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LOCAL GOVERNMENT
ELECTION 2012:PRECINCT PROFILES
With Oregon's shift to all-mail voting, precincts today may serve little purpose except to provide a glimpse at voting trends in such small pockets of the state. With just days to go until Election Day, The Bulletin is examining Central Oregon precincts. Crook County's Precinct 7 and Wheeler's Precinct 3 are the final parts of the four-part series.
By Bill Turque The Washington Post
a
ura areas, mos
• Will there be a • winner on election night? • There is a decent • chance that by the time most Americans wake up on Wednesday morning, the seemingly endless campaign will finally have ended. But all the elements are in place for a Florida-style donnybrook of recounts, lawsuits and partisan intrigue. Pivotal Ohio is a tossup in many polls and at the center of most overtime scenarios. State law provides for an automatic recount if the margin separating the candidates is within one-quarter of a percent of the total votes cast. But before any recount begins, each of the 88 county election boards has until Nov. 27 to certify results and submit them to Secretary of State Jon Husted. Unless he decides to expedite the process, a recount would be unlikely to begin before early December. The state has a history of Election Day troubles, and this year could be a logistical nightm are. Husted decided to have absentee-ballot applications mailed to 7 million registered voters. SeeQ&A/A5
By Ben Botkin The Bulletin
Before cities and counties start
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Photos by Ryan Orennecke(The Bulletin
ABOVE:Bob Lucas, getting ready to fish in the Ochoco Reservoir, will vote for former Gov. Mitt Romney. "There is no question what the outcome of this election has to be," he says. "I don't like anything Obama has done." LEFT:In Mitchell, Dan Cannon voted for Barack Obama the first time around, but this year hesays he asked himself,"Am I better off than I was four years ago?" And the answer, he says, is no.
Man climbs stairs with
By Lauren Dake • The Bulletin
aleg guided by his mind By Michelle janaye Neaiy The Associated Press
CHICAGO — The metal on Zac Vawter bionic leg gleamed as he climbed 103 floors of Chicago's iconic Willis Tower, becoming the first person ever to complete the task wearing a mind-controlled prosthetic limb. Vawter, who lost his right leg in a motorcycle accident, put the smart limb on public display for the first time during an annual stair-climbing charity event called "SkyRise Chicago" hosted by the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, where he is receiving treatment. "Everything went great," said Vawter at the event's end. "The prosthetic leg did its part, and I did my part." The robotic leg is designed to respond to electrical impulses from muscles in his hamstring. SeeLeg /A4
fishing.
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Source: Crook County, Wheeler County Andy Zelgert l The Bulletin
voi. 109, No. 310,
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ries, they face another, less predictable, cost: recruiting them. After a round of interviews, the city of Redmond failed to snare its finalist for a city manager opening. In a similar vein, Deschutes County has failed to find a new chief administrator after two searches and rounds ofinterviews. Redmond's fruitless effort cost the city $7,839.53, according to paym ent vouchers obtained by T h e Bulletin through a public records request. The incurred costscome from a variety ofsources: consultant fees, advertising, lodging, car rental and meals and related travel costs for four candidates, including one who came to Redmond a second time, records show. Interim City M a n ager Sharon Harris said the costs would have been greater if the city had hired a recruiter. "Usually for c it y m a nager recruitments, if you hired a recruiter, they're going to take $20,000 off the top,n she said. See Costs/A5
Coastal cities
seek shields vs. superstorrns
As the water licked the shoreline, he
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OCHOCO RESERVOIRob Lucas lowered his kayak into the reservoir, preparing for an afternoon of
Crook County Precinct 7 and Wheeler County Precinct 3
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"Don't get me started on politics," the 69year-old said. Too late. "There is no question what the outcome of this election has to be," said Lucas, a retired engineer. "I don't like anything Obama has done." Lucas believes the current U.S. president "sold a good chunk of (the country) to China." He's worried about the economy and the debt the U.S. has accrued. There are so many government regulations these days, he said, "you couldn't build a Home Depot." From the northeasternshore of the Ochoco Reservoir to the Crook County line, Precinct 7 is markedly conservative. There are 153 registered Republicans to 44 Democrats. On a hill overlooking the reservoir, an American flag stands tall over Rick Bingham's house. Bingham will also cast his vote for former Gov. Mitt Romney. "Anybody other than Obama," he said. Like a large chunk of the country, the economy is a driving force behind their decision. But here in Crook County, where the unemployment rate often tops the state's charts, it takes on a particular weight. Bingham believes Romney is better suited to tackle the economy. See Precincts/A5
INDEX C alendar C 3 C r osswords C5, E2 Green, Etc. C1-6 Sports D1 - 6 Classified E1-4 Dear Abby C 3 L ocal News B1-6 Sudoktl C5 Comics C 4- 5 Editorials B4 O b ituaries B 5 T V & Movies C2
TODAY'S WEATHER sunny 4
By Darryl Fears The Washington Post
Galveston, Texas, is betting on the Ike Dike, a proposed 60-mile storm gate named after the raging hurricane that walloped the island and the rest of the Houston area four
years ago, leaving more than 70 people dead and $30 billion
in damage.
• East Coast's
next Norfolk, V a . , i s trying to strengthen pr o blem: housing,A3 its string bean of a storm-drainage system that can't absorb mild flooding from high tides, much less dayslong deluges from hurricanes or nor'easters. And Maryland is looking for help from nature itself, buying up wetlands and marshes that officials hope will thrive in coming decades and provide buffers against surging stormwater. Sandy's battering of the Northeast provided a preview of a terrifying future for many coastal areas — one potentially marred by increasingly frequent superstorms, with f i erce winds and massive flooding. SeeCoastal /A4
TOP NEWS
High 67, Low 44
CAMPAIGN:Last push,A3
Page B6
IRAN:Israel almost struck in '1 0,A3
A2
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 20'l2
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Discoveries, brealzthroughs, trends, names in the news — thingsyou need to hnow to start your day. Until Election Day, this page will focus on politics.
TODAY
HOW WE GOT HERE
Can i ates' on so tonai- iter inis By Nancy Benac The Associated Press
WASHINGTON Mitt Romney pulled the plug on his first presidential run on Feb. 7, 2008, andimmediately served notice that he wasn't about to fade away. "I hate to lose," he told conservatives that day. BarackObamawasn'tpaying too much attention to Romney just then. The first-term Illinois senator was in a bare-knuckled brawl with Hillary Clinton for the Democratic presidential nomination and, if he got past the New York senator and former first lady, was calculating his odds of defeating Republican Sen. John McCain. Four and a half years later, Romney is not to be discounted. He and Obama are in a downto-the-wire race for the White House that has split the nation down the middle after a long, hard slog that upended conventional wisdom time and again, smashed campaign spending records and pushed the limits of saturation politics. The arc of this campaign has taken the nation from a flavorof-the-month Republican primary campaign, captured in a
seeminglynever-ending series of GOP debates and buzzwords like "9-9-9" and "oops," to a general election race that keeps circling back to the economy after detours into foreign policy, social issues and even the employment status of Big Bird. Along the way, Campaign 2012 has brought us a rambling one-sided conversation by Clint Eastwood at the GOP convention, a fresh dose of Bill Clinton's charms at the Democratic convention and a jarring intrusion from a superstorm named Sandy. Now, o n E l e ction D ay's brink, with 27 million people already having voted, Obama appears to have more options than Romney fo r r e aching the 270 electoral votes that will clinch victory. But half of Americans think the country is on the wrong track, and almost as many disapprove of how Obama is handling his job.
Republican primary It's easy to forget there was a time when Rep. Michele Bachmann was the surprise breakout from the GOP primary field. To be replaced by Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Then pizza executive Herman Cain and his 9-99 tax plan. Then former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. Then former Sen. Rick Santorum. N ew Jersey G ov. C h r i s Christie, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, celebrity businessman Donald Trump and other GOP notables all did the tease but never joined the Republican speed-dating scene. Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman tried to go steady but just couldn't get noticed. Romney's GOP rivals hurled everything they had at the former Massachusettsgovernor as Obama silently cheered them on from the White House. Santorum labeled Romney a snob. Gingrich called him a liar. Huntsman went with "perfectly lubricatedweather vane." Perry contributed "vulture capitalist." The most memorable moment to come out of 20 GOP debates may have been Perry's "oops" — when he tried to shrug offhis inabilitytorememberthe third government agency that he'd like to abolish. It became a metaphor for his short-lived campaign. Through it all, Romney, who had never completely stopped running after his loss in 2008, hung tight, spent liberally and refashioned his image from that of a Massachusetts moderate into a candidate with a "severely conservative" approach t o governing and a k n a ck for t u rning a r ound f a iling enterprises. He made more than his share of gaffes, feeding into critics' efforts to paint him as an elitist with remarks like "corporations are people" and "I like firing people." In the latter case, Romney was talking about the importance of people being able to choose among different health insurance policies, but his opponents used a shorthand version against him in a campaign that kept fact-checkers working overtime from start to
A Scott Applewhtte /The Associated Press
President Barack Obama greets supporters late Saturday evening during a rally in Virginia.
David Goldman /The Associated Press
GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romneylooks on as his wife, Ann, introduces him at an event Saturday in Colorado.
finish. The GOP primaries were a roller coaster: Santorum won a squeaker in Iowa. Romney claimed New Hampshire. Gingrich prevailed in South Carolina. Romney claimed Florida, spending five times what Gingrich did to flatten the competition, and Nevada. Santorum won in M i nnesota, Missouri and Colorado. It was only a matter of time until Romney finally piled up enough delegates to clinch the nomination on May 29 in Texas. For practical purposes, by then the general election campaign had been going on for months.
had both the burden and blessing of a record to run on. The economy was sputtering along but hardly robust. The president's favorability ratings were higher than Romney's. But his job approval numbers hovered below 50 percent.The jobless rateremained above 8 percent, with each monthly unemployment report driving home that statistic anew. If Obama's glass was halffull, Romney's was half-empty — actually, almost drained. "It's another hammer blow to the struggling m i ddle-class families of America," Romney said when the jobs report came out in August. He spoke from Obama's primary break Nevada, where the economic For all the words spoken, picture was particularly grim. money expended and attenObama played up 29 straight tion devoted to the Republican months that private employprimary fight, the most impor- ers had added jobs and surtant thing that happened in rounded himself at the White the presidential race may have House with middle-class famibeen what wasn't happening at lies making progress."Those that time: Obama did not draw are our neighbors and families a Democratic opponent. finding work," Obama said. For decades, incumbents "But, let's acknowledge, we've who've faced either no primary still got too many folks out there challenge or an insignificant who are looking for work." No one havebeen re-elected,while economicrecovery since World those who've had a serious War II had been weaker. challenge have not. So the two candidates head"Romney had to move right ed in, and out, of their nominatto win his primary's nomina- ing conventions wielding the tion and Obama didn't have to same campaign a rguments move left to win his," says Dan they'd been making all year, Schnur, a former Republican and still running about even in adviser who teaches political their support from voters. But science at the University of Obama had theedge on anothSouthern California. "So while er important yardstick: Romney was talking about Asked who t hey t hought contraception and i m migra- would win, voters went with tion, Obama was bragging Obama hands down. about expanding offshore oil drilling, cutting the corporate Debate reversal tax and using military drones Romney had a rough Sepin Afghanistan and Pakistan." tember: His response to the While the Republicans were deadly U.S. consulate attack busy with t h eir i n f ighting, in Libya hit a sour note. The Obama made a decision in Feb- release ofa secretly recorded ruary that would be key to stay- video that caught him saying ing competitive over the nine- that 47 percent of Americans month march to Election Day: consider themselves victims fed He reversed course and gave into impressions that Romney his blessing to the big-money wasn't looking out for ordinary independent f undr a i sing A mericans. The race started to groups that he had previously feel like it was slipping away assailed as a "threat to demo- from him. cracy" because of the potenOctober'sseriesofthreecamtially corrupting influence of paign debatesoffered Romney money on politics. The candi- his last, best chance to change date who once told supporters the dynamic. And did it ever. to "fight their millions of dollars Romney turned in a comwith millions of voices" decided manding performance in the voices were great, but he'd like first debate, while Obama was those millions of dollars, too. lackluster and disengaged. The The money rolled in. Before contrast was startling, and it it was over, the two sides and reinvigorated the Republican their allies had spent in excess candidate and his supporters. of $2 billion. With no primary opponent to worry about, Obama got an early start on softening up his opponent for the fall. One TV ad accused Romney of failing to stand up to "the voices of extremism" in his party. In another, a steelworker called Romney a"job destroyer" and compared his former private equity firm to a "vampire" that sucked the life out of companies. The cumulative effect was reflected in polls showing that voters saw Obama, not Romney, as the candidate who best understood the concerns of the middle class.
"I had abad night," Obama conceded, and he upped his game for the next two debates. That was enough to satisfy nervous Democrats that their candidate was truly in it to win it. But Romney still was feeling the energy when a most unlikely October surpriseupended both sides' game plans in the home stretch of the campaign. Hurricane Sandy roared up the East Coast and barreled ashore on a destructive path that t emporarily o v ershadowed all else. It gave Obama a chance to jump into action as commander in chief and left Romney struggling to strike the right tone. At week's end, the final jobs report before Tuesday's election gave one last economic snapshot, showing the U.S. adding a solid 171,000 jobs and more than a half-million Americans joining the workforce. But the jobless rate was still higher than when Obama took office. Said Obama: "We've made real progress." Countered Romney: "This is not a time for America to settle." F or every a r gument t h e candidates made in p e rson in their frenzied final days of campaigning, their messages played out many times over in an unending stream of political ads targeting voters in the nine battleground states that will determine which candidate ultimately gets to 270 electoral votes. More than 915,000 presidential campaign ads have aired since June I, 45 percent more than over the same period in 2008, according to a report by the Wesleyan Media Project. Those ads aired in far fewer states this year, meaning a smaller number of people have been targetedby a far larger advertising onslaught. People like Paris Hilliard, 24, who turned out for an Obama rally in Springfield, Ohio, on Friday, and thinks Obama's on the right track. "I knew it wasn't going to be an overnight fix," he said. Not far away, 75-year-old Walter Myers said he knows far too many people looking for work to believe the improving statistics on joblessness. On his chest was a sign: "Nobama."
It's Monday, Nov. 5, the 310th day of 2012. There are 56 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS • Barack Obama, Mitt Romney
and their running mates are scheduled to hold14 events
across eight states aheadof Election Day.A1, A3
• Some schools in NewYork City will reopen after Hurricane Sandy, but others remain without power or are too
damaged to reopen.A3
IN HISTORY Highlights:In1605, the
"Gunpowder Plot" failed as Guy Fawkeswas seized before he couldblow up the English
Parliament. In 1872, suffragist Susan B. Anthony defied the law by attempting to cast a
vote for President Ulysses S. Grant. (Anthony was convicted by a judge and fined $100,
but she never paid the fine.) In 2009, a shooting rampage at the Fort Hood Army post
in Texas left13 people dead; Maj. Nidal Hasan, an Army
psychiatrist, was charged with premeditated murder and attempted murder. Ten years ago:In midterm
elections, Republicans won control of the Senate and strengthened their hold on the House while claiming a
majority of the governors' races. Fiveyearsago:Hollywood writers went on strike, forcing late-night talk shows
to immediately start airing reruns. One year ago:Former Penn State defensive coordinator
Jerry Sandusky, accusedof molesting eight boys, was arrested and releasedon $100,000 bail after being arraigned on 40 criminal
counts. (Sartdusky was later convictedand sentenced to30
to 60 years in prison.)
BIRTHDAYS Singer Art Garfunkel is 71. Actor Robert Patrick is 54. Actress Tatum O'Neal is 49.
Country singer-musician Ryan Adams is 38. Rockmusician Kevin Jonas (TheJonas Brothers) is 25. — From wire reports
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Economic record F rom I n auguration D a y, Obama knew it would be hard to live up to the high expectations set during the heady days of his 2008 "hope and change" campaign to become the nation's first black president. A few weeks into his presidency, he took stock of a country in economic crisis and acknowledged: "You know, I've got four years.... If I don't have this done in three years, then there's going to be a one-term proposition." By this summer, Obama
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012•THE BULLETIN
A3
TOP T ORIES
ama, omne e in ina us to ection a By David A. Fahrenthold
by visiting Pennsylvania, a state long assumed to be in MORRISVILLE, PA. Obama's column and one that And now it is closing time. has not voted for a GOP presiToday, in the final hours of dential candidate in more than their 17-month, nearly $3 two decades. billion marathon, the two T aking the stage t o t h e candidates and their run- "Rocky" theme before a crowd ning mates are scheduled to of about 30,000 in Morrisville, hold 14 events across eight Romney declared that "this austates. dience and your voices are beFor R epublican c h al- ing heard all across the nation lenger Mitt Romney, this ... We're taking back the White last full day of campaigning House, because we're going to is aimed at achieving what win Pennsylvania!" he has seemingly been unOn Sunday, the two camable to do over the first 522 paigns held events in eight days: overcome President states, including six in the batBarack Obama's razor-thin tleground of all battlegrounds, but steady leads in the states Ohio. where the election will be For both candidates, it was a decided. day of big crowds — and final On Sunday, it appeared goodbyes. that Romney's task was getIn th e m o r ning, Obama ting a little harder. visited New H ampshire for A pair of national polls the seventh time during the seemed to show that it was general-election season after Obama who had a bit of campaigning here extensively momentum in t h e r ace's four years ago. This, presumlast weekend. A Washing- ably, was his last visit as a canton Post-ABC News poll didate. He spoke to a crowd of showed the president at 49 14,000 in Concord, the state percent to Romney's 48 per- capital, with former President cent. The tracking poll has Bill Clinton. had both candidates locked Later Sunday, the president within a narrow band for made his last stops in Florida weeks, although Romney and in Colorado. He also visheld a brief three-point edge ited Ohio — but he will be back. in late October. Today, Obama will return for a Another poll, r eleased rally in Cincinnati and will also Sunday by the Pew Re- travel to Wisconsin and Iowa, s earch C e n ter, fo u n d touching on the Midwestern Obama with a three-point trio that could provide his path lead nationwide a m ong to victory. At day's end, he will likely voters, 48 percent to return to his hometovim, Chi45 percent. A week ago, the cago, for Election Day. same poll had the two canRomney on Sunday made didates tied. his last stop in Iowa after at Meanwhile, a poll l ate least 14 trips there during the Sunday by CNN showed general-election campaign and the race deadlocked at 49 many, many more before that, percent. leading up to the 2008 and 2012 In addition to the polls, caucuses. data on early voting seemed Romney also visited Ohio on to show Democrats with an Sunday, speaking to 6,000 in edge in several key states, Cleveland. although not as wide as the advantages Obama held four years ago. Nonetheless, R o m ney and his aides said they were confident of victory. The Republican made a striking gesture of that confidence Endorsed by The Washrngton Post
-
+2
Michael Appletoe /New York Times News Service
Blankets are distributed at a playgroundSunday in the Coney Island neighborhood of Brooklyn. As of 3 p.m. Sunday, 182,000 residents of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut had applied for disaster assistance from FEMA.
er esu ers orm, OllSIIl I1I mareooms By Michael Schwirtz New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — New York City officials said S u nday that they faced the daunting
challenge of finding homes for as many as 40,000 people who were left homeless aft er the devastation of l a st week's storm, a s i t u ation that the city's mayor, Michael B loomberg, c o m pared t o New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. The mayor said that t h e 40,000 figure was a w orstc ase scenario given by t h e Department of Housing and Urban Development, and that a more realistic assessment was 20,000 people — the bulk of whom w o uld b e p u blic housing residents. Even in the best-case scenario, he said, the task will be formidable. " We don't have a l o t o f empty housing in this city," B loomberg said at a n e w s conference on Sunday. "We
are not going to let anybody for the neighborhood," Fugate go sleeping in the streets or said, adding that it was up to go without blankets, but it's a the states to request the trailers. "We are going to bring all challenge, and we're working on that as fast as we can." potential housing solutions It is a task shared throughand look at what works best out the region, as officials in for each neighborhood." New York, New Jersey and Even as utility companies Connecticut struggle to meet work to restore power to milthe demands of those whose lions of customers without homes have been left uninit, a nor'easter, projected to habitable. In some cases, the land midweek, may hit the alsolution may be a familiar, if ready batteredcoastal areas unwelcome sight: the t r ail- with heavy winds and strong ers provided by the Federal waves that could cause more Emergency M an a gement flooding and tear down powAgency a f t e r Hur r i c ane er lines recently replaced and Katrina. stop repair workers in their Craig Fugate, director of tracks. "The first concern is slowthe agency, said most displaced people would likely ing the army that we've got be housed in hotels or apartd own; the second is m o r e m ents. But for some in r e outages," said John Miksad, gions like Long Island, with Consolidated Edison's senits many single-family homes ior vice president for electric and fe w l a r g e a p a rtment operations. "It certainly does blocks, he said there was a complicate the restoration." shortage of vacant housing. A week a f ter H u r r icane "It has got to make sense Sandy tore through the re-
gion, millions have regained e lectricity, mass t r ansit i s on the mend, and volunteers have rushed in to help. On Sunday, some runners who had expected to compete in the New York City Marathon, which was canceled, instead pitched in to haul fallen trees and to distribute clothing and food in the city's most heavily damaged regions. Others ran a modified marathon route in Central Park. In many regions, power is still lacking and fuel is nowhere to be found. New York City said that 57 schools were too d amaged to reopen, forcing officials to find new schools for their 34,000 students. As of Sunday afternoon, 29 schools remained without power, withparents, teachers and students — many of them storm v i c t im s t h e mselves — unsure when classesmight resume.
INCOME STRATEGIESCONFERENCE
In 2009, engineers detailed storm threat to NewYorkCity
neering designs of measures to counter it.
NEW YORK — As the authorities examine how they can protect New York City from extreme weather events like Hurricane Sandy,
of Engineers took part in the seminar, serv-
one of the nation's most influential groups of engineers is pointing out that more than
three years ago, it presented detailed warnings that a devastating storm surge in the region was all but inevitable.
The warnings werevoiced at aseminar in New York City convened bythe American Society of Civil Engineers, whose findings are so respected that theyare often written
Officials from the city's Office of Emer-
gency Managementandthe U.S. Army Corps
-SOURCE WEEKLY
~ J i m Clinton
barriers for years. But as the region struggles with the devastation after the storm,
officials to seriously consider whether to install surge barriers or tide gates in New York
seminar see parallels to alarms that went unheeded before Hurricane Katrina struck New
Harbor to protect the city. Their views are contained in 300 pages of technical papers, historical studies andengineering designs from the seminar, copies of which the soci-
Orleans in 2005. "Scientists and engineers weresaying years before Katrina happened, 'Hey, it's going to happen, folks. Stop putting your
ety provided to The New York Times. Any effort to install such barriers would
head in the sand,'"said Malcolm Bowman, a
be extremely costly and takemanyyears to carry out.
%O R L D IN BRIEF
JERUSALEM — An Israeli news program claims that Israel's premier told his military to preparefor a strike on Iranian nuclear sites in 2010, but it was not ready. D efense M i n ister E h u d Barak says in excerpts aired Sunday that "at the moment of truth, the answer given was that the ability didn't exist." It quotes former Mossad chief Meir Dagan as telling Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the order was illegal, as it needed Cabinet approvaL The full program is scheduled for broadcast today. Israel views Iran as an existential threat due to its nuclear program, frequent calls f or Israel's destruction and support of anti-Israel militants. The West s uspects Ir an might tr y t o b u i l d n u clear
Sandy last week. Some sci entistshavechampionedsuch
The Bulletin
Paid for by Jrm Chmton for City Council
ing on review panels or giving talks. Participants in the 2009 seminar called on some of the engineers involved in the 2009
into building codes around theworld. CorpoEven if the government had embraced rate, academic andgovernment engineers at the meeting presented computer simulations such a proposal in 2009, it would not have been in place to prevent destruction from of the storm-surge threat anddetailed engi-
Israel almost hit Iran's nuclear sites in 2012
Tropical Storm lrene lastyear or Hurricane
REVEALING ONE OF THE BEST KEPT SECRETS TO GENERATING INCOME AND GROWING WEALTH IN TODAY'S ECONOMY. VISIT SMITHWEEKLY COM FOR DETAILS.
weapons. Iran denies that. Israel has hinted at a military strike if economic sanctions fail.
Abbas' remark stirs right-of-return uproar JERUSALEM — The question seemed simple enough: Would President M ahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority like to go to Safed, the city in northern Israel where he wasborn? But there are no easy questions in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Abbas' answer, in an interview broadcast on Israeli television Friday night — yes, he would like to visit, but not to live there; Safed is part of Israel — was widely interpreted as a surprising concession on the demands of Palestinians to return to their pre-1948 homes, perhaps the most intractable and emotional of all the unsettled issues in the de-
Nl
Whi nant=== . -
professor of oceanography at the State University at Stony Brook whospoke at the conference and is an editor of the proceedings.
"The samething's now happened here," Bowman said.
cades-old dispute. The remark set off angry protests across the Gaza Strip. Palestinian rivals and commentators denounced him as a traitor, or worse. Abbas beat a hasty retreat. In an interview with an Arabic newspaper published Sunday, he said he was talking only of his personal aspirations, not about giving up anyone's rights.
Syria's rebels open talks on being unified BEIRUT — Syria's fractious
opposition groups began negotiations in Doha, Qatar, on Sunday to forge a more unified front to reshape the political landscape in a bloody conflict that claims more than 100 lives virtually every day. Given the scant prospects that any attempt to restructure the opposition will succeedthe last such meeting in Cairo in June ended in shouting and fistfights — senior opposition figures tried to smooth over
— New YorkTimesNews Service
any differences in their initial remarks. "The main aim is to expand the council to include more of the social and political components," Abdulbaset Sieda, the current leader of the Syrian National Council, told reporters. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said last week that the Syrian National Council had outlived it s u sefulness and should be replaced by a larger umbrella organization with more representation from inside Syria, as well as from minority groups. The council could be incorporated into that larger body, she said, but could no longer play the starring role in the exiled opposition. Riad Seif, a respected Syrian dissident leading that effort, tried to play down any competition. "The initiative is not a substitute for the Syrian National Council, but the SNC should be an important part of it," Seif said. — From wire reports
Rep. Whisnant was an Architect of: Rainy DayFund, Oeschutes River Mitigation, Transparency Website, and Balanced Budget Bills
A4 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
"In the aftermath of the storm, everybody wants to do what they wish they had done before the storm. A lot of this stuff, they're starting the process of figuring out."
