
Molasses Cookies
By Wyatt Chance.Makes 84 cookies.
Chocolate Chip Cookies
By Dina Severson.
By Jerry Egge."My recipe is right off the Nestle's Toll House Cookie
Makes 18-24 cookies.
pack, but it's the chocolate chips that set my cookies apart, and we usually can't get them in Bend." Makes 30-35 cookies.
'/4 C soft shortening 1 C brown sugar '/4 C molasses
1 egg 2 tsp baking soda 2 tsp cinnamon 1 tsp ginger ~/~ tsp cloves
~/2tsp salt 2'/4 C flour Granulated sugar
Preheat oven to 375. Mix shortening, brown sugar, molasses and egg at high speed until well blended. Mix ginger, baking soda, cinnamon, cloves, salt and flour, then slowly add to molasses mixture.
/2 Ib butter '/4 C brown sugar '/4 C sugar 1 tsp baking soda 1 tsp salt 1 tsp vanilla 2 eggs 2'/4 C flour 3 packages of Hershey's Mini-Kisses
2 eggs 2 tsp almond extract
TOPPING '/~ C butter /2 tsp Mexican vanilla 3 to 3'/2 C powdered sugar 3 TBS heavy cream Crushed hard peppermint candies
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. In a mixing bowl, beat the butter, then Then, mixing minimally, add in the oil, eggs and extract. Gradually add in the flour and beat with the mixer as much as possible. Any remaining
flour can be mixed in byhand. Chill the dough and cover for at least 30 minutes. Divide the dough into four equal sections. Keep the remaining dough in the fridge as you work with each portion. Shape the dough into 1'/4inch balls and place them onto an ungreased cookie sheet about 2 inches
(see note) Mix the butter, sugars, baking soda, salt and vanilla
apart. Dip the bottom of a drinking glass in granulated sugarand then use
together. Add theeggs and mix again. Blend in the flour. Stir in the Mini-Kisses. Bake at 375 degrees, being careful not to over-brown them. They
continue to bake a bit after removal from the oven. And I makethem pretty big. Why bother with a cookie if it's only half a bite? Note on Mini-Kisses:The most important part: I use Hershey's
Mini-Kisses. Most people use semisweet chocolate chips. Not me. These are milk chocolate, but different from Hershey's milk chocolate chips. These are larger, and taste different. Where the recipe on
the Nestle's pack calls for a package of chocolate chips, I put in three a•
4'/2 C all-purpose flour granulated sugar for pressing
add both sugars, baking soda, cream oftartar and salt and mix until fluffy.
Mix thoroughly. Chill at least one hour.Takechilled dough and roll into balls, dip tops in granulated sugar, place on cookie sheet. Bake10-12 minutes or until just set.
COOKIES 1 C butter 1 C sifted powdered sugar 1 C granulated sugar 1 tsp baking soda 1 tsp cream of tartar 1 tsp salt 1 C cooking oil
that surface to lightly flatten each ball, until it is about '/4 inch thick. The cookies should bake until the edges are just starting to brown, about10to12 minutes. Move the cookies to a wire rackto cool. Prepare frosting: To make the frosting, beat the butter until fluffy with an electric mixer, then add in the extract and vanilla. Add in the sugar slowly to the mixture. Add the cream — add just a little to create a thick
frosting or add all or more for a thinner frosting. Spread the frosting onto the cookies and sprinkle with the crushed
peppermint candies. — This recipe wasadapted from the Setter Homes8 GardenNewSaking Book
packages: just enough cookie to hold the chocolate chips together. I remember when I was a kid, I was hunting for the chocolate chips in
•
Second place:
the cookies. Now that I can afford to makethemany way I want, I put in three packages. As you saw, it's easy to find chocolate chips in my cookies. Either we get Hershey's Mini-Kisses when we travel out of
Oregon, or we order a25-pound box at Cashand Carry, andthey get it
Peanut Butter and Chocolate Cookies
specially for us. We then divide the chips into packs, about 33 ounces
By April Watkins. Makes approximately 2 dozen cookies.
each, and useapackageforeachbatchofcookies.
1 C butter 1 tsp baking soda '/4 C plus 2TBS granulated sugar '/4 tsp salt 1'/2 C semisweet chocolate /2 C brown sugar ~/~ C plus 1 TBS peanut butter chips 1 egg 25 dark chocolate peanut 1 tsp vanilla butter cup miniatures cut 1'/4 C flour into quarters
Preheat oven to 375. Cream butter and granulated sugar. Add the
II58
Second place and fan favorite: Snickerdoodie
•
•
By Kenzie Salari. Makes 90 cookies
Second place Editor's note:Michelle Tobin, who placed second in the chocolate
chip category, could not be reachedfor her recipe.
1'/2 C sugar 1 C butter
2 eggs
1 tsp baking soda '/2 tsp salt Sugar and cinnamon mixture
2'/4 C sifted flour 2 tsp cream of tartar
rest of the wet ingredients. Then add flour, baking soda and salt. Stir
in chocolate chips and peanut butter cups. Drop onto an ungreased cookie sheet with '/4-cup sized ice cream scoop. Bakefor 12-14 min-
Preheat oven to 425. Creamsugar, butter and eggs. Sift flour, cream of
utes.
tartar, baking soda and salt; add to creamed mixture. Mix until well blended. Chill dough if desired. Form into small balls the size of small walnuts;
roll in sugar and cinnamon mixture. Place on anungreased cookie sheet about 2 inches apart. Bake for 8-10 minutes. Cool before removing from
cookie sheet. •
•
Third place:
KC%8II
Chocolate Chip Coconut Oatmeal Cookies x•
Third place:
By Kati Hannigan.Makes about4 dozen cookies.
•
Third place:
'/4 C butter (room temperature) 1 C brown sugar /2 C granulated sugar
2 eggs
Mexican Wedding Cookies
1 tsp vanilla 1 /2 C all-purpose flour 1 tsp baking soda
By Becky Willis-Zaremba. Makes about 8 dozen1-inch cookies. 4'/~ C flour ~/2tsp salt 1 /2 C pecans, finely chopped
2 C butter
1 C powdered sugar 2 tsp vanilla
1 tsp cinnamon '/4 tsp nutmeg '/2 tsp salt 3 C OldFashioned Oats '/2 C semisweet chocolate chips /2 C milk chocolate chips '/4 C shredded coconut
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Beat butter and both sugars together un-
til creamy, about 4 minutes. Beat in eggs, one at atime. Add in vanilla and mix well.
Mix butter, sugar and vanilla thoroughly. Sift flour and salt together, then blend into butter mixture. Mix in nuts. Chill dough. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Roll dough into 1-inch balls. Place on ungreased cookie sheet. Bake for10-12 minutes (do not brown). While warm, roll
in sifted powered sugar.
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
a
••
TheBul l e tjn
S
speed. Mix in oats, chocolate chips andcoconut. Droproundedtablespoonsontoanungreased cookiesheet. Bake for10 to12 minutes until golden brown.
• Trained Professionals • Free Quotes • No"Hidden" Costs • On Time • Guaranteed Work
Mary Mossman, of Baltimore, was looking for a recipe for making Polish pumpkin soup with dumplings. She said her grandmother came from
Poland and taught her mother Polish cooking, and this soup w as a favorit e ofhers. Jean Suda, of Timonium, Md., had two grandmothers who came to the U.S. from Poland in th e e arly 1900s,
Central Oregon'sONLY IICRC Certihed Master Cleaners Residential & Commercial Carpet Cleaning • Upholstery Cleaning Oriental & Area Rug Cleaning Pet Odor Removal All Work Performed to Industry Standards
•Q
Ask about our "CLEAN FORLlf E" Planned MaintenanceProgram
R ED m 0 0 0 P R 0 F IC IE fl C v
e 4 academy
Licensed Bonded Insured
L
EDUCATION AS UNIQUE AS YOU ARE
www.cleaningclinicinc.com 20664 Carmen Loop, ¹4, Bend, OR 97702
~
a
Are you seeking a more challenging course of study? Would you like to earn college credits while in high school? I Learn more about RPA's pathways to success
College Prep High School Proficiency
I ~e~ 541-382-9498 C- 4 4~
e e
2 eggs
2/3 C all-purpose flour 1 /2 C chocolate chips 1~/~ C Reese's Pieces
1 tsp baking soda '/2 tsp salt
Preheat oven to 375. Combine butter, sugars and vanilla in a bowl until creamy. Add eggs. Combine remaining ingredients with mixer. Shape dough into balls and place on baking pan. Bake 8-10 minutes. — Recipeis from the Whinerys'neighbors, Christinaand Michaela Alexander
and she has a collection of her mother's and grandmother's recipes, as well a s s everal good Polish cookbooks that she uses regularly. She shared a recipe for pumpkin soup from the "Polish Cookbook." She also included a recipe for traditional soup d u mplings from "The Art of Polish Cooking" by Alina Zeranska that she said would be appropriate to use in the soup. While this particular soup recipe calls for the addition of
RECIPE FINDER If you arelooking for a hard-to-find recipe or
can answer arequest, write Julie Rothman Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email baltsun-
recipefinder©gmail.com.
rice, Suda sees no reason why the rice could not be omitted and dumplings served instead. She said that the soup dumplings could be placed into the pureed soup as it cooks.
Pumpkin Soup
TM
Immediate Openings for High School Students Apply online at www.rpacademy.org
Serving Send for 25 Years!
1 C butter '/4 C sugar '/4 C brown sugar 1 tsp vanilla
An after-ThanksgivingLjsefor pumpkin The Baltimore Sun
You DeserveTheVery Best!-
By Greyson andHeronWhinery. Makes about 2 dozencookies.
Mix together flour, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg andsalt. Slowly add flour mixture to butter mixture with mixer running at slowest
By Julie Rothman
gpg
Neighborly Cookies
Makes 8 servings. 1 quart milk 1 (15-oz) can pumpkin puree /2 tsp allspice /4 tsp nutmeg
/4 tsp pepper ~/2 tsp salt 1 C cooked rice, optional 2 TBS butter, optional
Beat milk and pumpkin together in saucepan. Stir in spices and salt. Bring just to a boil. Stir in cooked rice and butter Cif using). Cook and stir 5
to10 minutes, or until rice is heated through; do not boil. SOUP DUMPLINGS 1'/2 C flour 1 Ig egg
/4 C water Dash of salt
Virtual Academy Serving all Central oregon students grades 6-12
Visit wvvw.rpacademy.org and apply today!
Mix flour with egg, water, and salt. Beat with a spoon for 2 minutes. Drop small portions of the dough into boiling water (or directly into soup) from a teaspoon. Cook uncovered until the dumpling float.
TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Start a holi ay meal with a creamysoup
a• •
First place:
First place:
Painted Cookies
Cherry Coconut Bars
By Rika Turel.
By Renee Schindele.
SUGAR COOKIE: 1 C unsalted butter 1'/4 C sugar 1 egg and1 egg yolk 2 tsp vanilla extract /2 tsp almond extract 3 C all-purpose flour '/4 tsp salt 1 tsp baking powder
1 Cflour '/2 C butter 3 TBS powdered sugar 2 eggs
By Lisa Abraham Alzron (Ohio) Beacon Journal
1 C sugar i/2 C coconut '/4 C flour
ICING: 1 Ib powdered sugar ~/4 C corn syrup Cream together butter and ~/4 tsp almond extract sugar. Beat in eggs, vanilla and ~/2 tsp vanilla extract almond flavorings. In a separate ~/4 C water or to your preferred bowl, sift together flour, salt and consistency
baking powder. Pour and mix the dry ingredients into the wet, one
Mix all ingredients together
cup at a time. Cover dough and for at least1 minute. You can use refrigerate overnight. Roll and cut food coloring to color the icing. into cookie shapes. Freezedough To paint cookies, usefood colfor10 minutes before you bake. Bake at 350 for 6 to 8 minutes.
'
•
oring and water.
/2 tsp baking powder '/4 tsp salt 1 tsp vanilla '/4 C chopped pecans /2 C maraschino cherries, quartered
Preheat oven to 350. Greasebottom and sides of 9-by-9-inch cake pan or line with parchment paper. Mix flour, butter and powdered sugar together until crumbly and
consistently smooth. Press into bottom of prepared pan. Bakefor 20 minutes.
Just before crust comes out of oven, beat eggs slightly. To eggs, add sugar, coconut, flour, salt, baking powder andvanilla. (Important to not let this mixture set too long after baking powder is added, be-
fore it goes back in theoven). Blend well. Add pecans andmaraschino cherries. Spread coconut/cherry mixture over crust, and smooth out to edges of pan. Return to oven. Bake another 20-25 minutes, until knife in-
serted into center comesout clean.
•
•
Second place:
ESII
Salted Caramel Chocolate Thumbprint
Second place:
By Donna Davis.
Florentine Bars
/3 C sugar /2 C butter, softened 1 Ig egg, separated 1 TBS milk 1 tsp vanilla extract 1 Cflour /3 C cocoa '/4 tsp salt 1 C pecans, finely chopped 16 unwrapped caramels 3 TBS whipping cream Sea salt /3 C semisweet chocolate chips '/4 tsp shortening
By Julie Story. Makesapproximately 35 bars. 1 C salted butter, at room temperature 1'/4 C sugar 1 egg plus one egg yolk 2'/2 C cake flour '/2 C plus 6 TBS unsalted butter '/~ C honey
/3 C heavy whipping cream 12 oz sliced almonds '/2 C raisins, finely chopped '/~ C tart dried apricots, finely
chopped '/2 C tart dried cherries, finely chopped
Heat the oven to375. Measureout a piece of parchment paper to16 by11 inches and flour the surface. In a bowl, cream the butter and ~/2 cup of sugar together until fluffy.
Add egg and yolk, then slowly add in the flour. Combine well to form In small bowl, beat sugar, butter, egg yolk, milk and vanilla until blended. Stir together flour, cocoa and salt; blend into butter mixture.
a soft dough. Transfer the dough to the parchment paper and roll, with a floured
Chill dough1 hour or until firm enough to handle.
rolling pin, until the doughmatches the size of the parchment. Usethe
Preheat oven to 350. Lightly grease cookie sheet or use parchment
paper. Beat eggwhite slightly. Shape dough into 1-inch balls. Dip each ball into egg white, shaking to remove excess, and roll in pecans to
D3
parchment to transfer the dough to a rimmed baking pan. Bake about 12 minutes, until golden, and set aside.
Over medium heat, stir together salted butter, remaining sugar,
coat. Place 1 inch apart on prepared cookie sheet. Press an indenta-
honey and cream and stir frequently. Stir frequently until the mix-
tion gently into the center of eachball (I use a melon baller). Bake 10-12 minutes or until set (cookies will appear a little underdone). While cookies bake, preparecaramel filling.
ture reaches 250 degrees on a candy thermometer. Once it reaches 250, remove the pan from the heat and add in the almonds, raisins, apricots and cherries and stir. Carefully spread this mixture over the
Cream soupsarethe pe rfect starter for a holiday dinner. Rich, decadent and velvety smooth, they make an opening statement that a truly sumptuous meal is to follow. But the bonus is that cream soups are simple to make and can be relatively inexpensive, depending on the vegetable used. "This is the time of year when the cold sets in, when you want something warm, comforting and filling, with a little more substance to it," s aid chef Mark K ent, w h o teaches cooking at the University of Akron's hospitality management program. Kent said cream soups are easy to prepare:simmer a vegetable in stock until tender, puree, strain to remove any fibrous bits, and add cream and seasonings. Some recipes use a thickening roux instead of cream, or a thickener like flour and cream. Otherrecipes use pureed rice or potatoes instead of cream to lower the fat, or substitute half-and-half instead of heavy cream. The basic preparation technique remains pretty much the same,despitethe nuances of any particular recipe. Some recipes call for aromatics like celery, carrotsand onions to be sauteed first, then simmered along with the vegetable, to increase the flavor of the soup. Kent also noted that some vegetables, such as b u tternut squash, taste better when roasted first to bring out their sweetness and richness. "It really adds an intense
"This is the time of year when the cold sets in, when you want something warm, comforting and filling, with a little more substance to it." — Mark Kent, chef
flavor and takes it to another level," he said. Some hard vegetables like winter squash or carrots are s ubstantial e n ough wh e n cooked to make a thick soup without adding cream. However, cream soups, particularly when they are starting the meal, are intended to be served in small portions of one cup or less, so that also helps to keep the calories in check. Kent cautioned that when making a cream soup, it is important to not add cold cream into hot puree, as it may curdle. Cool the puree first, or warm the cream,and "add the cream just before serving, if possible." Traditionally, cream soups are seasoned with salt and white pepper — never black pepper — so that the color of the soup is not marred by flecks of black, Kent said. But some recipes ignore this rule. When working with inexpensive produce like carrots or broccoli, a cream soup isa very affordable dish. However, a soup made from out-of-season produce orexotic ingredients — gourmet mushrooms, for example — can be more expensive to prepare.
Cream of Broccoli Soup Makes 4 servings. 8 C broccoli florets (about1/4 Ibs) 3 TBS unsalted butter 2 C low-salt chicken broth Ground white pepper 1 C plus 4 tsp whipping cream Cook broccoli in large pot of boiling salted water until tender but still bright green, about 5 minutes. Drain broccoli. Set aside 4 small florets
ping cream. Cookover low heat, stirring frequently until caramels are
shortbread using aspatula. Bake about 10 minutes, until the top appears caramelized and the
melted and mixture is smooth.
almonds look toasted. Cut into 2-inch squares while the bars are still
for garnish. Combine broth and 1 cup cream in heavy large saucepan and bring
After removing cookies from oven,press center of each cookie again to make indentation. Immediately spoonabout /2 teaspoon caramel fill-
warm.
to boil. Working in batches, puree broccoli, broth mixture and butter in
Caramel filling: In small saucepan, combine caramels and whip-
— Adapted from Sunset Magazine
ing in center of each cookie. Let cool slightly before removing to wire
racks to cool completely. Sprinkle caramelcenter lightly with seasalt. In small bowl, combinechocolate chips and shortening. Microwave 1 minute or until softened; stir. Drizzle chocolate mixture over top of cookie.
blender until smooth, about 45 seconds per batch. Return puree to same pan. Season soup to taste with salt and white pepper. (Soupcan be made up to 8 hours ahead.Cool slightly, cover and refrigerate.) Bring soup to simmer, thinning with water if desired. Ladle soup into 4 bowls. Drizzle 1 teaspoon cream over each; garnish with reserved florets. — wwwrepicurious.com
g@55 '
•
•
•
Third place (tie):
Cream of Mushroom Soup
Third place:
Makes 8 servings.