Coastal
tious, it's too expensive, let's talk about it 50 years from now Continued from A1 ... when the sea level rises two As a result, ideas to protect to three feet," he said. "Well, that's too late." low-lying coastal cities — even those ideasonce dismissed as When the c leanup ends, — jim Titus, expert on rising sea levels Bowman said, Sandy is likely too expensiveor far-fetchedare getting a second look from to be forgotten like the hurriofficials and scientists worried canes before it: "Unfortunately, that climate change will spawn storm surges of up to 17 feet. landowners stay in projected it's going to take a storm with a a successionof ever-more-vioGalvestonprovided$250,000 flood areas as long as they major loss of life. It's going to be lent Sandys. for the project, Merrill said, al- want but make clear that they like Europe, that big storm that Some cities are looking into lowing his research to continue will be on their own when the drowned several thousand." seeding oyster reefs and sea and raising his hopes that he'll waters rise. He was referring to the 1953 grass beds off Long Island eventually convince officials Maryland officials have con- North Sea storm that killed and the Delmarva Peninsula's that the $6 billion structure is ducted acomprehensive analy- more than 2,000, mostly in Atlantic coast; these natural worth it. sis of sea-level rise and are Britain and the Netherlands. "We're slowly building the p rotections, s cientists s a y, pushing to redirect develop- After that debacle, the Dutch could help absorb the f irst political will (to build it)," said ment. Zoe Johnson, program set out to design and build the wave ofsurging waters before Merrill, th e G eorge M itch- manager for climate-change world's most ambitious stormthe coastline is overwhelmed. ell chair for marine science policy at the state Department surge protection system. Other areas are considering at Texas ARM University at of Natural Resources, said Spanning 400 miles, and adding massive amounts of Galveston. "I just hope we don't Maryland wants to avoid build- costing $40 billion over four sand to their shorelines to soak have to wait until thousands of ing "in areas that are the most decades of construction,the up some of the surge before it people are killed." vulnerable." Delta Works has been called reaches the next set of heavy Other coastal areas have Johnson is skeptical of big the eighth wonder of the world. blockers, sand dunes. been stymied by partisan dif- engineering proposals — such The system of dams, dikes, " In the aftermath of t h e ferencesover the environment. as a dam at the mouth of the gates, sluices and walls is destorm, everybody wants to do In North Carolina, the leg- Chesapeake Bay. She favors signed to reduce the risk of what they wish they had done islature voted this year to pro- naturaldefenses, as does the flooding to once every 4,000 before the storm," said Jim Ti- hibit any regulations related to Nature Conservancy, which years. tus, an expert on rising sea lev- sea-level rise or global warmhas helped restore the beach U nlike politicians i n t h e els. "A lot of this stuff, they're ing along the state's coast be- and meadows at New Jersey's United States, "the Dutch in starting the process of figuring fore 2016. John Dorman, who South Cape May M e adow. 1953 were like, 'Never again,'" out." as director of the Geospatial While Sandy made landfall saidDale Morris,a senioreconAlong the coast, anxiety is and Technology Management near the preserve, the area omist at the Dutch Embassy in growing even as cash-strapped Office agency helps the state fared much betterthan other Washington, D.C. local, state and federal govern- identify hazard risks, said the parts of the state, as it did durThe Dutch have helped build ments struggle to come up with lack of p o l itical agreement ing Hurricane Irene. storm protections all over the funding to study and develop has complicated his task: usForty years ago, Providence, world, including in St. Petersstorm-protection sch e mes. ing a $5 million federal grant R.I., took a d i ff erent path, burg, Russia, and in Venice. Complicating the efforts are to study the impact of a rise in building the Fox Point Hurri- They assisted with the recent continued partisan fights in sea levels. cane Barrier to protect the city construction of New Orleans's Washington and in states over Dorman initially based his from floods. Constructed in $14.5 billion system of levees, the cause and impact of climate study on the assumption that 1966 after a major hurricane, flood walls and gates designed change. sea levels could rise by nearly the barrier's 25-foot wall and to thwart the kind of cataCaught in the middle are sci- three feet by 2100 but scaled gates control storm surges in strophic flooding Hurricane entists who study the problem it back to 15.7 inches after ob- Narragansett Bay. Katrina caused in 2005. "It's 10 feet higher than the and say they haven't gotten jections from state and local The Dutch experts have also adequate support. They worry residents who were concerned w orst-case scenario," said Pete worked with officials in New it will take an even more de- about the analysis's economic Gaynor, director of emergency York and Galveston. And they structive storm to end the po- impact. "What I need is some- management and homeland have advised Norfolk on stormlitical gridlock. one to say, 'John, this is what security for Providence. "I'm water drainage and Miami on Hurricane Ike was a beast everyone agrees upon,'" he more than confident that the water management. when it hit the Houston area in sald. barrier would protect the city. Some experts warn t h at September 2008, ripping into Last year, Titus, the sea-level It would have to be the storm while it's important to adopt Galveston and shutting down expert, wrote for the Environ- of the century to overcome the protections against floods, efa petrochemical plant, causing mental Protection Agency the barrier system." forts to hold off deluges will fuel shortages. Four years later, first-ever plan t hat a dvises To protect New York, Mal- eventually fail if greenhouse William M errill, th e T exas coastal areas to stop trying to colm Bowman, a professor of gas emissions an d g l o bal A8 M Universityprofessor who hold back water. He said a rise oceanography at the State Uni- warming aren't curbed. "We can build seawalls, we first envisioned the Ike Dike as in sea levels is unstoppable and versity of New York at Stony a defense against storms, only will be a fact of life in about 70 Brook, envisions a storm bar- can raise highways, but it's a recently got significant fund- years. rier on a much grander scale. losing proposition if you don't ing for his work. His proposal: He offered three sugges- But Bowman isn't sure the stop sea-level rise," said Mibuild a barrier in the Gulf of tions for planners: retreat from barrier he has worked on and chael Oppenheimer, a profesMexico stretching the length of the coasts, giving landowners promoted since2004 — which sor of geosciences and interthe island of Galveston and the money as an incentive to leave; would cost between $3 billion national affairs at Princeton Bolivar Peninsula, with gates continue building dikes, which and $6 billion — will ever be University, who lost power at that swing open to allow boats cost about $35 million per mile, built. home in L ower M a nhattan "People say it's too ambi- when Sandy hrt. into the bay and close to block according to one expert; or let
Brian Kersey/The Associated Press
Zac Vawter, pictured here last month, is the first person to climb the stairs up Chicago's Willis tower wearing a mindcontrolled prosthetic limb.
Leg
leg to ensure that it would respond to his thoughts. Continued from A1 When Vawter goes home When V a wter t h o ught to Yelm, Wash., where he about climbing the stairs, lives with his wife and two the motors, belts and chains children, the experimental in his leg synchronized the leg will stay behind in Chimovements of its ankle and cago. Researchers will conknee. tinue to refine its steering. The computerized pros- Taking it to the market is still thetic limb, like something years away. "We've come a long way, one might see in a sci-fi film, weighs about 10 pounds and but we have a long way to holds two motors. go," said lead researcher Levi Bionic — or thought-con- Hargrove of the institute's trolled — p rosthetic arms Center for Bionic Medicine. have been available for a few "We need to make rock-solid years, thanks to pioneering d evices, more than a r e work done at the Rehabilita- search prototype." tion Institute. Knowing leg The $8 million project is amputees outnumber people funded by the U.S. Departwho've lost arms and hands, ment of Defense and involves the C h icago r e searchers Vanderbilt U n iversity, t he are focusing more on lower Massachusetts Institute of limbs. If a bionic hand fails, Technology, the University a person drops a glass of wa- of Rhode Island and the Uniter. If a bionic leg fails, a per- versity of New Brunswick. "A lot of people say that son falls down stairs. "This event was a research losing a leg is l ik e losing projectfor us," said Joanne a loved one," said Vawter. Smith, th e R e habilitation "You go through a grieving Institute's CEO. process. You and establish a "We were testing the leg new normal in your life and under extreme conditions. move on. Today was a big Very few patients who will event. It's just neat to be a use the leg in the future will part of the research and be a be using it for this purpose. part of RIC." From that perspective, its Nearly, 3,000 climbers performance was b e yond participated in the annual measure," Smith added. charity event, called SkyTo prepare for his pioneer- Rise Chicago. Participants ing climb, Vawter said, he climbed about 2,100 steps to practiced on a small escala- the Willis Tower's SkyDeck tor at a gym, while research- level to raise money for the ers spent months adjusting institute's rehabilitation care the technical aspects of the and research.
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012•THE BULLETIN AS
Costs
When finalist David Mickaelian, of Healdsburg, Calif., Continued from A1 arrived for a second interview, he brought his spouse with About the costs him. The city didn't pay airTo find a new manager, the fare for that cost. city hired Larry Patterson, a Other costs, including lodgconsultant and the Bend city ing for three nights, a rental manager from 1986 to 2001. car, a dinner and a catered Patterson collected resumes, public re c eption, to t a led screened applicants and pro- $765.87, records show. vided recruitment advice to Mickaelian dropped out of the city in August and Sep- consideration for unspecified tember fora $2,500 fee. reasons. Efforts to reach him Records show the city paid have been unsuccessful. for four candidates to travel to The city started its manager Redmond for the first round of search after David Brandt left interviews. the manager job for a similar H otel costs for t h e f o u r post in Cupertino, Calif. amounted to $1,014.60 at Eagle The City Council is schedCrest Resort on the city out- uled to meet Nov. 13 to discuss skirts during the weekend of next steps for finding a manSept. 15 and 16. Other hotels ager, said Harris. The city will directly in Redmond were al- need to re-advertise the posiready booked up, and the re- tion and may consider a prosort offered an in-town rate, file test for candidates, HarHarris said. Other travel costs, ris said. That tool could show such asairfare and car rental, strengths beyond what's in amounted to $3,387, records a resume, such as leadership show. abilities, she said.
Continued from A1 "He'll cut d ow n on our debt. We can't keep
manager failed.
spending," Bingham said.
DeBone estimated the cost for the recruitment firm was $18,000 or $20,000. Its services will continue with no additional fees, he said.
voters end up with uncounted ballots by failing to fill out all parts with appropriate signatures and addresses. States use
" If our c ountry w er e a household, we would be in foreclosure." About 40 m i nutes up the road i n n e ighboring Wheeler County, voters in Precinct 3 will be contemplating some of the same issues as they fill out their ballots. When Dan Cannon was growing up i n M i t chell, sawmills roared to life. At its peak, the tiny town, northeast of Prineville, had more than 13 mills in the area. Now, the nearest is about 40 miles away. Cannon knows M itchell, where he was born and raised, has tw o o ptions: grow or die. And to grow, it needsjobs. When it came to casting his vote for the U.S. president this year, Cannon also thought of the economy. He voted for Barack Obama the first time around. This year, he asked himself, "Am I better off than I was four years ago'?" The answer, he said, was no. Two or three more years of this economy, he said, and the tire center he owns might not be in business. He sees one solution in the state's forests. Increasing harvest levels could help the town of 160 and the neighboring area - although now, he said, with the lack of infrastructure, he questions how the small town could even support a lumber mill these days. "First came the environmental groups and t hey took thelumber away," he said. "And now, the infrastructure is gone. The mills
varying degrees of diligence in
are gone. The people who
contacting voters with flawed ballots. "Ours have three red X's," Fitzgerald said of the places on the ballot that must be filled out.
used to cut the trees are
didates for interviews — an Deschutes County h asn't additional expense — weren't had a permanent admin- availableon Friday. The couni strator sin ce A ugus t ty hasn'tyet provided records 2011, w h e n admi n i stra- in responseto a public records tor Dave Kanner was fired. request filed by The Bulletin The county interviewed five on Oct. 25. "I'm sure there's thousands candidates in September, but neither of two f inalists was of dollars incurred," DeBone hired. The county also inter- said. viewed a round of candidates But he said they haven't in March, but officials couldn't been out of the ordinary. "I'm comfortable with the settle on a choice. The county's recruitment expenses we've done," he said. firm, Prothman Co. of Bel- "I don't feel like we've done levue, Wash., won't get any anything real expensive." extra pay because of the need — Reporter: 541-977-7185, to continue searching. The bbotkin@bendbulletin.com
.-
Early voters line up Sunday evening outside the Hamilton County Board of Elections building in Cincinnati. Ohio is at the center of many scenarios for a protracted election battle.
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Mississippi and South Caro- Vice President Joe Biden would lina) as the "least prepared" be the choice, but there would • How much of an issue to respond to voting-machine undoubtedly be pressure on • could voter fraud be? failures. Overall, the environ- him to step aside, in the inter• Almost none — at least at ment is significantly improved ests of giving the new president • the polls this week. While over 2000, when Florida voters the chance to have the No. 2 he Republicans and g r assroots used unreliable punch-card had intended. "ballot integrity" groups con- ballots and officials were left tend that many illegal votes go to examine dimpled, pregnant • Couldthe presence of poll undetected, there is scant evi- and hanging chads to divine a • watchers make polling dence to support the claim. An voter's intent. places chaotic or intimidating? analysis of more than 2,000 al• T he v a st m a j ority o f leged casesof voter fraud over • Will new state voter-ID • the nation's more than the past 12 years by News21, • requirements keep large 100,000polling places are likely the Carnegie-Knight investi- numbers from voting? to run smoothly and uneventgative reporting project, found • Not to the extent once an- fully. But grassroots organizathe rate of actual wrongdoing • ticipated. Over the past tions such as True the Vote say "infinitesimal." Instances of two years, measures requiring they will be at the polls in large voter impersonation, which voter identification b ecame numbers to look for possible prompted many states to de- law in nine states, nearly all of fraud, such as voters who don't bate or enact tough ID laws, them R e publican-controlled. display appropriate identificawere "virtually nonexistent," But courts and the federal gov- tion or attempt to vote more News21 reported. Many pur- ernment have struck down or than once. Many states allow portedcases of fraud turn out placed on hold laws in four of poll observers to c h allenge to be the result of mistakes by them: M ississippi, Pennsyl- a voter's eligibility based on election officials. "The idea that vania, Texas and Wisconsin. questions about home address, impersonation fraud could be Laws in Alabama, Rhode Is- citizenship o r o t h e r b a ckdone on a large enough scale to land and South Carolina won't ground details. If an election affect the outcome of any major take effect until 20D or 2014. official concludes that there is race, without detection by gov- That leaves Kansas, Tennessee, sufficient doubt, a voter may be ernment officials, is ludicrous," Georgia and Indiana with strict asked to cast a provisional balRichard Hasen, a law profes- photo ID laws — the latter two lot, which can be counted later sor at the University of Califor- states passed their laws before if new information is provided. nia at Irvine, wrote in his new 2010. Other states, including These situations are most likely book, "The Voting Wars." Voter Florida, Louisiana, Michigan in areas with high concentraregistrati on, however, has been and South Dakota, have less- tions of minority voters. Katha source of abuse and scandal. stringent statutes that allow erine Culliton-Gonzalez, senior In 2008, a registration drive election officials to r e quest attorney for voter protection at by the community organizing photo ID but allow residents to the Advancement Project, urggroup ACORN produced an vote without it. Virginia, Ohio es voters to resist accepting a estimated 400,000 incorrect, and Arizona accept non-photo provisional ballot and seek asduplicated or fraudulent sub- identification. Critics say the sistance if they believe they've missions with false signatures. laws have disproportionate im- been unfairly challenged. Staff This year, the Republican Na- pact on seniors, voters under from Election Protection, a cotional Committee said it cut ties 30, the poor, and blacks and alition of civil rights groups, with organizer Nathan Sproul Hispanics. A study by the Bren- will be available at many pollafterdozens of suspect regis- nan Center for Justice at New ing locations to provide help. tration forms were discovered York University School of Law They will be wearing black Tby Florida officials. estimated that as many as 21 shirts with their phone number, million voting-age Americans 1 -866-OUR-VOTE, in w h i t e • What places are likely to — 11 percent — lack govern- lettering. • encounter delays or other ment-issued photo ID. problems with voting? • H ow d o pe o ple w h o • The historic volume of • What if o ne c andidate • vote by mail or absentee • early voting — it's pos• wins the p opular vote ballot know their votes were sible that as much as 40 percent and the other wins the electoral counted? of the electorate will have cast college, or if the electoral col• Local registrars and elecballots by Tuesday — is likely lege is tied'? • tions officials say absento easesome bottlenecks and • Four men have won the tee ballots that are received on speed the process on Election • presidency after l osing time are counted as long as they Day. But extremely long ballots the popular vote, most recently are correctly filled out. The noin some localities, including in George W. Bush, who lost to Al tion that they are counted only Florida, have already caused Gore by 500,000 votes in 2000. if an election is close is "an old lengthy lines. Confusion over The others were John Quincy wives' tale," said the auditor recent changes in state laws Adams (1824), Rutherford B. who oversees voting in Iowa's could complicate or delay vot- Hayes (1876) and Benjamin Polk County, Jamie Fitzgerald, ing. A Pennsylvania judge put Harrison (1888). Such a split a Democrat. "They all count." the state's strict new photo- decision can cast a shadow on The best way to ensure that identification law on hold last the legitimacy of a presidency your vote is counted, oNcials month, ruling t hat e lection and could make it difficult for say, is for the signature on the officials could ask for picture Obama or Romney to claim any ballot to match the one in the ID but not require it this year. kind of mandate for the next voter-registration record. But Voting rights activists are con- four years. This year's tightly the spectacle of the 2000 recerned that poll workers may contested race also raises mul- count andthe subsequent rise misunderstand the judge's de- tiple possibilities for a 269 to of social media and its ability cision and insist on photo iden- 269 electoral college deadlock. to spreadrumors have fostered tification. They also contend In that case the newly elected mistrust and eroded public that some ads sponsored by the House would choose the presi- confidence in the elections sysstate are misleading and will dent, with each state delegation tem. A national survey by the suppress the vote by giving the casting one vote. Barring an ex- Voting Technology Project, a impression that the law is cur- traordinary series of upsets, the joint venture of the Massachurently in force. Technical sna- House is likely to remain in Re- setts and California institutes fus are always a part of election publican hands, and Romney of technology, found just 57 night. A study released this would easily gain the required percent of those who voted by summer by Common Cause, simple majority of 26 delega- mail in were "very confident" the Rutgers School of Law and tions. The Senate, which picks that their ballots were counted. the Verified Voting Founda- the vice president, could be a Seventy-fourpercent of Election listed six states (Colorado, more contentious matter if it tion Day voters expressed the Delaware, Kansas, Louisiana, stays Democraticas expected. same level ofconfidence. Many
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firm was paid a flat fee, said Deschutes County Commission Chairman Tony DeBone. The county hired Prothman after its first attempt to find a
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Q&A Continued from A1 So far, about 350,000 residents who requested the ballots have yet to mail them back. If they decide instead to vote in person on Tuesday, they must use provisional ballots — a precaution against double voting. Officials could be inundated with provisional ballots, which must be evaluated individually. At the center of it all is Husted, a Republican who has drawn criticism from Democrats for his attempts to limit early voting. Under Ohiolaw, the secretary of state is given unusuallybroad power over elections, and Husted could play a critical role in determining the next president.
That could help streamline the process and identify top candidates, she said, adding that the details still need to be worked out. "We want to take the time and kind of dig into it," she said. M ayor Geo r g e End i cott couldn't be reached for comment.
• Will damage from Hur• ricane Sandy have an impact on the election? • The storm is not likely to • cause a shift in the electoral college totals. New Jersey and New York and Connecticut, the three states hit hardest by the storm, are solidly in Obama's column. But lingering damage could trim Obama's popular vote in those states. Hundreds of thousands remain without power, and gasoline is
would never consider leaving. "This is a beautiful place," he said of his hometown. "It's as close to heaven as you're go-
ing to get." H ere, R epublicans a l s o outnumber Democrats. But while knocking back a beer at the Little Pine Cafe, Jerry Nealeigh Jr., another lifetime Mitchell resident, has a different take. The 42-year-oldstream ecologist is eager to see small businesses flourish and jobs created. But he believes it will take time and the current president is doing what he can. What's more, he likes that Obama has set a deadline to bring troops home. "And he tracked down Osama and terminated him," Nealeigh said. At the historic Oregon Hotel, which sits next to the Little Pine Cafe in downtown Mitchell, business has actually been pretty good lately. People from all over the world — South Korea, Germany, France — come to see the Painted Hills, which is about nine miles from the 1930s hotel. But still, the hotel's owner, Waunita "Skeeter" Reed, can't afford to hire any employees. She can't pay their health insurance. She can't even afford some of her own. And she worries with Obama at the helm it will be more likely she will be on the hook to pay toward insurance. And that is the singular issue that drove her decision to vote for Romney. "I can't pay for (mandated) insurance," she said. All the other issues, she said, didn't matter. With the partisan gridlock at the federal level, she has little hope that either man elected would be able to accomplish much. Reed said she might feel more inspired if there were another choice on the ballot for her to mark. "I feel like I picked the best out of the worst," she said.
gone."
— Reporter,541-554-1162, Idake@bendbulletin.com
Now, the school district is the town's largest employer. Cannon's son, a music teacher and school bus driver for the district, is building the town's only new house. Despite difficult times, he
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in short supply. Polling places could remain dark or inaccessible. New Jersey Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno, a Republican, said last week that the state would deploy military trucks to serve as makeshift polling places and extend the deadline for requesting mail-in ballots. The silver lining for Obama is that the storm froze Romney in place for a couple of days at a time when he had momentum swinging his w ay. Romney was in the background while Obama commanded enormous attention as a commander in chief leading recovery efforts — and won high approval ratingsforhis performance.
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
exican carte s ic ine s e see 0 U stretc networ s a i n e ssemi ra in into • • cities By Sari Horwitz The Washington Post
CHICAGO — A few miles west of downtown, past a terra-cotta-tiled g at e w ay emblazoned with "Bienvenidos," the smells and sights of Mexico spill onto 26th Street. The Mexican tricolor waves from brick storefronts. Vendors offer authentic churros, chorizo and tamales. Chicago's Little V i l lage n eighborhood is h om e t o more than 500,000residents o f Mexican d escent a n d is known for its Cinco de Mayo festival and bustling Mexican Independence Day parade. But federal authorities say that Little Village is also home to something else: an American branch ofthe Mexican Sinaloa drug cartel. Members of Mexico's most powerful cartel are selling a record amount of heroin and methamphetamine from Little Village, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. Fro m t h e re, the drugs are moving onto the streets of south and west Chicago, where they are sold in assembly-line fashion in mostly A fr i c an-American neighborhoods. "Chicago, wit h 1 0 0,000 g ang members to put t h e dope on the street, is a logistical winner for the Sinaloa cartel," Jack Riley, the DEA's special agent in charge of the Chicago field division, said after a tour through Little Village. "We have to operate now as if we're on the Mexican border." It's not just Chicago. Increasingly, as drug cartels have amassed more control and influence in M e x ico, they have extended their reach deeper into the United States, establishing inroads across the Midwest and Southeast, according to
By Barbara Demick Los Angeles Times
BEIJING — At 49, Wang Z eqiang has a chieved th e C hinese equivalent o f t h e American dream. Raised in the cornfields of eastern China's Shandong province, he founded an auto parts business that today has several dozen employees. He has two houses, two cars and, because he's rich enough to pay the fines for defying the country's family planning policy, two children. Now, all t hat i s m i ssing — what he covets most — is a Barbara Demick/ Los Angeles Times foreign passport. Leon Zhong, an emigration consultant in Beijing, is planning his "In China, there is so much own retirement in Australia. He cites the gray Beijing air as one pressure," said Wang, who of the main reasons to leave. recently hired a c onsulting firm to advise him on his first "I had to send an assistant at 4 a.m. to stand choice, Australia. He hasn't been there yet, but he's been in line so I could get in (to see a specialist at surfing the Internet and likes what he sees: blue skies, open a hospital). In Melbourne, Ijust telephone the spaces. "I want to live a re- doctor and get an appointment."
American counternarcotics officials. An extensive distribution network supplies regions across the country,
relying largely on regional hubs like this city, with ready markets located off busy interstate highways. One result: Seizures of heroin a n d m e t h amphetamine havesoared in recent years, according to federal statistics. The U.S. government has provided Mexico with surveillance equipment, communication gear and other assistance under the $1.9 billion Merida Initiative, the antidrug effort launched more than four years ago. But critics say that north of the border,the federal government has barely put a dent into a sophisticated infrastructure that supports more than $20 billion a year in drug cash flowing back to Mexico. The success ofthe Mexican cartels in building their massive drug d i stribution and m a rketing n e tworks acrossthe county isa reflection of the U.S. government's intelligence and operational failure in the war on drugs, said Fulton A r mstrong, a former national intelligence officer for Latin America and ex-CIA officer. " We p r etend t h a t t h e cartels don't have an infrastructure in the U.S.," said Armstrong, also a f o rmer staff member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and now a senior fellow at A m erican U n i versity's Center for Latin American and Latino Studies. "But you don't do a $20 billion a year business ... with ad-hoc, part-time volunteers. You use an established infrastructure to support the markets. How come we're not attacking that infrastructure?"
T o a l a r g e e x t ent, t h e flight r e f l ects p e s simism a bout China's future. T h e s pectacular d o w n fall t h i s year of Politburo member Bo Xilai and his cronies, including many businessmen still in jail, proved that shifting political winds can put any-
body in jeopardy, and highlighted the instability of the system. More immediate, there is the competition for spots in good universities, for housing, for space, for land. "Scarcity is a very compel-
ling reason," said Zhong, ges-
turing out the oversize windows of his 30th-floor corner officeat the pea soup obscuring what would otherwise be a stunning view of the Beijing skyline. "And to be frank, the e nvironmental hazard i s a factor: the air, the poisoned foods." Zhong, who has been in laxed, happy life." the e m i g r ation bu s i ness — Leon Zhong, emigration consultant since 1995, says that each of The new Chinese emigres have little in common with the hundreds of families he's earlier waves o f u n s k illed helped has its own reasons. "At some point something laborers or p olitical exiles. an attempt to prevent capiof Liberty and Sydney OpThey're not g o in g a b road tal flight, Chinese laws limit era House being among the will happen, and they say for e c onomic o p p ortunity people from taking more than most p opular. P r ospective to themselves, 'I have to go t hey're a l ready w i l d ly $50,000 a year out of the coun- immigrants troll the Internet, now.'" successful — or political ac- try, but it is easy enough to get browsing real estate listings Zhong decided he would retivism, but for a q u ality of around the restrictions. and schools, examining rank- tire in Australia after a health life that money can't buy in In effect, the wealthy emiings of the "World's Most Liv- scare a few years back, when China. gres are buying their n ew able Places." he discovered how difficult it A recent poll of C h inese r esidencies, i n w h a t t h e y Melbourne. Mild w i nters. is to get an appointment with with a net worth of more than hope is the first step toward Good universities. Affordable a specialist at the top Beijing 10 million yuan ($1.6 million) new passports. Many of the housing. Check. hospitals. "I had to send an assistant found that 16 percent had ob- foreign programs involve a Vancouver, Canada. Dratained foreign residency and s ubstantial i n v estment b y m atic o cean v i e ws. L o w at 4 a.m. to stand in line so I that an additional 44 percent the prospective expatriates, crime. Clean air. Check. could get in," said Zhong, who were planning to emigrate. either in real estate or busiLos Angeles. Business op- has an Australian passport, Many cite a polluted atmo- nesses. The recently renewed portunities. N ic e w e a ther. having studied business in sphere, and not just in the air U.S. EB-5 visa, for instance, Beaches. Check. Melbourne in the 1980s and "The United States is still they breathe:endemic corrup- requires $1 million ($500,000 travels frequently back and tion, a shaky political system, for poor or r u ral areas) in everybody's dream, but they forth. "In Melbourne, I just tainted products and p o or businesses that create at least w orry a b out c r i me," s a id telephone the doctor and get medical care, among other 10 jobs. Leon Zhong, president of Xin- an appointment." problems. Dozens of consulting firms haowei Consulting, one of the Wang, the Shandong busiThe exodus of the middle with names such as Royal largest companies advising nessman, said the deciding and upper class is an embar- Way Ahead Exit and Entry prospective migrants. "All in factor for him has been corrassment to the government, Service Co. have sprung up all, though, the people who ruption in the business world. with possibly serious ecoin recent years, their websites want business opportunities "I have to give out gifts, cash, nomic implications because beckoning with photographs prefer the United States. The gift certificates. If I don't give, the emigres are taking with of swimming pools and world young professionals prefer business won't happen. I'm them money and skills. In landmarks, with the Statue Australia." tired of that."