Bop Bop's Brownies Chocolate-Chocolate Cookies
By Becky Davis, of Redmond.
By Deb Douglas. COOKIES: 1 Csugar '/2 C butter
~/2 tsp salt 1 C chopped nuts (optional)
1 egg
CHOCOLATE FROSTING: 2 C powdered sugar
/2 Cnonsweetened chocolate
cocoa powder
/~ C nonsweetened cocoa
1 tsp vanilla /3 C milk 1'/4 C white flour /2 tsp baking soda
powder 3 TBS butter Dash of salt '/4-'/3 C milk
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Mix sugar, butter, egg, chocolate and vanilla. In a separate bowl stir flour, baking sodaandsalt together. Add /3 of the flour mixture to the first five ingredients. Then, add half of the milk, Alternate until all ingredients are well blended.
Dropdough by rounded teaspoons about 2 inches apart onto ungreased cookie sheet. Bake until almost no indentation remains when touched, about 8-10 minutes. Ifyou love a soft cookie, do not over
'/2 C butter 2 squares unsweetened chocolate, chopped coarsely 2 beaten eggs 1 C sugar
/3 C flour /2 C chopped nuts of choice '/2 tsp baking powder '/~ tsp vanilla /2 C peanut butter melted in microwave
In microwave, melt butter and chocolate. Stir until smooth. Cool.
7 TBS butter 8 C chopped mushrooms, about 1/4 Ibs (see note) /3 C finely chopped celery 1'/4 C thinly sliced leek (white part only) /2 C all-purpose flour 5 C chicken broth
1 fresh thyme sprig 1 C sliced mushrooms 1/2 C heavy cream, heated Fresh lemon juice to taste Salt to taste Freshly ground white pepper to taste
Melt 6 tablespoons of the butter in a soup pot over medium heat. Add
the chopped mushrooms, celery and leek. Cook, stirring frequently, until softened, 6 to 8 minutes. Add the flour and cook, stirring constantly, for 3 to 4 minutes.
Stir in eggs, sugar, flour, nuts, baking powder andvanilla. Pour into a
Whisk in the broth gradually. Add the thyme sprig, bring to a simmer,
8-by-8-inch greased pan. Bake at 350 for approximately 20 minutes. Cool briefly on wire rack. Pour melted peanut butter on top evenly. Cool until peanut butter is set.
and cook for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, melt the remaining butter in a skillet. Add the sliced mush-
FROSTING: 6 Ig marshmallows cut into pieces '/2 C butter '/3 C milk
rooms and saute until cooked through, about 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and reserve. Remove and discard the thyme. Puree the soup, then strain through
1 C semisweet or milk chocolate chips 1 /2 C confectioner's sugar Chopped nuts (optional)
cheesecloth or a fine sieve. Return the soup to the pot and placeover low heat. Add the heavy cream and season to taste with the lemon juice, salt
and pepper. Heatthe soup, but do not boil. Serve in heated bowls, garnished with the reserved cooked mushrooms.
Melt butter, chocolate chips, marshmallows and milk in a sauce-
Note: Regular white mushrooms work well in this soup, or use a com-
bake. Immediately removefrom cookie sheet. Icecookies whencooled.
pan.Add enough powdered sugarto make athickglaze.Pourover
bination of white and exotic mushrooms, depending on your taste and
To make frosting:Mix the frosting ingredients until well blended. If the frosting is too thick, add milk one tablespoon at a time until creamy.
chilled and set brownies. Top with nuts, if desired. Cut into squares when completely set.
what is available.
Our December show is titled
Open Every Day •
•
•
•
Third place (tie):
R e c l C h a ir g a I I e ry
Pretzel Caramel Cookies By Haley Younger. Makes 2dozencookies. /2 C butter (room temperature) '/4 C sugar '/4 C brown sugar '/2 tsp vanilla
1 egg
— "The Culinary Institute of America: TheNewBookof Soups"
F ine A r t 4 C o n t e m p o r a r y C r a f t
A Fewof My Favorite Things During the mOnth of DeCember
10% of sales Will go to benefit
The Bethlehem lnn M
/2 tsp baking soda 1'/2 C flour '/4 C pretzels (broken) /2 C Kraft caramel bits ~/2 C chocolate chips
'/2 tsp salt e
In a stand mixer, cream butter with sugars. Add vanilla and egg. Incorporate and scrape bowl. Combine salt, baking soda and flour in a separate bowl. Gradually add to wet mixture. Mix until combined.
Fold in broken pretzels, caramel bits and chocolate chips with a spatula. Bake at 350 for 11-12 minutes.
103 NW O r e gon Ave. • Bend • 5 4 1-306-3176 • r e d c h a i r g a l l e r y b e n d . c o m
D4 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
H OME de
A RDEN
Cleaningfireplaces easy,with help; pickingshrubsfor pets harder and chimney. Schedule an appointment now for spring.
MARTHA STEWART
Pet-friendly shrubs
I
know rhododendrons Q •• Iand azaleas are poisonthe best way to Q •• What's clean soot off the front
ous to dogs. Which flowering shrubs are good in shade and won't harm my pet? • Two safe bets are Itea
t
of afireplace? • S moke and s o ot c a n • build up, causing black stains on your fireplace over time. But with proper care, you can p r event u nsightly
quercifolia (oakleaf hydran-
gea). Both of these blooming shrubs are hardy varieties that are not poisonous to dogs and can survive in many environments. What's more difficult to figure out, though, is what shrub will survive where you live. In th e A m erican Southwest, for instance, the plant will need to withstand heat and drought; in the Southeast, heat and humidity; and in the North, cold winters. Before heading to your local nursery to buy a shrub, you should also think about where you will
Suzanne Dechillo/ New York Times News Serwce
No matter what material your hearth is made of, a few simple tricks can help keep it clean.
fireplace. Next, spot-clean the soot marks. Whether you have a granite, brick or stone hearth, you never want to use water-based solutions — these
will only spread the greasy soot around. Instead, use a dry cleaning soot sponge (usually sold at hardware stores). The
--g iz
• virginica (Virginia sweetspire) and Hydrangea
smudges. The first step toward maintaining it is to clear away any debris, says Sophie Hudson, cleaning merchant at Home Depot. So sweep around your
rr
trick is to swipe it firmly in one direction. (These sponges are made of nontoxic natural rubber, so you don't have to worry about inhaling potentially harmful chemicals.) Hudson r ecommends c leaning t h e soot off at least once a month,
more if you use the fireplace frequently. Always follow the manufacturer's i n structions, and make sure the fireplace is properly ventilated. Hire a chimney sweep at leastonce a year for a professional cleaning of your firebox
The Bulletin file photo
Rhododendrons are pretty — but they're poisonous to dogs. plant it. Find out if the shade is dense or dappled and if the soil is dry, swampy or in between. In addition to azaleas and r hododendrons, stay a w a y from laurels, oleanders, yews and privets, which are also hazardous to dogs. Also, consider your dog's personality when planting a garden. Some dogs love to chew on plants, while others don't even notice them. If your pet is naturally
inclined to eat greenery, Tina Wismer, the medical director at the ASPCA's Animal Poison Control Center, recommends fencing off the plants in your yard. Keep in mind, too, that even nontoxic shrubs can upset your dog's stomach. — Questions of general interest can be emailed to mslletters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.
Gifts for the home By Lindsey M. Roberts
www.serenaandlily.com).
Special to The Washington Post
Forget the orchid; smart gift givers look to the unexpected, such as a Red Velvet echeveria. Terrain's red-tinged succulent comes in a gray, lace-pressed pot ($28, wwwterrain.com). In 2013, Italian designer Paola Navone turned her designer's eye to the United States, first with bedroom textiles for Anthropologie, and then with tableware forCrate & Barrel. Our pick is her hammered-aluminum Como pitcher. Fill it with flowers for an extra-special p r e sentation ($49.95. www.crateandbarrel.com). Everyday containers — tin cans, plastic bottles, milk cartons — are cleverly preserved in porcelain form by Seletti. Our favorites are canisters that recall aluminum cans, which we found at Washington's Salt & Sundry. The larg-
Anyone can go to the mall
and swoop up some generic gifts. But no, not you. You're a researcher, a hunter, a savvy shopper ofthe coolest, quirkiest, finest presents around. Maybe you're a bit crunched for time this year, though, so we're here to help with some unexpected present ideas:
Hostess gifts and stocking
ASCADE COTTONS
stuffers($1-$20) Shopper tip: If you're mall-
Find the perfect gift for everyone onyour list!
averse and want to find something unusual, don't overlook a museum's gift shop. Luckily you don't have to go all the way to Los Angeles to visit the gift shop at that city's Museum of Contemporary Art. We found this art for your kitchen, a tea towel with an illustration of tools by artist Louise Bourgeois, online. ($19, www.moca
Bend rl'c Mt. Bachelor Logo- Wear and Gifts for the Entire Farnily!
' '4IKjl
I Bend Silipints Stickers,mugs, and more Cashmere Scarves50% OFF!
0 tdoor
ali
Select Sweatshirts
20-50% offg!
•
•
•
store.myshopify.com).
•
m
•
wwrr. CascadeCottons com
=
e
•
•
•
•
.
909 NW WALL STREET DOWNTOWN BEND• 541-306-6071
•
•
~
•
•
You can't beat the price of CB2's 3-Piece Trio Vase Set. Three porcelain vases in organic shapes for less than $10? It's our new go-to hostess gift. Two are glossy and one is matte, for contrast, and they arrive in a box ready for wrap-
ping ($9.95, www.cb2.com).
.4
There are a ton of stylish new calendars out there, but for the cook or f oodie, the clear winner is Florida-based Rifle Paper with its 6-by-9inch Herbs and Spices calendar. Each month features an illustration of an herb or spice — such as cloves, ginger root and peppercorn — in its botanic form ($16, www.rifle
o
•
•
•
•
I
•
-
paperco.com).
•
Help the consummate host be ready for a guest's every need with a set of four sustainable-bamboo toothbrushes fro m N e w Y o r k -based Izola. When said host saves a guest's dental hygiene with these teeth sweepers, they'll thank you for coming to the rescue ($12.50for a set offour, www.izola.com). In small or large, red-string notebooks from Jayson Home in Chicago are a touch of nostalgia for the technophobe or the not-so-stealthy co-worker who's always raiding the
(QoOj 0
~
rz
- C94 r
'r
P
0 •
•
I I
'
i
I
•
est (the "biscuits" jar) would m ake a striking gift o n i t s own — or buy one of each
size to make a set. ($14-$48, www.shopsaltandsundry.com). Forget wine, it's craft beer that's having a moment right now: Sales grew 14.1 percent in 2012 and are still rocketing through 2013. Provide your nephew, favoritebachelor or any other brews aficionado with a set of tasting tumblers. The Libbey Craft Brew set has two each of six glasses: a classic pilsner, an English pub glass, a Belgian ale glass, a craft pub glass, a porter/stout glass and a wheat beer glass
($39.99, www.target.com). Give loved ones a set of stunning stainless-steel servers with mother-of-pearl handles, and they'll think of your thoughtfulness and good taste whenever they dish up greens
($45, wwwjaysonhome.com).
Splurges($51-$100) What's under your evergreen? A tree skirt from Terrain shows unexpected form, being that it's a basket and not a traditional cloth. Handwoven from natural fibers, the rustic basket skirt is perfect for a new couple's first Christ-
mas ($58, available in four col-
or options, www.terrain.com). A bit of welcome extravaoffice-supply closet ($10-$15, gance comes in the form of a www jaysonhome.com). Pair set of four linen napkins from a n otebook w i t h a n o ther Alder & Co. in Portland. The throwback: chic pencils by French-made napkins, in blush, Jonathan Adler. Each comes green-gray, dark gray, white with a cheeky saying to cheer or chalk, will make your loved
you up ($10 for a set of 10, www.paper-source.com).
k4y ~~b~+~~ c~vn
a a ea e Co baehraovss mtrror)
r
Hlee, h l e C (cu C Sc 4ape Co
b
OESIGN
JEtnrstER
•
•
•
•
•
I
•
•
•
•
• •
•
•
e
e •
one's dinner guests (maybe
even you!) feel like they're sitting in the lap of luxury ($70, Midrange gifts ($21-$50) www.alderandcoshop.com). For modernists, those in crePile up some gourmet brie ative fields and all who have fun and bleu with this gift, and with fonts, Pentagram's 2014 Ty- you'll be the big cheese of pography Calendar, from Seat- any present-giving extravatle bookstore Peter Miller, comes ganza. The bamboo cheese in first. Each month features board hasrims on the sides for a different typeface nominat- crackers and a hidden drawer ed by members of the Alliance with ba m b oo-and-stainless Graphique Internationale ($30- spreadersfor a picnic on the $48, www.petermiller.com). go, or just on the coffee table. Glitzy and glam, plated-glass ($64.29. www.casa.com.) ornaments from Serena & Lily E ven the worst baker i s would be gorgeous on and off a sure to impress with cooktree — pilethem in aprettybowl ies from Anthropologie's cefor a gifted centerpiece or string ramic White Rabbit jar. We them across your own living imagine filling it w it h bunroom as a d ecorative pres- ny-shaped sugar cookies. ($68, ent to yourself ($38 for three, www.anthropologie.com).
TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DS
Trees Continued from D1 "We did country, because s he raised her f a m il y o n a farm in Post, so you see there's a lot of sheep ornaments. She loved her sheep." Most tree designers say the hardest part is deciding on a theme and color palette for the tree. If you go with too many themes on a tree, it won't have a cohesive look. But Donna also stresses there's nothing wrong with that either and people shouldn't get stressed out about decorating their trees. "It should be about fun, and what appeals to your family," says Donna. "I love the Christmas trees that h a ve the handmade children's orn aments on t hem. I m a k e those every year with my own g randchildren, a n d t h o s e can easily be i n corporated onto a tree without it looking
,u
.tttj', 'i',h,
+
„lktt ',h;t
uti~gtthh,, I';,
/
Carol Rank puts a butterfly ornament on her tree.
A
h
hodgepodge." To go w it h t h e c o untry theme, Donna printed out a large country Christmas letter that is framed, and Frank b uilt an easel on w h ich i t will stand. The other piece of art to go alongside this tree is a decorated handcrafted juniper tree mailbox, which Frank also built, gathering the wood from his mother's property. "For the theme of country Christmas, you must also develop all these things to go around your tree and gifts to put under the tree," said Donna, explaining the w i nning bid will not only get the tree, but also all the art and gifts in and around that tree. "First step is to make sure all your lights on the tree are working, and then you start draping and weaving in your ribbons." The ribbons give it a highend designer look, and Donna says it will make it more cohesive.She says texturized wired ribbons are a fairly inexpensive way to add color. Decorators say you probably want about 100 lights for every vertical foot of tree. The lights will enhance the overall sparkle effect, which looks beautiful in the evening and nighttime hours. Next you'll want to hang your larger, usually solid-color ornaments as the backdrop color. Glass ball ornaments will sparkle with your lights, and can be used on a traditional designed tree or a m o dern tree. Traditional trees, like this country-themed tree have red glass ornaments, but for a more contemporary look you could use colors such as bronze, fuchsia or chartreuse. When going for a traditional look, you'll want to use solid red, white, silver and gold. Placement of ornaments is important for that pulled-together look. Donna says to give your tree more depth, you'll need to place the larger ornaments, evenly spaced, on the inside branchescloserto the trunk. "Hanging o r naments on the inside of the tree, gives it the added dimensions; you don't just want ornaments on the outside edges," said Donna. "Your more valuable, sentimental or detailed smaller ornaments can go on the outside branches." By placing the more de-
i
u
W
' h
W' u
i
I ; ' i s
Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Donna and Frank Porfily finish putting the ornaments on a Christmas tree in the garage at their Redmond home.
' "'J
/
Carol Rank decorates her Christmas tree, called "Bronze Beauty" in her Redmond home. She plans her trees a year or two in advance. She made this tree in honor of a friend who was a beer lover.
"I've done a tropical, Hawaiian-themed tree, a pink lady-themed tree, a grandma's garden tree, a Santa's workshop tree — there are so many themes you can go with.... If you don't know what you want to do with your tree, you should come down to the auction and just see the 30 or more trees on display to get some ideas."
r
The Porfilys' Christmas tree display includes a letter written to Santa. tailed ornaments on the outside branches, you give these special decorations a showcase branch. As a n e x a mple, D onna pointed to one of her handmade angel ornaments that s he started making i n t h e summer. Each of the angels has a round, wooden face, which Donna patiently hand-painted, before dressing each in hand-sewn a n ge l d r e sses with wings. "All those angels took Donna about three days to make," said Frank, clearly proud of his wife's crafting talents. Taking the spotlight off of herself, Donna pointed to the top of the tree, where a crocheted angel stands majestically on top. "My neighbor and f r iend made the angel toppers; aren't they beautiful?" asked
Donna Porfily holds an angel she is building for her Christmas decorations.
— Carol Rank
Donna Porfily opens the door to a holiday feature made by her husband, which will be included with their country Christmas tree. Donna. "Normally, you put the angel topper on last, but we wanted you to see it. I still have quite a bit of work left to get these other ornaments wired on." The c o untry C h r i stmas tree is the Porfilys' second tree.The couple also decided to do another tree dedicated to a friend and neighbor who passed this year. Donna took a few steps to the tree she started decorating first, which is almost completed. "I call t h i s t r ee, 'Margo got her wings,'" says Donna. "Hospice was also so good to Margo, so naturally we had to do a tree in honor of her, so I found all the things Margo loved in life, and incorporated it in her tree." The color p alette choice was easy b ecause M argo loved the color rose, and she loved hummingbirds and angels, said Donna. "We went to the state fair and saw t hi s a r t ist, L awr ence Eichmann, who w a s glass-blowing or na m ents, so we commissioned him to make a dozen hummingbirds for Margo's tree, and that's how it started," said Donna. To fill the tree, Donna suggested buying floral picks for your tree. She found glittered, r ose-colored f l o w er s a n d bought dozens of these to fill in the spaces, which says was perfectbecause Margo loved her garden and flowers. " When w e fi r s t st a r t ed doing Margo's tree, my granddaughter was helping me. And at first she was intimidated to work on it, but I told her how to put the ornaments on and how to arrange it, by s pacing them," said Donna. "Don't get too organized, though, about where you're putting everything. If it stresses you out, take a step
back, and you'll see where you need to fill in."
White Wonderland Carol Rank has been decorating trees for nine years. She plans each tree at least one or two years in advance. She likes t o p l a n e a r ly because she's often able to buy ornaments and the tree at half price the day after Christmas.
This year she's doing an all white Christmas tree, which will highlight her bronze orn aments, which g ives t h i s tree a more contemporary look. "I'm calling this tree the 'Bronze Beauty,' and it's in memory of m y b r o t her-inlaw, who passed away this year," says Carol. "In memory of him, the bronze color also happens to be the color of beer, and he was a connoisseur of fine beers from around the world." Local brewers in Central Oregon donated beer for this hospice tree. Carol was surprised at the overwhelming response she got from local breweries that happily donated bottles of beer and growler fills. Even though she w a sn't finished decorating her tree, the boxes and pilesof beer and growlers around the base already made the tree look festive. "I still need to put the ribb ons on a n d m o r e o r n aments," said Carol. "I decided, because the tree is all white, we needed a little more color than just the bronze, so we're
School, where she works, was diagnosed with cancer. "I did a NASCAR tree, because he loved car racing," said Carol. "NASCAR even donated some items to go underneath the tree for us, and Make-A-Wish Fou n d ation sent him and his family to one of the NASCAR races." Carol showed a snapshot of the student standing next to the NASCAR tree and said, "After I did this tree, I knew I wanted to do more trees. (He) passed away two months later." Carol said picking a theme for these trees isn't too difficult because she tries to gear it to the person she is honoring, consideringthe person's personality and what he or
— Reporter: pnakamura® bendbulletin.com
she enjoyed.
"I've done a tropical, Hawaiian-themed tree, a pink lady-themed tree, a grandma's garden tree, a Santa's workshop tree — there are so many themes you can go with, and I j ust love doing
BarkTurISoil.com I
PROMPT DELIVERY
'
r
I
541-389-9663 •
•
•
I
•
'-'A Novel Idea ! ...REAOTOIETp R -:S
~
4,
~~ ~
~ M .•.
Be the first to know! V
•
using subtle highlights of blue with the glitter-frosted branch picks." Carol started donating a tree to the hospice auction when one o f t h e s t udents at Terrebonne Elementary
this for the Hospice of Redmond," said Carol. "If you don't know what you want to do with your tree, you should come down to t h e a uction and justsee the 30 or more trees on display to get some ideas." Of course, if you don't want to decorate your own tree at all, th e d e signer-decorated trees will all be auctioned off during the Festival of Trees, and if you place the winning bid, the tree is already decorated and will be delivered free of charge to your home, along with all th e presents underneath that t ree. Who says Santa Claus can't come early?
~ •
•
•
a
a
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
D6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
ADVICE ck ENTERTAINMENT
Cheesy plotlines a oun as Christmasnears TV SPOTLIGHT
bly played backward, to be appreciated. By Neil Genzlinger Another young mother in New York Times News Service need of a man turns up in "Finding Christmas" (Sunday, Back in 1965, Linus stepped forward and calmed the chaos Hallmark), this one played by of "A Charlie Brown ChristTricia Helfer of "Battlestar Gamas," the c lassic animated lactica." She, too, finds her soul special, by reciting verses from mate in a matter of days bethe Gospel of Luke about the cause love, in holiday movies, birth of Jesus. "That's what is instantaneous and effortless. v' "Finding Christmas" is most Christmas is all about, Charlie I Brown," he concluded. notable, though, for the presWe can only guess what Lience of J.T. Hodges, normally nus would be thinking today a country singer but here an were he to sample the avaactor. Hodges, a newcomer t l' ' .". sv!i lanche of Christmas-themed to the acting thing, is surprism ade-for-television mo v i e s HandoutviaThe New YorkTimes ingly good, and the script also that began rolling down on us The Hallmark holiday movie "Finding Christmas" stars, from left, leadshis character to an opena few weeks ago and will con- Mark Lutz, Tricia Heifer, Christian Distefano,JT Hodges and Cristimike night in which he sings a tinue right up until the big day. na Rosato. A virtual avalanche of Christmas-themed made-for-tele- delightful "Joy to the World." Plenty of people in t hese vison movies began rolling over us a few weeks ago, and will keep (Later, appallingly, that same movies expound onthe meanon coming right up to the big day. script forces him to turn "Silent Night" into a sort of seduction ing of Christmas, but there is rarely a biblical verse to be song,because, in these movies, heard. (Linus shared his wis- time to remind ourselves that they don't have a man they can the sacred and the cheesy ofdom again on ABC on Monday work is bad, people who work get gooey-eyed about. ten intermingle.) night in the annual rebroad- hard are bad, and being devotThere i s , f o r i ns t ance, T his h o liday s eason i s cast.) A sampling of the offer- ed to your job is bad. Though "Christmas on the B ayou" making actors out of a lot of ings over the next couple of good luck paying for all the (Saturday, Lifetime), in which singers, although, for most of weeks answers the big holiday Christmas presents, Christ- a career woman (Hilarie Bur- them, it's not the first time. "A question thus: mas decorations and Christ- ton) with a young son takes a Country C h r istmas Story," • C hristmas m e ans t h a t mas travel depicted in these holiday break from her hectic which had its premiere this whiny children of single moth- movies once you're fired for New York City life and goes month on Lifetime, featured ers will soon have stepfathers, not working hard enough. home to Louisiana. It doesn't Dolly Parton, and Naomi Judd thanks to courtships that last Women with young children take her long to find the man plays a r estroom attendant in "Window Wonderland" on just days. but no husband are, as usual, who has been missing from • C hristmas m e ans t h a t in ample supply this year in her life, a fellow who — a re- Hallmark, being rebroadcast made-for-the-holiday movies, current Christmas miracle in singers, especially c o untry on Saturday. Randy Travis singers, will get a chance to try which tend to be concentrated these movies — also bonds tends a store in "Christmas movie acting. on the Hallmark Channel and instantly with her sullen child. on the Bayou." Jordin Sparks, • Christmas means that Ed Lifetime, outlets pitched to a E d Asner turns up a s t h e the "American Idol" winner, Asner will get a chance to try a weird demographic of women swamp-dwelling Papa Noel, is a real estate agent in "Dear Cajun accent. who are smart, capable over- using a bayou accent that has Secret Santa" (Friday and Sat• Christmas means that it's achievers yet are incomplete if to be heard, and then possi- urday, Lifetime), one who gets
ewantsc i ren; e oesn't
to burst into "0 Holy Night" at the end. It becomes a duet with Tatyana Ali, who plays the lead role and also has a musical background. More o m n ipresent e v en than singers is the universal demon of the holiday season: work. In practically all of these movies, someone is working so hard that he or she is in danger of not appreciating the wondrous beauty of a garishly decorated tree or amateurishly performed Christmas pageant. Burton's ch a r acter i n "Christmas on the Bayou" is a workaholic. In "Let It Snow" (Thursday, Hallmark), Al an Thicke plays a father too busy to celebrate Christmas with his adult daughter, and that daugh-
ter (Candace Cameron Bure) is fairly no-nonsense, too. Perhaps the weirdest workis-bad movie of this season is "A Snow Globe Christmas" (Saturday, Lifetime), a holiday story with a bit of the summer sci-fi hit "Under the Dome" mixed in. Alicia Witt plays a maker of t elevision holiday movies — yes, it's a Christmas in metaland — who is bopped on the head and wakes up inside a snow globe, where she has a husband she wasn't aware of and almost ruins the community Christmas pageant. Or something like that. Anyway, watch enough of these things and you may find yourself in need of an antidote that drives all the sugary sentiment right out of your head.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-Dand INIAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
Dear Abby: I am a 38-year-old woman who has been dating a 41-year-old man for seven months. He's wonderful and treats me magnificently. We have similar values and interests and are very much in love. Sadly, although I have always wanted children, he does not. At my age, I have DEAR dated enough men ABBY to know that I have found someone spec ial. I r e a l ize m y choice is either to stay in a relationship with a fabulous partner, knowing we won't have children, or end it, hoping I'll find someone just as wonderful who wants kids. Your advicein making the hardest decision of my life would be greatly appreciated. — Maternal in New York Dear Maternal: I'll t r y . M a ny women in their late 30s find that conceiving a child is complicated, and it can also take longer than they thought. It has taken you 38 years to find this exceptional man, and it could take quite a bit of time to find another one who is so compatible. Look at it this way: If you married "Mr. Wonderful" and learned afterward that he couldn't father a
child, would you leave him? Insist on adopting'? Or would you count the many blessings you do have with him and stay'? Many women are happily childless.However, if you're not one of them, you should take your chances and move on — remembering that there are no guarantees. Dear Abby: I work on a b u s y s t r eet in S a n F r a n cisco where smokers walk
around puffing all day while ig-
have many new opportunities that stem from your increased interest and energy. Creativity whirls around you, which draws many people to you. In the excitement of the moment, you easily could become me-oriented. Don't allow that to happen. If you are single, many people express an interest in getting Starsshowthe kiod to knowyou better. of dayyou'Ilhave The person you * * * * * y" . choose will need to ** * * Positive be very indulgent, ** * Average as so much is going on. If you are attached, your significant other often takes a back seat this year. Be careful, as the ramifications could be difficult to handle. Make this relationship a high priority. CAPRICORNhelps you make money. ARIES(March 21-April 19) * ** Keep reaching outtosom eoneyou care about. This person has many diverse ideas and also can play devil's advocate far more easily than you might think. Pressure builds. If you run into a difficult associate or a frustrating situation, you easily could get angry. Tonight: Rent a movie.
Dear Readers: Years ago, a young mother in A r lington, Va., wrote my mother about a book she had received that promised to help parents prepare their children for school by expanding their vocabulary. The "secret"? Reading to them while they are small. Children learn words by hearing them spoken in context — the more they hear,the more they absorb. Like everything else, reading is something people will do more of if they enjoy it. When a parent reads to a child, the child associates reading with pleasure. "The Read-Aloud Handbook" by Jim Trelease became a huge best-seller when it was published. Penguin Books called it one of the 75 most important books it has published in its history. The book is now in its seventh — and LAST — edition and has been completely revised and updated. If you're a parent who wants your child to succeed, a grandparent, or someone contemplating becoming a parent in the future, pick up a copy. — Love, Abby
noring those around them. Don't you think they should be considerate enough to smoke at designated areas only and not while walking with their secondhand smoke billowing around other pedestrians? I have seen pregnant women and children inundated by the smoke as these puffers stroll by with no regard. We nonsmokers would appreciate their courtesy for others because we don't want to inhale what they're smoking. Can you comment? — Hates That Habit Dear Hates That Habit: I hate it, too, but unless there is an ordinance in your city that prohibits — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com smoking on c e rtain s idewalks, or PO. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, DEC. 3, 2013:Thisyearyou
I think it's unrealistic to expect smokers who inhale not to exhale.
I
I
i
McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54 I-330-8562 • ELYSIUM (R) 6 • THE FAMILY (R) 9 • After 7 p.m., shows are21and older on/y. Younger than 21may attend screenings before 7 p.m. ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • GOOD OL'FREDA (PG)8:15 • MUSCLESHOALS(PG) 3:30 • SHORTTERM12(R) 6 • WADJDA (PG)1:30
Get some extra R and R.
YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
agree. You could decide to play devil's advocate, but what will be the cost? Maintain a sense of humor. A matter involving your home could trigger you. Tonight: Be friendly.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * You'll dive into a project without hesitation. You might not like the manner in which certain questions are being asked. Say so and get down to the real issue. Until that point, concentrate on one item at a time. Tonight: First relax, then decide.
LEQ (July23-Aug.22) ** * * Use your energy and intellect to m ake poi a nt.Someone would behard pressed to contradictyou, especially with your commanding style. You tend to see matters from a different point of view, and you have more information as a result. Tonight: Touch base with a loved one.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
** * * L isten to your inner voice and be direct with your feelings. A family member could be irritable. An issue involving your domestic life could arise. Check all the TAURUS (April 20-May20) information given and evaluate possible ** * * Deal with a partner directly. You solutions. Take awalk if you're feeling might feel as if he or she is blocking many cranky. Tonight: Be creative. of your ideas. Resist getting confrontational; however, do not hesitate to support LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * You are likely to say what you yourself and your decision if someone starts questioning you. Tonight: Talk over think. Fortunately, you have the gift of choosing the right words in order to avoid dinner, then choose a favorite escape. insulting someone. However, one person GEMINI (May21-June20) whom you deal with reads you a little too ** * * Others give you their opinion of clearly for your taste. Be careful. Tonight: this and that. Be polite, even if you don't
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * You might be more aware of your finances than most others are. You will want to verify some facts that revolve around this issue. Hold out as long as you can, but knowthat pressure from others won't allow you to go too long. Tonight: Checkyour email and return calls.
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium 'l6 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 12 YEARS A SLAVE(R) 12:50, 4, 7 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS(PG-13) 1:25, 4:35, 7:55 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 3:15, 6:20, 9:10 • DELIVERY MAN (PG-13) 12:55, 4:50, 7:25, 10:05 • ENOER'S GAME (PG-13) 10 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 12:25, 3:40 • FROZEN(PG) 1:25, 4:05, 4:40, 6:45, 9:25 • FROZEN 3-D (PG) 2, 7:15,9:55 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 2:10 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13) 5:05, 7:40, IO • HOMEFRONT(R)12:50,5,7:30,IO:05 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) I2:40, I:15, 1:50, 2:45, 4:30, 5:30, 6: l5, 8, 9, 9:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE IMAX (PG-13) Noon, 3:30, 7, 10:15 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BADGRANDPA(R) 6:25, 10:10 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 1:05, 3:45, 6:35, 9: I5 • PHILOMENA(PG-13)3:55,6: 40,9:05 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)1:35,4:20,7:05,9:50 • Accessibi/ity devices are availableforsome movies.
I
I
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I -548-8777
TV TQQAY 8 p.m. on (CW), "The Originals" — Klaus (Joseph Morgan) opens up to Marcel (Charles Michael Davis) about his past indiscretions. Cami (Leah Pipes) tries to decipher some cryptic messages. The human faction takes matters into its own hands, with violent results. Hayley (Phoebe Tonkin) seeks help from Elijah and Rebekah (Daniel Gillies, Claire Holt) when she hears about a plan to harm the werewolves in the bayou in the new episode "Reigning Pain in NewOrleans." 9 p.m. onl3, "NCIS: Los Angeles"— An ambush connected to a cartel kingpin with terrorist ties has Sam, Callen, Kensi and Deeks (LL Cool J, Chris O'Donnell, Daniela Ruah, Eric Christian Olsen) working under cover as an elite tactical unit to investigate. Linda Hunt, Barrett Foa and Renee Felice Smith also star in "Kill House." 9 p.m. on (CW), "Supernatural" — Sam and Dean(Jared Padalecki, Jensen Ackles) are surprised to find Castiel (Misha Collins) at the scene of an angel slaughter. While helping the brothers investigate, Castiel is captured and subjected to torture. Dean wonders if it's time to tell Sam the truth in the new episode "Holy Terror." 9 p.m. on TNT,"Boston's Finest" — The tension that's been building between rival gangs for a year comes to a boil in this new episode, with backto-back retaliation shootings in one night. Detective Tim Stanton calls on both the gang and fugitive units to investigate the matter and end the fighting in "No More Bullets." 10p.m. onFX, "Sonsof Anarchy" — The dust is finally starting to settle for Jax (Charlie Hunnam) — but not for long. A new development suddenly turns his entire world upside down in the new episode "You Are My Sunshine." Katey Sagal also stars. 10:01 p.m. on TNT, "MarshalLaw:Texas" — Sheriff 's Deputies David Crain and James Drury call for all hands on deck to pursue a suburban strip-mall shooter who has a history of running from the law. Deputy U.S. Marshal Spencer Pellegrin intervenes in the case of a love triangle that's turned violent, and his colleague Natalie Garzagoes after a gang member accused of stabbing a woman over a taco in the new episode "Terror in the 'Burbs." o zap2rt
mplements tf irrrvc 3 vl t'c < 40 <4 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com
Mountain Medical Immediate Care 541-3SS-7799 1302 NE 3r S t . B end www.mtmedgr.com
See us for $100 mail-in rebates on select Hunter Douglas products.
• DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 4: l5, 6:30 • FROZEN (PG) 4:15, 6:45 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)3:45, 7:15 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)4,6:30
dya gMssig
** * * You would be on cruise control if you weren't continually bumping heads with a higher-up. This person has a lot of frustration and anger that, unfortunately, might be directed atyou. You can deflect only so much. Tonight: Try to avoid sharp words. Indulge yourself a little.
Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • ALL IS LOST(PG-I3) 6:30 • DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 6:15 • FROZEN (PG) 6 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)6
www.classic-coverings.com
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan. 19)
Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway97, 54 I -475-3505
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21)
** You might keep hearing information that normally would getyou going or acting on it; however, right nowyou are digesting everything you are being told and attempting to sort factfrom fiction. Trust in your abilities. Tonight: You feel better as the night goes on.
541-388-4418
it
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * You could feel pressured by others' demands. You will want to make a change, but you might feel somewhat inhibited. A partner has been unusually difficult as of late. You might want to play the waiting game rather than provoke his or her ire. Tonight: Make plans with friends. 04 King Features Syndicate
i
• DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 4:45, 7: IO • FROZEN (PG) 4:50, 7:20 • HOMEFRONT (R) 5:10, 7:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)3:30, 6:30 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)4:40,7
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh.18)
** * * Focus on a meeting if you are at work. If you are free, friends will play a significant role in what happens. In your enthusiasm, you might forget about a partner. Do not let this happen if you really want to make the most out of the moment. Tonight: Join friends first.