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Donate Clean, Gently Used Winter jacket, sleeping bag, tent, blanket, tarp, winter boots or a combo of any 10 warm winter hats, gloves, scarves, socks 8 receive a coupon for 20% off 1 regular priced item. Coupon Must BePresent To Receive Discount Expires 11/30/12
Donate Canned Food Receive a raffle ticket for each item donated.Raffle prizes include — skis, helmets, goggles, lift tickets, etc. Most needed items: meats, soups, peanut butter, pasta, rice, beans, fruits, veggies
311 SW Centui YDr, Bend 541-388-8234 *Does not apply to prior sales.
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Readerphoto, B2 Ob i tuaries, B5 Editorials, B4 Weather, B6 O www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
VOTER TURNOUT
HEALTH INSURANCE EXCHANGE
Nov. 6 general election must be returned by
8 p.m. on Election Day. Voter turnout as of late Friday afternoon, by
county: Crook.......... 49% Deschutes...... 44% Jefferson g Poi o
STATE NEWS Portland
Medford
meeting W hen: 6to8 p.m.W ednesday
Authorities investigate stabbing, car chase
Where: St. Charles Bend Center for Health and Learning,
By Hillary Borrud
Conference RoomCD,2500 N.E.
The Bulletin
Neff Road
Police and sheriff's deputies were busy early Sunday morning, as they responded to a stabbing in Bend and, in a separateincident, pursued a man who led deputies on a chase on U.S. Highway 97 that reached 100 mph. In Bend, police officers received a report of a stabbing near northeast Twin Knolls Drive at approximately I:50 a.m., according to a police news release. The stabbing victim and his friends had fled to the bar Timbers Bar & Grille for help, said Sgt. Todd Fletcher of the Bend Police Department. Before the incident, a group of people that included Austin Phillip Cronin, 22, were in a vacant parking lot near northeast Twin Knolls Drive, according to police. Shawn William Flanary, 49, was inside the Eastside Laundromat. Flanary exited the laundromat through the back door and confronted the group in the parking lot, according to police. "They didn't know each other," Fletcher said of Flanary and Cronin. "I don't know if Flanary was upset about the noise being made or what,but he came out and confronted them and some kind of dispute, a pushing, shoving match, ensued between Cronin and Flanary." Flanary stabbed Cronin in the back, according to
ommun mee in anne
All ballots for the
• Cover Oregon is seeking feedback, questions from public By Heidi Hagemeier The Bulletin
Central Oregonians have the opportunity to learn firsthand this week about plans for a statewide exchange to help individuals and small businesses buy health insurance coverage. C over Oregon, which was until r e cently known as Oregon Health Insurance Exchange Corp., plans a community meeting in Bend at 6 p.m. Wednesday to discuss its work crafting a new system for purchasing health insurance. Its board members and staff intend to explain the effort, which is tied to the federal Affordable Care Act, as well as to answer questions and hear feedback from
If yougo What: Cover Oregon community
area residents. The exchange, as part of the act's mandate requiring citizens to purchase health insurance,is an effort to make coverage more affordableand accessible. "This is a rare opportunity," said Aelea Christofferson, a Sunriver business owner appointed by the governor to the Cover Oregon board. "This might be the only inperson opportunity here before this is all implemented." The Wednesday event will be followed Thursday by a meeting of Cover Oregon's
What: Cover Oregonboard meeting When: 10a.m. to 2 p.m .Thursday Where: Comfort Inn 8 Suites, 62065 N.E. 27th St., Bend
Contact: www.coveroregon.com, info©coveroregon.com or 503-
board of directors (see "If you go"). Its board meetings are open to the public, and there will be a public comment period. SeeExchange/B6
373-9424
• Portland:Negative press defines mayoral race betweenJefferson Smith and Charlie
Hales. • Portland:Police used
pepper spray during Occupy Portland protest. • Medford:Elk hunter
describes harrowing bear attack. Stories on B3
Have astoryidea or sudmission? Contactus! The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend................541-617-7829 Redmond ........ 541-977-7185 Sisters.............541-977-7185 La Pine........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0348 Deschutes ......541-617-7837 Crook ..............541-633-2184 Jefferson ........541-633-2184
police. See Police/B2
Salem..............541-554-1162 D.C..................202-662-7456 N
Business ........ 541-383-0360 Education .......541-977-7185 Public lands .....541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects ..........541-617-7831
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Henry Winnenberg, left, 9, mom Michelleand sister Sylvia, 8, race out of Ray's Food Place toward their bikes in Bend on Sunday, carrying items for a scavenger hunt on wheels that benefits Bethlehem Inn, a local homeless shelter.
Submissions: • Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details onthe Obituariespage inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com
ELECTION: TUESDAY For our complete coverage, visit www.bendbulletin.com/election.
• Families take part in Cranksgiving scavenger hunt/bike ride to aid BethlehemInn By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
unday was the perfect day for an autumn bike ride, and many bicyclists chose to spend the morning participating in the Cranksgiving ride. It was a chance for families and individuals to ride around northwest Bend for a good cause, on a scavenger hunt for items to donate to Bethlehem Inn homeless shelter. The charity event was
well-timed for the shelter, where the demands for food, clothing and a place to stay begin to increase at this time of year, said Kim Fischbach, director of development for Bethlehem Inn. Bethlehem Inn has room for up to 73 people each night. Two rooms are set aside for military veterans, and five rooms are for families. There is a waiting list for the family rooms, which are in high demand, said manag-
ing director Chris Clouart. "On a weekly basis, we're turning families away," Clouart said. People must pass drug and alcohol tests before they can stay at the inn, although Clouart said the inn does sometimes help individuals who are intoxicated and have nowhere to go on a cold night by letting them stay in a lounge area until the next
"Tosee this
(number) of people come out is truly incredible." — Kim Fischbach, director of development for Bethlehem Inn
morning. SeeScavenging/B6
,
W Bendroad work
,:ur. Mornin star
— Road closed - - Local traffic only — Detour • • • Lane closures
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0 SIMPSON AVENUE ANDMT. WASHINGTON DRIVE The intersection of Simpson Avenueand Mt. Washington Drive reopened to traffic on Friday.
Br sonBlvd.
6 PARKWAY LANESSUBJECTTO CLOSE The Oregon Department of Transportation on Sunday beganfelling trees in the Parkway median south of Empire Boulevard. The work will continue for about a week, with intermittent lane closures both northbound and southbound expected from about 7 a.m. until noon.
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0 TUMALO FALLsROAD REOpENS ForestService Road 4603, also known as Tumalo Falls Road and located 6 miles west of Bend at the end of Skyliners Road, has been
reopened. Access to the Tumalo Falls Trailhead andTumalo Falls Day Use have also been reopened. TheForest Service closed the road to accommodate replacement of a water line by Bendcity contractor ~ as part of its multimillion-dollar improvement of the city water system. However, a U.S. District judge in Eugene halted work by
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granting project opponents a preliminary injunction while the dispute is addressed. 0 EMPIRE AVENUEAND 18TH STREET
Reed Mkt. Rd.
The intersection of18th Street and Empire Avenue is closed through
mid-November for the construction of a new roundabout. Traffic will be detoured around the intersection.
Powers Rd.
6 BROOKSWOOD BOULEVARD AND POWERS ROAD The intersection of Brookswood Boulevard and Powers Road is closed through mid-November for the construction of a new roundabout. Traffic will be detoured around the intersection. Sources: City of Bend, Oregon Department of Transportation
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Andy Zeigert /The Bulletin
Whythe ballot is ordered randomly Bulletin staff report Itdoesn'tmake sense, does it, that random order of candidates listed on your 2012 Oregon election ballot? Obama, Stein, Johnson, Romney. Who pickedthat lineup'? The Oregon Secretary of State, Elections Division, did, in a way. Even the ballot list for the election to that post is a bit scrambled: Wooley, Wolfe, Brown, Buehler. According to Andrea Cantu-Schomus,communications director for the secretary of state, a computer program generates a random order of the alphabet for all elections. The list is generated in Orestar, the same program that provides online data about elections and corporations on the secretary of state's website. State law ORS 254.155 mandates that the secretary create a random order of the alphabet to determine the order in which candidates' names appear on the ballot. A Compliance Specialist 3, or lead worker, in the department must generate the list and do so no later than the 69th day before the election. County elections officials must receive the random alphabet no later than the 68th day before the election. See Ballot/B2
B2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
Police
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Canyou work a camera, and capture a great picture? And canyou tell us a bit about it? Email your color or blackand-white photos to readerphotos@bendbulletin.com and we'll pick the best for publication in the paper and online. Submission requirements:Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
highway," sheriff's Sgt.
A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT Glen Schaumloeffel photographed this sceneon the Deschutes River Trail southwest of Bend using a Canon S95 camera.
PUBLIC OFFICIALS For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.
CONGRESS U.S. Senate
Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.: 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-318-1298
Sen. RonWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov
U.S. House of Representatives
Rep. GregWalden, R-Hood River 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 W eb: http://walden.hobse.gov/ Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON
creased to around 30 mph, somewhere around there," EgContinued from B1 gert said. "Alcohol was a contributPatterson eventually stopped ing factor," Fletcher said. "I the Denali in the passing lane know that the victim was near the Empire Avenue overintoxicated. I don't know pass and fled on foot across the about Flanary." northbound lanes of the highFletcher said Cronin suf- way, the Sheriff's Office said. fered "a serious wound, Bend police were on the scene but I don't believe it was and a police dog tracked and life-threatening." apprehended Patterson, acMedics from the Bend cording to the Sheriff's Office. Fire D epartment t r a nsPatterson was treated for p orted Cronin, who w a s minor injuries he suffered from bleeding and having trouble the dog and was booked into breathing, to St. Charles the Deschutes County jail on Bend for treatment. Cronin suspicion of attempting to elude was later released from the a police officer, reckless drivhospital. ing, two counts of recklessly Flanary w a s a r r ested endangering another person, and lodged at the Deschutes third-degree escape and a warCounty jail on suspicion of rant for violating his parole. first-degree assault and unThere were two passengers lawful use of a weapon, ac- in the Denali, an unidentified cording to police. woman who was interviewed Later Sunday morning, and released,and Cecil Archie at 3:16 a.m., a Deschutes Turner, 28, of Bend. Turner County sheriff's d eputy was arrested and lodged at attempted to stop a GMC the Deschutes County jail on Denali near southeast Ev- suspicion of violating his paergreen Avenue and south- role, according to the Sheriff's east Jackson Avenue in Office. Redmond police and Redmond, according to a the Oregon State Police also sheriff' snews release. responded to the incident. The driver, Jesse William Meanwhile, t h e T u m a lo Patterson, 45, of Bend, tried Country Store on Cook Avto get away and led depu- enue in Tumalo was reportedly ties on a pursuit south on burglarized Saturday night, U.S. Highway 97, according but details of t hat i n cident to the Deschutes County were not available early SunSheriff's Office. day afternoon, Eggert said. "It reached speeds up to — Reporter: 541-617-7829, 100 miles per hour on the hborrud@bendbulletin.com
136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.t/s Superintendent of Public lnstruction Susan Castillo 255 Capitol Street N.E. Salem, Oregon97310 Phone: 503-947-5600 Fax: 503-378-5156 Email: superintendent.castillo ©state.or.us Web: www.ode.state.or.us
Democrat 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax:503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
Mark Eggert said Sunday afternoon. The speed actually reached approximately 110 mph, according to a second Sheriff's Office news release sent out Sunday night. M eanwhile, anot h e r deputy placed spike strips on the highway near Deschutes Junction. The strips punctured Patterson's tires, which gradually deflated as he drove into Bend, according to the news release. "As they came into Bend, I think the speeds had de-
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Treasurer TedWheeler, Democrat 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer ©state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us
Gov. John Kitzhaber, Democrat 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Bend office: Fax: 503-378-6872 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 Secretaryof State KateBrown, Democrat Attorney General Ellen Rosenblom,
Ballot Continued from B1 This year, the list was generated Sept.4:E,O, Y, S, I,N, W ,D,K, A , P , H , F, J, T, M , B , L, V, R, X, U, Q, C, Z, G. C antu-Schomus said t h e secretary'soffice has not received any complaint about the ballot order so far in incumbent Kate Brown's tenure.
"We do o ccasionally get calls asking how the order was chosen," Cantu-Schomus said by email. "We use this as an educational opportunity to inform the caller." The secretary o f s t a te's website contains links to Oregon voter pamphlets of the past and present, where the random order for that election is published. Other election
laws are available by searching the site. For example, state law mandates that the political party to which a candidate belongs appears first after the candidate's name, but up to two minor political parties that have also nominated the same candidate may appear on the ballot next to that candidate's name.
$335,872.02 plus interest, costs andfees 12CV1061:Bradley R. Warkentin Filed Oct. 17 v. Ocwen Loan Servicing LLC and 12CV1059:Midland Funding LLC Ocwen Financial Corporation, v. Aaron Harpole, complaint, complaint, $16,000 plus interest, $11,836.51 costs and fees 12CV1060:Midland Funding LLC v. 12CV1062:E*Trade Bankv. Peter Andy Jacobs, complaint, $11,454.07 M. Thomas and American Express 12CV1063:Capital One Bank v. Bank, complaint, $599,721.60 plus Daniel P. Makepeace, complaint, interest, costs and fees $10,285.79 Filed Oct. 24 Filed Oct. 18
12CV1053:Daniel Woods v. Barbara Grabell, complaint, $400,000 Filed Oct. 22
12CV1054:Provident Funding Associates L.P. v. Gregory A. Scott and Terrebonne Estates Homeowners Association, complaint, $131,228.65 plus interest, costs and fees 12CV1055: Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Matthew L. Trickey, complaint, $226,998.76 plus interest, costs and fees 12CV1056: Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Scott D. Lutz and Deborah K. Lutz, complaint, $346,65718 plus interest, costs and fees 12CV1057: Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Stephen G. Rosen, Beverly S. Rosen and the United States of America Internal Revenue Service, complaint, $128,919.28 plus interest, costs and fees 12CV1058:Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Nicholas M. Kroske, Michele R. Kroske, Debra A. Kroske nka Debra Miller, complaint,
12CV1065:Deutsche Bank National Trust Company as trustee for the Indymac Imja Mortgage trust 2007-A2, mortgage pass-through certificates, series 2007-A2 under the pooling and servicing agreement dated Aug. 1, 2007 v. Heather H. Johnson and Ross G.Johnson, complaint ,$603,060.88 12CV1067:Gary V. Laznicka v. John F. Hadlich and Composite Assist LLC,complaint,$32,800.75 plus interest, costs and fees Filed Oct. 26
12CV1069:Asset Acceptance LLC v. Shawn P. Lippy and Kirsten Lippy, complaint, $24,730.88 12CV1070:Asset Acceptance LLC v. Marleen J. Pitts and Wendell Pitts, complaint, $22,631.36 Filed Oct. 29
12CV1071:Flagstar Bank FSBv. Cindy Hausinger and Crooked River Ranch Club and Maintenance Association, complaint, $214,894.32 plus interest, costs andfees 12CV1072: Citimortgage Inc. v.
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NEWS OF RECORD
CIVIL SUITS
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Jeremy J. Koehler aka Jeremy Joseph Koehler, Charity Koehler aka Charity Judith Koehler, Oregon Affordable Housing Assistance Corporation and Janine Curtis, complaint, 373,062.80 plus interest, costs and fees Filed Oct. 30
12CV1075:JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. v. Bryan Kelly aka Bryan W. Kelly and Valerie Hunt aka Valerie G. Kelly aka Valerie Sims, complaint, $50,000 plus interest, costs and fees 12CV1076:Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Kali Jackson, Matthew Dobry and River Canyon Estates Homeowners' Association Inc., complaint, $261,250 plus interest, costs and fees 12CV1077:Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Christopher R. Gregg, Merchants Acceptance, Citifinancial Inc. and Onemain Financial lncn complaint, $295,704.91 plus interest, costs and fees 12CV1079:Brandon Thompson v. Richard C. Cearns, complaint, $135,000 12CV1081:Howard Fisher v. Ray M. Witbeck, complaint, $310,000
GAS TAX would de a good thing for this community>> (The Source Weekly)
Filed Oct. 31
12CV1082:JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. v. Kevin P.Connolly and Nancy G. Connolly, complaint, $50,000 plus interest, costs and fees 12CV1083: Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Matthew R. Thomas and April D. Thomas, complaint,$179,266.43 plus interest, costs and fees
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012• THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON NEWS PORTLAND MAYORAL RACE
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OR EGON IN BRIEF
• Recent polls show Jefferson Smith 20 points behind Charlie Hales By Steven Dubois
closure, first reported by Willamette Week, that Smith was PORTLAND — It appears charged with m i sdemeanor the decisive blow in the Port- assault after hitting an 18-yearland mayoral election w as old woman at a party near the delivered at a college party al- University of Oregon in 1993. most two decades ago. The charge was dropped when On that evening, 20-year-old Smith did community service Jefferson Smith hit a young and paid the woman's medical woman after she charged at bills. him because she thought he The damage escalated when shook or tipped a couch on the police report from the inciwhich she was sleeping. Vot- dent surfaced, portraying the ers did not learn that informa- young Smith in an unflattering tion until October, shortly af- light and partially contradictter it was disclosed that Smith ing the candidate's memory has had his driver's license of the event. Compounding suspended seven times. matters, Smith paid an unanTwo polls released this week nounced visit to the victim's show the twin bombshellshouse after the news broke. and Smith's heavily criticized Smith said he wanted to alert response to the news reports the woman that the story was — have probably cost him the being made public. He later reelection. Heading into sum- alized the visit was a bad idea mer, Smith was considered a and apologized. "I've been at this business for slight favorite to defeat former City Commissioner Charlie 36 years here, and I'm not sure Hales. Now he's some 20points I'veever seen a candidacy selfbehind in Tuesday's race to re- destruct like this," said Tim place Mayor Sam Adams, who Hibbitts, a prominent Portland declined to seek re-election pollster. after a scandal-marred first Hales had his share of negaterm. tive press, starting with his acHales and Smith are Demo- knowledgment that he lived in crats and have similar takes on income tax-free Washington many issues, leaving Portland- state for several years while ers to contemplate factors such continuing to vote in Oregon. as character, style and likeabil- He also got dinged for secretly ity. After months of negative recording an endorsement inarticles about both candidates, terview and submitting a letter the polls suggest a significant to the editor that included pasnumber of voters might write sages lifted from The Oregoin an alternate choice. nian newspaper. Smith's reputation was alToward the end of the camready tarnished by his terrible paign, he broke a promise not driving record and a revela- to accept contributions of more tion that he was kicked out of than $600. "I don't think it would be a sports league for rough play. Then came the October dis- unfair to say there's not a lot The Associated Press
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8 IIlBS88 "I've been at this business for 36 years here, and I'm not
sure I've ever seen a candidacy selfdestruct like this." — Tim Hibbitts, Portland pollster
of enthusiasm for either candidate, and I think Charlie Hales will basically win by default," Hibbitts said. Despite the downbeat press, the candidates have remained remarkably positive. Neither has exploited the other's problems in television commercials and their debates have been civil. Smith said his options in the difficult past few weeks ranged from quitting the race to going totally negative. He decided to keep running on the issues. "We have tohave the kind of politics that reflects that we are all in this together," he said, "rather than the campaigns that say 'everybody else sucks, vote for me.'" Smith, 39, is a Harvard Law School graduate who had a brief legal career before starting The Bus Project, a nonprofit aimed at getting young people active in politics. He was elected to the state Legislature in 2008. He seeks to boost education, improve the city's core services and focus on outer East Portland, an unfashionable yet fast-growing part of
Ferry operator fails sobriety test SALEM — Th e M a rion County Sheriff's Office has taken a ferry operator into custody after he failed a field sobriety test. KGW-TV reports 57-yearold Brian Trussell told sheriff's deputies he had been drinking alcohol just before his shift. He also had liquor in his lunchbox that he carried to his shift operating the ferry that crosses the Willamette River from Marion Countyto Yamhill County, Don Thomson with the Marion County Sheriff's Office said. Shortly after 2:30 p.m., a citizen called 911 after he noticed the smell of alcohol on the ferry operator when he and his family crossed the river Saturday. The ferry was closed for an hour until another operator could take over.
the city in which most students receive free or reduced-priced lunches. "It's been tough, but life is tough and politics are tough," he said of the campaign. "But what happened to me pales in comparison to the concentration of poverty that's been developing in this town." Hales, 56, served as a city commissionerfrom 1993-2002. Under Portland's commission form of government, the mayor and fourcommissioners share executive branch duties. As commissioner,hepushed reforms that increased diversity in the fire department and was known for his support of parks, skateboarders, lightrail and the return of streetcars. He quit in the middle of his third term to join HDR Engineering as senior vi ce president, a job in which he promotes streetcarsthroughout the country. H ales describes himself as a fix-it type who has the experience to get things done at City Hall. He said he will create jobs, fill potholes and change the culture of a police bureau that, according to the U.S. Department of Justice, has used excessive force too frequently. "The real difference between Jefferson and me is not political ideology," he said. "It's action. I've proven the ability to make things happen." The one-time Republican has the reputation for shifting his positions; he doesn't run away from the tag. "The fact that I am willing to take in new i n formation and change policy is, I think, a healthy thing," he said. "Sure, some people will interpret that pejoratively — oh well."
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Medford hunter pepperspray tells ofbearattack POliCeLISe
during rally in Portland
The Associated Press PORTLAND — Police used pepper spray o n m a r chers during a protest organized by a coalition of groups that participated in last year's Occupy Portland movement. Several h u ndred p e ople took part in the mostly peaceful demonstration in Northeast Portland on S aturday afternoon, Th e O r e gonian reported. Police said they re-
sponded with pepper spray after several p eople u s ed wooden shields to confront officers. Authorities didn't say how
many people were sprayed, but one person was arrested. The Oregonian reported at least 20 were sprayed, but t here was no w ord o f a n y injuries. Quetzal Brock, 16 , s a id he was near the front of the march a n d w a s s p r a yed twice. "I didn't expect for them to start i mmediately spraying people," the Cleveland High School student said. "They do those things to make you not want to come back. It makes me want to fight even harder, but next time with goggles." The goal of the rally was to protest the burden of the financial crisis on the working class, protest spokesman Nicholas Caleb said. Under a bipartisan budget compromise passed in August 2011, Congress would have to come up with $1.2 trillion in alternative budget cuts by the end of this year. If it fails, automatic, across-the-board cuts in federal spending begin on Jan.2. Organizers didn't have a permit and didn't respond to requests to discuss the march, policesaid.Free speech events do not require a permit, but marches on publicstreets do, police said in a statement. Caleb said none of the organizersreceived prior communication about the need for a permit.
throat and squeezed as tightly as he could, screaming for MEDFORD — Alex Mach- Shinn to shoot the bear. "I was just squeezing as ado was about 10 feet away from a black bear he thought hard as I could," Machado was dead when it came to its said. "I was just thinking, 'I feet and ran at him, swiping can't die like this. This isn't and biting. how it's supposed to be.'" "(The) thing popped up But Shinn's gun jammed. and just came right at me," So he ran back up the hill a the 22-year-old recalled Fri- few yards to retrieve Machaday afternoon at his Medford do's rifle, then returned and home. fired. The bear went limp. The attack occurred late Machado said he heard its Thursday afternoon while final breath. he and 24-year-old Nathan Machado crawled out from Shinn, of Phoenix, were hunt- under the black bear and lay ing deer off Elk Creek Road down about 10 feet away, trynear Trail. The men, who had ing to calm the tide of adrenbeen at it since 7 a.m., split up aline while Shinn dialed 911. "He kept asking me the temporarily as they climbed uphill when Shinn, who was alert questions. 'Count one carrying a bear-hunting tag, to 10. What's your name'? What's the date?' All that saw the bear. "He thought he saw me," stuff," Machado said. Machado said. "Then he reMachado started walking alized it was a bear. He took back uphill, hoping to meet a shot. He said he thought he rescue workers when they hit it broadside." came, while Shinn stayed The men trackedthe blood behind and tried to maintain trail and found the bear lying contact through spotty cellon a steep hillside, Machado phone service with emergensaid. cy services workers. "We thought it was dead," T he w ounds h ur t b u t he said. weren't bleeding too badly, As Machado approached said Machado, who estimates with hi s s k i nning k n ives he walked about a mile and in hand, the bear rose and a halfbefore rescuers found charged, knockingthe knives him. "I just started hoofing it," out of his hands, its mouth snapping and biting. Machado said. Shinn fired a w a r n i ng He spotted a deer as he shot, but it had no effect. walked and remembers wishMachado retrieved his ing he had seen it earlier. knives and ducked behind a T he J a c kson C o u n t y tree, swiping at the bear with Sheriff's Department found his blades. him near Elk Creek Road T he bear k n ocked t h e and took h i m t o A s a nte weapons aside and bit down Rogue Regional M e d ical on Machado's arm, then his Center for treatment. Machado's wounds required sevhand. "It just latched on. I just eral stitches and numerous started screaming," Machado cleanings of the bites. He left said. the hospital late Thursday When he yanked his hand night. back and started to s lide Shinn was found by resdown a slope, the bear bit cuers about an hour after him on the inside of his upper h is hunting p a rtner w a s leg and both tumbled down- transported. hill together. Machado said he plans to Machado reached the bot- be back at his job at Sportstom first, landing on his back, man's Warehouse in a few 40 to 50 feet belowwhere they days. He also plans to meet started. The bear hit next, with a plastic surgeon, who its back against Machado's will assess his injuries and chest. Machado w r apped address any potential nerve his arms around the bear's damage.