COVERINGS
•
•
vPure &oA6 Co.
rd u >~ B~
ir
Bend Redmond John Day Burns Lakeview La Pine 541.382.6447 bendurology.com
Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014
• FROZEN (PG) 6:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (Upstairs— PGI3) 6:15 • Theupstairs screeningroom has limited accessibility.
E L EVAT ION
O
Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's
•
0 GO! Magazine • Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at bendbulletin.com/movies
Elevation Capital Strategies 775 SW Bonnet Way Suite 120 Bend Main: 541-728-0521 www.elevationcapital.biz
I
e
I
e
•
e
ANY PIZZA ANY SIZE
•
S2 off any menu-priced Pizza or Calzone Any Size!
62 OFF qttttEtO'I I •
• •
•
•
.
9
•
9-
LI f8
Love at I I
Three100% Real. Cheeses, CrispyBacon,Canadian Bacon, PepperBacon and Mixed Onions
EXPIRES 01.15.14 Not valid with other oflera
FAMILYslzE 52 MORE!
aara12 n
ANY OTHER OFFE RS
•
LB
- %~OIjtwt,TO»~„
•
6
I.
Large Bacon Bacon Bacon
—.®: —SOLAT U BE.
I
Excludes mini-pizzas and Mini Murph
aa
a
All new gll the timel
CARPET CLEANING •
•
CARPET CLEANING
3 ROOMS i 5 ROOMS
ff
'123
'195
Cleaning Completed by: 1/6/14
IAII TO/S!I
1
SKu¹ 840341599081
Cleaning Completed by: 1/6/14
BEYOND CARPET CLEANING
CARPET i UPHOLSTERY i TILE5 GROUT i HARDWOOD
MTANLEY STE MER,
USE THISOUTPOSTCOUPONFOR ONE FREEROLLOF CHRISTMAS WRAP WITH PURCHASEOF ONE ROLL LIMIT ONECOUPONPERPERSON PER MONTH
541-706-9390
1-800-STEEMER. l stanleysteememcom
/ pI
e
O
~
Og„I I
EXPIRESDEC31ST, 2013
dg gtg~l
v a' •
e
Combined Living areas, L-shaped rooms, and rooms over 300 sq ft are considered two areas. Baths, halls, large walk in closets, and area rugs are priced separately Minimum charges apply. Cannot combine with other offers. Residential only Must present coupon at time of service Valid at participating locations only. Certain restrictions may apply Call for details.
I
I
Chimney Cleaning
s
i
$15 OFF any Dryer Vent Cleaning
CUSTOMER LOYALTY KEY TAGS ARE HERE!
, 'MURRAYSHOLT I •
I
Natural Gas• Dryer I/ Dryer
I
Vent Cleaning
•
5 41 -3 8 2 - 2 2 2 2
I Covers most vehicles. Diesels extra. Coupon expires12/31/13.
22
I
I
'
I
I ' •
I I
I '
I I 'I
I
' LTII
I
''
I'
I
I
I I '
•
I I '
I
I
'
I
'
'I
I
I
'I
I
' I • I
I
'
I'
I
I I I
I I
''
'
I
I
' I '
'I
I
I
'
' I
I
I '
I
1230 NE 3RD ST
Roszak's I I
I
Fish House I I
I
I I I Not valid back page specials or I otheromo prtionalofers. I Ex p ires 1/07/14
'I
I'
I
Behind Bank ofAmerica on 3rd Street in Bend
with purchase oftwo beverages
I
'11
'
I
541-382-3173
2'
, ''5$ ,
Iagasper tag
I
I
'
(Gas)
Includes 6 quarts of oil, (blend of synthetic oil) replace oil filter, 21-point inspection, discounts up to 10%, roadside assistance, 12/12 warranty. The key tag includes 3 lube, oil 8 filters. The cost is only
I
iII
I II
•
$2999
$ERt/ICE HOUR$: M-P 7:45am to 5:3Opm
Licensed • Bonded• Insured CCB¹ 197928www.mastertouchbeniLcom
,'
3 Oil Ghanges
os
• sI
Sta dadcl aatarr/adeesa Single Story House Wood Stove • Fireplace Insert
I I I
I I
I
StandardRate$~ ch,'.".„ Coupon Discount RateOId)l 94. magteef rsStQUCh
I I I
•
LUNCH 11:30 — 2:30, MON —FRI DINNER 4-9, MON-SAT SEE OTHER SIDE FOR DAILY BACK PAGE SPECIALS
•
I
I
with purchaseoftwo I beverages I I Notvalid backpagespedalsor I otheromot pr ionaloffers. I Ex pi r es 1/07/1 4
3 Rooms Cleaned I
I
I
$99
Chem~r '
E xpires 12/31/2013
Drier. Clearren Hea/ehiere
$76 WithCoupon.Roomis Considered250Sq.Ft. I Expires 12/31/2013
ServingDeschutes, Crook&JeffersonCounties Indep endentlyOwned& Operated
$158"""-"-
'
'
'
I
•
I
I
'
I
I' i i I'
xpires 12/31/2013 BW1213 I
./'/
I I
tf',(, 4@I,„', rffnef
I
I
I
I
I
I I
I I
The Bulletin
•
•
•
•
Sce back of this coupon for full details. Doesnotapplyto the Pastini SundaySupper.
e
I
•
eee
//' ',, I
I '
Cleaned
WithCoupon. RoomisConsidered250Sq,Fl.
5 41-38 8 - 7 3 7 4 I
BW 12 1 3 I
Whole House Cleaning
Carpet 8 Upholstery Cleaning
I I
BW 12 1 3
2 Rooms Cleaned
Chem-Dry of Central Oregon
I
I
WithCoupon. Roomis Considered250Sq.Ft.
ARP E
Old th" Mil
I
THE BULLETIN
BEND SOUTH BEND NORTH South Hwy 97 NE 3 r d St & Murphy Rd & Re v e re
(541)
TAKE 'N' BAKf PIZZA
REDMOND SW10th & Highland
'
•
when you arrlve
MADRAS SW Hwy 97 & Bard Lane
I
oar
•
Welcome to The Outpost! The Outpost is a Oregon retailer.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
We specialize in providing a fun shopping
•
I • •
•
We are the BEST(.): Certified Installers 10 Year Warranty Licensed, Bonded, Insured Highest Performance Guaranty ~g e
•
•
•
•
(541) 447-5999 475-1555
•
•
•
(541)
pmpizza,com •
•
we'll have it ready
PRINEVILLE NE Third St Near Les Schwab
VISA ~
•
phone ahead
548-7272
~EBT
Online at: www.
Bring Sunshine into Your L ivin S a c e
n •
(541)
Facebook at: Papa Murphy's Central Oregon
S OL A T U B E
(541)
382-6767 389-7272
Love at II
TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
interesting and unique items.Wehavetoys, p • •
•
clothing, crafts, swords, tools, leather goods, household supplies,and an assortment of tobacco products,all at great prices!
z
BEYOND CARPET CLEANING 1-800-STEEMER. I stanleysteemercom
experience is our priority,so pleasecomein
and area rugs are priced separately. Minimum charges apply. Cannot combine with other offers. Residential only. Must present coupon at time cf service. Vahd at participating locations only. Carlain reslnclions may apply. Call for details.
•
I
Air Duct Cleaning!
FORD
(541) 389-871 5 515 Off Dryer Vent or Chimney Cleaning
Includes 21-point inspection, top off of fluids, blended synthetic oil.
DID YOU KNOW? Poor Indoor Air ualit c an: Resultin lllness• Including: Nausea Eye& Skin Irritation • Headaches • Allergic Reactions • Respiratory Problems Expf
5 41 -382- 2 2 2 2 SERVICE HOURS: M-F7:45am to 5:30pm Couponexpires 12/31/13.
•
•
g
•
•' I
I
L
I
•
s50 to s100 OFF
'69" '79" '89" Gre a t Pricing
•
YSII CANRREATIIE SETTERAIR
I
G r e at Servlee.
•
AEEERGIES...
'r
Great Seleetlen.
•
The D>fie>
and see us at any of our locations!
Combined Living areas, L-shaped rooms, and rooms over 300 sef ft are considered Iwc areas. Baths, halls, large walk in closets,
MURMY8rHOLT
•
Providing you with a fun shopping
II Q Mn]Qg
DODGE
<ineVi/ie
Lapine
541-706-9390
CHEVY
•
experience for our customers, with a lot of
CARPET i UPHOI STERY i TILE&GROUT i HARDWOOD
MTAIL Y STE MER
•
z
•
I
I
r•
I
'
I
k
k
•
I
I
I
'
I
I
M O N E Y -SAVING CO U P O N S I PASSENGER TIRE ' 'LIGHT TRUCK TIRE ", CHANGEOVER
Includes 7 oz. TOP SIRLOIN, Grilled, Fried or Coconut SHRIMP
BakedPotato8 FreshVegetables Monday - Saturday • No coupon required Not valid with other promotions, offers or discounts. Promotion expires 1/07/14
I I I I
Rvszak's
Fis ouse
541-382-3173
I
I I I I
Beki kk r krtA eki kk kk3 rStreet,
1230 NE 3RD • BEND, OR
e/ Convenient Appointments
I of Central Oregon 54 1 593 1 799
PER TIRE electronlcally computer balanceI I on standard wheel. II
ev
MOST CARS EXP 12/31/13
MOST LIGHT TRUCKS.EXP. 12/31/13
•
e
I
• • •
al
I
a
•
•
Drier. Cleaner. Healrbier.v
I www.chemdrybend.com
541-388-7374
G I FREE Estim at e O v e r t h e P h o n e
Residential & Commercial
Oxi Fresh uses a combination of its one of a kind Oxi Sponge Encapsulator, andOxi Powder.This three part cleaning solution creates apowerful oxygenated cleaning system that breaks down the stains while encapsulating them, so that they can be efficiently removed from the carpet pile.
Offer valid with coupon only. Ncl including Rvs &stairs.
I C arpet & Uphol'stery Cleaning I
Old Mill District — Next to REI 375 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, OR 97702 541.749.1060
PASIINl.coM
~
Serving Desehutes, Crook efeJefferson Counties Independently Ofvned ere Operated ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Reachthousandsof readers for as little as $295 ner month! This unique section publishestwice eachmonth inTheBuletin andin CentralOregonMarketplace, wrappingthefront ofasection for amazingandnever-before-offered visibility! Only 18 couponpositions are atfailadle! Space is limited, so call 541-382-1811andresertfe your full color couponposition today!
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
'
•
•
•
g g •
l
54 I -388-7374 Bend L ~
Valid anydayof theweek.Bring inthis voucherto redeem.Mustbuytwo regularly pricedentreesandtwo beverages to receive37 discount. Limitone couponpertable. Cannotbecombined with anyother offers, discounts,or specials. Doesnotapplyto the Pastini SundaySupper.Valid in Bendonly. Pleasehonor your serverwith a gratuity basedon the amountbeforediscount. Offerexpires12/31/2013,
Ncl valid with other offers. Minimumsapply. Payment dua at time ofservice. Expiration date: December 31, 2013
Chem Dry of Cen-tral Oregon
Itissafe forchildren and pets,leaves no sticky residue,reduces returning stainsand has an one hour average dry time.
P A I I T 'L N L P A STA R IA
•
•
'CIlem@fg'
GI IICRC Certified Technician
•
I II
wheel.
I I I
of years. Now let the power of oxygen clean your carpets! I C ARPET C L E A N I N G "
tire. mount I snow tire and I PER TIRE eleclrpnically Il computer balance Il on standard
tire, mount snow tire and
I I
Il
Includes removal or one regular
or one regular
I I
The power of oxygen is undeniable; Mother Nature has I used oxygen to naturally purify the Earth for thousands I
®
CHA]VGEOVER
II Includes removalI
Nzreag«etee
I I I I I
II
~
tI
ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2013 •
•
~M ~EJZJJ
i
•
•t•
• i
i
h.
e
"u&
IIliIlllll>l) 'gte \'
Jt rt'avQ~ )Zetg
.r
::haurs:
contact us:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Includeyour name, phone number and address
Monday - Friday : 7:30a.m. -5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
. Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371
t zg 7 • s . w .
• B u I I e t i n : •
C h a n d l e r
Pets & Supplies
I
J
Pets & Supplies
+
A v e . Pets & Supplies
,
• Be n
d• O r e g o n
-
210
210
212
Furniture & Appliances
Antiques 8 Collectibles
it;u
L ittle Red Corvette"
~~ g~ IArtN'
gppglAL
HANCOCK & MOORE SOFA Salmon/Coral c h enille fabric with diamond pattern. Traditional styling w ith loose pillow back, down-wrapped seat cushions roll arms skirt, two matching pillows a n d ar m covers. L i k e n ew condition. $1500.
•
541-526-1332
541-447-7585
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin
Classifieds
541-385-5809
Twin size bed, fully ad- The Bulletin reserves justable, great shape the right to publish all used less than 6 mo. ads from The Bulletin with spread and newspaper onto The sham. $500. Bulletin Internet web541-526-0687 site. Very nice granite, dining table with 4 chairs, $200. 541-923-7342
The Bulletin
Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them in someway.
Crafts & Hobbies
This advertising tip brought to you by
Serving Central Oregon ttnee 1903
240
3rd Holiday Fair coming to Sisters, at OutlawStationttShopping Center close to Ray's Food Place, Hwy 20. Open 11/29 -12/22 Mon.-Thur. 10-4, Fri. Sat. Sun. 10-6. Vendors wanted! 541-595-6967
The Bulletm
AGATE HUNTERS Pollshers • Saws a •• r •
The Bulletin recommends extra
I oa to n
a
Repair & Supplies a
p
chasing products or, services from out of I the area. Sending l USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
I I cash, checks, or lI l credit i n f o rrnationl may be subjected to l FRAUD. For morel about an t I information advertiser, you may l I call
State
the O r egon l At tor n ey '
Dccr-to-dcor selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
l General's O f f i ce l Nature's Craft presents Consumer Protec- • ion ho t l in e Il t1-877-877-9392.
at I
LThe Bulleting
BEAD SHOW at Shilo Local wholesaler of precious 8 semi-precious stones. Sat. Dec. 7, 2013 9am-6pm, Shilo Conference Rm., Bend.
Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. ra
soiid Featuresinclude rs,4-dr Surface counte, Icro, 1'deconvectionm' r lg r r,cebuilt-inwasher/dryer, ramictilefloor,TV,DUD, iiitedish,airleveling, s „rog„ p tray,andakingsizebe -Agforonly $149,000 541-000-000
•
Reber's Farm Toy Sale! Each Sat. & Sun., 10-5 until Chnstmas, 4500 SE Tillamook Lp., Prineville.
(whichever comes first!)
00+ o Qyna
•
$02
Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months
FOR ONLY gu]P"~< fLLiE<
9 7
Furniture & Appliances
RC BzIX
004 - LQ
•
: Monday- Friday 7:30a.m. -5p.m.
Labradors AKC - Choc 40 Karat Gold Theramales, black fem, shots, edic full size mattress, wormed, health guaran- oxspring, frame + bed264- Snow Removal Equipment tee, $500. 541-536-5385 ding, $200.541-504-3833 ITEMS FORSALE www.welcomelabs.com 201 - NewToday 265 - Building Materials TURN THE PAGE 202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves area. Sending cash, English Labrador, AKC Newfoundland puppies For More Ads 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood checks, or credit in- registered, 3 fem's left! 8 AKC registered. 2 blk 204- Santa's Gift Basket The Bulletin 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers f ormation may b e wks, b eautiful w h ite, m ales, parents o n 205- Free ltems 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment subjected to fraud. champ bloodlines, par- site. Almost 4 wks old. 208- Pets and Supplies For more i nforma- ents hip 8 eye certified, Call J i l l at 541- A1 Washers&nryers 270 - Lost and Found 2 79-6344 t o co m e tion about an adver- $800. 503-551-3715 210- Furniture & Appliances $150 ea. Pull warGARAGESALES tiser, you may call French Bulldog 4-yr fe- visit and see the boys. 211- Children's Items ranty. Free Del. Also 275 - Auction Sales the O r egon State male, looking for forever 212 - Antiques & Collectibles wanted, used W/D's Attorney General's home with no other pets. Poodle pups, AKC. Toy 280 - Estate Sales 541-280-7355 215- Coins & Stamps Also-7mo. M, $200; F, Office C o n sumer $500. 541-382-9334 281 - Fundraiser Sales 240- Crafts and Hobbies $250. 541-475-3889 Protection hotline at 282- Sales Northwest Bend Fullcouch and 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 1-877-877-9392. loveseat, coffee table 284Sales Southwest Bend 242 - Exercise Equipment Call a Pro with glass inserts, 2 286- Sales Northeast Bend 243 - Ski Equipment The Bulletin end tables and 2 table ger ng Central Oregon r nre lg03 Whether you need a 288- Sales Southeast Bend 244 - Snowboards lamps. Asking $200. fence fixed, hedges 245 - Golf Equipment 290- Sales RedmondArea 541-526-0687 55 gal fish aquarium 8 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 292- Sales Other Areas trimmed or a house wood stand, no flaws! French Bulldog AKC 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. $125 obo. 541-408-8611 Christmas Pups! built you'll find FARM MARKET Get your 248- Health and Beauty Items 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery A ussies, Mini, A K C , Cream Colored, 5m professional help in business 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 11. 541-410-1299 316 - Irrigation Equipment black tri, M/P. Parents on The Bulletin's "Call a 251 - Hot TubsandSpas site. 541-788-7799 325- Hay, Grain and Feed Kittens! 20 avail. Fixed, Service Professional" a ROW I N G 253- TV, Stereo and Video shots, ID chip, tested, 333Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies Donate deposit bottles/ 255 - Computers Directory cans to local all vol- more! Also a lot of 341 - Horses andEquipment 256- Photography unteer, non-profit res- g reat adult cats t o 541 a385-5809 with an ad in 345Li ve s t o ck and E qui pment adopt. 65480 7 8 t h, 257- Musical Instruments cue, for feral cat spay/ Bend, Sat/ Sun 1-5, 347 Llamas/Exotic Animals The Bulletin's 258 - Travel/Tickets neuter. Cans for Cats 541-389-8430; kitten Queensland Heelers 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers "Call A Service t railer at B end P et 259- Memberships Standard & Mini, $150 358- Farmer's Column Express East, across foster 5 4 1-815-7278 260- Misc. Items Professional" & up. 541-280-1537 from Costco; or do- www.craftcats.org. 375- Meat and Animal Processing 261 - Medical Equipment www.rightwayranch.wor Directory nate Mon-Fri at Smith Lab puppies black and 383 - Produce andFood 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. dpress.com Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or yellow pure b red, 263- Tools at CRAFT in Tumalo. males and f emales Rodent issues? Free Call for Ig. quantity ready to go now. $250 adult barn/ shop cats, 203 pickup, 541-389-8420. Call 541-771-5511. f ixed, s h ots , so m e Dgvltzn Holiday Bazaar www.craftcats.org some not. Will Visit our HUGE Lab Pups AKC, black & friendly, & Craft Shows deliver. 541-389-8420 home decor yellow, Master Hunter DO YOU HAVE sired, performance pedi- Siberian-Husky pups, consignment store. SOMETHING TO 3rd Holiday Fair New items Holiday Craft & Gift gree, OFA cert hips & el- AND Wolf-Husky pups, SELL Coming to Sisters at bows, 541-771-2330 arrive daily! Fair, Pleasant Ridge FOR $500 OR $400 ea. 541-977-7019 Outlaw Station Shopwww.kinnamanretrievers.com 930 SE Textron, Community Hall LESS? ping Center close to Dec. 7, 10am-3pm. Bend 541-318-1501 Yorkie 2-yr old male, 9 Ray's Food Place, Non-commercial BULLETIN CLASSIFIEOS 7067 SW Canal Blvd., advertisers may Ibs, for Stud Service. www.redeuxbend.com Hwy 20. Open11/29 Search the area's most in Redmond. Call 541-416-1615 place an ad with thru 12/22, Mon. comprehensive listing of For info Call Linda G ENERATE SOM E oui I Want to Buy or Rent Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. classified advertising... Yorkie 9-wk male, tail Ingle, 541-241-6063 "QUICK CASH EXCITEMENT in your Sun., 10-6. real estate to automotive, docked, dewclaws, $600. neighborhood! Plan a SPECIAL" Vendors wanted! COWGIRL CASH merchandise tc sporting Can deliv. 541-792-0375 garage sale and don't 541-595-6967 We buy Jewelry, Boots, goods. Bulletin Classifieds Christmas Boutique forget to advertise in o ~g e e k a 2 0 t Vintage Dresses 8 appear every day in the Call The Bulletin At Friday, classified! Ad must include More. 924 Brooks St. Find exactly what print or on line. 541 -385-5809 Dec.6 541-385-5809. price of single item 541-678-5162 you are looking for in the 9to9 Call 541-385-5809 of $500 or less, or Place Your Ad Or E-Mail www.getcowgirlcash.com www.bendbulletin.com Westside Church CLASSIFIEDS multiple items s e a t and At: www.bendbulletin.com Love 2151 Shevlin Park Rd. Wanted: $Cash paid for whose total does couch, brown, soft The Bulletin vintage costume jewFeaturing antiques, not exceed $500. Sentng Central Oregont nte tglg suede-like material, 3RD ANNUAL elry. Top dollar paid for holiday arts & crafts EVERGREEN good condition. $250 Gold/Silver.l buy by the Christmas from local artisans. Labrador puppies, AKC Call Classifieds at Boutique for bo t h . Call Estate, Honest Artist choc., yellow 8 black 541-385-5809 541-420-7667 by the La Pine Ya Ya Elizabeth,541-633-7006 $500. 541-977-6844 www.bendbuiietin.ccm Sisterhood Society. Check out the Dec. 1-14, 10-5. at Labrador Pups, AKC w/ottoman, by People Look for Information classifieds online YorkiePom 8 Pom-a-poo Sectional 54538 Hwy 97. Daily English Bulldog, 3-yr old Chocolate & Yellow. Crandall, 1 year old, About Products and vrvrw.bendbulletin.com puppies, 9 weeks 8 raffles, silent auction spayed female, very Hips OFA guaranteed. brown, excellent cond. Services Every Daythrough HEALTHY! $350 call/text Paid $1596; asking $500. lots of handcrafted gift Updated daily $300-$400. sweet, $500. 541-977-7773 (LOCAL) TheBulletin Classifieds items. 541-536-2170 541-382-9334 1-541-954-1727 541-388-7382 The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h a sing products or services from out of the
w
•
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
Place, cancel or extend an ad
TP e
•
--g'tttun&'.;:~ 2004 Corvette Convertible Coupe, 350, auto with !32 miles, gets 26-24 mpg. Add lots more description and interesting facts fOi' $9. Look how much fun a girl could have in a sweet car like this!
$T2,500 541-000-000
• Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households.
• Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.
E2 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
265
266
Building Materials
Sales Northeast Bend
REDMOND Habitat RESTORE
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • . •• • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri •
Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 1242 S. Hwy 97 541-548-1406
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!
Tuesday. • • • . Noon Mone Open to the public. 266 INCLUDES: Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e Noon Tuese Heating & Stoves • 4 KIT Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To NOTICE TO Use Toward Your Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. ADVERTISER Next Ad Since September 29, • 10 Tips For "Garage Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. 1991, advertising for Sale Success!" used woodstoves has limited to modSaturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. been PICK UP YOUR els which have been GARAGE SAI E KIT at c ertified by the O r - 1777 SW Chandler Saturday • . • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. egon Department of Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Environmental Qual(DEQ) and the fed- The Bulletin Sunday.. • • • • • • • . • • • 5:00 pm Fri • ity eral E n v i ronmental •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
e
Placea photoin yourprivate party ad for only $15.00per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500 in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days.................................................$33.50 28 days.................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days .................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
*Must state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS B ELOW MARKED WITH A N (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
C®X
267
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
The Bulletin bendbulletin.com
•
CHECK YOUR AD
Cash and carry.
2005 Maverick ML7 M ountain Bike, 1 5 "
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to
541-390-1713.
frame (small). Full Proform Crosswalk 380 suspension, Maverick treadmill, like new, only 1 s hock, S RA M X O hour of usage! $275 obo.
your ad, please con-
drivetrain & shifters, 9 541-408-0846
tact us ASAP so that corrections and any
speed rear cassette,
34-11, Avid Juicy disc Where can you find a brakes. Well t a ken helping hand? care of. $950. From contractors to 541-788-6227.
yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory 243
BOB Apex Bicycle trailer, used very little, never in dirt. $275. 541-389-0099
Ski Equipment
adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified G REAT GIFTS! S u n Mountain Oregon golf bag, $125. 4 pair new golf shoes, size 10, $25 ea. New Ping putter, $75. Cleveland 56' SW, $50. 541-306-0166
Salomon women's ski boots, sz 6-6/s, worn 1x; also skis 8 b i ndings, $250. 541-480-4811
TiCk, TOCk
Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get
•
away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
•
Call 54 I- 385-5809 to Promote your service Adult Care
Computers
Handyman
T HE
B U LLETIN r e -
476
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
NURSE Automotive Driveability Tech needed. We are an extremely
busy automotiveshop in n e e d of a TOP-NOTCH EXPERIENCED Driveability Technician. S tarting wage is $30 per flat rate hour plus benefits. If you have the proven skills and ability, we have a position available for you. Send replies to PO Box 6676, Bend, OR 97708
Misc. Items •
Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655 BUYING
From mountain hiking, thrill-seeking white wat er rafting, skiing a t 8,000 feet, or visiting the historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center, Baker County welcomes you.
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Need help fixing stuff? Call A ServiceProfessional C .O. m i xe d wo o d , find the help you need. semi-dry, split, Del. in www.bendbulletin.com Bend. 2 cords $250; 1 341 cord for $135, Cash or Horses & Equipment check. 541-312-4355. Pine & Juniper Split •
•
•
•
PROMPT DELIVERY 542-389-9663
269
BUYING & S E L LING
Gardening Supplies 8 Equipment
All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, BarkTurfsoil.com class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vin- PROMPT D E LIVERY tage watches, dental 542-389-9663 gold. Bill Fl e ming, •
•
•
541-382-9419.
•
2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H slant Shilo, g reat c ondition. $5 9 0 0 obo. 541-317-0988.
What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
Pet Grooming Busy Dog Grooming B usiness i n Red mond is looking for E XPERIENCED p e t groomer (must have own tools), and exp. bather/brusher. Must have resume. Leave msg 541-678-3421.
r
The Bulletin
I Recommends extra
I I services from out of I I the area. Sending I c ash, c hecks, o r I credit i n f o rmationI I may be subjected to FRAUD. I For more informaI tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General's I Co n s umert I Office Protection hotline at l caution when purchasing products or I
• Nurse Manager, Acute Care Baker City, Oregon RN Positions also available:
Hay, Grain & Feed
541-420-3484.
Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.
Saint Alphonsus
• ICU • OB
• Resource RN • RN Supervisor, float pool environment
I 1-877-877-9392.
Press Operator
First quality Orchard/Tim- The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is seeking a night time press operator. We are part othy/Blue Grass mixed and inspection. hay, no rain, barn stored, of Western Communications, Inc. which is a • A cord is 128 cu. ft. $250/ton. Patterson Ranch small, family owned group consisting of 7 news4' x 4' x 8' papers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our Sisters, 541-549-3831 ideal candidate must be able to l earn our • Receipts should equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style include name, Looking for your is a requirement for our 3 t/a tower KBA press. In phone, price and next employee'? addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we kind of wood Place a Bulletin have numerous commercial print clients as well. purchased. help wanted ad We offer a competitive wage and a potential op• Firewood ads today and portunity for advancement. MUST include reach over If you provide dependability combined with a species & cost per 60,000 readers positive attitude and are a team player, we cord to better serve each week. would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable our customers. Your classified ad work environment that provides a great place to will also live and raise a family, let us hear from you. servingcentral oregon sinceace appear on Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at bendbulletin.com anelson@wescom a ers.com with yourcom1 cord dry, split Juniper, which currently piete resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is $200/cord. Multi-cord receives over required prior to employment. EOE discounts, & t/a cords 1.5 million page available. Immediate views every delivery! 541-408-6193 month at no
quires computer advertisers with multiple The Bulletin ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as A-1 Dry Juniper those who sell one $185 split, or $165 rnds computer. Multi-cord discount; Delivery. 541-977-4500 Just too many All YearDependable collectibles? Firewood: Seasoned Lodgepole, Split, Del. Sell them in Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 The Bulletin Classifieds for $365. Cash, Check or Credit Card OK.
541-385-5809
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
To learnmore &apply The Bulletin Classifieds www.saintal honsus.or bakercit ~
325
The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
Exercise Equipment • G olf Equipment • Nordic Trac A2350. Presents beautifully. Hardly used. A perfect holiday gift. $350.00
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - Independent Positions
Fax it to 541-322-7253
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,
242
I
Can be found on these pages:
Fuel 8 Wood
PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracythe first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday.
Bicycles 8 Accessories
Protection A g e ncy (EPA) as having met smoke emission stan- Want to impress the dards. A cer t ified relatives? Remodel w oodstove may b e your home with the identified by its certifi- help of a professional cation label, which is from The Bulletin's permanently attached "Call A Service to the stove. The Bulletin will no t k n ow- Professional" Directory ingly accept advertisi ng for the s ale o f uncertified woodstoves.
fg,/F~>Jirr JI,J j Jl)IJjjJ~ jg
gTl ie BLtlletig g Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin Seeee CenrralOregon sece 1903
RM)(iiCC)
® Umtk(m
Pressroom
Night Supervisor The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Or-
egon, is seeking a night time press supervisor. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon and two in California. Our ideal candidate will 528 manage a small crew of three and must be Loans & Mortgages able t o l e ar n o u r e q u ipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for WARNING our 3 t/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ The Bulletin recomleadership experience preferred. In addition to mends you use cauour 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nution when you promerous commercial print clients as well. We vide personal offer a competitive wage and opportunity for information to compaadvancement. nies offering loans or If you provide dependability combined with a credit especially positive attitude, are able to manage people those asking for adand schedulesand are a team player, we vance loan fees or would like to hear from you. If you seek a companies from out of stable work environment that provides a great state. If you have place to live and raise a family, let us hear concerns or quesfrom you. tions, we suggest you Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at consult your attorney anelsonlwescompapers.com with your comor call CONSUMER piete r esume, r e ferences a n d s a l ary HOTLINE, history/requirements. No phone calls please. 1-877-877-9392. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE. BANK TURNED YOU DOWN'? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land MortAdvertising Account Executive gage 541-388-4200. Rewardingnew business development The Bulletin The Bulletin is looking for a professional and To Subscribe call driven Sales and Marketing person to help our 541-385-5800 or go to customers grow their businesses with an www.bendbulletin.com expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full-time position requires a LOCAL MONEyrWe buy background in c onsultative sales, territory secured trustdeeds & management and aggressive prospecting skills. note,some hard money Two years of m edia sales experience is loans. Call Pat Kelley preferable, but we will train the right candidate. 541-382-3099 ext.13.
Life Tree Personal ERIC REEVE HANDY For newspaper Service LLCSERVICES. Home & Have an item to delivery, call the Senior Concierge Service Commercial Repairs, CASH!! sell quick? Circulation Dept. at • Errands• Home Mgmt. Carpentry-Painting, For Guns, Ammo & 541-385-5800 • Organizing 541-389-2591 If it's under Pressure-washing, Reloading Supplies. To place an ad, call 541-408-6900. Honey Do's. On-time '500you can place it in 541-385-5809 promise. Senior Building/Contracting or email The Bulletin Discount. Work guarclassifiedobendbulletin.com DON'TMISSTHIS NOTICE: Oregon state anteed. 541-389-3361 Classifieds for: or 541-771-4463 law r equires anyone serving central oregon since a03 Bonded & Insured who contracts for '10 - 3 lines, 7 days DO YOU HAVE 476 CCB¹181595 construction work to SOMETHING TO '16 - 3 lines, 14 days 270 be licensed with the Employment SELL Construction Contrac- Home Repairs, Remod (Private Party ads only) Lost & Found Opportunities FOR $500 OR tors Board (CCB). An els, Tile, Carpentry LESS? Finish work, M ainte active license Found 2 loose keys on Non-commercial means the contractor nance. CCB¹168910 Industrial Way, Wed. CAUTION: advertisers may is bonded 8 insured. Phil, 541-279-0846. Nov 27. 541-382-4537 Ads published in The p o sition i n c ludes a com p etitive place an ad 573 Verify the contractor's "Employment Opompensation package, and r ewards a n with our CCB li c ense at Landscaping/Yard Care Lost diamond ring at Ju- porfunifies" in clude c Business Opportunities aggressive, customer-focused salesperson with "QUICK CASH www.hirealicensedniper Pool 11/25, cluster employee and indeunlimited earning potential. SPECIAL" of diamonds, sentimen- pendent positions. contractor.com A Classified ad is an NOTICE: Oregon Land1 week3lines 12 tal value. 541-330-7378 or call 503-378-4621. EASY W A Y TO Ads fo r p o sitions scape Contractors Law Classic Stallion Email your resume, cover letter OI' The Bulletin recom- (ORS 671) requires all REACH over 3 million Lost small brown metal that require a fee or and salary history to: Boots mends checking with businesses that a d~2 e e k s 2 0 ! Pacific Northwesternsuitcase, containing car upfront i nvestment Ladies size 7t/s, Jay Brandt, Advertising Director Ad must the CCB prior to con- vertise t o 'ack 8 other parts, may- must be stated. With pe r f orm ers. $5 4 0 /25-word seldom worn, brandt@bendbulletin.com tracting with anyone. Landscape Construcinclude price of e downtown near Jackc lassified ad i n 2 9 any independentjob or' Paid $1100; Some other t r ades tion which includes: s~le t e o f $500 alope Grill, Sat. Oct. 29. daily newspapers for opportunity, please selling for $290. drop off your resume in person at also req u ire addi- p lanting, less, or multiple Reward! 541-389-7329 3-days. Call the Padeck s , or i nvestigate tho r 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; t ional licenses a nd 541-480-1199 items whose total fences, arbors, cific Northwest Daily Use e xtra Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. certifications. does not exceed Lost sunglassesin case oughly. water-features, and inConnection c aution when a p (916) No phone inquiries please. 11/24 outside of Bed/ $500. stallation, repair of irClothing, wardrobes & Bath Beyond; AND white plying for jobs on2 88-6019 o r em a i l p acking boxe s , I D ebris Removal rigation systems to be elizabeth©cnpa.com line and never proEOE / Drug Free Workplace Call Classifieds at FREE. 541-647-1024 scarf, 10/29, Tower The- vide personal inforlicensed w i t h the for more info (PNDC) 541-385-5809 ater. 626-646-3396 Landscape ContracJUNK BE GONE mation to any source www.bendbulletin.com How fo avoid scam tors Board. This 4-digit you may not have I Haul Away FREE Take care of and fraud attempts number is to be i nresearched and For Salvage. Also 8 8 • cluded in all adverYBe aware of internayour investments deemed to be repuCleanups & Cleanouts tisements which indi- Ruger American Rifle tional fraud. Deal lotable. Use extreme Mel, 541-389-8107 NIB, $365. with the help from cate the business has cally whenever posc aution when r e 541-771-5648 bond,insurance and *AD RUNS UNTIL SOLD! sible. The Bulletin's s ponding t o A N Y Just bought a new boat? a workers c o mpensaY Watch for buyers Sell your old one in the online employment Ruger SR556, gas pis "Call A Service for their employclassifieds! Ask about our tion offer more than ad from out-of-state. ees. For your protec- ton, A R r i f le, N I B who Super Seller rates! your asking price and Professional" Directory We suggest you call $1000 tion call 503-378-5909 asking 541-385-5809 541-480-5797 who ask to have the State of Oregon or use our website: money wired or Lost walking stick, hand- Consumer H o tline www.lcb.state.or.us to handed back to them. made of wood + hand at 1-503-378-4320 I Domestic Services check license status Springfield XD 45, full Fake cashier checks beaded/leather work, last For Equal Opportubefore contracting with s ize w / h olster, 2 s een R edmond S t . nity Laws c ontact and money orders A ssisting Seniors a t the business. Persons mags, mag holster 8 Charles. $50 Reward. Oregon Bureau of Home. Light house doing lan d scape c ase. $ 5 00 . Ca l l are common. 541-420-8771 / 256-0293 Labor 8 I n d ustry, 4 58-206-8111 a f t e r VNever give out perkeeping 8 other ser maintenance do n ot 5:30 pm. sonal financial inforCivil Rights Division, v ices. L icensed & r equire an L C B mation. 971-6730764. Bonded. BBB C e rti cense. VTrust your instincts Look at: fied. 503-756-3544 REMEMBER: Ifyou and be wary of Sereng Central Oregon «nce 1903 Bendhomes.com Nelson have lost an animal, someone using an 541-385-5809 Landscaping & for Complete Listings of don't forget to check Drywall escrow service or The Humane Society Maintenance Area Real Estate for Sale agent to pick up your Serving Central Bend Add your web address WALLS R US merchandise. 541-382-3537 to your ad and readHang tape, texture, Oregon Since 2003 249 Redmond ers on The Bu//etin's scraping old ceilings, Residental/Commercial Art, Jewelry servmgcenfral0 egon«nce sie 541-923-0882 8 paint. 25 yrs. exp. web site, www.bend& Furs Pi e ille bulletin.com, will be Call Bob, 760-333-4011 Sprinkler Blovvouts Wanted- paying cash 541-447-717a Sprinkler Repair able to click through for Hi-fi audio & stuor Craft Cats automatically to your dio equip. Mclntosh, OAK BEDROOMSET Electrical Services Fall Clean Up 541-389-8420. website. rwo dark oak night J BL, Marantz, D y stands and matching naco, Heathkit, SanBEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP Mike Dillon Electric Snow Removal head boards condition ReplaceThat old tiredBedroomsetyou got fromyour Parents! sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Electrical troubleshootNo scratches. Very The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are Call 541-261-1808 Schedule for 2014 ing, new panel installasturdy.Was $1200 new, Item Priced at: Y o ur Total Ad Cost onl: still over 2,000 folks in our community without tions. 24 yrs exp. Lic./ •Weekly 8 Monthly offering for only WHEN YOU SEE THIS permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift • Under $500 $29 Bonded ¹192171 Maintenance 14 carrot white gold $650 0B0 camps,getting by as best they can. • $500 fo $99 9 $39 ladies wedding band Holiday Special $50/hr •Landscape 541-000-000 The following items are badly needed to ~OO 503-949-2336 Construction with a bright polish • $1000 to $2499 $49 help them get through the winter: •Water Feature finish, 1.66 c a rrot M arePiXatBei)dbijletii),CO m @ CAMPING GEAR: Us ed tents, sleeping bags, • $2500 and over $5ttt Installation/Maint. diamond Hearts and On a classified ad Handyman tarps, blankets. Includesup to40 words of text, 2" in length, with •Pavers arrows round cut, go to Sl -1 Clarity, F color. •Renovations www.bendbulletin.com @ WARM CLOTHING: rain gear, boots, gloves. border,full colorphoto, bold headline ondprice. serving centrat oregonsince ecs I DO THAT! •Irrigation Installation Appraised at to view additional Home/Rental repairs PLEASE DROP OFF Y OUR DONATIONS AT • The Bulletin, • The Cent ralOregonNickelAds $15,000. Very 541-385-5809 photos of the item. Small jobs to remodels Senior Discounts THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER unique piece. Ask• Central Oregon Marketplace e bendbulletin.com Some restrictions apply Honest, guaranteed Bonded & Insured ing $9500. Wilson Electronics cell 1036 NE 5th St., Bend, Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. work. CCB¹151573 541-815-4458 p hone booster, $ 9 5 Please help, you can make 541-281-7815 'Privateport/ rnerchondiseonly- excludespets&livestock, autos, Rvs, rnotorcycles,boats, airplanes,cndgaragesalecategories. Dennis 541-317-9768 LCB¹8759 435-669-5013 (Prineville) a big differencei n our community.