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Show your appreciation to your customers by thanld.ng them in a group space ad that vvill run
Nov. 22nd, Thanksgiving Day, the most-rend pepev o f the yenv! This special one page group ad will showcase your business along with a message of thanks to your customers.
Ad sizes are 3.33" x 2.751" and are only 8 9
in cl u d ing full coloy".
ONLY 18 SPOTS WILL BE AVAILABLE! Deadline for ad. spaceand. copy: Thursday, November 15, 2012 Publishes on Thursday, November 22nd
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1 dead, 1 injured in crash near Scio
An elderly woman died Saturday afternoon after her husband crashed the car he was driving into a tree along state Highway 226 east of Scio, state police said. Shirley James, 76, was in the passengerseatnextto her husband, Oliver James, when, for an unknown reason, the car traveled off the south side of the road and crashed headMan dies in crash on into a tree, according to a news release. near CoosBay Shirley James was critiA man died Sunday morn- cally injured in the accident ing after losing control of his and taken to Salem Hospital, vehicle and slamming into a where she was pronounced guardrail on state Highway dead. OliverJames, 79, was 241 near Coos Bay, police taken to a different hospital sard. with non-life-threatening inThe m a n , 30 - year-old juries. Neither were wearing Thomas Charles Bunch, from seat belts. North Bend, wa s d r iving State police are investigatnorth on the highway near ing the incident. — From wire reports Chandler Bridge at around
Weekly Arts & ••
2 a.m. when he lost control of the car, sliding sideways, striking several road signs and hitting the car's passenger side on the end of a guardr ail, according to a n e w s release. Bunch was taken to a hospital in Coos Bay where he later died from his injuries. He was driving with a suspended license at the time of the incident. State troopers are continuing to investigate the crash.
Contact your Bulletin Advertising Representative for more information Tonya McKiernan: 541-617-7865 email: tmckiernan@wescompapers.com
Nena Close: 541-383-0302 email: nclose@wescompapers.com
www.bendbulletin.com
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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erhaps nothing is so symbolic of Bend's growth in the last 13 years as the changes to its roads. Roundabouts and medians are common, providing better traffic flow and safer driving throughout the city. (c>~g. lDomm~
The first roundabout, the one at the intersection of Colorado Avenue and Southwest 14th Street, set the tone. All have been designed to be pleasing to the eye, landscaped traffic managers that not only make driving easier but the city more attractive. U nfortunately, u n less t h e y receive routine doses of maintenance, that attractiveness diminishes rapidly. Roundabouts got that dose this summer, thanks to the generosity of local businesses. But given the current state of the city's budget, it's no surprise that major and minor medians alike have become more notable for their ragtag appearance than for their spiffy landscaping. Now the city plans to do something about that. This month it will put nearly $46,000 into median landscaping. It's the first of several such projects that aim to make the medianslook good once again. More important, the landscaping projects will make it easier and less expensive for the city to keep medians attractive. Some will be planted with native species that require less maintenance and less water. Others, particularly narrower ones, may see even bigger changes
City officials believe spending relatively small amounts of their $9 million
road maintenance budget on new landscaping will both save money and keep medians looking good in the future. as plants are replaced with river rock or something similar. That's what has been used to divide the U.S. Highway 97 bypass east of Redmond; while it isn't green, it is attractive and taking care of it is relatively simple and inexpensive. City officials believe spending relatively small amounts of their $9 million road maintenance budget on new landscaping will both save money and keep medians looking good in the future. That budget is funded in part through the city's general fund and currently has a reserve that allows the work to begin. It's money worth spending. Bend prides itself on being an attractive place to visit, and medians overgrown with weeds are anything but.
IN MY VIEW
Election choice calls for a little skepticism By John j. Mathews oday's information overload — the curse of the electronic age — often tempts us to restrain our natural skepticism, instead making snap judgments just to shrink our to-do lists. One result, predictably, is the popularity of the term "buyer's remorse." There's no clearer example than the current election, in which the headline issue has been the economy, p r i m a ril y un e m ployment. Little wonder that both presidential candidates boast of w hat t hey've done in the past, while they paint rainbow-hued visions of what they will do in the future. One candidate even claims that, if elected, he will conjure up 12 million new American non-government jobs. Hearing t h is , a n u n e m ployed head-of-family can be excused for hoping the claim isn't just illusory. His bills are piling up, health insur-
ance has lapsed and mortgage payments are months inarrears. Only an obsidian heart could fault him for suspending his normal skepticism and casting his ballot for the spellbinder. But the spellbinder knows — and the unemployed worker tries not to remember — that American presidents can't do like Chancellor Hitler or Premier Stalin or Chairman Mao and simply issue a command that unemployment cease. In this country, a president has no power other than what's given him by the Constitution and laws enacted under it. Moreover, even if the Constitution were to be amended to grant a president sweeping new powers, he would still find himself confronted by the harsh realities of 21st-century economics. First, before World War II, most American jobs were understood to be for men, the major exceptions being schoolteachers,sales clerks, nurses and officeworkers. In those days, "full employment" essentially meant full employment for adult males, age 60 or under. But by the time Ronald Reagan had entered the White House in 1981, 43 percent of
American full-time jobs were being filled by women. And today, as this election approaches, women are filling more than 50 percent of those jobs. Nonetheless, any current office-seeker unwary enough to suggest this trend should be "corrected" would be dead meat. Other harsh realities of 21st century economics start with globalization. There is simply no prospect of the U.S. significantly closing the chasm between wage rates in our country and those in Southeast Asia, India and elsewhere. Inevitably, this has given rise to calls for protective tariffs, but experience following enactment of Smoot-Hawley in 1930 drowns out such talk, the most vigorous opposition coming, expectably, from manufacturers, farmers and others dependent on exporting their U.S. products to foreign markets. To counter cheap overseas labor, both presidential candidates have advocated more and bettereducation, especially in math and science, to better equip f uture A m erican workers, butthe speakers tend to gloss over the time lag required to accomplish results on any appreciable scale, a time lag further stretched out by our embarrassing shortage of instructors capable of teaching the requisite math and science. Of the candidates' proposals to offset other nations' cheap labor, the most ironic is their vision of vastly updated U.S. manufacturing plants, highly automated and r o botized. True, such factories could to some degree counter peon pay in foreign factories, but only by using technology in lieu of America's own labor. The illusions and deceptions debunked here will, if ignored, exact a price that can't be calculated until too late. In trying times, people often seek the shelter of their religion and the comfort of the true believer, but in choosing an American president the greatershelter and comfort are afforded by exercising our own natural skepticism. — John J. Mathewslives in Bend.
'TlSYES Y
M Nickel's Worth Vote for the issues
struggled to survive. I suggest that local business ownAn election is coming soon. I do ers ask themselves this question: hope everyonerealizeshow impor- What happens when a big-box store tant this election is to all of us. arrives in a small town'? Locally Wars have been fought over our owned businesses suffer. freedom. Unfortunately, local business ovmI was born in extreme poverty ers have been convinced that they and adopted by a wonderful family. I have more in common with multiworked my way through college. We millionaire and billionaire corporate Americans can accomplish what we executives than they have in comwant in life. mon with their employees and local Think before you v ote! Even customers. The truth is that your though you are Democrat or Republi- employees and customers are your can,vote for the issues.Vote because best friends, those who support your we are "the government, the taxpay- businesses by purchasing the goods ers." We all share one goal: freedom! and/orservices you provide. In realElizabeth R. Kelly ity, local-owned businesses have very Redmond little in common, economically or politically, with America's gigantic corporations. They are more than happy SupportConger to push you aside whenever it suits Over the past few months, I have their bottom line. been proud to volunteer for Jason I personally respect and admire Conger's campaign. Most campaigns local business owners, encouragfocus on media and fundraising at the ing their efforts in growing and exexpense ofthe grassroots eff ort be- panding their businesses against the cause it is difficult to motivate people overwhelming odds of the corporate to give up hours, days and weekends juggernauts. for a political campaign. Not Jason Dick Phay Conger. He has run and emphasized Prineville a community-based campaign; he invitesand encourages the members of Rules applyto electric bikes his community to get involved. Both of his campaigns for HD54 I am responding to a My Nickel's have had hundreds of different volun- Worth from Oct. 9. The individual teers. Men, women and children, all who sent in this article is not informed age ranges and political affiliations, about the rules and laws that apply to have come out in droves to support "pedal assist electric bicycles." The Conger. He has consistently sought first issue is that the DMV regulates to engage people with his campaign that they cannot go more than 20 and stressed that same community miles per hour on a flat surface with participation while he is in Salem. a 170-pound human aboard. Like any This approachisrare and refreshing. human-powered bicycle, it is possible He realizes that his role as our repre- to go faster thanthat, as we all witness sentative is to champion the needs of by road bikers daily here in beautiful our district and to promote a stronger Bend. They are not anything like a community. This "team effort" men- Vespa or moped that are powered by tality shows in the results. Whenever I gasoline motors that are noisy and go to make phone calls or visit homes, also pollute the air that we all breathe. I am always accompanied by 20-30 As for the "silently whizzing" issue, other people who believe in Conger as I do believe that automakers are all m uch asIdo.The atmosphere is elec- headed toward battery-powered cars tric and never boring or lethargic. that are very silent — like the Prius. We are lucky to have such a dy- Lastly, the lighting issue applies to namic local leader who brings people electric bikes as it does to all bikes together and puts forward solutions that are ridden at night, which require we can all believe in. We need Conger a front headlight and rear reflectors. in Salem fighting for our community. I recently attended a Commute OpI hope you will join me in supporting tions safety class that was provided at Conger for state representative. the electric bike shop Let it Ride here Michael Bird in Bend, and it covered all of the rules Bend of the road for bicycling. If more people here in Bend rode electric bikes for Support businessowners the very short distances that we have to get to and from work, we would I grew up in a small farming com- reduce the growing traffic issues that munity. Every business in town was are occurring and get people out for owned and operated by local resi- some exercise, not to mention the redents, including all the surrounding duction of the carbon footprint that farms. The service stations, bank, one persondriving in a carcreates. telephone and electric substations Dean Egertson were the only exceptions. Bend Later, my wife and I lived in a rural farmingcommunitywith apopulation Community center of 10,000. There were several locally needs help, donations owned grocery stores and numerous owner-operated bakeries, butchers, Positive editorials about Bend's fruit and vegetable shops, and conve- Community Center are a good thing, nience stores in the downtown busi- but to keep the doors open they need ness area as well as scatteredthrough- your time, your talents and your monout the community. Upon the arrival ey. After some restructuring, the new of two chain supermarkets, the major- executive director calledthosewho doity of these locally owned businesses nateregularlyby creditcard and every closed their doors; the few remaining one agreed to continue to give. Many
non-revenue-generating programs ended. Because of an impassioned plea by a teen at the community meeting, the board voted to keep Becca's Closet open. Now area students can borrow formal wear for free. So, the senior lunch program, Sunday's Feed the Hungry, Keep Them Warm and firewood programs, and Becca's Closet continue to serve those in need in our community. Volunteers are needed weekdays to cook and serve mealsto our seniors. On Sundays, volunteers are needed from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. (in two-hour shifts) to cook and serve meals for the hungry. Becca's Closetneeds teens and adults after school and Saturdays. Your money is needed too. Donations can be made directly or through the United Way. Personally, I designate my United Way contribution for the community center and the Latino Community Association, as my volunteer work with those organizations has shown me the powerful impact they make. We are all responsible for creating a community we want to live in. "Any society, any nation, is judged on the basis of how it treats its weakest members — the last, the least, the littlest." — Cardinal Roger Mahony
Mimi Graves Bend
Seek local, natural foods So, it seems as if our local dietitians support additives (food dyes, MSG, hormones, BPA from packag-
ing, etc.). Julie Hood Gonsalves, a dietitian in Bend, said, "In fact, the additives themselves are likely not harmful, but a diet with a lot of additives points to a diet high in processed foods. That is the problem." Gonsalves continues to say that our FDA ensures that our foods are safe, that things like nitrates are "naturally occurring" and that nitrites added to meats are safe. She does not differentiate that nitrates added to our industrialized meats are not naturally occurring. Gonsalves continues to talk about other additives that are known allergens, such as MSG. She states that the use of MSG can flavor food and help eliminate the use of salt. As a practicing nutritional therapeutic practitioner, I see chronic illness, inflammatory diseases and a
growing number of digestive dysfunction and food allergies that can be completely alleviated by purchasing local and naturally sourced foods and organic grass-fed meats. Eliminating foods with additives, dyes, artificial sweeteners, GMO grains and hormones can help improve the health of our chronically ill population. With our demands for getting healthier, the large industrial food suppliers will comply. When we see our National Dietitians Association and their lead sponsors (such as Kellogg's, McDonald's
and Coca-Cola) discussing calorie cutting and the elimination of all fats to improve the health of our country, we have to wonder whose side these dietitians are on.
GinaJacobson Bailey Bend
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012• THE BULLETIN
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WEST NEWS
BITUARIES
Eurasianauthor HanSuyin known or provocativewritings By Alisoo Lake The Washington Post
Robert Durell/ bos Angeles Times
A view of the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir and Hetch Hetchy Valleyfrom atop O'Shaughnessy Dam in Yosemite National Park in California. The group Restore Hetch Hetchy is trying to have the reservoir drained and the dam removed so that the valley and the Tuolumne River can return to the state it was in before the dam was finished in the 1920s.
anFranciscoto eci e
utureo Hetc Hetc • Reservoir in Yosemite National Park has provided water to city for 80 years By Bettina Boxall
one-third of the Hetch Hetchy water and sells the rest wholesale to Bay Area communities, including Palo Alto, Mountain View and Stanford University. Altogether, the Hetch Hetchy system supplies about 2.6 mil-
stations for electric vehicles. Los Angeles Times That its watersource clashes L OS ANGELES — O n with that green image has not lion people. "What is it about this that Tuesday, voters in San Fran- been lost on those who would cisco, one of the nation's most like to see Hetch Hetchy's glo- needs tobe fixed?" Wunderprogressive an d e n v i ron- riesresurrected from a watery man asked. "These are not mentally aware cities, will tomb. things we want to give up ... to "Here is this city by the bay make this very narrow group be asked to decide just how green they want to be. that seems to give thought to of environmental i nterests For nearly 80 years, the every cause imaginable ex- happy." city has been getting pristine cept wheretheir water comes A 2006 state report estimatSierra Nevada water piped from — much less that it's part ed that it would cost $3 billion from behind a dam it erected of killing a valley in one of the to $10 billion to remove the in a majestic glacial valley in world's great national parks," dam, restore the valley and Yosemite National Park. said David Mihalic, who was modify the water system to reThe 1913 passage of the Yosemite's s u p erintendent place lost storage and hydroRaker Act, which allowed the from 1999 to 2003 and is re- power. The authors said more city to turn Hetch Hetchy Val- tired from the National Park study was needed, but outlined ley into a 300-foot-deep res- Service. various options for changervoir, was one of the biggest Bounded by sheer graning the system and concluded defeats in America's youthful ite walls and streaked with there were "no fatal flaws in conservation movement. It cascading waterfalls, Hetch the restoration concept." has remained a wound that Hetchy has often been comnever completely healed, pe- pared to its famous sibling to Conflict and concern riodically prompting calls the south, Yosemite Valley. Proponents say much of to demolish O'Shaughnessy San Francisco's desire to dam the restoration money would Dam and restore a v alley the upper Tuolumne River and probably come from state and that John Muir called "one of flood the winding, seven-mile federal coffers. But San Frannature'srarest and most pre- length of Hetch Hetchy ignited cisco oNcials say draining cious mountain temples." a national fight a century ago Hetch Hetchy would increase A measure on San Francis- that played out in newspaper local utility costs in a numco's ballot asks voters if the editorials across the country ber of ways, driving up water city should develop an $8 mil- and ultimately in the halls of rates.Replacement power for lion blueprint to drain the val- Congress. the lost hydroelectric generaley and devise ways to make Muir a n d c o n servation- tion would be expensive; waup for the resulting loss of ists bitterly fought the dam, ter supplies would be less rehydropower and water stor- equating the flooding of Hetch liable and filtration would be age. If city voters say yes, they Hetchy with using a cathe- required because water would would decide in 2016 whether dral for a water tank. Propo- no longer be diverted directly to actually carry out the plan nents argued that the valley from Hetch Hetchy into the and empty Hetch Hetchy was little visited and that San conveyance system. Reservoir. Francisco — then the state's Restore Hetch Hetchy, the Proponents have an uphill premier city — couldn't get group that is promoting the battle. Virtually th e entire sufficient supplies elsewhere. ballot measure, says the state San Francisco political and What's more, they insisted, a cost estimates are inflated. It business establishment is ad- big lake would be prettier. also argues that San Francisamantly against the proposal. With a dam, the valley "will co owns and operates seven Former Mayor Dianne Fein- be asaccessible as iteverwas, other reservoirs in the sysstein, California's senior U.S. and far more attractive, for tem that could be managed to senator, says tearing down in one place a beautiful lake make up for much of the lost O'Shaughnessy "makes no will be substituted for an arid storage space. "We're not saying there's sense." Mayor Edwin Lee has plain," declared the Los Ancalled the idea "stupid" and geles Times, which that same zero impact of what we're "insane." The Board of Super- year celebrated the arrival of looking at and zero makevisors opposes it and the Bay Owens Valley water in L.A. up required," said Spreck O'Shaughnessy Dam was Rosekrans, the organization's Area Council, the r egion's leading business group, is finished in 1923 but the net- policy director, who co-auheading the campaign to de- work of pipes and tunnels that thored a2004restoration study feat the proposal. transported supplies 160 miles when he was working for the "It's the height of f olly," from Hetch Hetchy down the Environmental Defense Fund. said Jim W underman, the slopes of the Sierra Nevada, "But it's just so much less than Bay Area Council's president. across the Central Valley and people seem to think." "Some things are better off the coastal range didn't make By adjusting o perations put aside and this is one of its first deliveries to San Fran- of some its other reservoirs, those things." cisco until 1934. Rosekrans says, in most years The mountain water is so San Francisco would l ose Environmental pride clean that to this day, the city no more than 5 percent of its San Francisco prides itself is oneof the few urban areas water delivery capability. In on its environmental record. It in the country that doesn't dry years, it would lose a fifth. was the first city in the nation have to filter its water supply. The city could make that up to ban plastic grocery bags The conveyancesystem isfed by stepping up the use of local and boasts that it diverts a by gravity, generating clean supplies such as groundwater greaterportion of waste from hydropower that r uns San and recycled water,the restore landfills than any other city in Francisco's cable cars, lights group says. The city currently North America. It has hybrid municipal buildings and city doesn't use any recycled suptaxicabs and is expanding its streets. plies, although it plans to do network of public charging San Francisco uses about so.
Han Suyin, a prolific Eurasian author who generated controversy with her hagiographic view of China's Cultural Revolution and who may be m ost rememberedforher bestselling semi-autobiographical novel that inspired the Hollywood melodrama "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing," died Nov. 2 at her home in Lausanne, Switzerland. She was 95. Her death was confirmed by her daughter, Yung Mei Tang. The China-born Han
By Norimitsu Onishi
have beentaking on what they New Yorh Times News Service refer to as the "Chevron Man." RICHMOND, Calif. — This But this election season, city small, blue-collar city best leaders are fighting on two known for its Chevron refin- fronts, against not only Big ery has become the unlikely Oil but also Big Soda, as they vanguard for anti-corporate, like to call their foes. If voters left-wing activism in recent here approve a proposal on years. Tuesday's ballot, Richmond It b ecame t h e l a r gest will become the first city in the American city to be led by a U.S. to add a tax on businesses Green Party mayor, who was that sell soda and other sweetre-elected two years ago even ened drinks. thoughthe oil giantbankrolled F ierce campaigning h a s rival efforts with $1.2 million. brought in the kind of money Social activists belonging to rarely seen in a community the Richmond Progressive of 104,000 people. Soda comAlliance gained control of the panies have funneled $2.5 City Council, from where they million into efforts to defeat
the tax, while supporters have raised only $69,000. In it s c o ntinuing f i ght, Chevron has again spent $1.2 million, this time to oppose two council candidates critical of the company and to support threeconsidered supportive. Richmond, though, is not united. T h e tw o - pronged battle has sharpened the differences between the Richmond Progressive Alliance and leadersofthe city'sgrowing Hispanic population and the once-dominant black establishment. Many in t hose groups oppose the soda tax and side with Chevron.
"I write as an Asian, with all the pentup emotions of my people. What I say will
annoy many people
who prefer the more conventional myths brought back by writers on the Orient. All I can say is that I try to tell the truth. Truth, like surgery, worked many years FEAT URED the crossroads of cul- may hurt, but it cures." as a physician, but her Q g p writing provided her most enduring, complicated and provocative legacy. She published almost two dozen novels, nonfiction books and memoirs — and countless essays for mainstream newspapers and magazines — that were often set against the backdrop of historical and generational upheaval in Asia. H er career a s a wr i t e r spanned World War II, China's revolution, the Korean War, C ommunism's rise and t h e decline of colonialism in East Asia, and included panegyric biographies of Chinese leaders such as Mao Zedong and Chou Enlai. In her writing and frequent lecturing, most of which took place during the Cold War, Han cultivated an image of someone capable of unraveling and demystifying for Western audiences the political and social developments of the East. At Beijing's Yenching University in the mid-1930s, she studied alongside many who formed the first and second generations of China's Communist party leaders in China. "Every year the school used to put on the 'Messiah' and it's very funny when I look at some of the people I know in China today, important Communist Party members, and to remember them sitting there in the choir with me singing the 'Messiah' is quite wonderful," she told The Washington Post in 1982.
Literarysensati on Many of her books drew h eavily from her ow n d r amatic biography. Several of her works, including "My House Has Two Doors" (1980), explored her upbringing and the pressuresand conflicts of her half-Chinese and half-Belgian heritage. Her first book, "Destination Chungking" (1942), set against the Sino- Japanese war, was about her first marriage to a general in the Chinese nationalist army, who was later killed in combat. She became an international literary sensation with "A Many-Splendored Thing," published in 1952 when she was a widow raising a daughter and working at a Hong Kong clinic. The book was based on her romance with Ian Morrison, a married war correspondent who in 1950 became one of the first journalists killed in the Korean War. The tale of forbidden love, likened by reviewers to "Romeo and Juliet," was also politically topical, mixing revolution and romance with news
making headlines in Hong Kong, China and Korea. The 1955 film version, "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing,"
DEATHS
California citysavorsrole in soda-tax fight
featured two of th e biggest stars in Hollywood, William H olden and Jennifer Jones. It also spawned an Oscar-winning, if maudlin, theme song by Sammy Fain and Paul Francis Webster. A daytime TV soap opera, based on the film, ran on CBS in the late 1960s and early 1970s. "Han Suyin encompasses three generations of audiences in China," Hailin Zhou, a professor at Villanova University's Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies, wrote in an e-maiL "She was a writer at
ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Milt Campbell, 78: The first African-American to win the Olympic decathlon, in 1956, he went on to play professional football and become a motivational speaker. Died Saturday at his home in Gainesville, Ga., after a battle with prostate cancer. L ebbeus Woods, 72: A n experimental architect who inspired colleagues and architecture students with radically inventive designs and installations that evoked futuristic worlds and cityscapes. Died Oct. 30 in Manhattan. — From wire reports
tures, past and prese nt; individual a n d nation; and different
— Han Suyin, in the early 1950s
ideologies." Today, Zhou wrote,"Her novels are often listed as emblems of multiculturalism, postmodernism, and post-colonialism."
'One sentence, one word' Han's professional life as a doctor took her to Malaya during the Emergency, the name given to the conflict throughout the 1950s between military forces in the British protectorate and a Communist guerrilla insurgency. A committed antiimperialist whose books conveyed a far-left partisanship, she wasnonetheless married at the time to a police officer in the British special forces. As a prominent writer who traveled to China while it was l argely walled off f rom t h e world during the 1950s and 1960s, Han was widely seen as having failed to describe the horrors of Mao's disastrous economic and political schemes. In the 1970s, Han called the Cultural Revolution, in which m illions perished o r w e r e purged, a "creative historical undertaking," a phrase for which she was pilloried as the extentof the suffering became more widely known. She was slow to acknowledge publicly the a t rocities c ommitted in t h e n ame o f revolution and stopped short of criticizing Mao. She devoted two laudatory volumes to his life and place in China's history, "The Morning Deluge" (1972) and "Wind in the Tower"
(1976).
"I'm not going to change one sentence, one word," she told The New York Times in 1988 when asked if she wished to change language in the books. Han was born Rosalie Matilda Kuanghu Chou on Sept. 12, 1917, in Sinyang, a city in China's eastern Henan province. She later changed her middle name to Elizabeth, the name she preferred. Her parents met in Brussels, where her Chinese father studied engineering.Her mother, a Belgian, returned with him to China, where he constructed railways. Starting in the late 1930s, Han studied medicine in Belgium and in London, when she married Tang Pao-huang, a military attache to Chiang KaiShek. They adopted a daughter, Yung Mei. In 1947, Tang was killed in Manchuria while fighting Communists. Han completed her medical studies at the University of London, migrated to Hong Kong with her daughter in 1949,and completed her residency in obstetrics.
In 1952, Han married Leon Comber, a British policeman. The couple moved toMalaya, where she worked in a hospital and opened an anti-tuberculosis clinic. Her years in Malaya were covered in her book "And
the Rain My Drink" (1956), which a Time magazine reviewer drubbed for its stock portraits of the whites and a tendencyto gloss over the unsavory traits of the Communists. The marriage to Comber ended in divorce and in the late 1950s Han married Vincent Ratnaswamy, an Indian military engineer. They lived together in Bangalore, Hong Kong and Lausanne before his death in 2003. Han quit medicine in 1963, preferring to lecture, travel and write full time. If some reviewers and i nterviewers found Han and her books confounding and perhaps troubling, she seemed perfectly happy to live with that exasperation. "I write as an Asian, with all the pent-up emotions of my people," she said in the early 1950s. "What I say will annoy many people who prefer the more conventional myths brought back by w r iters on the Orient. All I can say is that I try to tell the truth. Truth, like surgery, may hurt, but it cures." Besides Yung Mei Tang, of New York, survivors include a sister, a granddaughter and three great-grandchildren.
Weekly Arts 5 Entertainment In
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B6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
F O R ECA S T Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.
l l a
Today:1 Sunny.
Tonight: Mostly clear.
CHANNE
LOW
Kxoz.com
67 WEST Look for sunny to partly cloudy and mild conditions.
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Seasideo 56/51 • CannonPeach
66/48
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61/44
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64/47
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62/43
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63/41•
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65/36
63/45
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65/41
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62/39
57/34
•
Chemult 62/38
66/ 8
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66/43
5jiver Lake
65/36
Frenchgle 72/39
Rome
66/39
• Klamath
Ashland
64/52
Roseburg
67/35
• 70/42
• Brookings
• 28o
Fields•
• Lakeview
FallS ezn3
64/42
Lakeview
McDermitt
63/41
66/34
72/32
ancouver • Calgary 55/46 4QS 55/29 oseattle •
Saskatoon 47/30
Winnipe 37/32
ortland 62/49
60s
Thermal, Calif.
• 10'
•.
46/35
RaPid City
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Columbus
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FRONTS d 4 d x d >
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59
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Monterrey 906
La Paz 85/71
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrise today...... 648 a.m. MOOn phaSeS SunsettodaY......449p.m,
p i r st Full
Last New
Sunset tomorrow... 4:48 p.m. Moonrisetoday...10:33 p.m. Nov 6 Nov.13 Nov 20 Nov. 28 Moonsettoday 1210 pm
Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp
Monday Hi/Lo/W
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....8:43 a.m...... 5:31 p.m. Venus......3:51 a.m...... 3:36 p.m. Mars......10:05 a m 6 46pm Jupiter......617 p m...... 9 28 am. Satum......5:49 a.m...... 429 p.m. Uranus.....3:11 p.m...... 3:30 a.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 66/39 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........74m1949 Monthtodate.......... 0.01" Record low.......... 4 in 1935 Average month todate... 0.1 3" Average high.............. 53 Year to date............ 7.04" Averagelow ..............30 A verageyeartodate..... 7.90"
6arometricpressureat 4 p.m30.35 Record24 hours ...0.32 in1938 *Melted liquid equivalent
FIRE INDEX
WATER REPORT
Tuesday Bend,westofHwy 97.....Low Sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central Hi/Lo/W Bend, eastof Hwy.97......Low La Pine...............................Low Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as
Redmond/Madras........Low Prinevine..........................Low a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Astoria ........61/55/0.16....60/46/pc . ...56/46/sh Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme Reservoir Acre feet C a p acity Baker City...... 63/29/0.00....66/36/pc . ....63/35/s To report a wildfire, call 911 Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 35,543...... 55,000 Brookings......71/55/0.00.....64/52/< . ...56/51/pc Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 132,017..... 200,000 6urns.......... 63/29/0.00.....66/33/s . ....65/32/s Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 72,837...... 91,700 Eugene........74/57/0.00....61/44/p<. ...59/43/pc Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 16,592 . . . . 47,000 Klamath Falls .. 66/30/000 ....67/33/s ... 67/35/s The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 82,193..... 153,777 Lakeview...... 66/28/0.00 ....66/34/s . ... 66/38/s R iver flow St at i o n Cubic ft./sec La Pine........67/39/0.00.....64/40/s . ...64/33/pc the need for eye and skin protection. Index is Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 254 Medford....... 73/49/0.00.....70/42/s . ....67/46/s for sol t noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 250 Newport....... 63/55/0.03....62/46/pc . ...58/46/sh Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 23 LO MEDIUM HIGH gggg North Bend..... 70/57/0.00....65/51/pc ....60/51/pc Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 148 Ontario........62/38/0.00....66/40/pc . ....64/39/s 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 687 Pendleton...... 69/49/0.00....68/45/pc ....67/44/pc Deschutes RiverAt 6enham Falls ..... . . . . . 813 Portland .......66/57/0.00....62/49/pc . ...59/47/sh Crooked RiverAbove PrineviBe Res.. ... . . . . . 37 Prineville....... 66/41/0.00.....64/45/s . ...66/40/pc Crooked RiverBelow PrineviHeRes. .... . . . . 65.6 Redmond....... 70/38/0.00....68/40/pc . ....69/40/s Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 6.65 Roseburg.......76/55/0.00..... 66/48/f . ....64/47/< Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 148 Salem ....... 73/57/000 ...62/45/p< " 59/44/p < Wv Sisters.........66/39/0.00.....65/43/s.....65/37/pc ~YLOIN Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM The DaHes......68/51/0.00....65/46/pc.....64/45/pc • or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
2
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TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
o www m (in the 48 contiguous states):
41 22
Legend Wweather, Pcp precipitation,s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze,shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday'sOH extremes
HIGH LOW
46 26
IPOLLEN COUNT
• 76'
69/35
Paisley
Chiloquin
Medford
•
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
Chr i stmas Vagey
64/33
rants Pass zold
HIGH LOW
56 27
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
•
• Brothers 64/4o •
Roseburg
HIGH LOW
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through 4 pm.
66/oe
' *** * '* ++
W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms Ram Flurnes Snow
Ice
this (number) of people come which does not have a com-
out is truly incredible," FischContinued from Bl bach said. On S u nday, C r a nksgivS tephanie Yenne, 41, o f ing participants received a Bend, participated i n th e map and a list of items and C ranksgiving ride with h er the nearby stores at which to family, including daughters JJ, purchase them. The shopping 10, and Lucia, 8. "It was really list included sugar, nutrition fun, and I'm trying to think of bars, batteries, fruit snacks, ways to get more people to do lip balm, coffee, powdered it next year," Yenne said. She creamer, tuna and toilet paper. said the ride was a great event The event started and ended for families. at GoodLife Brewing Co. on Although Bethlehem Inn acSouthwest Century Drive in cepts financial contributions Bend. More than 50 adults and on its website, there are many kids participated in the event. ways to help. For example, the Fischbach said organizers inn can always Use clothing handed out 50 packets, many donations, Fischbach s aid. of them to f amilies, so the Another way fo r p eople to number of participants was help is by preparing a dinner probably closer to 100. uTO see and bringing it to the shelter,
Exchange
ing the plans, said Rocky King, the organization's executive Continued from B1 director. Consumers will see Christofferson hopes a wide plans rated asbronze, silver, range of people from the region gold or platinum leveL will attend, including smallThe effort must be ready to business owners, individuals, launch in roughly 11 months, insurance agents and health as the open enrollment period care professionals. for the exchange is to start "These are big decisions that Oct. L are going to effect everyone in This week's meetings are Oregon," she said. the CoverOregon board'sfirst Cover Oregon is charged forayeastof the Cascades. But with creating an exchange that King said he expects it will not will be a central marketplace be the last time. One of Cover where individuals and small O regon's chief concerns atthis businesses can compare and point is making sure the state's purchase health i n s urance residents and small-business plans from a variety of compa- owners are in the loop. nies. They will be able to access This is particularly true for that marketplace online, by rural areas, King said, where phone or through an insurance the numbers of people without agent or a locally based group. health insurance tend to be As part of t h e exchange, higher. "Right now we're reaching Cover Oregon will also be rat-
mercial kitchen. Bethlehem Inn is trying to educate more
young peopleand young families in the community about its work and the need for volunteers and donations. "Today's event a c hieved that, as did the Perfect Pair," Fischbach said, referring to the food and beer tasting event at Deschutes Brewery l ast month, which benefitted the inn. nWe're trying to get more awareness in the community, because we do rely so heavily on private donations." For more information about B ethlehem Inn, v i sit w w w .bethleheminTLorg. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrudCmbendhulletin.com
out to a lot of community organizations and community partners on how we're going to ... get the message oktt," he said. Cover Oregon is also presently developing a customer service center and working with insurance carriers ontheir participation in the exchange. The details of the health plans to be offeredhaven't yet been presented. Area r esidents attending Wednesday's event should expect a panel that will first talk about how the exchange is expected to work and then answer questions. "It's an opportunity not only for us to be able to share with them," Said King, ubut fOr US tO be able to listen to them." —Reporter: 541-617-7828, hhagemeier@bendbulletinocom
Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......71/48/0 27..74/47/pc.. 77/49/s Grandlapids....42/30/0 00...45/29/s. 46/36/sh RapidCity.......60/30/000..62/42/pc. 59/35/pc Savannah.......85/56/0.00 ..69/5epc...57/42/t Akron..........39/34/000...44/28/s.47/31/pc Green Bay.......43/25/0.00...44/30/s. 44/33/rs Reno...........73/37/0.00...72/39/s.. 75/40/s Seattle..........63/55/0.08 ..60/48/pc. 55/45/sh Albany......... 44/35/000...44/24/s .. 45/25/s Greensboro......56/41/0 00... 54/37/s .. 49/34/c Richmond.......56/43/0.00 ..52/32/pc.51/36/pc SiouxFalls.......45/30/0.10... 45/36/c. 55/30/pc Albuquerque.....71/37/0.00...68/41/s .. 71/42/s Harnsburg.......44/42/0.00...47/29/s .. 45/32/s Rochester, NY....37/34/0.00 ..40/26/pc.. 43/30/s Spokane........57/47/0.01 ..60/44/pc. 60/43/sh Anchorage......30/18/000 ..22/11/pc .. 24/14/s Hartford CT.....52/35/0 00...45/26/s .. 44/29/s Sacramento......75/49/0.00... 81/54/s .. 80/53/s Springfield, MO ..61/34/0.00.. 56/40/sh. 57/38/pc Atlanta.........72/57/000 ..64/49/pc.56/43lsh Helena..........60/46/0.00...65/41/c. 64/41/pcSt. Louis.........52/31/0 00 ..48/39/sh .52/38/pc Tampa..........78/64/0.00 ..82/64/pc...79/57/t Atlantic City.....50/31/0.00 ..50/32/pc.. 51/45/s Honolulu........83/71/0.00...84/72/s .. 85/72/s Salt Lake City....66/40/0.00... 66/43/s .. 71l45ls Tucson..........87/53/0.00...88/54/s .. 90/54/s Austin..........82/5$/0.00... 81/47/t .. 76/44/s Houston ........83/60/0.00... 82/56/t .. 75/52/s SanAntonio.....83/61/0.02... 82/54/t .. 78/52/s Tulsa...........69/36/0.00...65/38/c. 67/41lpc Baltimore .......51/33/000...48/30/s .. 47/34/s Huntsville.......63/47/0.00...60/41/c. 54/39/pcSanDiego.......87/56/0.00... 84/60/s.. 79/61/s Washington, OC.53/38/0.00... 49/35/s .. 49/35/s 6illings.........60/48/000...65/42/c. 64/40/pc Indianapolis.....45/30/0.00...47/30/s. 51/39/pcSanFrancisco....76/55/0.00... 80/59/s.. 78/56/s Wichita.........68/32/000 ..61l36/pc. 73/42/pc Birmingham .. 68/51/0.01 ...66/47/c. 59/43/pc Jackson, MS.... 69/55/080 .. 68/47/t .. 67/43/s SanJose........79I51/000.. 86/56/s.. 78/52/s Yakima.........63/43/000 63/40/pc. 61/40/pc Bismarck........34/30/0.11 ..46/35/pc. 48/28/pc Jacksonvile......84/54/0.00..73/57/pc...70/49/t SantaFe........66/29/0.00... 65/34/s .. 67/37/s Yuma...........92/63/0.00...92/62/s.. 92/62/s Boise...........65/41/000 ..67/42/pc .. 67/42/s Juneau..........42/39/0 25... 41/35/r...39/29/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........53/40/000...47/31/s.. 45/34/s Kansas City......61/33/000 ..52/42/sh. 61/39/pc BndgeportCT....54/38/000...49/32/5 .. 47/36/s Lansing.........39/28/000...43/28/s. 44/35/pc Amsterdam......46/36/000 51/40/sh47/4vsh Mecca..........84/82/000 .97I76/pc. 96/75/pc Buffalo.........36/33/0.01 ..40/26/pc.. 43/33/s Las Vegas.......81/53/0.00... 81/57/s .. 81/56/s Athens..........75/58/0.00... 74/6ec. 79/68/pc Mexico City .....66/54/1.35... 65/53/t 62/45/t Burlington,VT....40/36/001 ..40/21/pc.. 39/25/s Lexington.......51/33/000 ..52/34/pc. 56/38/pc Auckland........59/54/0.00... 62/52/c.61/54/pc Montreal........39/36/0.00 .. 38/27/pc.. 32/24/c Caribou,ME.....42/34/002..37/19/pc.. 35/22/s Lincoln..........63/32/000...49/34/c. 59/31/pc Baghdad........99/70/0 00.. 92/72/pc. 90/71/pc Moscow........45/41/000 ..41/35/sh. 42/35/sh CharlestonSC...83/54/042 ..67/51/pc...57/44/t Little Rock.......63/47/0 00..62/43/sh. 61/42/pc Bangkok........95/81/0.00... 93/80/t...95/80/t Nairobi.........61/61/000 ..76I59/pc...78/58/t Charlotte........64/44/000...59/41/s. 50/36/sh LosAngeles......87/55/0 00... 85/61/s .. 78/61/s Beiling..........41/36/0 00 .. 45/34/pc. 55/34/pc Nassau.........81/63/0.00... 79/70/t.. 78/71/c Chattanooga.....65/48/001 ..62/43/pc. 56/40/sh Louisvile........54/35/000...54/36/s. 56/40/pc Beirut..........81/70/0.00... 83/70/c.. 79/68/s New Delhi.......77/61/0.00...86/66/s .. 85/65/s Cheyenne.......55/33/000..61/38/pc.64/38/pc MadisonWl.....48/28/000...45/30/s. 45/31/sh Berlin...........50/39/0.00...48/40/c .. 46/36/c Osaka..........63/43/0.00 ..67/55/sh. 63/53/sh Chicago.........48/33/000...46I34/s. 47/37/sh Memphis....... 62/44/00060/43lsh.59/44/pc Bogota .........66/45/0.00 65/47/sh. .. 68/50lsh Oslo............39/36/0.00 ..36/21/pc.. 30/26/c Cincinnati.......51/30/000...50I31/s. 52/38/pc Miami..........82/62/000..81/67lpc...82/64/t Budapest........64/41/000 .. 63/41/sh.57/43/pc Ottawa .........39/34/0.00..38/22/pc.. 34/24/c Cleveland.......40/36/001 ..45/31/pc. 46/36/pc Miliaauke......445/30/.00...,44/34/. 46/35/sh Buenos Aires.....81/57/0.00 ..85/68/pc...86/67/t Paris............$4/41/0.00..52/41/sh.49/37lpc ColoradoSpnngs.66/33/000..63/38/pc.. 69/39/s Minneapolis.....45/30/000...47/39lc. 49/34/sh CaboSanLucas ..86/63/000 ..88/70/pc. 88/68/pc Rio de Janeiro....81/73/0.00... 81/69/t...79/6it Columhia,MO...53/30/000 ..47/39/sh. 55/36/pc Nashville........58/41/0 00.. 56/38/sh. 56/41/pc Cairo...........88/68/0 00.. 84/65/pc.. 84/65/s Rome...........70/61/0.00..70/56/sh.. 65/55/c Columhia,SC....79/50/0.17..64/43/pc. 52/40/sh New Orleans.....80/64/0.48... 75/56/t .. 72/51/s Calgary.........43/28/0.00... 55/29/s .. 30/20/c Santiago........84/55/0.00...82/62/s.. 8460/s Columbus, GA...79/54/000 ..70/51/pc. 59/44/pc New York.......51/39/0.00...49/34ls .. 48/36/s Cancun.........84/63/0.00..83/74/pc.83/71/pc SaoPaulo.......73/63/0.00... 80/59/t. 79/58/pc Columbus, OH....46/32/0.00...47/30/s. 49/34/pc Newark,Nl......53/38/0.00...49/32/s .. 48/35/s Dublin..........46/41/0.00..47/36/pc.. 49/44/c Sapporo ........48/46/0.00..51/47/pc. 51/46/sh Concord,NH.....49/38/000...45/21/s.. 44/25/s Norfolk,VA......50/46/000..51/38/pc. 52/46/pc Edinburgh.......45/27/0 00.. 46/33/pc. 47/44/sh Seoul...........59/43/000..52/40/sh. 51/45/sh Corpus Christi....85/67/000 ..88/64/pc. 81/56/pc Oklahoma City...70/41/000 ..68/4llpc. 70/42/pc Geneva.........61/46/000..49/43/sh. 52/39/sh Shanghai........63/50/0.00...57/48/s.. 59/54/s DallasFtWorth...75/54/000..76/47/pc..70/50/s Omaha.........59/40/000..48/36/sh.57/33/pc Harare........ not availahle ..84/56/pc.. 87/59/s Singapore.......90/75/0.00...88/79/t...89/79/t Dayton .........43/28/000...48/30/s. 49/36/pc Orlando.........82/55/0.00 ..81/59/pc...79/53/t HongKong......82/72/0.00... 76/73/c. 78/74/pc Stockholm.......39/32/0.00...39/35/c. 40/29/pc Denver....... 62/33/0.00..65/39/pc.. 69/38/s Palmsprings.... 95/61/0.00...95/64/s.. 96/63/s Istanbul.........68/59/0.00 ..69/64/pc.. 74/63/c Sydney..........73/57/0.00...77/65/c.. 82/62/c Des Moines......50/39/001..49/39/sh. 55/34/pc Peoria..........49/28/0.00..48/34lsh. 50/35/sh lerusalem.......80/66/0.00 ..79/63/pc.. 76/60/s Taipei...........81/70/0.00..74/66/pc. 71/68/pc Detroit..........41/28/000 ..45/32/pc. 46/39/pc Philadelphia.....48/37/0.00...49/33/s .. 48I36/s Johannesburg....77/50/000 ..81/65/pc.86/58/pc TelAviv.........84/66/0.00...83/66/c.. 82/63/s Duluth..........38/24/000..40/34/pc. 43/32/sh Phoenix.........91/59/000...91/62/s.. 92/61/s Lima...........68/63/0.00... 73/62/s .. 71/61/s Tokyo...........63/54/0.00..65/50/sh.61/46/sh ElPaso..........78/49/000...75/46/s.. 77/49/s Pittsburgh.......38/35/0 00...44/27/s. 48/32/pc Lisbon..........61/50/000 63/53/sh 62/49/sh Toronto.........36/32/000...37/26/s.. 40/34/c Fairbanks........l6/13/000...-1/ 14/c .. -2/20/s Portland,ME.....54/41/000...45/26/s .. 44/2B/s London.........48I34/0 00 .. 47/35/pc. 48/41l pc Vancouver.......57/52/0.00..55/46/pc...51/46/r Fargo...........40/33/000...41/34/c.45/29/pc Providence......56/36/0.00...47/26ls ..44/32/s Madrid .........57/52/0.31 .. 58/44/pc.. 56/41/s Vienna..........57/37/000..51l43lsh. 55/38/sh Flagstaff........64/24/000...65/29/5.. 66/29/s Raleigh.........55/42/000...54/36/s. 51/35/sh Manila..........90/77/000..90/76/pc. 87/75/pc Warsaw.........52/43/0.00...53/42/r.. 48/38/c
WASHINGTON
Port Orchardtree removal causesconcern By Brynn Grimley
and now provides an unobstructed view into the batting P ORT ORCH A R D , cages and ball fields. Wash. — There's a gaping Trees also were t h inned hole along Lund Avenue around the perimeter of the where a family o f e ver- park along Lund and Jackgreen trees once stood. son where a pedestrian path Their removal, to prewill connect the two park enpare for a skatepark, has trances. The path will increase some people upset and has safety for people using the left others with a s ense park, allowing them to connect of "shock and dismay" at to amenities without walking seeing such a barren area. along the shoulder of the heavMany didn't know w o rk ily traveled roads. was beginning so soon on Concerns that more trees the skatepark project. were logged than originally "When I saw it, I didn't planned are wrong, said counrealize it'd be l ike that," Port Orchard resident Debbie Davis said. "I'm kind of upset because it takes so long to grow them back. It's a park, shouldn't it be protected'?" Davis passes the park regularly and said she likes living in Kitsap because of its trees. She prefers a view of the trees to a view of the water any day, she said. 4 I "I just hope they don't L take too many trees," Davis said. "I don't want to see the
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just love seeing the trees." The work going on at South Kitsap Regional Park started a week ago when in to clear the trees from a section of the county park that spans sections of Lund and Jackson avenues. The clearing was done near the Lund entrance to the park
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ty Parks and Recreation Director Jim Dunwiddie. The county has a detailed blueprint that m a pped out which trees shoUld be removed, he said. A total of 105 trees were marked for removal to make room for the first phase of the skatepark — the bowl — and the path. Sixty percent of the total design of the skatepark will be completed with this project Dunwiddie said A county parks project manager has been at the park every day to make sure the right trees were removed, he said.
Kitsap Sun (Bremerton, Wash.)
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
FLU SEASON
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As this year's flu season gathers steam, doctors and pharmacists have a fresh stock of vaccines to offer their patients. The vaccines usually provide strong protection against the virus — but only for a while. Vaccines for other diseases typically work for years or decades. With the flu, though, next fall it will be time to get another dose. "In the history of vaccinology, it's the only one we update year to year," said Gary Nabel, director of the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Al-
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Using light detection and ranging, or lidar, technology,the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries created this image of Hole in the Ground in Lake County.
SCIENCE fl uvaccine was introduced in the 1950s. But a flurry of recent studies on the virus has brought some hope for a change. Nabel and other flu experts foresee a time when seasonal flu shots are a thing of the past, replaced by long-lasting vaccines. "That's the goal: two shots when you're young, and then boosters later in life. That's where we'd like to go," Nabel said. He predicted that scientists would reach that goal before long — "in our lifetime, for sure, unless you're 90 years old," he said. Such a vaccine would be a great help in the fight against seasonal flu outbreaks, which kill an estimated 500,000 people a year. But in a review to be published in the journal Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses, Sarah Gilbert of Oxford University argues that they could potentially have an even greater benefit. Periodically, a radically newtype of flu has evolved and rapidly spread around the world. A pandemic in 1918 is estimated to have killed 50 million people. With current technology, scientists would not have a vaccine for a new pandemic strain until the outbreak was well under way. An effective universal flu vaccine would already be able to fight it. Se Fluvaccine/C6 Thinkstock
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• Geology group uses lidar technology to mapout 3-D imagesof the landscapeto aid in research By Rachael Rees • The Bulletin
"(Lidar) measures the
lanes shooting laser light flew back and forth across the Deschutes Basin to create recently released maps that reveal the history of Central Oregon's volcanoes and the state of its forests. The technology, light detection la t est data captures an additional and ranging,or lidar,measures 3 84,000 acres ofthe Three Sisand detects objects by sending ters W i lderness, the crest of the 100,000to200,000 pulses oflaser Cascades and Newberry Crater, light per second to the ground, Madin said. capturing millions of data points, The d e partment has been colaccording to the Oregon Delecti n g lidar images in Oregon partment of Geology and since 2004, according to Mineral Industries. Using Madin. The majority of the '+ computers, scientists create data is obtained through the 3-D images of the landscape ~ , ~ Oreg o n Lidar Consortium, ~ s > an Oregon Department that are accurate within 6 inches. of Geology and Mineral
funded by the U.S. Geological Survey and the Deschutes National Forest, began in July 2011 and took about three months, Madin said. New lidar mapping of a portion of the Ochoco National Forest, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument and the surrounding area of Burns was also released recently. The public can view the maps through the geology and mineral "It measures the elevation TE C H Ind u stries-led group of, industries department website. of everything: trees, people, mostly, government agenUsing lidar data, Madin said, cars, houses ... Then we use cies that pay to gather lidar geologists, lidar specialists, geocomputer filters to remove everyd a t a across the state. graphic information system anathing but the ground, and we get It co s ts about $1 an acre to map, lysts, cartographers and a graphthese spectacular images," said Madi n said. ic designer created the newest Ian Madin, chief scientist at the About 15 million acres, equivamaps. Those include the new Portland-based geology and minl e n t to 25 percent of the state, Three Sisters Geologic Guide eral industries department. have been mapped in Oregon so and RecreationMap, which the Slivers of the Deschutes Basin fa r , Madin said. agency released Thursday. had already been mapped, but the The m ost recent mapping, SeeImaging /C6
elevation of everything: trees, people, cars, houses
... Then we use computer filters to remove everything but the ground, and we get these spectacular images." — lan Madin, chief scientist, Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries
"It's like building ajigsaw puzzle, except you have to create the pieces of the puzzle. Each pieceis a lava flow and represents an eruption, so I'm trying to identify the different eruptive events that have occurred at the volcano." — Julie Donnelly-Nolan, U.S. Geological Survey, discussing the Newberry Volcano
Wolf hunting hasprotectors worried •W isco nsinand Minnesotabeginseasonsdevisedto manage reboundingpopulations, but lawsuits arepending By Steven Yaccino New York Times News Service
GREENDALE, Wis. — When people like Nancy Jo Dowler started raising wolves here decades ago, the ani-
mals were rare in Wisconsin and
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consin is three weeks into its first wolfhunting season, sanctioned by the state l e g i slature in April. Minnesota begin its fi r s t registered wolf hunt recently. The legalization of wolf hunting in both states was devised to man-
nearly extinct across the country. age a rebounding wolf populaNow the president of the Timber tion after the federal government Wolf Preservation Society, Dowler, stopped listing the species as en66, cares for five full-grown puredangered in the region last year. breds. Shebottle-fedthemaspups GRE E N Bot h h a ve d rawn l awsuits from and howls with them at passing local and national animal rights sirens. groups that fear the undoing of The other day she gave one breath n e a r l y f our decades of workto restore a mints through a hole in the fence, pass- h e a lthy number of wolves. "We've spent a lot as a nation to proing it directly from her lips to his. Hers seems a fairy-tale world comt e c t t h em," said Wayne Pacelle, presipared with the legal dogfights occurring d e n t of the Humane Society, which in beyond these kennels. Out there, Wis- O c t ober announced a lawsuit against
the federal Fish and Wildlife Service to restore protections for wolves. "These plans in Wisconsin and Minnesota are draconian, severe and unwarranted, and we think they may jeopardize the health and viability of this population." Since the wolf hunt began last month, at least 42 have been killed in Wisconsin. All told, officials expect 600 wolves will die at the hands of hunters and trappers in the two states before spring. Wolves were once so numerous in the United States that ranchers and government agencies paid people to kill them. By the time the Endangered Species Act began protecting wolves in 1973, they were nearing extinction in the lower 48 states. Today, wolf numbers have grown to 4,000 and exceeded recovery goals in the western Great Lakes area, according to federal estimates. SeeWolves/C6
Narayan MahonI New York Times News Service
Corne, a grey wolf at the Timber Wolf Preservation Societyin Greendale, Wis., howls for attention. Wolf hunting seasons in Minnesota and Wisconsin are raising concerns among those who are trying to protect the animals.
C2 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
T
a M O V I ES
Digital worldsget reality check onBravo By Mike Hale
around the edges as friends, New York Times News Service bosses and hair and makeup When word got out about women. Much of the episode "Start-Ups: Silicon Valley," is spent establishing the enthe valley started to have trepreneurialbona fides of c onniptions. A m on g t h e these six as well as the realmore clever responses was ity-TV personas they wear a tweet by a T echCrunch like wineglass tags: mean, editor: "Here Comes Silicon vain, ambitious, alcoholic, Valley Boo Boo." gay, British.