The Bulletin
/I 0
0
The Bulletin
•
• i|
•
The Bulletin
I
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
•
E4 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, DEC 3, 2013
DAILY B R I D G E
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD WIIISbortz
C L U B T uesday, December3,2013
The root of the matter
ACROSS
9 Fine pillow stuffing 11 Car with a checkered past? 14Turkish money 1s Parkinson's treatment 16 Egg: Prefix 17 Audibly shocked 1e Military muscle
Tribune Content Agency
I've heard that the roots of the w ord "consultant" are " con" ( t o deceive) and "insult" (to demean). W hether that's true, I a m o f t en consulted by players who want a disaster adjudicated. "I led a diamond against 3NT," today's West told me. "When I took the king," said East, "I knew a d i amond continuation wouldn't w o rk . D e clarer's I NT marked him with a s t opper, and though I could set up a third diamond trick, we would get only the king of clubs besides. So I shifted to the four of hearts." South had to play low, but when West took the queen, he returned a heart, and South made his game. How would you assess the blame?
doubles, and the next player passes. What do you say? ANSWER: Your hand is far too strong for a minimum response and maybe too strong for an invitational jump. Anyway, it's not clear in which suit you should jump; partner may have better support for one major suit than for the other. Cue-bid two clubs. If he bids a major next, raise to three. North dealer N-S vulnerable
~vI 107
074 4 AQ J10 9 5 WEST 4i54
EAST 45 J982 9 K94 0 AK1 09 4K8
9 Q86 2 0 863 2 4632
I gave most of it t o West, who should shift back to diamonds at Trick Three. He can expectto beat 3NT if he assumes East has the A-K of diamonds and king of clubs. East could help his partner by leading the nine of hearts, not the four. That lead would deny interest in a heart continuation and would impel West to find the best defense.
H I D A G A M O R O WH E R E 0 K O R E A G M C R E G A L 0 E D I P U R A G E S E T E R MA DM A X E L S A L E R O MY L I T T FR A T A M E L S T
OQJ5 474 14 Pass 3 NT
DAILY QUESTION
East Sou th Dbl Red b l 1O 1 NT All Pass
West Pass Pass
Youhold: 4i K 7 6 3 Q A J 5 3 Opening lead — C 2 0 Q J 5 A 7 4. The dealer, at your left, opens one club. Your partner (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
1iii
39 Plus
DOWN 1"There oughta be z "Alas" and "ah" 3 Curly hair or hazel eyes 4 Haile Selassie disciple 9 Bad-mouth 9 Actress Jenna of "Dharma &
Greg"
E G C O HW O N S E S R T A A N I D L E R
E V E R Y
A C H O O E G G S R D A S
P O E R A N I I N X P E R E E C S A O G T E T S
O M E G A S
H I H O
M C A N
E A S Y
P O EW L E N O V E P E D I N D IJ G O N 0 T M O
T E A R
1
2
3
4
5
6
14
15
17
18
20
8
9
10
29
13
33
34
35
51
52
19 22 24
30
26
31
27
32 37
40
38
39
42
41 44 47
12
16
25 28
11
21
43
45
48
49
53
character on "The Big Bang Theory" 9 Fencing blade
7
23
46
7 Moron 9Almost any
54
50
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63 64 1o Radio format 11 Shrink in fear PUZZLE BY ROBERT CIRILLO 13 Deflect 13 Word with 33Word of Quarantine canal or control qualification a 49 Quite bad 19 Place to 33 Priest's get free garment Effect's partner screwdrivers, 34 Org. with a say Something prohibitedacquired by 31 Free throw, e.g. items list marriage? 34 Said, as "adieu" 3s Sharer's 49 Shore fliers ZB " opposite fOr Shore fixtures octopus" 3e Parisian assent zz "Yeah, like 41 Yule libation s 1 "Snowy" wader
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
SOUTH 4K763 QAJ53
North
side of some rocks Bs Pa r k , Colo.
4o Take every last cent of 43 Inflatable safety device 44 Curt denial 4s 10 Downing St. residents 49 Scoring 100 on 49 One who keeps plugging along s3 Fade zo Sign of change at the Vatican s4 "Go" signal 97 Using all of zz Prell rival a gym, as in 33 Ogle basketball 34 Ship slip 99 Eagle's home eo Network that zs RR stop aired "Monk" zs Chief Norse e1 007, for one god ez News that may ze Saffron and be illustrated ginger by a graph 32 Functional lawn e3 Fictional adornment detective 36 Per person Archer
NORTH 4AQ10
KING OF CLUBS
can follow both halves of 18-, 20-, 32-, 40-, 54- and 57-Across
per aspera" (Kansas' motto)
By FRANK STEWART
94 Like the north
37 Word that
1 "Ad
No. 1029
65
you have a chance!" zs Regulatory inits. since
sz
Va l ley, German wine region
s4
gir l
ss Regrets se Senators Cruz and Kennedy ss Machine part
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual eubecriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. 1934 AT&T users: Text NYTX Io 386 to download puzzles, or visit nyiimes.com/mobilexword for more information. P 39 arou n d with Online subscripiions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past E 3o Winter driving puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). S hazard Share tips: nyiimes.com/wordplay. O Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
31 Wide strait
DENNIS THE MENACE
SUDOKU
I ii' I
l
Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
• I
1'I
%yr"
' ll' I
0 9
SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY'S SUDOKU
o,
1Z-3
"SORRY AJSOUT MR.WILGON, IP IAETE'LLG Sizw(IOCBINCL'.Coii(
12'3 13
w 098MC
MY PAP... I'AA sURE 'foU'LL gE I4GARIN' ABOUT IT R'EAL 5OON!"
CANDORVILLE DIDYOUSEESILL CONY ON COMCDYCENTRALT :
.
' COSSY PEAP TO ME.
Ct
SLACK MEN ARCFOUR NC ALI/AYS TALKIN' 'SOVT TIMEAMORC LIK'CLY TO SE NOI/SLACK MEN NEED TO ARRESTEDTNANIVNITE RAIK TNCY KIDS. SUT IIE NEI7CR SAYNOTNIN' 'SOUT o MCN 4'NODO TNE AAME IIA+4 NOhl CAN YOURAIK WY SOMANY POAI'7' A KID I/NCN YOU IN JAILe
I/NATCI/ER I/O 4/AS REALLY FI/NNY,
cv po
"FO NN Y»
DIFFICULTY RATING: ** 6
6 6
LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis SAFE HAVENS
+
~t2OIIE t)OIZM I fHlklC l265IDEIIT5 SIZIPI&~ -,1'Lt J(I&l &ACAI L' IIITO . . (XIHICH II6A& I('Oif LL FIIID S A IIAA (HA'5 PlZIVA1(G3 IJ&TIc'EIIAhAED rIIEIIZ Eiix)H RogTEI2~ 5O %&Y'<E 'Hl PA'TIAA." 1H8. PA'J&i/)ORD IIOT f4'E&TIRICTSD 8( TIIS gl&l iiAL' So(l-DIPl(sig IS KOV(2 ig~ z2TVP6P1$ & rdEIzfle1 I:P. NIIIYlg Eg. iCRSLE5. &Of ME...
/R/ez.':::;::,::;;:;:;::;:;::;:";::;I::: ~ 2013 by King Features Syndicate, 100 Wond nghis reserved
";~l!"ig" E-m811: bholbrooki Legmail com
http iiwww 8afehaven800m10Com
SIX CHIX 4>xck44 2u9N 44F54rtj64> Sv40 ulTe law 4 zo>9~ F t 0 5 4 6 f 9 9 U l o c K
1Fkwv0« < 8 « ~, 2M 007
OsE
5/It/100K
170INC 14Y 80 9 I NE69
EvEHI g6 AT fHE
PAK ZITS i
W%Pbl'rllfcK, ~EKIW WILL IQVF HIS NEW6NF4KQZS SMKFN.IN 5CUN.
-
.g <C1 L)
0
O I2I4
HERMAN
W Ca~ M ~85 ~
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
1++ ~u~~~~X + fJ ~ V
5/-"LV IT IA/ITH
~PR0059%
~
bv DavidL.14oytand Jeff Knurek
~B
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter 10 each square, 10 form four ordinary words.
RUCRY
Ithink we'8 E
02013 Tnbune ContentAgency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
//
8 ='-' =--i /
El
/,1-- '1-'11':4(r64 "
.11~ 974.9..
'1i
TEEQUA
1Z
~5 11 191155:~
THE NDVICB Mc2UNTiuN CLM5taz NBSPBP TC>-
ROPRAL N0W arrange the CirCled letterS
io form the surprise answer, 88 suggested by the above carloon.
Ana I 2-3
0 LaughingStOCk Intema40nal InC 05t Dy UniverSal UCliCk for UFS 2013
"One dOZen lOng-Stemmed roSeS."
3 Had a hunch 4 Barely beats 5 Member of the fam 6 CBS drama with supply two spin-offs 15 Dot in the ocean 7 "Everything's 16 Circus fine" 8 Exeter's county performer? 17Tune 9 Dictation whiz 18 Thin, decorative 10 The K.C. Chiefs metal represented it in 20 What a 63-Across Super Bowl I 11 High school may speak 21 The last Mrs. choral group Chaplin 12 Dollhouse cups, 22 Grand Rapids-tosaucers, etc. Detroit dir. 13 Protected 23 Gets married condition 27This, to Michelle 19 Pied Piper 28 Morose followers 29 Geometric suffix 24 End-of-the30 Like potato chips workweek cry 32 Lulus 25 Pebble Beach's 36 Mass transit 18 carrier 26 China's Zhou 37 Dangerous things 31 SALT concerns to risk 32 say 39 Retirement something destination? wrong?" 40 Wimps 33 Elected ones 34 '50s automotive 41 Underworld 9I'oup failure 43 Printer's widths 35 Goo 44 Cookie container 1 2 3 4 47 Renoir output 48 Equestrian's 14 supply box 17 53 Spoil 54 Alabama, but not
Kansas? 55 "Picnic" playwright 560ne, toane, e.g. 60 "Ain't Misbehavin"' Tony winner Carter 61 Throw hard
THE
(AnsWer8 tOmarrOW) S A PBTV Y88terda 8 ~ 3umbies: SALAO HBOOB P X CBBO AnSWer: His hOPe Of Winning the SPrint Was abOut 10 be — DASHED
63 Hebrides native 64 Desires 65 Burning desire? 66 Chop Chinese American dish DOWN
37 There's a lane for 46 "I Believe I Can
Fly" singer
one at many
intersections 49 St a d ium 38 Superlative 50 Mo r e desperate, suffix as circumstances 39 Like Bach's 5 1 Som e portals music 52 Adornments for 41 Boggy noses and toes 42 Solar system sci. 57 Gore and Green 44 Alaskan capital 58 L a cto45 "Crouching Tiger, veg e t arian Hidden Dragon" 5 9 Years in a director decade
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: C U B S
W A T T H S L H A O O D D O P C U L A R AL I N E J A R D Y A A V E R S E G B A S E B A L L D A F O E S M E E S T H OP E C H E S O R O M E O D E N D I A M D A Y E S K I Y U M S T A R xwordeditor@aol.com 5
O G L E
6
7
8
I C A S A N I N G A R I L Y N O R E T 0 N S E A Y T O H E R O N D M 0 E S
S T P C A O U U L S I G N A R O F O I H E S L D
10 1 1
12
9
15
D I O N N E
I C E A G E
H T T E S A
N A I R
E D D Y 12/03/1 3
16
18
19
20 23
24 2 5
28
29
26
27 30
32
33 3 4
35
37
36
40
41
42
47
48 4 9
53
54
56
31
38
39
62 Hero's quality
NAPST ,,14 1'i,~</i I:~j~~.11 1
ACROSS 1 Cathedral area 5 Tons 10 Reps: Abbr. 14 Garden center
44 4 5 50
51
46
52 55
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
1 Valuables 2 Illinois city that
symbolizes Middle America
By Mike Peluso (c)2013 Trlbune Content Agency, LLC
12/03/1 3
THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
~
v
I •
•
•
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
'.0 0 627
Vacation Rentals & Exchanges
Christmas at the Coast WorldMark Depoe Bay, OR 2 bedroom condo, sleeps 6 12/22 - 12/29 or 12/23 -12/30.
$1399
541-325-6566
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 632
Apt./Multiplex General CHECK YOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. nSpellcheckn and human errors do occur. If this happens to
your ad, please con-
tact us ASAP so that corrections and any
adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Call for Specialsi Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTA/N GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin gererng Cenrrel Oregon rrneefggg
f •
•
•
n
®
648
745
Houses for Rent General
Homes for Sale
880
ATVs
Motorhomes
882
•
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers •
Snowmobiles 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, in good condition, $1000.
Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
Honda TRX 350 FE Fleetwood D i s covery Rexair 28-ft 2006, 4 wheel drive, 40' 2003, diesel momotorhome, 1991electric start, electric torhome w/all Ideal for camping or s hift, n ew tire s , options-3 slide outs, hunting, it has 45K $2500, 541-980-8006. satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, miles, a 460 gas enetc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. 870 Wintered in h e ated gine, new tires, automatic levelers, Boats & Accessories shop. $84,900 O.B.O. Onan generator, 541-447-8664 king-size bed, aw-
ning. Nice condition Sell or trade'? $8700. 541-815-9939
860
Motorcycles & Accessories
2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384 Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming
NOTICE
Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900.
Fifth Wh e els A lpenlite 1993 2 9 f t . 5th wheel/gooseneck. S lide, q ueen b e d ,
o 0 0
•
682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747 -Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
865
Sunchaser Pontoon boat - $19,895 G ulfstream S u n 20' 2006 Smokercraft sport 30' Class A cruise, S-8521. 2006 1988 ne w f r i dge, 75hp. Mercury. F u ll TV, solar panel, new camping e n c losure. refrigerator, wheelPop u p cha n ging c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W room/porta-potty, BBQ, g enerator, Goo d swim ladder, all gear. condition! $12,500 Trailer, 2006 E a sy- obo 541-447-5504 loader gal v anized. P urchased new, a l l records. 541-706-9977, cell 503-807-1973.