Of course the r eal geeks of
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t ime f o r ju s t two s i g nificant scenes: the party, at which apps, websites and online shows (none of the six entrepreneurs plans to make a physical product) take a back seat to fighting, flirting and skimpy costumes; and an actual pitch, by two of the cast, to an actual Silicon Valley venture capitalist, Dave along with togas and flying McClure. cocktails. Any new technoloMaking its debut on Bravo gy is strictly a rumor, and the on Wednesdaynight is "LOLonly deal making happens work," another reality series between consenting adults at set in the digital world. It the toga party. takes us inside the offices of On the basis of a trailer re- Cheezburger, a Seattle-based leased by Bravo, "Start-Ups" Internet h u mor p u b lisher has already been criticized built on funny pictures of — and rightly so — for focus- cats with fractured-English ing on the lovely cityscapes captions, and while its story of San Francisco rather than lines appear to be as staged theflatexpanses ofSan Jose, as those of "Start-Ups," it has Sunnyvale and the other cit- a depressed, workaday vibe ies that actually make up that makes it by far the supeSilicon Valley. The pilot has rior show. " LOLwork" is abou t an aerial shot of downtown Mountain View and a few r eal people doing a r e a l scenes inside the Four Sea- job. In th e p ilot th e staff sons Hotel in East Palo Alto, members of C h eezburger but the dominant images are ( its p r i mar y w e b site i s panoramic views of the sexi- www.icanhascheezburger. er city to the north. com) are pitted against one Also more than a l i t t le another in a c o m petition unreal, i n S i l i con V a lley that was probably made for terms, is the homogeneity TV, but they're not glamorof the six-member principal ized. We can see that they're cast, which is generally at- young, smart, prematurely tractive — one woman is a cynical and fully aware of former M i l waukee Bucks both the superficiality and dancer — and entirely white; profitability of what they do Asians and blacks appear for a living. Mountain V i ew and Menlo Park are smart enough to know that reality is the last thing to expect from a Bravo reality show. What you expect is manufactured camaraderie and conflict, tears, cleavage and p roduct p l a cement, a n d when "Start-Ups" begins tonight, that's what you'll get,
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'h.a
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Fix-It Felix Jr. (voiced by Jack McBrayer) hangs out with the Nicelanders in "Wreck-It Ralph." SILENT HILL: REVELATION3-D (R) 12:55, 7:40 SINISTER (R) 3:10, 6:25, 9:20 TAKEN 2 (PG-13) 1:55, 4:35, 7:20, 9:55 WRECK-IT RALPH(PG) 12:30, 3:30, 6:45, 9:25 WRECK-IT RALPH3-D (PG) 12:45, 3:45, 7, 9:45
McMenamins Old St. Francis School
REDMOND Redmond Cinemas 1535S.W. DdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
FUN SIZE (PG-13) 5 HERE COMESTHE BOOM (PG)7 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA(PG) 5:15, 7:15 PARANORMALACTIVITY4(R)5,7 WRECK-IT RALPH(PG) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15
700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562
Oue to Monday Night Football, no movies wiII be shown today. After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only.Youngerthan21may attend screenings before 7 p.m.if accompaniedby a legalguardian.
SISTERS Sisters Movie House 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800
ARGO (R) 6:15 LOOPER(R) 6:30
869 N.W. Tin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271
/~a C;uyt SSTC
LEGEND OFAAHHH'S: A TRUE FABLE (no MPAArating) 8
COVERINGS
N O R T H W E ST
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PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 6:30 WRECK-IT RALPH(PG) 6:15
MADRAS Madras Cinema 5 1101 S.W. U.S.Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
CHASINGMAVERICKS(PG) 6:40 FUN SIZE(PG-13) 7 PARANORMAL ACTIVITY4 (R)7:30 SILENT HILL: REVELATION(R) 7:10 WRECK-IT RALPH(PG) 6:50
PRINEVILLE Pine Theater 214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014
TROUBLEWITH THECURVE (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 6 WRECK-IT RALPH(PG) 3:40, 6:10 Pine Theater's upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
Tin Pan Theater
Also see us for
o
at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 tI /MAX. • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAX films. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
M ED I l ase r
Warehouse Pr i ces
S PA
c en t er
Rebecca Nonweiler, MD, Board Certified
(541) 318-7311
Q NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
A t47ard-t4iinnin g
neighborhood
Awnings, Solar Screens
on Bend's
8 Custom Draperies
t4iestside.
(541) 388-441 8
www.northwestcrossin)".com
www.northwestmedispa.com
LOCAL TV L I STINr.S MONDAY PRIME TIME 11/5/12
ALSO INHD;ADD600 TOCHANNELNo •
KATU
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*In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/BlackButte Di ital PM-Prineville/Madras SR-Sunriver L-LaPine
•
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Nightly News Newsohannel 21 at 6 (N) « Jeop ardy! 'G' Wheel FortuneThe Voice Thetop20 hopefuls perform.(N) 'PG' « Jay Leno ( 10:01) Revolution (N) '14' « New s News Evening News Access H. O ld C hristine H ow I Met 3 0 R o ck n '14' How I Met Letterman KBNZ 0 ( 8:31) Partners 2 Broke Girls Mike & Molly n Hawaii Five-0 Mohai (N) n '14' N e ws K EZI 9 News KEZI 9 News Entertainment The Insider 'PG' Dancing With the Stars: Ail-Stars (N) n 'PG' « KEZI 9 News (11:35) Nightiine K OHD Q 0 0 0 KEZI 9 News World News (10:01) Castle (N) n 'PG' « Videos Two/Half Men Two/Haif Men Big Bang Big Bang Bones (N) '14' cc(DVS) The Mob Doctor Legacy(N)'14' News KFXO IDi IEI IEI IEIAmerica's Funniest Home TMZ (N) n 'PG' The Simpsons Family Guy '14' Antiques Roadshow(N) 'G' « O r e gon Exper Oregon Exp M arket Warriors (N) 'G' « Independent Lens(N)'PG' « Koae O B Q B Wild Kratts BC Electric Comp. This Old House Business Rpt. PBS NewsHoor (N) n « NewsChannel 8 NightlyNews NewsChannel 8 News Live at 7 (N) I nside Edition The Voice Thetop20 hopefuls perform.(N) 'PG' cc KGW 0 (10:01) Revolution (N) '14' cc N e wsChannel 8 Jay Leno Yet? We ThereYet? King ofQueens KingofQueens Engagement Engagement 90210 into theWild (N)'PG' « Gos sip Girl (N) n '14' « Seinfeld 'PG' Seinfeid n 'G' 'Tii Death 'PG' 'Tii Death '14' KTVZDT2IEI 0 B IH We There Lidia's Italy C h efs A'Field My Family Tim e Goes By Angelique Kidio-Friends Darlene Love:Concert-Love Wo r ld News T a vis Smiley (N) Charlie Rose (N) n cc PBS NewsHour n cc OPBPL 175 173
KTvz 0 0 0 0 News
Beyond ScaredStraight '14' Bey ond Scared Straight '14' Beyond ScaredStraight '14' Bey ond Scared Straight « Beyond ScaredStraight '14' (11:01) BeyondScaredStraight ** "Rambo:FirstBfoodPari ii" (1985, Action) Sylvester Staiione, Richard ** "Four Brothers" (2005,CrimeDrama)MarkWahiberg, TyreseGibson, Andre Benjamin.Sib- ***"Crimson Tide"(1995,Suspense) Denzei Washing(4:00) *** "First Blood" (1982, Ac*AMC 102 40 39 tion) SylvesterStaiione. « Crenna.Ex-GreenBeret goesonVietnam mission. « lings seekrevengefor their adoptivemother's murder. « ton,GeneHackman,GeorgeDzundza.« *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Monsters Inside Me 'PG' cc North Woods Law: Onthe Hunt Rattlesnake Republic 'PG' cc Finding Bigfoot: Further Evidence Finding Bigfoot: Further Evidence Finding Bigfoot: Further Evidence Finding Bigfoot: Further Evidence BRAVO1 37 4 4 Real Housewives/Beverly Real Housewives/Beverly Real Housewives/Beverly The Real Housewives of Atlanta Real Housewives/Beverly (10:01) Start-Ups: Silicon Valley What Happens Housewives Reba 'PG' cc Reba 'PG' cc Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders D a llas Cowboys Cheerleaders D a llas Cowboys Cheerleaders CMT 190 32 42 53 Roseanne'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Reba 'PG'cc Reba 'PG'cc Reba 'PG'cc Reba 'PG'cc CNBC 54 36 40 52 Ultimate Factories Winnebago'G' American Greed: The Fugitives A merican Greed Mad Money American Greed: TheFugitives American Greed Paid Program Hair Loss CNN 55 38 35 48 Anderson Cooper380 (N) cc P i e rs Morgan Tonight (N ) Ande rson Cooper360(N)cc Erin Burnett OutFront (N)(Live) Piers Morgan Tonight (N)(Live) Anderson Cooper 360 cc Erin Burnett OutFront COM 135 53 135 47(4:56) Fttturama Always Sunny Always Sunny (6:29) Tosh.0 Colbert Report Daily Show (7:59) Fotorama Fttturama '14' South Park 'MA' South Park 'MA' Brickleberry S o oth Park Da i ly Show Co l bert Report COTV 11 Dept./Trans. C i ty Edition P a i d Program Kristi Miller D e sert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Adv Journal G e t Outdoors Visions of NW The Yoga Show The Yoga Show Kristi Miller C i t y Edition CSPAN 61 20 12 11 Politics & Public Policy Today Politics & Public Policy Today *DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie Good.Charlie Phineas, Ferb Good-Charlie Shake it Up! 'G' Jessie 'G' cc Good.Charlie Dog With a Blog Austin & Ally n Shake it Up! 'G' A.N.T. Farm'G' Phineas, Ferb Good.Charlie Austin & Ally n *DISC 156 21 16 37 Overhaulin' SEMA Shown 'G ' D v erhaulin' 1967 Camaro n 'PG' Overhauiin': Deconstructed 'PG'Overhauiin'. Deconstructed 'PG' American Chopper (N) 'PG' « Jes se James: Outlaw Garage '14' American Chopper n 'PG' « *E! 1 36 2 5 The E! True Hollywood Story '14' Fashion Police '14' E! News(N) Studio E! (N) Nicki Minaj: My Jonas Jonas IceLovesCoco IceLovesCoco Chel seaLately E! 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FAM 67 29 19 41 Reba 'PG' « The700Club n 'G' « The O'Reilly Factor cc FNC 57 61 36 50 The O'Reilly Factor (N) cc Hannity (N) On Record, GretaVanSusteren Hannity On Record, Greta VanSusteren The Five *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Best Dishes P a ula's Cooking Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive $24 in 24 Mys t ery Diners Blind Dinner " Action) EdwardNorton, Liv Tyler, Tim Roth. *** "The Incredible Hulk" FX 131 How I Met Ho w I Met Two /Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men *** "The Incredible Hulk(2008, HGTV 176 49 33 43 My First Place My First Place My First Place My First Place Love it or List it Mark &Aiana 'G' Love It or List It Cira Bagnato'G' Love it or List it (N) 'G' « House Hunters Hunters Int'I L o ve It or List it 'G' « *HIST 155 42 41 36 Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' American Pickers (N)'PG' cc P a wn Stars (N) Pawn Stars (N) invention USA Pawn Stars 'PG' ** "RumorHasit..." (2005) Jennifer Aniston, KevinCostner. o« ** "TyroWeeksNotice" (2002) SandraBullock, HughGrant. « ** "MissCongeniality 2:Armedand Fabulous" (2005) Premiere. LIFE 138 39 20 31 (4:00) ** "UptownGirls" (2003) MSNBC 59 59 128 51 The Ed Show(N) TheRachelMaddow Show (N) The Last W ord The Ed Show The Rachel MaddowShow The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MTV 192 22 38 57 Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Inbetweeners Ridiculousness Ridiculousness NICK 82 46 24 40 SpengeBOb SpengeBOb SpengeBObSquarePanten ' Y7' DOra theEXplarer(N)n ne Full House'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' The Nanny'PG' TheNanny'PG' Fri endsn 'PG' (11:33) Friends OWN 161103 31 103Breaking Downthe Bars n '14' B r eaking Down the Bars n '14' B r eaking Down the Bars n '14' Dateline on OWNn '14' « Datehneon OWNn 14 « DatehneonOWNn 14 « Dateline on OWN n '14' « ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Women's CollegeSoccerBig 12Tournament, Final: TeamsTBA College Football Montanaat WeberState Boat Racing H1Unlimited Series The Dan Patrick Show *** "StarWars:Episode iii — Revengeof theSith" (2005, ScienceFiction) EwanMcGregor, Nataiie Portman. n SPIKE 132 31 34 46 *** "StarWars:Episodeiii — Revengeofthe Sith" (2005) EwanMcGregor, Nataiie Portman. n Tattoo Night. ** "ShutterIsland" (2010)LeonardoDicaprio. A 1950slawmanhunts anescaped murderess, cc ** "ShutterIsland" (2010) « SYFY 133 35 133 45Journey-Center ** "The Village" (2004, Suspense)BryceDallas Howard,Joaquin Phoenix.ac TBN 05 60 130 Behind Scenes Living Edge K i ngdom Conn. Jesse Duplantis Praise the Lord ne « Joel Osteen M anna-Fest L i v e-Holy Land Creflo Dollar P r aise the Lord 'Y' « *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends 'PG' F r iends 'PG' K i ng of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld 'PG' Seinfeld 'PG' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Conan (N) '14' cc ****"TheGrapes ofWrath"(1940)Henry Fonda,JaneDarweii. A Depres- (7:15) ***"The Great Gatsby" (1974,Drama)Robert Redford, MiaFarrow,SamWaterston. A (9:45) **"The Storyof TempleDrake" (1933, Drama) (11:15) *** "The OldManand the TCM 101 44 101 29 sion-era Oklahoma family migrates toCalifornia. « racketeerbuysanestate to be closeto his former lover. Oscar Apfel, ClemBeauchamp.« Sea" (1958)SpencerTracy. *TLC 178 34 32 34 Breaking Amish rt '14' « Breaking Amish rt '14' « Breaking Amish Good vs. Evil '14' Breaking Amish: ExtendedEpi (9:12) Breaking Amish: ExtendedEpisodes(N) '14' Breaking Amish: ExtendedEpi Breaking Amish: *TNT 17 26 15 27 The Mentalist n '14' atj The Mentalist Paint it Red n '14' The Mentalist n '14' « The Mentalist Redemption n '14' The Mentalist n '14' c~ The Mentalist RedBadge n '14' CSI: NY n '14' c~ 'TOON 84 Regular Show Regular Show Regular Show Regular Show Adventure Time Adventure Time Regular Show Annoying Kin g of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' 'TRAV 179 51 45 42 Bourdain: NoReservations Bou r dain: No Reservations Bourdain: NoReservations Bourdain: NoReservations Bou r dain: No Reservations Dangerous GroundsHaiti (N) 'PG' Bourdain: No Reservations M*A*S'H 'PG' M'A'S*H 'PG' M*A'S*H 'PG' Cosby Show CosbyShow Cosby Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King ofQueens KingofQueens TVLND 65 47 29 35 Bonanza 'G' ~~ N C IS A survivaiist is wanted. 'PG' NCIS: Los Angeles Standoff 'PG' WWE MondayNight RAW(N) n ~c CSI: CrimeSceneinvestigation USA 15 30 23 30 NCIS DesignatedTarget n '14' Basketball Wives LA rt '14' Basketball Wives LA rt '14' Basketball Wives LA(N) rt '14' T . i. and Tiny C h rissy & Jones Basketball Wives LA rt '14' T.l. and Tiny C hrissy & Jones VH1 191 48 37 54 Behind the Music rt 'PG' « *ASIE 130 28 18 32 The First 48 '14' «
•
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012• THE BULLETIN
C3
ADVICE & ASTROLOGY
Earphonesmaybebest way to handleco-worker Dear Abby: I work in a cubicle in close proximity to my co-workers. I can't help but hear everything. A co-worker who sits next to me is driving me crazy. She spells her name wrong to customers every day, 20 times a day. She also makes seductive moans during the day. I almost want to peek over the cubicle to see what
she's doing.
When I have mentioned to her that perhaps she must spellher name so often to customers because she'sspelling it wrong in the first place, her retort is, "No, I don't!" Everyone in the office can hear her, too. They think it's funny. A bby, she's m aking m e crazy. Should I record her for a few hours and play it back'? Unless I do, she won't believe she does it. By the end of the week, I can hardly speak to her. Please help.
— Tortured in Orange, Calif.
Dear Tortured: Al t hough your co-worker may s e em to spell her name wrong to you, there are variations on the spelling of many names (i.e., Jeannie- Jeanne, ShariSherry-Cheri, B r i a n-Bryan, Steven-Stephen). The spelling of someone's name is usually determined by one'sparents — so lighten up. Your co-worker may be unaware thatshe makes these sounds. Instead of c r i ticiz-
your loved one that was taken within the last few years, not one from 20 or 30 years ago. (Yes, Abby, it happens all the
time.)
Also, please describe how the deceased wore theirhair if the picture has a pompadour and the person has a short bob. It's really frustrating! If you would take snapshots of your loved ones occasionally, I wouldn't have to wonder what Mom looked like. — Sandy the Hairstylist Dear Sandy: Obviously, this is something that f a m ilies don't always consider when they are grieving. Thank you for the heads up. Dear Abby: Can a man be too good to a woman? I dated this fantastic lady for f o ur years. We made a commitment to be true to each other. She broke up with me. Her reason'? She said I treated her too well. We were good to E A CH OTHER. We never had a disagreement. We went on several trips together. I love her so much. How can a person be too good to the one he loves?
— Begging for Answers in North Carolina
mention this to her. I d on't think you need tomake any
is used to abusive relationships, she may f i n d b eing treated well n o t " e x citing" enough. This usually happens when the p erson confuses love with feelings of anxiety and pain. Others can't resist a "challenge" and find stressfree relationships boring. I'm sorry you are hurting, but please understand that you may have dodged a bullet. Once you accept it, you can move on.
you. Dear Abby:I'm sure I speak for hairstylists all over t he c ountry who style hair f o r our dearly departed. It is the l ast time t heir f a mily w i l l see them, so it is very important that it looks "just right." PLEASE bring us a picture of
— Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or PO. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope:HappyBirthday for Monday,Nov. 5,2012 By Jacqueline Bigar This year your family and love life become even higher priorities. You set the tone in everyday situations, and you'll be a role model to others. Your ideas will be deemed good for the most part. Sometimes you might want more privacy, but because of your increasing popularity, this could become a burden. If you are single, you manage to meet people with ease, and you could meet someone of significance this year. If you are attached, do your best to include your significant other in a few of your many activities. LED likes your mysterious ways. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * Y our sharpness and ingenuity are increasing multifold. Your communication style also excels, as you seem to say the right words at the right time. You often might find yourself stumbling into brainstorming situations. Tonight: Ever playful. TAURUS(April 20-May 20) ** * Know what you want regarding a personal matter. Try to clear up problems, hassles and m isunderst andingsby noon.You might want to know more of what is happening behind the sceneswith a child. Askthe right questions, and everything will come out. Tonight: Stay centered. GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * You have a lot to say, and you will say just that. Investigate your alternatives more thoroughly. You might be quite verbal onceyou grasp the depth of an issue. Perhaps the wise action would be to say little until you are entirely sure of yourself. Tonight: Talk up a storm. CANCER(June21-July 22) ** * * Use the morning well, when you are apowerhouse and feel close to invincible. Youcould be overserious and not willing to take a risk. The unexpected works for you — just remember to slow down if you become upset. Tonight: Treattime. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * Honor your desires, and remain sure of yourself. Someone could push you beyond your limits. Incomingnews opensyoureyestoa different perspective. Thewords of an expert or someone in the know will surprise you. Tonight: All smiles. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
Pleaseemail event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY
TUESDAY
Dear Begging:If a woman
If the noise is distracting others in the office, a group of you should approach a supervisor about it. If not, then I'd recommend earphones for
A LE N D A R
NO EVENTSLISTED.
DEAR ABBY
ing her, perhaps you should recordings.
O M M U N IT Y
** * Use the daylight hours to the max in order to accomplish tasks that involve others. Beawareof your innate limits. You might want to understand more. Pull back and listen. You could besurprised by how much is revealed. Tonight: Havea chat with a friend. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * * Z e ro in on whatyou want, whether it is professionally or personally. You'll want to take care of your finances, so try not to get overcommitted. A risk at this point could backfire. You might feel centered, until someoneacts in a strange manner. Tonight: Whereyour friends are. SCORPIO(Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * T ake a stand and remain secure when dealing with others who you believe havemore experience and/or knowledge than you. You could feel quite jittery about everything that is happening. You might feel as if an obstacle is in your way. Tonight: Aforceto bedealtwith. SAGITTARIUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * * K eep reaching out to someone at adistance. Aconversation in the morning points to how important this person is to you. Heor she understands you better than many people do in your life. An important discussion could occur as aresult. Tonight: Where there is music. CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * You finally can relate to one person directly and discuss your authentic feelings; nowyou both can dropthe act. Afriend or loved one continues to joltyou with his or her behavior. Know that this individual might be coming from a slightly depressed perspective. Tonight: Where your friends are. AQUARIUS(Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * Let others seekyou outthat is, if you haveenough patience. You will hear much more if you allow them to initiate interactions instead ofyou.Though youm ighthavea naysayer very near to you, just ignore this person. Tonight: Say "yes" to an invitation. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ** * Your creativity dominates the morning, while your concentration rules the evening. If you can blend the two together, you will succeed. What you accomplish as aresult could be awesomeandunusual.Youm ight decide tochooseafun happening. Tonight: Not in the mood to stop. © 2012 by King Features Syndicate
"FOODANDTHE PARADOX OF PLENTY":Learn about food production and pathways and howthey impact the developmentofhuman civilization, world exploration and society; free; 2 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-617-4663, ruthh©uoregon.edu or http:// oshenuoregon.edu. "THE CRISIS OFCIVILIZATION": A screening of the film about the six global crises facing mankind and how they are related; free; 6:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend;541-815-6504.
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WEDNESDAY VETERANSCELEBRATION: With a luncheon and live music; free; 10:30 a.m.; Eastmont Community School,62425 Eagle Road, Bend; 541-382-2049. KNOW HUMOR:THE FUN 8t ART OFIMPROV COMEDY: Learn about improvisational comedy from the local improv troupe Triage; free; 4:30 p.m.; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendan "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: L'ELISIR D'AMORE":Starring Anna Netrebko, Matthew Polenzani and Mariusz Kwiecien in an encore performance of Donizetti's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Randall Shelton talks about life's big questions and his book "Life on Earth: The Game"; free; 6:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. FEMALES IN COMEDY: Sam Albert, an alumnus of The Second City in Chicago, shares her experience of trying to make it as an actress and comedian in Los Angeles; free; 6:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3121032 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendan LESSONS FROMLINCOLN: A presentation titled, "Is Political Bipartisanship Possible?"; with author and historian Dick Etulain; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 54 I-447-7978. THE NORTHSTARSESSION: The California-based roots-rock band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. "IT'SONLY MONEY": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about m ixing loveand money;$24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. THE NATURE OFWORDS: The Rising Star Creative Writing Competition awards ceremony and reception; free; 7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Library, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-6472233, info©thenatureofwords. org or www.thenatureofwords. OI'g.
THURSDAY THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "The Sojourn" by Andrew Krivak; free; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-3121055 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "State of Wonder" by Ann Patchett; free; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendan VIOLATION: The punk-rock group performs, with High Desert Hoooligans, The Confederats and Bastard Cat; $5; 6 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989. KNOW HUMOR: IL SAUGHTER THE BESTMEDICINE?: Carol Delmonico discusses the power of laughter and how it can reduce stress, boost your immune system and helpyou enjoy life; free; 6:30 p.m.; East
Cast members rehearse a song from "It's Only Money"at Greenwood Playhouse in Bend. The new musical, presented by Cascades Theatrical Company, is showing through Nov. 18. Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-312-1034. THE NATUREOFWORDS: Featuring author readings by Sherwin Bitsui, Thor Hanson, Tracy Daugherty and Jean Auel; $25; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700, info© thenatureofwords.org or www. towertheatre.org. "IT'S ONLY MONEY": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. THE ASCETIC JUNKIES: The Portland indie-pop band performs, with The Horde and TheHarem; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand.
TONY SMILEY:The one-man rock band performs, with Keez; $6; 9:30 p.m., doors open at 8:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331 or www.silvermoonbrewing. com.
SATURDAY
GARAGESALEFUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the High Desert Droids robotics team; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Mountain ViewHighSchool,2755 N.E.27th St., Bend; 541-389-7904 or www. team753.com. MARINE CORPSBIRTHDAY RUN/ WALK:Run 5K or walk one mile in honor of the Marine Corps; race begins outside City Hall; registration required; proceeds benefit Disabled American Veterans' Portland shuttle van; $21 with a shirt, $14 without; 9 a.m.; City Hall, 710 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-383-8061 or www. vetsdayrun.homestead. com. FRIDAY "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: THE TEMPEST":Starring Audrey Luna AUTHORPRESENTATION:Lily Raff McCaulou reads from her memoir and Isabel Leonard in a presentation "Call of the Mild"; free; 6:30 p.m.; of Shakespeare's masterpiece; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. opera performance transmitted Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; MOMS INC.DESSERT DASH AND Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, AUCTION:Afundraiser for Moms 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; Inc., with dessert, music and a 541-382-6347. silent auction; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Westside Church, 2051 Shevlin Park SENSATIONAL SATURDAY:Learn Road, Bend. about how Native peoples of the FREAK MOUNTAINRAMBLERS: The High Desert prepared for winter, depended on seasonal foods Portland-based Americana group performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins and supported and sustained the ecostystem; included in the price of Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. admission; $12 adults, $10 ages 65 Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or and older, $7 ages 5-12, free ages 4 www.mcmenamins.com. and younger; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; High KIRTAN MANTRAMUSIC: Healing Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. musicbyJaya Lakshmiand Ananda; Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or $15-$20 suggested donation; 7-10 www.highdesertmuseum.org. p.m.; Back Bend Yoga, 155 S.W. THE NATURE OFWORDS: Featuring Century Drive; 541-322-9642 or a lecture by JeanAuel; $40;11 a.m.www.backbendyoga.net. noon; Central Oregon Community THE NATUREOFWORDS: Featuring College, Hitchcock Auditorium, author readings by Ayad Akhtar, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend;541Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Brian 647-2233, info©thenatureofwords. Doyle and MichaelMeade;$25;7 org or www.thenatureofwords.org. p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall THE NATURE OFWORDS: Featuring St., Bend; 541-317-0700, info@ a lecture by Michael Meade; $40; thenatureofwords.org or www. 12:30-1:30 p.m.; Central Oregon towertheatre.org. Community College, Hitchcock "ASSASSINS":Opening night of the Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College dark musical comedy portraying W ay, Bend;541-647-2233,info@ history's most famous presidential thenatureofwords.org or www. assassins; with achampagne thenatureofwords.org. reception; $21, $18 students and AWARD: Learn seniors; 7:30 p.m., 7 p.m. reception; THE CALDECOTT 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. about the process and criteria for Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, selecting the annual award recipient; 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or free;1 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public www.2ndstreettheatencom. Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7099 or www. "IT'S ONLY MONEY": Cascades deschuteslibrary.org/calendan Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 Productions presents a dark musical students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood comedy portraying history's most Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood famous presidential assassins; Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. $21, $18 students and seniors; 2 cascadestheatrical.org. p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, "KING OF MASKS": A screening 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or of the unrated1997 film; free; 7:30 www.2ndstreettheater.com. p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. ESt., BECOMING AHUMORIST: Joel Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. Clements talks about what it takes jcld.org. to become a humorist; free; 3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public MONSTER TRUCKNATIONALS: Monster trucks compete in a variety Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www. of trick styles; $12 in advance, $15 deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. at the gate; 7:30 p.m., gates open at5:30p.m.;DeschutesCounty AUDUBON FUNDRAISER: Featuring Fair 8 Expo Center, Hooker Creek a membership drive, silent auction, Event Center, 3800 S.W. Airport presentations, live music and more; Way, Redmond; http://www.expo. proceeds benefit the East Cascades deschutes.org. Audubon Society birding projects; free; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Bend Senior GREAT AMERICANTAXIAND POOR MAN'S WHISKEY: The jamgrass Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket bands perform; $12 plus fees in Road; 541-317-3086 or www. ecaudubon.org. advance, $15 at the door; 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W.Greenwood THE NATUREOF WORDS: Gala Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. author dinner with a wine reception midtownbend.com. and author readings; with keynote PIGEONJOHN AND SUNSPOT JONZ: speaker Dan Wieden; $75 or $110; California hip-hop, with Mosley 5:30 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. Wotta and The Hard Chords; free; Century Drive, Bend; 541-647-2233, info©thenatureofwords.org or 9 p.m.;Liquid Lounge,70 N.W . Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999. www.thenatureofwords.org.
"SLEDFILM12":A screening of the snowmobile film festival; $6 plus fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Lily Raff McCaulou reads from her memoir "Call of the Mild"; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina SpringsBooks,422 S.W . Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. FREAK MOUNTAINRAMBLERS: The Portland-based Americana group performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history's most famous presidential assassins; $21, $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheater.com. "IT'S ONLY MONEY": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love andmoney $24 $18seniors $12 students; 7:30 p.m .;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. BEND COMMUNITYCONTRADANCE: Featuring caller SueBakerand music by the TheEugene City Barnstormers; $7; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys 8 Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W.Wall St.; 541-330-8943. MONSTER TRUCKNATIONALS: Monster trucks compete in avariety of trickstyles; $12 in advance, $15at thegate;7:30 p.m.,gatesopenat5:30 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair8 Expo Center, Hooker CreekEvent Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; http://www.expo.deschutes.org. STACEYEARLEAND MARKSTUART: The folkartists perform; $15 suggesteddonation;8p.m .,doors open at 7 p.m.; HarmonyHouse, 17505 Kent Road, Sisters; 541-548-2209. KIRTRONICADANCE CONCERT: Electronic dance music combined with Sanskrit chanting and singing, featuring Jaya Lakshmi andAnanda; $10-$20suggested donation; 8:0811:11 p.m.; BackBendYoga, 155 S.W. Century Drive; 541-322-9642 or www.backbendyoga.net. SHARPTHREE: The contemporary world jazz act performs; $6; 9:30 p.m., doors open at 8:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331 or www.silvermoonbrewing. com.
SUNDAY AUTHORPRESENTATION:Arthur Lezin talks about his book, "From Afghanistan to Zaire: Reflections on a Foreign Service Life"; free;11 a.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers 2690 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242 or www. athousandlettershome.com. BENDVETERANSDAYPARADE: Themed "Fulfilling our promises to men and women who served"; with a flyover; free for spectators; 11 a.m.; downtown Bend; 541-480-4516. CROOKCOUNTYVETERANSDAY PARADE: Parade begins on 4th and Elm St. and continues to Dchoco Creek Park; followed by a ceremony; free; 11 a.m., 10:30 a.m. staging; downtown Prineville; 541-447-2329. MINING DAYS:Experience the life of a placer miner and pan for gold; $2 panningfee,plus museum admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. REDMONDVETERANSDAY PARADE: Parade honoring veterans, followed by a chili feed for veterans and their families at the VFWpost; free;11 a.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-280-5161.
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Cy the Cynic says there's only one way to have a happy marriage, and when he finds out what it is, he might marry again. Cy swears he never plays a hand w ell i f i t h a s a "marriage": a doubleton K-Q. In today's deal, West led a club against Cy's slam, and the C ynic b l anched w he n h e s a w dummy. He tookthe ace and counted 11 tricks. For one more he had to set up the diamonds. So Cy led the A-K and a third diamond. When East followed, Cy shrugged and ruffed with his ace of trumps. He next tried to draw trumps with th e K - Q , b u t w h e n W e st discarded, Cy was doomed. He threw his club loser on a good diamond as East ruffed with the high ten of trumps, but the defense still got a heart. G OOD DIAM O N D
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"There's absolutelynothing on TV tonight!"
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11/05/1 2
C6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
Flu vaccine
tect against only flu viruses with a matching hemagglutiContinued from C1 nin protein. If a virus evolves a "Universal vaccination different shape, the antibodies with u n iversal v a ccines cannot latch on, and it escapes would put an end to the destruction. threat of global disaster that Influenza's relentless evolupandemic influenza can tion forces scientists to reconcause," Gilbert wrote. figurethe vaccine every year. V accines work b y e n - A few months before flu seahancing the protection the son, they have to guess which immune system alreadypro- strains will be dominant. Vacvides. In the battle against cine producersthen combine the flu, two sets of immune protein fragments from those cells do most of the work. strains to create a new vaccine. One set, called B cells, makes antibodies that can Escaping evolution latch onto free-floating viScientists have long wonruses. Burdened by these dered whether they could esantibodies, the viruses can- cape this evolutionary cycle not enter cells. with a vaccine that could work Once flu viruses get into against any type of influenza. cells, the body resorts to a This universal fl u v a ccine secondlineofdefense.Infect- would have to attack a part of ed cells gather some of the the virus that changes little virus proteins and stickthem from year to year. on their surface. Immune Gilbert and her colleagues cells known as T cells crawl at Oxford are trying to build a past, and if their receptors T cell-based vaccine that could latch onto the virus proteins, find such a target. When T cells they recognize that the cell is learn to r ecognize proteins infected; the T cells then re- from one kind of virus, the scilease molecules that rip open entists have found, they can the cells and kill them. attack many other kinds. It apThis defense mechanism pears that the flu proteins that works fairly well, allowing infected cells select to put on many people to fight off the display evolve very little. virus without ever feeling The scientists are testing a sick. But it also has a built-in vaccine that prepares T cells to flaw: The immune system mount a strong attack against has to encounter a particu- fluviruses.They engineered a lar kind of flu virus to devel- virus that can infect cells but op an eff ective response. cannot replicate. As a result, It takes time for B cells to infected cells put proteins on develop tight-fitting antibod- display, but people who receive ies. T cells also need time to the vaccine do not get sick. adjust their b iochemistry In a clinical trial reported to make receptors that can this summer, the s cientists lock quickly onto a particu- found that people who received lar flu protein. While the the vaccine developed a strong immune system educates response from their T cells. itself, an unfamiliar flu virus Once the scientists had vaccican explode into full-blown nated 11 subjects, they exposed disease. them to the flu. Meanwhile, Today's flu vaccines pro- they also exposed 11 unvactect people from the virus by cinated volunteers. Two vacciletting them make antibod- nated people became ill, while ies in advance. The vaccine five unvaccinated ones did. contains fragments from the tip of a protein on the The secret of antibodies surface of the virus, called While the Oxford researchhemagglutinin. B cells that ers focus on T cell vaccines, othencounter the vaccine frag- ers are developing vaccines that ments learn how to make antibodies against them. When vaccinated people become infected, the B cells can quicklyunleashtheir antibodies against the viruses. Unfortunately, a t r a ditional flu vaccine can pro-
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Photos by Narayan Mahon / New York Times News Service
Nancy)o Dowier, president of the Timber Wolf Preservation Society in Greendale, Wis., said, "People absolutely love (wolves) or they absolutely hate them. There are few people in the middle."
Wolves Continued from C1 But some of those packs have startedto cause problems again for ranchers in northern Wisconsin and have cost the state hundreds of thousands of dollars in livestock reimbursement payments, said officials at the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. "Without c ontrols, w h at we've seen in the state is a feeling of needing to take it into their own hands for folks that are frustrated," said Kurt Thiede, head of the wildlife management program for the
agency. After the Wisconsin Legislature approved the wolf hunt, which ends Feb. 28, more than 20,000people applied for the required license. The state awarded 1,160 permits and capped this year's harvest at 201 kills, or roughly a quarter of its current wolf population. In Minnesota, about 3,600 licenses were available to hunt up to 400 wolves, which would reduce thestate's numbers by about 15 percent. "There ain't too many people that have one hanging in their living room," said T imothy Mueller, a hunter from Silver Cliff, Wis . He, like others with a wolf license, was waiting for winter because pelts will be thicker and the snow will make it easier to track the animals. Yet some hunters who once proudly talked about the rare opportunity would now rather keep their a dventures private. A number declined to speak about the controversy because of reported threats made against a hunter who was among the first to register his kill with the state. "There are a lot of the claims about how easy this is and how this is senseless slaughter," said Scott Meyer, a lobbyist for the United Sportsmen of Wisconsin. "When you see the terrain
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Buttons depicting wolves are for sale at the Timber Wolf Preservation Society in Greendale, Wis.
"Without controls, what we've seen in the state is a feeling of needing to take it into their own hands for folks that are frustrated." — Kurt Thlede, head of Wisconsin's wildlife management program
and the geographies of everything, you understand that the advantage is toward the wolf." Animal rights groups have little sympathy for the hunters. They argue that the state kill quotas do not properly account for other ways that wolves can die, like poaching and vehicular collisions and the killing of the animals by farmers and ranchers protecting their livestock. Those additional causes, they say, could put the animals at risk again. On Oct. 15, the day Wisconsin's wolf-hunting season began, two national groups — the Humane Societyand the Fund for Animals — filed a 60-day notice of their intent to sue the federalgovernment to restore wolf protections. In addition, Wisconsin hu-
mane groups have filed a lawsuit to prohibit the use of dogs for hunting wolves, calling it cruel. Minnesota advocates also took legal action against their state in an attempt to stop its hunt, which lasts from Nov. 3 to Jan. 31. And Minnesota's Chippewa tribes have banned wolf hunting and trapping on reservation lands. "The whole balance of nature, they don't want to hear any of that," said Dowler, criticizing hunters for killing the animals she has devoted years to protect. "People absolutely love them or they absolutely hatethem. There are few people in the middle."
•
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can generate antibodies that are effective against many flu viruses — orperhaps allofthem. The first hint that such antibodies exist emerged in 1993. Japanese researchers infected mice with the flu virus HIN1. They extracted antibodies from the mice and injected them into other mice. The animals that received the antibodies turned out to be protected against a different kind of flu, H2N2. In hindsight, that discovery was hugely important. But at the time no one made much of it.
"By and large, people just
said, 'This is an oddity — so what'?'" said Ian Wilson of the Scripps Research Institute. Scientists did not appreciate its importance for more than 15 years, until Wilson and other researchers began isolating the antibodies that provided this kind of broad protection and showed how they worked. The new antibodies turn out to attack different parts of the flu virus from the ones produced by today's vaccines. Today's vaccines cause B cells to make antibodies that clamp onto a broad region of the tip of the hemagglutinin protein. Recently, Wilson and his colleagues discovered a new antibody with a slender tendril. It can snake into a groove in the hemagglutinin tip. Wilson and his colleagues found that this tendriled antibody can attach to a wide range of flu viruses. The results hint that the groove — which flu viruses use to attach to host cells — cannot work if its shape changes much. The antibody is also impressively powerful, the scientists found. They infected mice with a lethal dose of the flu and then, after three days, injected the new antibody into them. The antibody stoppedthe virus so effectively that the mice recovered.
Providing unparalled service across a variety of industries since 1983.
•
Some see Mondays as the
Imaging
she said, but does it with more accuracy and detail. Continued from C1 Knowledge is power, Maffei The map includes trailheads, said. Having more informaroads and information about tion about the forest enables eruptions of the Three Sisters managers to make better asto aid hikers, Madin said. sessments on projects large For Julie Donnelly-Nolan, a and small, such as treatments geologist at the USGS Volcano afterforest fires and in areas Science Center, the updated of beetle infestation. "First we could map all the maps give her a tool to study the history of the Newberry trees," she said. "Now we can Volcano and build a geologic (see on the) map if the trees are map. alive or dead. The more (Iidar She wants to u nderstand is) used and the more scientists how the volcano has behaved look at it, the more they'll be through time. By understand- able to get out of it." ing its past, she said, hopefully But gathering the data is she'll learn something about expensive, Madin said. To finwhat it may do in the future. ish mapping the state, he esti"It's like building a jigsaw mates, will take $35 million. "The way we get our money puzzle, except you have to create the pieces of the puzzle," she is by going around with a hat said. "Each piece is a lava flow to othergovernment agencies," and represents an eruption, so he said. "It will take a long time I'm trying to identify the differ- to find $35 million worth of ent eruptive events that have quarters in the hat." occurred at the volcano." That uncertainty makes it Lidar allows her to see the hard to predict how long it will topography of the Newberry take to map the entire state, area in greater detail than a but he thinks Central Oregon regular topographic map, she could be f i nished soon. To sald. complete lidar mapping in JefIt also strips away vegeta- ferson, Crook and Deschutes tion to allow her to see rock counties will cost about $3 outcroppings she might not million. "My guess is w ithin f i ve otherwise know exist. "Newberry is heavily man- years we'll have most of Centled with trees and volcanic tral Oregon mapped," he said. ash from Mount Mazama, so A 400-square-mile portion there's a lot of stuff over the top of the Ochoco National Forof the volcano," she said. est, just east of Prineville, is Helen Maffei, forest patholo- scheduled to be mapped next, gist for the U.S. Forest Service, he said. said before lidar technology, Once the Ochoco has been the trees, streams and other mapped, he said, the Deschutes elements in the forest had to Basin will have lidar mapping be mapped with GPS and by of 2 million acres. hand. Lidar not only captures — Reporter: 541-617-7818, what lies beneath the canopy, rrees@bendbullettn.com
end of a weekend.
Others see them as the start of somet hing even better.
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ENPLOYMENT PROFESSIONALS
www.expresspros.com
Scoreboard, D2
Golf, D3 Motor sports, D3 Cycling Central, D5
NFL, D3, D4 NBA, D3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
RUNNING
PREP SPORTS COMMENTARY
No NYCmarathon? Some run anyway
Ravenscross-country team makesRidgeview history
NEW YORK — Even though their race was called off, marathoners were still on the move in
New York onSunday. Hundreds of runners wearing marathon shirts and backpacks full of supplies took the ferry to hard-hit Staten Island and ran to stricken neighborhoods to help. Thousands of others poured into Central Park to put in 26.2 miles after the official cancellation of the world's largest
marathon becauseof Superstorm Sandy. "A lot of people just wanted to finish what they started," said
Lance Svendsen,who organized an alternative marathon called Run
Anyway. By8:45 a.m., his group had sent off
five waves of runners from the marathon's official finish line, which had not yet been taken down. "It is amazing.
BEAU EASTES
L~ ~
EUGENEidgeview cross-country c oach John Albrechthad no idea what to expect from his first-year program this fall. Everything was a blank slate at the new Redmond high school, which opened its doors this fall. But when Albrecht held a voluntary weekend workout at B end's Shevlin Park early in the season and six of his seven girls showed up, he had a hunch his girls team had a chance to be special. On Saturday in Eugene, the Ravens'
girls squad made history by becoming the first Ridgeview team to compete at the state level. The Ravens took 14th at the Class 4A championship meet, paced by junior D akota Steen's 10th-place finish.
"It was just a truly amazing effort on their part," Albrecht said after the meet at Lane Community College. "We didn't have any alternates.These seven girls were our entire team. And four of them have battled injuries all season." Steen's top-10 effort capped a highly successful fall sports season for Ridgeview, which competed at the varsity level in all sports without any seniors. The Ravens' volleyball team made it to state as well, and Raven boys and girls soccer teams both advanced to the 4A play-in round, as did Ridgeview's football team, which ended the year 6-4. But it was Albrecht's girls team that was the first to wear the Ravens' purple and black colors on the state stage and spark a student body that's still establishing an athletic culture. "On Friday, before we came over, the whole student body did a human tunnel from the gym to the bus," Albrecht recalled. "It was just surreal. The school is feeling it. The students are feeling it.
Qo Qu theweh:Morestate cross-countryphotos
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Matthew Aimonetti / For The Bulletin
Summit's Tess Nelson (359) turned in the Storm's second-fastest time in Saturday's Class 5A state championship meet in Eugene, as Summit's girls won their fifth straight state title. For more photos of Central Oregon runners from the meet, visit www.bendbulletin/preppics.
MEN'SCOLLEGE BASKETBALL: SEASON OVERVIEW
CYCLING CENTRAL
Italians stretched en
masse near thePlaza Hotel. The Germans started from Columbus
All eyes on Indiana, Kentucky asseason draws near
Circle. Everyone plunged into the parkto pursue their own race. Some
ran around the park clockwise, somecounterclockwise, taking over startled dog walkers with a riot of color. It was a throwback to the original New York City Marathon in1970,
which was run ragtag with127 people and stayed completely within Central Park. This time,
By jim O'Connell
some dropped off clothing and othersupplies
The Associated Press w
for storm victims.
This year's runners all are guaranteedentry
I
into nextyear's race, but
not everyone could be sure that chancewould come. "I'm in the military,
and I could bedeployed," said Ruben
\
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Arredondo, 36, of Los
Angeles, who showed up outside the parkat
Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
6:45 a.m. to join a group called the Replacement
Molly Cegswell-Kelley,at the Old Mill District cyclocross course in Bend on Friday afternoon, is in her first season of cyclocross and is competing in the women's beginners category.
Marathon, which had
been organized online just hours before. —TheAssociated Press
NFL Falcons 19 Panthers 21 Cowboys 13 Redskins 13 Broncos 3 1 Lions 3 1 Bengals 23 Jaguars 14 Ravens 25 Texans 21 Browns 15 Bills 9
Bears 51 Tilans 20
S eahawks 30 V i kings 20
Colts 23 S l eelers 24 Dolphins 20 Giants 20
Steelers rally past Giants, 24-20 Pittsburgh wins game in
New Jersey in wakeof Hurricane Sandy,D3 .
'> • 7
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SeePrep sports/D5
My guess is about 600 people haveleft so far."
P ackers 31 Bucs 4 2 Cardinals 17 Raiders 32
g
2?5
Kentucky has another greatfreshman class. Indiana is on top of the preseason poll for the first time in 33 years. There was alotofconference movement — again— and there's more ahead. As usual, college basketball is changing and staying the same. Welcome to 2012-13. Seven months ago, Kentucky walked off the court in New Orleans with its eighth national championship. The top six players from that team are gone — all drafted by the NBA, including freshmen Anthony Davis and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist as the top two picks. John Calipari has the same problem thisseason — a Wildcats roster loaded with freshman talent. Instead of meeting Davis, Kidd-Gilchrist and Marquis Teague quickly
and saying goodbye as
• Bend'S MOllyCOgSW ell-I(elley iSn't held baCk in CyCIOCrOSSdeSPite miSSingPart OfOnefOOt s with many riders who decide to give cyclocross a try, Molly Cogswell-Kelley has gotten hooked. "I can't stop thinking about it, and I absolutely love it," Cogswell-Kelley says about racing this fall in her first full season of cyclocross. "And I love it because ... I was always athletic as a kid, but I was
A
never really pushed very hard by my parentsbecause ofmy foot."
AMANDA MILES The foot to which Cogswell-Kelley refers is her right foot. The 40-year-old Bend resident does not seem to differ much from the other beginner women against whom
she has been racing this fall in events such as the Thrilla Cyclocross Series and the Halloween Cross Crusade — and in many ways she doesn't. But observers might notice that Cogswell-Kelley's right cycling shoe is considerably shorter than her left shoe, and that the cleat on that shoe is placed farther back toward the heel than a typical cycling cleat.
SeeCyclocross/D5
freshmen first-round draft picks, the names this season to learn in a hurry are Nerlens Noel, Alex Poythress, Archie Goodwin and Willie Cauley-Stein. "We're just so young," Calipari said. "If we had
to play a game right now, we'd probably be the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth team in our league. See Basketball/D5
iptr
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Alabama is still No.1, but aura of invincibility takes hit • OregOn mOVeS uPtO NO.3 in the lateSt BCSranking PittsburghSteelers running backIsaac Redmanrushed for147
yards on Sunday.
MOTOR SPORTS Johnson triumphs in NASCARrace Sprint Cup leader grabs win in Texas,D3
By Ralph D. Russo The Associated Press
Inside
The toughest tests of the season were passed, and Alabama and Oregon are still perfect. The Crimson Tide's aura of invincibility was the only thing lost. A thrilling Saturday produced some great games but no upsets and few changes among the highest ranked teams in The Associated Press Top 25 released Sunday. Those fortunate enough to be able
• BCS standings,D4 • AP and USA Today polls,D2
to keep track of multiple games got the chance to compare and contrast the contenders, and maybe a sense about how they would stack up against each other. Alabama, which scored late to
beat LSU 21-17, is No. I for the 10th straight week in the AP poll. Oregon beat Southern California 62-51 and is No. 2 for the seventh consecutive week. Kansas State remains at No. 3 after beating Oklahoma State 44-30, and Notre Dame stays at No. 4 after rallying to beat Pittsburgh 29-26 in triple overtime. The BCS standings came out later Sunday, and Oregon took advantage of NotreDame's struggles by passing the Fighting Irish and moving into third place. SeeAlabama /D4
Bret Hartman/The Associated Press
Oregon running back Kenjon Barner(24) celebrates one of his five touchdowns in a 62-51 over USC on Saturday.
D2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TELEVISION Today
Tuesday
SOCCER 11 a.m.:English Premier
SOCCER 11:30a.m.:UEFA Champions
League, WestBromwich vs.
League, Schalke vs. Arsenal,
Southampton, ESPN2.
2 p.m.:English Premier
Root Sports. FOOTBALL
League, West Ham United vs.
5 p.m.:College, Ball State at
Manchester City (taped), Root Sports. 5 p.m.:Women's college, Big 12 tournament, final (taped), Root Sports. FOOTBALL 5p.m.:NFL, Philadelphia Eagles at New Orleans Saints, ESPN. BASKETBALL 5:30 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Dallas Mavericks, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.
Toledo, ESPN2.
RADIO Today BASKETBALL 5:30 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Dallas Mavericks, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690.
Listings are the mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changes made by Tl/or radio stations.
ON DECK Tuesday Girls soccer Class5Aplayoffs, first round: Cleveland atSummit, 530 p.m.;WestAlbany at Bend, 1:30 p.mzMountainViewat Putnam,6:30 p.m. Class 4Aplayoffs, first round: Sistersat Molaga, TBD.
IN THE BLEACHERS In the Sleachers © 2012 Steve Moore Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.comhnthebieachers
I'/F
Boys soccer: Class 5Aplayoffs, first round:Wilson at MountainView,2 p.mcFranklin at Summit, 3 p.m. Class 4Aplayoffs: Ontarioat Sisters, TBD. Friday Football. Class 5Aplayoffs, first round: Churchil at Redmond, TBD;Mountain Viewat Wilsonvige, 7 p.m. Class4Aplayoffs, first round: Madrasat Scappoose,TBD Volleyball: Class 5Aquarterfinals, Bendvs. Summit at Liberty High in Higsboro, 10a.mc Class 5A semifinals,Bendor Summit vs. TBAat Liberty High in Higsboro, 630 p.m.; Class4A quarterfinals, Madrasvs.La Grandeat LaneCommunity College inEugene,1:15 p.m.; Class4Aquartertinals, CrookCountyvs. Elmira atLaneCommunity College inEuge ne, 1:15 p.mc Class4A quarterfinals, Sisters vs. Astoria at LaneComm unity College inEuge ne, 3:15 p.m.; Class2A quarterfinals, Culvervs. Kennedyat RidgeviewHigh in Redmond,1:15p.m. Water polo: Class5/4Astatechampionships at Tualatin Hills AquaticCenterin Beaverton, semifinal round: Madrasgirls vs. Parkrose, 10:10 p.m.; Summitgirlsvs. WestAbany, 1:20 p.m.; Summit boys vs.MountainView,2:30p.m.
PREP SPORTS
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Basketball • OSU wins exhibition:Or-
egon State won its only scheduled preseason game onSunday night, defeating Lewis 8 Clark 83-58 in an exhibition contest in Corvallis. Ahmad Starks led the Beavers with14 points on four-of-five three-point shooting to go along with four assists. Devon Collier scored12 points and Roberto Nelson added10 points. Oregon State led 39-28 at halftime and pulled away with a17-7 run to start the second
half. The Beavers openthe season at home onFriday against Niagara. Gametime is 6 p.m.
Volleyball • No. 2 Ducksfall to No. 1 Stanford:In the first-ever
meeting in Eugenebetween the nation's top two teams, topranked Stanford (22-2, 14-0 Pac-12) handed No.2 Oregon (20-3, 11-3) its first 3-0 loss of theseason Sunday atMatthew Knight Arena. In front of the second-largest Duck volleyball
crowd ever (5,007), the Cardinal won 25-20, 25-22, 25-21 over the Ducks to keep their Pac-12 record unblemished.
Football • Cal QBuncertain for Oregon game:California quarterback Zach Maynard has no ligament damage in his injured left knee and his status for this
week's gameagainst No. 2 Oregon remains in doubt. Cal coach
match against a former No. 1 player with a forehand on her
second match point before an ecstatic sell-out home crowd on the hard court at 02 Arena in Prague. The Czechs are the third
country in a row to successfully defend the Fed Cup title. Russia won in 2007-08 and Italy 200910. The Czechs took a 2-0 lead after the opening singles Saturday, but Ana Ivanovic made it 2-1 Sunday by beating Petra Kvitova 6-3, 7-5. It was the first
loss for Kvitova after11 straight Fed Cup singles wins. • Ferrer wins Paris Masters: David Ferrer ended the amazing run of Polish qualifier Jerzy Janowicz 6-4, 6-3 at the Paris
Masters on Sunday, clinching his first Masters title and win-
ning a tour-leading seventh trophy of the season. The 69thranked Janowicz eliminated five top-20 ranked players, including No. 3 Andy Murray, to reach the final. Ferrer's seven titles is one more than Roger Federer, who did not defend his title in Paris. • Petrova beats Wozniacki in final:Nadia Petrova stunned
top-seeded Caroline Wozniacki 6-2, 6-1 to win the Tournament
ofChampions onSundayin Bulgaria, clinching her third WTA title of the year. The
second-seeded Russian broke Wozniacki twice in each set, taking control from the beginning through her booming serve and
groundstrokes.