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755
KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
Keystone Laredo 31' RV 2006 with 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w e r. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600 541-447-4805
Onan gene r ator. Needs refrigerator repaired. $ 6 0 00/obo. Bend. Mess a ge: 541-306-1961
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear
kitchen, very good condition. Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer. 541-382-2577
Good classified ads tell vkt the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write TIFFIN PHAETON QSH a~a, 2007 with 4 slides, CAT from the readers view - not 350hp diesel engine, the seller's. Convert the $125,900. 30,900 miles, facts into benefits. Show new Michelin tires, great the reader how the item will Arctic Fox 2003 Cold cond! Dishwasher, w/d, help them in someway. Weather Model 34 5B, central vac, roof satellite, This licensed thru 2/15, exlnt aluminum wheels, 2 full advertising tip cond. 3 elec slides, solar slide-thru basement trays brought to you by panel, 10 gal water htr, & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 tow14' awning, (2) 10-gal bar and Even-Brake inThe Bulletin propane tanks, 2 batts, ger ng Ceneei Oregonr nre rggg cluded. catalytic htr in addition to Call 541-977-4150 central heating/AC, gently used, MANY features! '~g Must see to appreciate! Tioga 24' Class C • I II$19,000. By owner (no Motorhome dealer calls, please). Call Bought new in 2000, or text 541-325-1956. currently under 20K miles, excellent Layton 27-ft, 2001 CHECK YOUR AD shape, new tires, professionaly winterFront & rear entry ized every year, cutdoors, bath, shower, off switch to battery, queen bed, slide-out, plus new RV batteroven, microwave, air ies. Oven, hot water conditioning, patio heater & air condion the first day it runs awning, twin protioning have never to make sure it isn corpane tanks, very been used! rect. nSpellcheck and nice, great floor plan, $24,000 obo. Serious $8895. human errors do ocinquiries, please. 541-316-1388 cur. If this happens to Stored in Terrebonne. your ad, please con541-548-5174 tact us ASAP so that corrections and any Check out the adjustments can be gfPi classifieds online made to your ad. www.bendbuffetin.com 541-385-5809 Updated daily The Bulletin Classified
541-388-8939 $25,000. All real estate adver541-548-0318 tised here in is sub21' Crownline Cuddy (photo aboveis of a ject to t h e F e deral Cabin, 1995, only similar model & not the F air H o using A c t , 325 hrs on the boat, actual vehicle) which makes it illegal 5.7 Merc engine with to advertise any prefoutdrive. Bimini top erence, limitation or & moorage cover, discrimination based $7500 obo. on race, color, reli541-382-2577 Harley Davidson gion, sex, handicap, familial status or na2011 Classic Limtional origin, or inten- ited, LOADED, 9500 tion to make any such miles, custom paint NATIONAL DOLPHIN preferences, l i m ita- "Broken Glass" by 37' 1997, loaded! 1 tions or discrimination. Nicholas Del Drago, slide, Corian surfaces, We will not knowingly wood floors (kitchen), new condition, fridge, convection such pre f erence, accept any advertis- heated handgrips, 21' Sun Tracker Sig. se- 2-dr Vizio TV & limitation or discrimi- ing for r ea l e s tate auto cruise control. ries Fishin' Barge, Tracker microwave, nation." Familial sta- which is in violation of $32,000 in bike, only 50hp, live well, fish fndr, roof satellite, walk-in new queen bed. tus includes children this law. All persons $23,000 obo. new int, extras, exc cond, shower, Orbit 21'2007, used White leather hide-aunder the age of 18 are hereby informed 541-318-6049 $7900. 541-508-0679 only 8 times, A/C, bed & chair, all records, living with parents or that all dwellings adoven, tub s hower, no pets or s moking. legal cust o dians, vertised are available Ads published in the micro, load leveler pregnant women, and on an equal opportuNeed to get an "Boats" classification $28,450. hitch, awning, dual Call 541-771-4800 people securing cus- nity basis. The Bulleinclude: Speed, fishad in ASAP? batteries, sleeps 4-5, tody of children under tin Classified ing, drift, canoe, EXCELLENT CONFleetwood Prowler Winnebago Aspect You can place it 18. This newspaper house and sail boats. Get your DITION. All acces32' - 2001 2009- 32', 3 slidewill not knowingly aconline at: 750 For all other types of sories are included. 2 slides, ducted outs, Leather intebusiness cept any advertising watercraft, please go www.bendbulletin.com Redmond Homes OBO. heat & air, great rior, Power s e at, $14,511 for real estate which is to Class 875. 541-382-9441 condition, snowbird locks, windows, in violation of the law. 541-385-5809 ready, Many up541-385-5809 Aluminum w heels. a ROW I N G O ur r e aders a r e Looking for your next 17 9 Flat Screen, grade options, fihereby informed that emp/oyee? nancing available! Surround so u n d, Sernng Central Oregon gnce i903 all dwellings adver- Place a Bulletin help with an ad in camera, Queen bed, $14,500 obo. tised in this newspa- wanted ad today and The Bulletin's Foam mattress, Awper are available on reach over 60,000 Call Dick, "Call A Service ning, Generator, Inan equal opportunity readers each week. 541-480-1687. verter, Auto Jacks, basis. To complain of Professionaln Your classified ad Air leveling, Moon discrimination cal l will also appear on Harley Davidson SportDirectory Tango 29.6' 2007, roof, no smoking or HUD t o l l-free at bendbulletin.com ster 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0cc, Rear living, walkp ets. L i k e ne w , 1-800-877-0246. The h o u seboat, which currently re9,257 miles, $4995. Call Beautiful $74,900 around queen bed, toll f re e t e l ephone ceives over $85,000. 541-390-4693 li • u ~ s Michael, 541-310-9057 541-480-6900 central air, awning, , zI u~. -number for the hearwww.centraloregon 1.5 million page 1 large slide, ing im p aired is houseboat.com. views every month HDFatBo 19 96 1-800-927-9275. $15,000 obo (or at no extra cost. trade for camper Keystone Ch a llenger Bulletin Classifieds Find exactly what that fits 6 9/z' pickup 2004 CH34TLB04 34' USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Get Results! you are looking for in the bed, plus cash). fully S/C, w/d hookups, Call 385-5809 or Head south Door-to-door selling with CLASSIFIEDS 541-280-2547 or new 18' Dometic awplace your ad on-line for the winter! ning, 4 new tires, new fast results! It's the easiest at 541-815-4121 1997 Tropical by Winnebago Suncruiser34' Kubota 7000w marine bendbulletin.com GENERATE SOME exway in the world to sell. National RV. 35-ft, 2004, 35K, loaded, too diesel generator, 3 Completely citement in your neigChevy Vortec enmuch to list, ext'd warr. Rebuilt/Customized slides, exc. cond. inborhood. Plan a gaThe Bulletin Classified gine, new awnings, thru 2014, $49,900 Dens ide & o ut. 27 " T V 771 2012/2013 Award rage sale and don't 541-385-5809 everything works, nis, 541-589-3243 dvd/cd/am/fm entertain Winner forget to advertise in Lots excellent condition, center. Call for more Showroom Condition classified! 385-5809. 693 1 owner, non-smokdetails. Only used 4 Many Extras SHEVLIN RIDGE ers, $15,000 OBO. Travel Trailers times total in last 51l Office/Retail Space 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apLow Miles. 541-408-7705 WEEKEND WARRIOR Serving Central Oregon smee r903 years.. No pets, no for Rent $17,000 proved plans. More Toy hauler/travel trailer. smoking. High r etail 541-548-4807 details and photos on 24' with 21' interior. 875 $27700. Will sell for 500 stf. ft. upstairs craigslist. $159,900. Sleeps 6. Self-con$24,000 IncludIng slIdWatercraft office on NE side of 541-389-8614 tained. Systems/ i ng hitch that fits i n town, private bath, all appearancein good your truck. Call 8 a.m. Ads published in nWautil. paid. $500 month 775 condition. Smoke-free. to 10 p.m. for appt to tercraft" include: Kayplus $500 d eposit. F leetwood Am e r i - Tow with I/g-ton. Strong see. 541-330-5527. Manufactured/ aks, rafts and motor541-480-4744 can haul Ized personal N avion R V 20 0 8 , cana W i lliamsburg suspension; Mobile Homes ATVs snowmobiles, watercrafts. For Sprinter chassis 25'. 2006. Two king tent even a small car! Great Mercedes Benz die- end beds w/storage FACTORY SPECIAL Bafl &iWRs Triumph D a y tona " boats" please s e e price - $8900. sel, 2 4 ,000 m i l es, t runk b e lo w on e , Class 870. New Home, 3 bdrm, 2004, 15 K m i l e s, Call 541-593-6266 pgoy ~[]g pristine con d ition, slideout portable di541-385-5809 $46,500 finished perfect bike, needs quality th r o ughout, n ette, b e nch s e a t , on your site. nothing. Vin r ear s lide-out w i th cassette t o i le t & J and M Homes Looking for your ¹201536. Monaco Lakota 2004 ~l n gc u e utufr eguuftuui~ 541-548-5511 queen bed, d eluxe shower, swing level next employee? $4995 5th Wheel captain swivel front galley w/ 3 bu r ner Place a Bulletin help Dream Car 34 ft.; 3 s lides; im880 seats, diesel genera- cook top and s ink. wanted ad today and People Look for Information Auto Sales maculate c o ndition; tor, awning, no pets, outside grill, outside Motorhomes reach over 60,000 About Products and 1801 Division, Bend l arge screen TV w / no smoking. $79,950 shower. includes 2 745 readers each week. Services Every Daythrough DreamCarsBend.com entertainment center; obo. Financing avail. propane tanks, 2 batYour classified ad Homes for Sale 541-678-0240 reclining chairs; cenThe BulletinClassifieds 541-382-2430 teries, new tires plus will also appear on Dlr 3665 ter kitchen; air; queen bike trailer hitch on bendbulletin.com bed; complete hitch back bumper. Dealer LOT MODEL AUCTION which currently reand new fabric cover. serviced 2013. $8500 BANK OWNED LIQUIDATION ceives over 1.5 mil$18,000 OBO. 541-948-221 6 Six contiguous Prices Slashed Huge lion page views ev(541) 548-5886 COACHMAN vacant parcels Savings! 10 Year ery month at no Fleetwood Wilderness Freelander 2008 +/- 60.94 AC conditional warranty. extra cost. Bulletin N.W. Edition 26' 2002, 32' Class C, M-3150 STARTING BID Finished on your site. Classifieds Get ReProvidence 2005 1 slide, s leeps 6 , Pristine just 23,390 ONLY 2 LEFT! sults! Call 385-5809 $550,000 Fully loaded, 35,000 queen bed, couch, miles! Efficient coach December 17, 2013 Redmond, Oregon or place your ad miles, 350 Cat, Very stove/oven, tub/ has Ford V10 541-548-5511 Victory TC 2002, on-line at 1675 SW Veterans clean, non-smoker, shower, front e l ec. w/Banks pwr pkg, Way/Reindeer Ave, JandMHomes.com bendbulletin.com runs great, many 3 slides, side-by-side 14' slide, ducted furn/ jack, waste tank heatRedmond OR accessories, new MONTANA 3585 2008, refrigerator with ice AC, flat screen TV, ers, s t abilizers, 2 BROKER'S Rent /Own exc. cond., 3 slides, maker, Washer/Dryer, prop. tires, under 40K 16' awning. No pets/ t a n ks , no Call The Bulletin At WELCOME 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes king bed, Irg LR, Flat screen TV's, In miles, well kept. smkg. 1 ownersmoking/pets, winter541-385-5809 $2500 down, $750 mo. Call 310.887.6225 Arctic insulation, all motion satellite. a must see! $52,500. i zed, g o o d co n d . $5000. KENNEDY WILSON OAC. J and M Homes options $35,000 obo. 541-548-4969 $95,000 $8500 OBO Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-77 I -0665 www.kwreoauctiomcom 541-548-5511 541-420-3250 541-480-2019 At: www.bendbulletin.com 541-447-3425 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 based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any
„ -
•
The Bulletin
I e ~'
4
<' :
The Bulletin
$oo
The Bulletin
ow ou r
u . e
o ur
u .
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds. Full Color Photos For an additional '15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
('Speciaf private party rates apply to merchandise and autOmO/i VeCategOrieS,)
We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4,
and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
'. a~~i 1C S T o pl a ce y o ur
a d, visit
ww w.b end b ul l et i n . com or
ca l l 54 1 -3 85 - 58 0 9
E6 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 933
• n
s
v
Pickups
Vans
Automobiles
•
G R E AT •
•
•
•
•
BOATS & RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent
Ford Windstar, 1996, 1 I nternational Fla t only 68,100 miles, Bed Pickup 1963, 1 owner, new tires, always sert on dually, 4 s p d. viced, no smoking/pets. trans., great MPG, Like new, $3950. could be exc. wood 541-330-4344 or hauler, runs great, 541-420-6045 new brakes, $1950.
AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
541-41 9-5480. 935
Sport Utility Vehicles
K+~iiA
L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700
years. Never damaged or abused.
$72,900.
Dave, 541-350-4077
5 41 -385-580 9
908
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
Fifth Wheels
B MW X 3
2 0 07 , 9 9 K
miles, premium package, heated lumbar supported seats, panoramic moonroof, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- GMC 1995 Safari XT, non headlights, tan & A/C, seats 8, 4.3L V6, black leather interior, studs on rims, $1500 obo. 541-312-6960 n ew front 8 rea r Save money. Learn GMC Sierra 1977 short brakes O 76K miles, bed, e xlnt o r i ginal one owner, all records, to fly or build hours 975 cond., runs & drives very clean, $16,900. with your own airAutomobiles c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o great. V8, new paint 541-388-4360 and tires. $4750 obo. Commander, 4 seat, 541-504-1050 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at ,
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed
sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 27 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s c issor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new!
•
Chevy Tahoe 2001
541-447-5184.
5.3L V8, leather, air, heated seats, fully loaded, 120K mi. $7500 obo
I
541-419-0566
SuperhavvkOnly 1 Share Available
•
MGA 1959 - $19,999 Convertible. O r iginal body/motor. No rust. 541-549-3838
541-460-0494
Ford Escape SEL 2013, 4WD, leather, 22K mi. ¹A34703. $23,995
~ OO
Oregon More Pixat Bendbulletiij.com Economical flying Recreation by Design AnloSource in your own 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. 541-598-3750 IFR equipped Top living room, 2 bdrm, www.aaaoregonautohas 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, Cessna 172/180 HP for source.com entertainment center, only $13,500! New fireplace, W/D, Garmin Touchscreen garden tub/shower, in avionics center stack! great condition. $36,000 Exceptionally clean! Plymouth B a r racuda or best offer. Call Peter, Hangared at BDN. 1966, original car! 300 307-221-2422, Call 541-728-0773 hp, 360 V8, center( in La Pine ) lines, 541-593-2597 916 WILL DELIVER infinifi FX35 2012, Trucks & RV space avail. in Just too many Platinum silver, Tumalo, 30 amp hk-up, Heavy Equipment 24,000 miles, with collectibles? $375. 541-419-5060 factory war r anty, f ully l o aded, A l l Sell them in Wheel Drive, GPS, The Bulletin Classifieds sunroof, etc. $35,500. 541-550-7189 541-385-5809 Peterbilt 35 9 p o table water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, RV Transport Have an item to 3200 gal. tank, 5hp fl®ii n Local or Long Disp ump, 4 - 3 hoses, sell quick? tance: 5th wheels, camlocks, $ 2 5,000. camp trailers, toy If it's under 541-820-3724 haulers, etc. '500 you can place it in 925 Ask for Teddy, VW Bug Sedan, 1969, 541-260-4293 The Bulletin Utility Trailers fully restored, 2 owners, with 73,000 total miles, Classifieds for: Mirage 24' x S t/g' wide $10,000. 541-382-5127 10,000 G V W car a '10 - 3 lines, 7 days hauler, $5000 o bo. 541-388-4362 '16 - 3 lines, 14 days e0 Pickups • (Private Party ads only) 931 Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories •
00
CLASSIC
1966 Ford F250
4 studded snow tires on rims, 70-R17, fits Ford Expedition. $75 ea including rim, obo. 541-617-8997
3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, P/S, straight body,
runs good. $3000. 541-410-8749
541-948-2963
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809 " ~
N S n•
1/3 interest i n w e l lequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510
•
s
541-923-1781
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4 matching canopy,
n loaded, 18 new tires, 114k miles. $7 900 obo (541) 419-4152
2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
¹4155624940 for
additional details.) Serious inquiries only. 541-480-5348
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
.'I
'
.
,
.
Ford Model A 1930 Coupe, good condition, $16,000. 541-588-6084
J vnikiskis Lighllt ated titit aed
$450 OBO 541-000-000
The Ek8etm gervtng Canlral Oregen alncatgt8
541-385-580sjt Some restrictions apply
Replace that oldtired setof skisyougot fromyour ski BtimBuddy! • • • •
I
I
I
1-877-877-9392.
~ Oo
I I
MorePixattBerjdbjletin,com The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregnn nnte t903
On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item. Need help fixing stuff?
Call A Service Professional find the help you need.
Under $500 $500 to $99 9 $1000 to $2499 $2500 and over
$29 $39 $49 $59
Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • The Bulletin, • Central Oregon Markeiplacs
Leg a l Notices
LEGAL NOTICE CIRCUIT COURT OF OREGON FOR DESLincoln LS 2001 4door CHUTES C O UNTY. sport sedan, plus set W ELLS FARG O of snow tires. $6000. 541-317-0324. BANK, N . A . , AS TRUSTEE FOR OPT ION ONE M O R T GAGE LOAN TRUST 2 006-3, ASS ET BACKED C E RTIFIC ATES, SERI E S Plaintiff, v. ESLincoln Zephyr 2006, V6, 2006-, TATE OF W E SLEY 29,000 miles, silver, It JOHNSON, DEstone leather seats, good M. C EASED; JULIE R . cond, priced t o s e l l, JOHNSON AKA $9700. 541-549-2500 JULIE ROUSE; UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF WESLEY M. JOHNSON, DECEASED; STATE ei OF OREGON, DE4i' PARTMENT OF JUST ICE; RA Y K L EIN Mercedes C300 INC. DBA PROFES2009 S IONAL CRE D I T 4-door 4-Matic, SERVICE; PERred with black SONS OR PARTIES leather interior, UNKNOWN C LAIMnavigation, panING AN Y R I G HT, oramic roof, loaded! TITLE, LIEN OR INOne owner, only T EREST I N THE 29,200 miles. PROPERTY DE$23,000 obo. S CRIBED I N T H E 541-475-3306 COMPLAINT HEREIN,
The Bulletin
928-581-9190
hindings i in greatshape no 2 seasons II«se s in the scrspes or dinQs base arid freshlYwax and tunedfor theseason
I I I
The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting
yourneeds.
www.bendbulletin.com
Call on one of the professionals today!
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
1000
•
541-389-7669.
Dramatic Price Reduction Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high biPrice Reduced! fold dr. Natural gas heat, Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 offc, bathroom. Adjacent engine, power everyto Frontage Rd; great thing, new paint, 54K visibility for aviation busi- orig. miles, runs great, ness. 541-948-2126 or exc. cond.in/out. $7500 email 1jetjock@q.com obo. 541-480-3179 Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, I based in Madras, always hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 to- GMC t/g ton 1971, Only tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500.$19,700! Original low 541-475-6947, ask for mile, exceptional, 3rd Rob Berg. owner. 951-699-7171
I
541-385-5809
extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all.
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
cyl, 5 mends extra caution I speed a/c pw pdl when p u rchasing nicest c o n vertible I products or services around in this pnce from out of the area. range, ne w t i r es, I Sending cas h , wheels, clutch, timchecks, or credit ining belt, plugs, etc. formation may be I 111K mi., remark- I subject toFRAUD. able cond. i n side For more informaand out. Fun car to I tion about an adverd rive, M ust S E E ! tiser, you may call $5995. R e dmond. I the Oregon State I 541-504-1 993 Attorney General's I Office C o n sumer WHEN YOU SEE THIS I Protection hotline at
The Bulletin Classifieds
BMW M-Roadster, 2000, w/hardtop. $19,500 57,200 miles, Titanium silver. Not many M-Roadsters available. (See Craigslist posting id
• ii 1974 Bellanca 1730A
Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928
I The Bulletin recoml
G T 2200 4
What are you looking for? You'll find it in
Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go towvttw.bendbullefin.com and click on "Classified Adsn
30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
Honda Accord LX, 2004, 4-door, silver exterior with charcoal interior, great condition, 67,000 miles, asking $9000. Call 435-565-2321 (located in Bend)
BMW 525 2002 Luxury Sport Edition, V-6, automatic,
government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility to citizens who want to know more about government activities.
•
1/5th interest in 1973 Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 Cessna 150 LLC block w/Weiand 150hp conversion, low small dual quad tunnel ram time on air frame and with 450 Holleys. T-10 engine, hangared in 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Bend. Excellent perWeld Prostar wheels,
iormance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541-410-6007
Q~
NOTICES I MPO RTA N T
932
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $ 5 9,700.
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
t
Looking for your next employee?
The Bulletin Classifieds
503-358-1164.
Chevy 1986, long bed, four spd., 350 V8 rebuilt, custom p aint, great ti r e s and Buick LaCrosse CXS wheels, new t a g s, Northman 6 t/g' plow, ...don't let time get $5000 obo. Warn 6000¹ w i nch. 2 005, loaded, n e w away. Hire a battery/tires, perfect 541-389-3026 $9500 or best r ea$8495. 541-475-6794 professional out Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD sonable offer. 541-549-6970 or of The Bulletin's SLT quad cab, short box, Cadillac El Dorado 541-815-8105. auto, AC, high mileage, "Call A Service 1994 Total Cream Puff! $12,900. 541-389-7857 Body, paint, trunk as Volkswagen T o uareg Professional" showroom, blue 2004 Met i culously Directory today! leather, $1700 wheels maintained. Very clean inside and out. w/snow tires although 4 studless snow tires on V6. Recently serviced car has not been wet in 5-lug Honda rims, 215/ 8 years. On trip to - 60 point inspection 65-R16, t read d e p th heet. $ 8900 C a l l Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., 8/32. Bridgestone Bliz- Ford Supercab 1992, s541-480-0097 $4800. 541-593-4016.s z ak WS 7 0 , $20 0 . brown/tan color with 541-389-2849 m atching f ul l s ize c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 A RE P U B LIC Les Schwab Mud 8 over drive, 135K mi., Snow blackwall full bench rear seat, Murano slide r ea r w i ndow, P245/50/R-20 102T bucket seats, power Observe G02, used seats w/lumbar, pw, 1 winter. Pd $1200. HD receiver 8 trailer Will take reasonable brakes, good t i res. An important premise upon which the principle of offer. 541-306-4915 Good cond i t ion. democracy is based is that information about $4900. 541-389-5341 Antique & Classic Autos
Porsche 911 Turbo
541-322-9647
ELK HUNTERS!
Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. owner, 87k only 3k on new 258 long block. C lutch p kg , W a r n hubs. Excellent runner, very dependable.
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located O Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, O $400/mo.
Corvette Coupe 1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell!
541-322-9647
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.
Automobi l e s
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on Subaru Legacy 3.0 R bendbulletin.com Ltd. 2008, 32k mi, which currently re¹21 0048 $23 , 995. ceives over 1.5 million page views Oregon every month at AneoSonrce no extra cost. Bulle541-598-3750 tin Classifieds www.aaaoregonautoGet Results! Call source.com 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at Subaru STi 2010, bendbulletin.com 16.5K, rack, mats, cust snow whls, stored, oneowner, $29,000, 541.410.6904 Need to get an ad in ASAP? Toyota Celica Convertible 1993 Fax it to 541-322-7253
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto.
Garaged since new.
•
Subaru Imp r eza 2006, 4 dr., AWD, silver gray c o lor, auto, real nice car in great shape. $6200. 541-548-3379.
Corvette 1979
I've owned it 25
Say ngoodbuyn
Automobiles
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
R U T T
•
Auto m o biles
• The Cen tralOregonNit:itel Ads o bendbulletin.eom
'Private parly merchandiseonly. excludespets&livestock,autos,Rvcmo!Ortycles,boats, airplanes,artdgarageaaktmlegories.
•
TIONS, YOU S HOULD SE E A N A TTORNEY IMMEDIATELY. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may call the O r egon S t a te Bar's Lawyer Referral S ervice a t (503) 684-3763 or toll-free
in Oregon at (800)
452-7636. The oblect of the said action and the relief sought to be o btained therein i s fully set forth in said complaint, a n d is briefly stated as fol-
PROVIDENCE, P HASE 5 , DE S CHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. Comm only known a s : 3197 Nort h east Richmond C o u r t, B end, Oreg o n 97701. NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS: READ THESE PAPERS
CARE-
FULLY! A l a w suit has been s t arted against you in the above-entitled court by JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Aslows: Foreclosure of a sociation, p l aintiff. Deed of T rust/MortPlaintiff's claims are gage. Grantors:Esstated in the written t ate of W e sley M . complaint, a copy of Johnson, Deceased, which was filed with Unknown Heirs and the a b ove-entitled Devisees of Wesley C ourt. You mu s t M . J o hnson, D e - "appear" in this case ceased. Property ad- or the other side will dress:64560 Old win a u tomatically. Bend-Redmond, To "appear" you B end, O R 977 0 1 . m ust file with t he Publication: The Bulle- court a legal docutin. DATED this 6 day ment called a nmoof November, 2013. tion" or "answer." Brandon Smith, OSB The "motion" or nann ¹ 124584, Email : swer (or "reply") bsmith I robinsontait.c must be given to the om, Robinson Tait, c ourt clerk or a dministrator within 30 P .S., Attorneys f o r D efendant(s). NO . Plaintiff, Tel: ( 2 06) days of the date of P LAINTIFF'S S U M676-9640. first pu bl i c ation MONS BY PUBLICAs pecified her e i n T ION. TO:Estate o f LEGAL NOTICE along with the reWesley M. Johnson, IN TH E C I RCUIT quired filing fee. It Deceased; Unknown COURT FOR THE must be in proper Heirs and Devisees of STATE O F ORform and have proof Wesley M. Johnson, EGON IN AND FOR o f service on t h e D eceased; Julie R . THE COUNTY OF plaintiff's a t t orney Johnson AKA J ulie DESCHUTES. JPor, if t h e p l aintiff Rouse; P E R SONS MORGAN CHASE does not have an O R PARTIES U N BANK, NATIONAL a ttorney, proof o f KNOWN C LAIMING ASSOCIATION, its service on the plainANY RIGHT, TITLE, successors in intertiff. If you have any LIEN OR INTEREST est and/or assigns, questions, you IN THE PROPERTY Plaintiff, v. UNshould see an attorDESCRIBED IN THE KNOWN HEIRS OF ney immediately. If COMPLAINT KIM MARIE SPRAyou need help in HEREIN, IN THE GUE; TROY finding an attorney, NAME OF THE SPRAGUE; KRISTI you may contact the STATE OF OREGON: SPRAGUE; Oregon State Bar's You are hereby rePROVIDENCE Lawyer Re f e rral quired to appear and SUBDIVISION S ervice online a t d efend against t h e HOMEOWNERS' www.oregonstateallegations contained ASSOCIATION, bar.org or by calling in the Complaint filed INC.; THE STATE (503) 684-3763 (in a gainst you i n t h e OF OREGON; OCthe Portland metroabove entitled proCUPANTS OF THE p olitan a rea) o r ceeding within thirty P REMISES; A N D toll-free elsewhere THE REAL PROPin Oregon at (800) (30) days from the date of service of this ERTY L O C A TED 452-7636. This Summons upon you. AT 3197 NORTHsummons is issued If you fail to appear EAST RICHMOND pursuant to ORCP and defend this matC OURT, BEN D , 7. R C O LE G A L, ter within thirty (30) OREGON 9 7 7 0 1, P.C., Michael Botdays from the date of Defendants. C a se thof, OSB ¹113337, 13CV 0 7 80. publication specified No. mbotthof@rcolegal. herein along with the SUMMONS BY com, Attorneys for r equired filing f e e, PUBLICATION. TO P laintiff, 51 1 S W Wells Fargo B a nk, T HE DEFEN 10th Ave., Ste. 400, DANTS: UNN.A., as Trustee for Portland, OR 97205, Option One Mortgage KNOWN HEIRS OF P: (503) 977-7840, Loan Trust 2006-3, KIM MARIE SPRAF: (503) 977-7963. Asset-Backed Certifi- GUE: In the name of cates, Series 2006the State of Oregon, will apply to the Court you are hereby rePUBLIC NOTICE f or th e r e l ief d e - quired to a p pear manded in the Com- a nd a n swer t h e DATE: complaint filed plaint. The first date November 14, 2013 of publication is Noagainst you in the v ember 1 2 , 20 1 3 . above-entitled Court NOTICE: NOTICE TO DEFEN- a nd cause on o r DANTS: READ before the expiraThe Board of DirecT HESE PAP E R S tion of 30 days from tors of the Central OrCAREFULLY! You the date of the first egon Irrigation Dismust "appear" in this p ublication of t h is trict will h ol d t h e ir case or the other side summons. The date General Board Meetwill win automatically of first publication in ing on Tuesday, DeTo "appear" you must this matter is Nocember 10, 2013 at file with the court a le- vember 30, 2013. If 9:30 A.M. in the Disgal paper called a you fail timely to aptrict Office located at "motion" or "answer." pear and answer, n 1055 SW Lake Court The "motion" or an- plaintiff will apply to i n R e dmond. T h e swer" must be given the a b o ve-entitled agenda for this meetto the court clerk or court for the relief ing will be published administrator w i t hin p rayed for i n i t s on the District's webthirty days along with complaint. This is a site, www.coid.org, by the required filing fee. judicial foreclosure the Friday prior to that It must be in proper of a deed of trust in meeting. form and have proof which the p l aintiff o f service o n t h e r equests that t h e plaintiff's attorney or, plaintiff be allowed if the plaintiff does not to foreclose your FIND IT! have a n at t orney, interest in the folBUY IT! d e s cribed proof of service on the lowing SELL IT! plaintiff. IF YOU real property: LOT HAVE ANY Q U ES- 36, The Bulletin Classifieds BL O C K 5,
PRICES EFFECTIVE: I I
4
II
Franz 12 Count Pkg Home Style
OL1p pgSllOIE1t
c
HDNTES <ptte I
't
7
9 10
BIUeo= ; . ' :
Bonnet-~",; 'Half the price'
<ptttptt et 5ptttp
BLUE BONNET
RUSSET POTATOES
'a
6
Ad Items Subject To Availabi%ty
E VERYTHI N G YOU NEED FOR ONLY
DINNER ROLLS
MEI
't
8
5
p< gree gee» Y
U.S. ¹1, 5 lb Bag
GREEN BEANS
r
Western Family 14.5 oz Can
RAVY MIX
CORN
One Package Western Family Turkey or Brown
ge(denCo
e/I
I
Western Family 15.25 oz Can
~7
IL
tL
FROZEN TURKEY Jennie-0 or Norbest, 10-12 Ib
BLACK FOREST HAM
HLlLiEEOREEJ, 96 "
"
„
"
"
"
'
. "
NATURALLY SMOKED OYER HICKORY
I
I
\
Fletcher's, 3.5 Ib
Bend
63455 Hwy. 97 N. 541-388-2100
@ggN
WE ACCEPY: ® We reserve the right to limit quantities • Not all items availadle at all locations
• Food Stamps • WIC Vouchers • Manufacturer's Coupons
FOOD 4 LESS — BEND I TUESDAY, DEC 03,2013 IPAGE 1
.
r g
BU~s'G~Mi ' M
+~rg~ -
'
18 Pack, 12 Oz Cans & Bottles
,
1eol,o ' EETOE Tloo
iH~gygl5~c F ES-FD FL
D S . C A N S = D AE
ISf,
BUSCH BEER
COORSLIGHT BEER
eell.
j
r
'
I
'""
y y g
18 Pack 16 Oz Cans
CAS E
NATURAL
ki
.
;
'I jjj'I'I I, RRIUR" A•
tn
C7&/P EA + DEP
EA + DEP
BUD LIGHT LIME 8 " Wj PLATINUM PEPSI, MTNDEW, BEER DR PEPPER, ,I
OEECHIITE'! EEETTEET
DESCHUTE S BREWERY BEER 6 Pack 12 Oz Bottles
12 Pack 12 Oz Bottles
QQRITQS
SIERRAMIST 24 Pack, 12 Oz Cans Selected Varieties
EA + DEP
10 to 11 Oz i DEp Selected VariE
EA + DEP
CUPCAKE WINE 750 ML Selected Varieties
APOTHIC REDWINE 750 ML
FOSTER FARM~ S BAY
WHOLECUT-UP
SCALLOPS
CHICKEN
Previously Frozen EA
'®
C ertiA e d P' ' zg~ i C
FAMILY SELTLER, GINGERALE 1 Liter
EA + DEP
PAGE 2 I TUESDAY, DEC 03,2013 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND
LB
Northwest Grown
EA
WESTERN
, CI.ORSOOA, 1 T ONIC WATER,
LB
AQUAFINA WATER 24 Pack 16.9 Oz Bottles
+ DEP
ORGANIC LEMONS
SWEET CALIFORNIA FOR
GRAPEFRUIT
FQR
j g
4
r
r
r
g
r
r
~
i
r
crrsenar VITAMIN II ~~~„" VI
QedSourerf
IrpAM)N p ggyw
I
gg -Q,
• •
<r" ASSk
I
I
VP' ~@ 9
I
IS KELLDGG
CEREAL
FRAHZ PREMIUM BIG WHITE BREAD ,ties
FA
10 to15 Oz, Frosted Flakes, Cocoa Krispies, Froot Loops, Apple Jacks, EA C orn Pops
225 Oz
ANE8 VAIUES
~IIIIgp I ACK
f88lEII VAlUES
EA
UAIUV IIAlUES QUAMY
/ ~l
7V C H E ~ ~ I
EXTRALEAN HAMBURGE R
EBERHARD'S COTTAGE CHEESE
IS EBERHARD
Our Burger Is Ground Fresh Daily Not To Exceed 15% Fat!
ICE CREAM
GARLIC Ls
4 Quart Pail Selected Varieties
B R EAD
DEll
E80ZEII IIAlUES
VAlUES-.
EA
VAlUESSatuygI It«iIi i
4~P Ãh
FOR
SLICED TURKEY
7
16 Oz Selected Varieties
frIU
~® ®
FLAV-R-PAC CLASSIC VEGETAB LES LS
H~ ~ florida's
I
•
GREEN ONIONS
EA
UAIUV
H
Rl
16 Oz Regular & Lite
rr
•
FLORIDA'S NATURAL JUICE EA
59 Oz Selected Varieties
EA
FOOD 4 LESS — BEND I TUESDAY, DEC 03,2013 IPAGE 3
II
Oper 2,000 NEW naturaW
MEAT
Check Out Our
PRODUt:E
~4K 00 Department
PR UCTS! e
e
•
y
BEEF TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
SWEET BRAEBURN APPLES
j
j
•
J
j J
Washington Grown
48 LB
BEEF CROSSRIB POT ROAST Boneless
SMALL HASS AVOCADOS
LB
., 2$)
CRISP FUJI APPLES
CHERRYOR GRAPE TOMATOES
Washington Grown
Pint
LB
PORK COUNTRY STYLERIBS Boneless
E$3
LB
RED y POTATOES
EXTRAFANCY
DPANJOU
PEARS
"$~18
'
8 18 LB
PORK SPARERIBS
BEEF
LB
NEW YORK STEAK
EXTRAFANCY SWEETNAVEL ORANGES
. $448
8 88
BEEF TIP STEAK Boneless
LB
WHOLE TILAPIA ,
ii „.
' JJA'(I
$288
RED RIPE ROMA TOMATOES
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS
8 28
Southern Grown
'' 18!
LB
Your Locally Owned Ad Items Subject To Avoilobility PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, DEC 03,2013 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND
PRICES EFFECTIVE: I I
4
63455 Hwy. 97 N., Bend • 541-388-2100
8
9 10
5
6
7