Hockey
• NHL andunion make progJeff Tedford said Sunday that an ress: A secret, long-awaited MRI on Maynard was negative bargaining session has done and hewould bedaytodaythis some good in the NHL labor week. The Bears (3-7, 2-5 Pac12) host the Ducks on Saturday (7:30 p.m. kickoff) in their final
home gameoftheseason.Maynard left Friday night's 21-13 loss to Washington in the fourth quarter with the injury. The sen-
ior quarterback has passed for 2,214 yards and 12 touchdowns
this season. • Kentucky fires coach:Kentucky has fired football coach Joker Phillips, a dayafter an embarrassing loss to Vanderbilt. Athletic Director Mitch Barnhart announced Phillips' dismissal Sunday in an open letter on the athletic department's web site. The Wildcats lost their eighth
straight game onSaturday, a 40-0 home loss to Vanderbilt. It was their worst loss to the
Commodores in 96 years. The 49-year-old Phillips is 12-23
fight — so much so that the
sides already haveplans to get back to the bargaining table
soon.NHL deputycommissioner Bill Daly and players'association special counsel Steve Fehr met for long stretches of
Saturday in an undisclosed location, marking the first time the sides had gotten together for talks in more than two weeks. nWe had a series of meetings
over the course of the dayand had a good, frank discussion on the most important issues separating us,n Daly told The
Associated Press in anemail a Sunday morning. We plan to meet again early in the week." Daly and Fehr hadn't met since Oct. 18 when both sides rejected offers.
overall in three seasons at Kentucky. He will finish this season.
Motor sports
The Wildcats (1-9, 0-7 South-
Kimi Raikkonen won a crashfilled Abu Dhabi Grand Prix on
• Raikkonen takes F1race:
eastern Conference) went to a bowl game two years ago but Sunday in United Arab Emirates have gotten worse eachseason for his first victory since returnsince. ing to Formula Onethis year, • Georgia loses receiver: a result that throws open the Georgia receiver Marlon Brown, drivers' championship with two who is tied for the team lead in catches, will miss the remainder of the season after hurting his left knee in Saturday night's win
over Mississippi. Coach Mark Richt said Sunday Brown tore the anterior cruciate ligament in the knee. Theinjury will end the senior's college career, but Brown is expected to make a
full recovery following surgery. Brown and another senior, Tavarres King, share the lead with 27 catches. Brown has four
touchdown catches.
Tennis • Czech Republic keepsFed Cup:The Czech Republic kept its Fed Cup title Sunday when
Lucie Safarova routed Jelena Jankovic of Serbia 6-1, 6-1 for an unassailable 3-1 lead in the
final. Safarova won the second reverse singles in the best-offive series. Shecaptured the
races remaining. Raikkonen, the 2007 champion who returned
to F1 after rally driving for a year, overtook RedBull's Mark Webber at the start to move into second. He took the lead on the 20th lap when McLaren's Lewis Hamilton retired because
of a fuel pressure problem, and then avoided the half-dozen
crashes and collisions that twice brought out the safety car. Raikkonen held off Ferrari's Fernando Alonso, who finished second. Two-time defending F1 champion Sebastjan Vettel clawed back from last to finish
third, his lead over Alonso cut to 10 points. Vettel was penalized for fuel irregularities after qualifying, forcing him to start from the pits. He tops the drivers' championship with 255 points,
followed by Alonso (245) and Raikkonen (198). — From wire reports
Water polo All-Central OregonLeagueteams Boys Most valuable player —AidanSoles, Summit First team —AidanSoles, Summit; NoahCox, MountainView; Tomm y Brewer, Summit; NateCox, MountainView;Brent Soles, Summit; lan Goodwin, Madras;Stuart We tstein, Summit. Second team — Connor Brenda,Summ it, AndyRhine,Bend;DustinHenderson,Madras,John Murphy,MountainView;JadenBoehm,Bend, Mitch Nave,Redm ond, TracyPitcher, MountainView. Honorable mention —KodiakArndt, Mountain View; Chris Speadborough,Summit; ZachBarry, Summit;CadeBoston, Madras;TeddyTsai, Redmond, Joe Murphy,MountainView; SamAinsworth Bend; Tim Gorman, Mountain View;Mateo Smith, Madras. Girls Most valuable player — AuroraGerhardt, Madras First team — AuroraGerhardt, Madras,Tegan
"Yeah, it's stuck. You try the Heimlich and
I'll go find another ball, just in case."
Sunday At TexasMotorSpeedway Fort Worth, Texas Lap length: 1.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (1Jij mmieJohnson, Chevrolet,335 laps,1468rating, 48points,$492,086.
2. (8) Brad Keselowski Dodge,335, 125.2, 43, $353,830. 3. (3) KyleBusch, Toyota, 335,125.2,42, $268,143. Perkins, Redmond; Ky Heffner, Summit; Brianna 4. (10j MattKenseth,Ford,335,96.8,41, $241,021. Hunt, Madras JennyWhite,Redmond;RachelHaney, 5. (21j Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 335, 84.5, 39, Redmond;Kaylin Ivy,Summit. $212,935. Second team —MaddieTorres, Bend;Sophie (4) ClintBowyerToyota,335,1133,38,$180149. Gemelas,Madras,Katie Simpson, Summit; Kam- 6. 7. (19) DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet,335,90.7, 37, eron JoelBend; , ElizabethArmitage, Madras;Vanessa $148,085. Rodgers,Summit; FelisaArmitage,Madras. (18) Kuit Busch, Chevrolet, 335, 89.6, 36, Honorable mention — Haley Houghton, 8. $155,493. Redmond;Madeleine Busby, Bend; Laura Rob- 9. l23) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 335, 83.5, 35, son, Summit, CiregeFrank, Madras, Marley Frost, Bend, I-lannah Holly, Redmond; Rachel Bloomquist, 10.$168,971. (2j Greg Biffle, Ford,335,1057,34,$128560. Redmond. 11. (6j JoeyLogano,Toyota, 335,95.6, 33,$121,585. 12. (36j RyanNewman, Chevrolet, 335, 79.8, 33,
FOOTBALL
$155,443. 13. (5) Martin TruexJr., Toyota, 335, 101.3, 31, $134,249. College 14. (16) Jeff Gordon,Chevrolet, 335, 100.8, 30, The APTop25 $148,021. The Top 25teamsinTheAssociated Presscollege 15. l14)AricAlmirola, Ford,335,82.2,29, $141,221. football pol, withfirst-placevotesinparentheses, re- 16. (9)CarlEdwards,Ford,335,83.7, 28,$145,051. cords through Nov. 3,total points basedon25 points 17. (17j Sam Hornish Jr., Dodge,335, 72.5, 0, for a first-placevotethroughonepoint tora25th-place $142,785. vote,andpreviousranking: 18. (24) JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet, 335, 67, 26, R ecord Pts P v $132,543. 1. A abam a(60) 9 -0 1 ,500 1 19. (22) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 335, 68.4, 25, 2. Oregon 9 -0 1,421 2 $139,210. 3. Kansas St. 9 -0 1,395 3 20. (12i Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 335, 75.1, 24, 4. NotreDame 9 -0 1,318 4 $143,051. 5. Georgia 8 -1 1,198 7 21. (20)CaseyMears, Ford, 335,57.4, 23,$116,343. 5 OhioSt 1 0-0 1,198 6 22. l7j TrevorBayne, Ford,335, 64,0,$99,810. 7. Florida 8 -1 1,112 8 23. (38j Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 335, 583, 22, 8. FloridaSt. 8 -1 1,057 9 $121,943. 9. LSU 7 -2 1,029 5 24. (32) DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 335, 61.4, 0, 10. Clemson 8-1 9 3 1 10 $99,210 11. Louisville 9-0 8 6 2 12 25. (13j KaseyKahne,Chevrolet, 334, 90.6, 19, 12. South Carolina 7-2 8 3 6 11 $107,185. 13. OregonSt. 7-1 7 9 6 13 26. (41) LandonCassill, Toyota, 333, 46.4, 18, 14. Oklahoma 6-2 7 6 5 14 $125,755. 15. Texas ABM 7-2 7 0 0 16 27. (27) Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 332, 49.8, 17, 7-2 16. Stanford 655 15 $106,585. 17 UCLA 7-2 4 4 6 25 28. (33)DavidRagan,Ford, 331, 41.2, 16,$109,668. 18. Nebraska 7-2 4 4 1 21 29. (11)MarkMartin, Toyota,accident, 329,82, 15, 19. Louisiana Tech 8-1 3 5 5 22 $97,710 19. Texas 7-2 3 5 5 NR 30. (31)Scott Speed,Ford, 328,44.7, 14,$96,000. 21. SouthernCal 6-3 2 3 7 18 31. l42)KenSchrader, Ford, 328,378,13, $105560. 22. MississippiSt. 7-2 1 8 7 17 32. (15)MarcosAmbrose, Ford,accident, 310, 70.5, 23.To edo 8-1 146 N R 12, $124,743. 24. Rutgers 7-1 9 9 NR 33. (29j Bobby Labonte,Toyota, 284, 49.4, 11, 25. Texas Tech 6-3 9 7 20 $111,682. Othersreceivingvotes:N. Illinois 64,KentSt. 61, 34. (25) JuanPabloMontoya, Chevrolet, 279,48.4 Michigan53, TCU38, Northwestern32, Dklahoma 10, $123,926. St. 27,Ohio22, UCF15,BoiseSt 11,Washington 9, 35. (30) DavidGigiand, Ford,engine,225, 46,9, PennSt. 8,SanDiegoSt. 7,Tulsa 6, Arizona5, Utah $93,460. St. 4, Fresno St.2. 36. (26) A JAgmendinger, Chevrolet, accident, 107, 54.6, 8,$101,510. USATodayTop25 Poll 37. (35) JoshWise, Ford, vibration, 41, 33.5, 7, The USA TodayTop25football coachespoll, with $93,030. first-pace votes in parentheses,records through 38. (37) MichaelMcDowel, Ford,overheating, 37, Nov. 3,total points basedon 25points for tirst place 34.5, 6,$92,803. throughonepoint for 25th,andpreviousranking: 39.l40) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, brakes,37, 31.9, 5, Record Pts Pvs $89,900 1. Alabama (59) 9 -0 1 ,475 1 40. (43) JoeNemechek, Toyota, vibration, 33,28.8, 2. Oregon 9 -0 1 ,399 2 0, $89,700. 3. Kansas St. 9 -0 1,370 3 41. (34j Mike Bliss, Toyota, brakes,32, 28.6, 0, 4. NotreDame 9 -0 1 ,289 4 $89,475. 5. Georgia 8 -1 1,218 6 42. (28) J.J.Yeley,Chevrolet, overheating, 10,29.6, 6. FloridaSt. 8 -1 1 ,147 7 2, $89,275. 7. Florida 8 -1 1,091 8 43. (39)ReedSorenson, Toyota, electrical, 6, 27.4,0, 8. Clemson 8 -1 1,013 9 $89,561. 9. LSU 7-2 998 5 10. Louisville 9-0 9 4 0 10 Race Statistics 11. South Carolina 7-2 8 8 0 11 Average Speedof RaceWinner: 136.117mph. 12. OregonSt 7-1 8 0 7 13 Time of Race: 3hours,41minutes,30seconds. 13 Oklahoma 6-2 8 0 0 12 Margin of Victory: 0 808seconds. 14. Texas A&M 7-2 7 3 6 16 Caution Flags: 9for 49laps. 15. Stanford 7-2 7 0 5 15 Lead Changes: 20among7drivers. 16. Nebraska 7-2 513 21 Lap Leaders: J.Johnson 1-48, R.Newman4917. Texas 7-2 4 8 5 22 50; J.Johnson 51-101; RNewman 102-105; 18. l.ouisianaTech 8-1 3 6 3 23 B.Keselowski 106-118; J.Johnson 119-165; 19. UCLA 7-2 333 N R Ky.Busch 166, M.Kenseth 167; TBayne16820. Rutgers 7-1 2 6 4 25 171; TKvapil 172; JJohnson 173-190; KyBusch 21. Northwestern 7-2 234 N R 191-223; B.Keselowski224; Ky.Busch225-235; 22. Usc 6-3 2 2 4 17 B.Keselowski 236-276; Ky.Busch 277-311, 23. MississippiSt. 7-2 1 8 6 18 J.Johnson312;B.Keselowski313-326;J.Johnson 24. BoiseSt. 7-2 1 2 6 14 327;B.Keselowski328-333;J.Johnson 334-335. 25. Toledo 8-1 1 0 8 N R Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps OthersReceiving Votes:Northernllinois 88;Texas Led): J.Johnson,7timesior 168 laps; Ky.Busch, Tech68, Michigan48, OklahomaState41; Cincinnati 4 timestor 80 laps;B.Keselowski, 5timestor 75 38; Tcu 37;Ohio34;KentState32; Wisconsin25; laps; RNewman,2timesfor 6laps;TBayne,1 time Utah State13;Centra Florida12;SanDiegoState 7; for 4 laps; MKenseth, 1timefor1 lap;T.Kvapil, 1 WestVirginra7; FresnoState4; Louisiana-Monroe4; time for 1lap. Tulsa 4;Washington4; ArizonaState 3; MiddleTen- Top 12 in Points: 1. J.Johnson, 2,339; 2. nessee 2. B.Keselowski, 2,332; 3. CBowyer, 2,303; 4 K.Kahne,2,281; 5.MKenseth, 2,267;6.J.Gordon, Pac-12 Standings 2,267; 7. D.Hamlin, 2,266; 8. T.Stewart, 2,259, All TimesPacific 9. M.Truex Jr., 2,259; 10. G Biffle, 2,256; 11 K.Harvick,2,238; 12.D.Eamhardt Jr., 2,188. North Conf. Overall NASCAR Driver Rating Formula Oregon 6-0 9-0 A maximum of 150points can beattained in a Oregon State 5-1 7-1 5-1 7-2 race. Stanford The formulacombinesthefollowing categories Washington 3-3 5-4 California 2-5 3-7 Wins, Finishes,Top-15 Finishes,AverageRunning Position While onLeadLap, AverageSpeed Under Washington State 0-6 2-7 Green, FastestLap,LedMostLaps,Lead-LapFinish. South Conf. Overall 4-2 7-2 UCLA Formula One usc 4-3 6-3 Abn Dhabi GrandPrix ArizonaState 3-3 5-4 Sunday Arizona 2-4 5-4 At yas Marina circuit 2-4 4-5 Utah Abu Dhabi, united ArabEmirates 1-5 1-8 Colorado Lap length: 3.46miles Saturday's Games 1. Kimi Raikkonen, Finland, Lotus, 55 laps, Colorado at Arizona,10:30a.m. 1:45:58.667,107.421mph. Oregon Stateat Stanford, noon 2. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,55,1:4559519. ArizonaStateatUSC,12:30 p.m. 3. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bul, 55, Oregon atCal, 7:30p.m. 1.46.02.830. Utah atWashington, 7:30p.m. 4. Jenson But ton, England, McLaren, 55, UCLAatWashington State,7:30 p.m. 1:46:06.454. 5. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Williams, 55, 1:46:11.674. Betting line 6. KamuiKobayashi, Japan,Sauber,55, 1:46:18.743. NFL 7. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Ferrari,55,1.46.21.563. (Hometeamsin Caps) 8. BrunoSenna,Brazil, Wiliams,55,1:46:22.209. Favorite Opening Current underdog 9. Paul di Resta, Scotland, Force India, 55, Today 1.46.22.827. SAINTS 3.5 3 Eagles 10. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Toro Rosso, 55, 1:46:26.130. 11. MichaelSchum acher, Germany, Mercedes, 55, MOTOR SPORTS 1'46:26.742.
NASCAR Sprint Cup AAA Texas500
12. Jean-Eric Vergne, France,Toro Rosso, 55, 1.46.33.573. 13. Heikki Kovalainen, Finland, Caterham, 55, 1:46:46.431.
14. TimoGlock,Germany,Marussia, 55, 1:46:55.140. 15. SergioPerez,Mexico, Sauber,55, 1:46:55.435. 16. VitalyPetrov,Russia, Caterham,55,1:47:03.262. 17. PedrodelaRosa, Spain, HRT,55,1:47:10.445. Not Classfied 18 CharlesPic,France,Marussia, 41,Retired 19 Romain Grosjean, France,Lotus,37, Retired. 20. MarkWebber, Australia, RedBull, 37, Retired. 21. LewisHamilton, England,McLaren,19, Retired. 22 NarainKarthikeyan,India,HRT , 7,Retired. 23. NicoRosberg, Germany, Mercedes,7, Retired. 24. NicoHulkenberg,Germany, ForceIndia, 0, Retired. Drivers Standings (After 18 of 20races) 1. Sebastian Vetel, Germany,RedBull, 255points. 2. Fernando Alonso, Spain,Ferrari,245. 3. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Lotus,198. 4. MarkWebber,Austra ia,RedBull,167. 5. LewisHamilton, England,McLaren,165. 6.JensonButton,England,McLaren,153. 7. Felipe Massa,Brazil, Ferrari,95. 8. NicoRosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 93. 9. RomainGrosjean,France, Lotus,90. 10. SergioPerez,Mexico, Sauber,66. 11. KamuiKobayashi, Japan,Sauber, 58. 12. NicoHukenberg, Germany, ForceIndia, 49. 13. Pauldi Resta, Scotland,ForceIndia, 46. 14. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Wiliams,43. 15. MichaelSchumacher, Germany, Mercedes,43. 16. BrunoSenna, Brazil, Wiliams,30. 17. Jean-EricVergne,France, Toro Rosso,12. 18. DanieRi l cciardo,Australia, ToroRosso,10. Constructors Standings 1. RedBull,422 points
2. Ferrari,340. 3. McLaren, 318. 4. Lotus,288 5. Mercedes,136. 6. Sauber, 124. 7. ForceIndia,95. 8. Williams,73. 9.ToroRosso,22.
TENNIS ProfessionaI Paris Masters Sunday At Palais Omnisports dsPsris-Bercy Paris Purse: $3.82million lMasters 1000) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Championship David Ferrer(4j, Spain, def.JerzyJanowicz, Po
land,6-4, 6-3.
Gatsr AirwaysTournament of Champions Sunday At ArenaArmeecHall Sofia, Bulgaria Purse: $750,000 Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Championship NadiaPetrova(2), Russia, def CarolineWozniacki (1 j Denm ark, 6-2,6-1.
lan Poulter,$1,200,000 69-68-65-65 267 JasonDufner,$417,500 68-66-71-64 —269 Scott Piercy,$417,500 68-68-68-65 —269 EmieEls,$417,500 70-63-69-67 —269 Phil Mickelson,$417,500 66-69-66-68—269 LouisOosthuizen,$190,000 65-63-70-72—270 LeeWestwood,$190,000 70-67-61-72—270 AdamScott,$155,000 65-68-71-67 —271 Martin Kaym er, $140,000 68-69-67-68 —272 Bill Haas,$125,000 69-67-66-71 —273 73-67-67-67 —274 HiroyukiFujita,$98,000 71-70-66-67 —274 MarcelSiem,$98,000 71-65-70 68—274 ThorbjomDlesen,$98,000 67-70-69-68—274 PromMeesawat, $98,000 72-71-60-71—274 BrandtSnedeker $98,000 72-72-69-62 —275 NickWatney,$80,500 70-68-66-71 —275 Carl Pettersson, $80,500 MarcLeishman,$75,000 73-68-65-70—276 LukeDonald,$75,000 68-68-69-71—276 GaganjeetBhugar,$75,000 73-68-63-72 —276 Thomas Bjorn,$70,000 72-70-68-67 —277 ThongchaiJaidee,$70,000 70-68-69-70—277 Keegan Bradley, $67,000 71-68-68-71—278 Wenchong Liang,$62,250 72-73-66-68—279 Scott Hend,$62,250 70-74-67 68—279 PeterHanson,$62,250 66-71-73-69—279 72-70-67-70—279 Justin Rose,$62,250 72-70-70-68—280 John Senden,$57,500 BerndWiesberger,$57,500 72-72-68-68—280 68-73-69-70—280 Thomas Aiken,$57,500 GonzaloFdez-castano,$57,500 71-67-69-73—280 ShaneLowry,$55,000 66-68 72-75 281 66-72-69-75—282 BubbaWatson $54000 TadahiroTakayama, $52,500 73-69-70-71—283 Ik-JaeJang,$52,500 68-71-72-72 —283 Paul Lawrie$50,000 , 69-71-72-72 —284 Joost Luiten,$50,000 72-72-68-72 284 AshunWu,$50,000 68-70-71-75—284 ThawornWiratchant,$47,000 72-70-70-73—285 Francesco Molinari, $47,000 74-69-74-68—285 DustinJohnson,$47,000 67-68-84-66—285 JulienQuesne,$43,500 71-71-71-73—286 Graeme McDoweg,$43,500 71-75-68-72 —286 73-72-70-71 286 MarcusFraser,$43,500 71-74 JamieDonaldson,$43,500 Brendan Jones, $40000 MarkWilson,$40,000 GregChalmers,$40,000 JeevMilkhaSingh,$40,000 RafaCabrera-Bego,$40,000 RobertGarrigus,$38,000 BradKennedy,$38,000 GeoffOgilvy,$38,000 NicolasColsaerts, $36,750 HanLee,$36,750 GeorgeCoetzee,$34,750 RobertAgenby,$34,750 GarthMulroy,$34,750 Hyung-Sung Kim,$34,750 JacoVanZyl,$34,750 Xin-JunZhang,$34,750 DannyWigett, $32,500 HennieOtto,$32,500 Branden Grace,$32,500 AlvaroQuiros,$31,000 RichieRamsay,$31,000 Kyle Stanley, $31,000 Jbe Kruger,$30,000 DavidLynn,$29,000 ToshinoriMuto,$29,000 KenichiKuboya,$29,000 David Lipsky, $27,500 Yuta Ikeda,$27,500 RobertRock,$27,500 JohnsonWagner,$26,500 SiddikurRahm an,$26,000 Mu Hu,$25,500
LPGA Tour Miznno Clsssic Sunday At Kintetsu KashikojimaoCuntry Club Shima, Japan Purse:, $1.2 million yardage: 6,506; P ar: 72 Final Round Leading Score StacyLewis,$180,000 Bo MeeLee,$109,523 Ayakouehara,$79,451 YaniTseng,$61,461 AnnaNordqvist, $38,376 HeeKyungSeo, $38,376 Na Yeon Choi, $38,376 JennyShin,$38,376 ChellaChoi,$22,822 BeatrizRecari,$22,822 So-HeeKim,$22,822 KarineIcher,$22,822 RikakoMorita,$22,822 AmyYang,$17,429 SakuraYokomine, $17,429 Jiyai Shin,$17,429
Akanelijima, $13,138 Mika Miyazato, $13,138 InbeePark,$13,138 MariajoUribe,$13,138 Miki Sakai$13,138 , LizetteSalas,$13,138 Eun-Hee Ji, $13,138 Rhee Lee,$13,138 JunkoOmote,$13,138 AngelaStanford,$13,138 Giulia Sergas,$9,999 Shanshan Feng,$9,999 Pornanong Phatlum,$9,999
Momoko ueda,$9,999
Mina Harigae,$9,054 GerinaPiler, $7,701 AlisonWalshe,$7,701 Fed Cup Hee-Won Han,$7,701 World Group KarrieWebb,$7,701 Final KumikoKaneda,$7,701 At 02 Arena Na-RiLee,$7,701 Prague,CzechRepublic YumikoYoshida, $7,701 Surface: Hard-Indoor Kaori Ohe, $5,876 Saturday DanielleKang,$5,876 Czech Republic 3, Ssrbia1 Erika Kikuchi$5,876 , Singles EstherLee,$5,876 LucieSafarova,CzechRepublic, def. AnaIvanovic, MihokoIseri, $5,876 Serbia,6-4,6-3. CandieKung,$5,876 PetraKvitova,CzechRepublic, def.JelenaJankov- TeresaLu,$4,917 ic, Serbia,6-4, 6-1. Maiko Wakabayashi,$4,917 Sunday SydneeMichaels,$4,917 Reverse Singles yuki Ichinose,$4,233 Ana Ivanovic, Serbia,def. Petra Kvitova,Czech Sun-JuAhn,$4,233 Republic,6-3,7-5. IK. Kim,$4,233 Lucie Safarova, Czech Republic, det. Jelena MisuzuNarita,$4,233 Jankovic,Serbia,6-1,6-1. YukariBaba,$4,233 Note:Doublesnotplayed. JenniferSong, $3,418 MegumiKido,$3,418 Mo Martin,$3,418 GOLF RitsukoRyu,$3,418 MayuHattori, $3,418 Champions Tour Yeo-JinKang,$3,418 Na RiKim,$3418 Charles Schwab CupChampronship HaejrKang,$3,418 Sunday At Desert Mountain Club,CochiseCourse Scottsdale, Ariz. SOCCER Purse: $2.6 million yardage: 6,929;Psr:70 MLS Final Round TomLehman(880),$440,000 68-63-62-65 258 MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER Jay Haas(508),$254,000 66-60-69-69—264 All Times Pacific Jay Don Blake(426),$213,000 64-71-65-66—266 FredCouples(316),$158,000 66-66-62-73—267 EASTERNCONFERENCE FredFunk(316),$158,000 71-65-66-65—267 Semifinals Bernhard Langer(234),$117,00069-65-70-65—269 D.C. United vs.Newyork RussCochran(210),$105,000 67-70-64-69—270 Saturday,Nov3: NewYork 1,D.C.United 1 Olin Browne (176), $87,500 66-67-69-70—272 Wednesday,Nov.7. D.C.United atNewYork, 5 p.m. CoreyPavin(176j, $87,500 67-68-69-68—272 KansasCityvs. Houston MichaelAllen(140), $70,000 69-66-69-69—273 Sunday,Nov.4. Houston 2, KansasCity 0 John Cook(140),$70,000 71-64-70-68—273 Wednesday,Nov.7: Houston atKansasCity, 6 p.m. DavidFrost(140),$70,000 70-6468-71 273 BradBryant(114j, $57,000 68-67-70-69—274 WESTERN CONFERENCE M. Calcavecchia l114), $57,000 68-66-68-72—274 Semifinals Bill Glasson(102j, $50,500 66-70-69-70—275 San Josevs. LosAngeles Larry Mize(102),$50,500 73-66-67-69—275 Sunday,Nov.4 SanJose1, l.osAngeles0 Joe Daley(82),$40,700 7 0 -71-67-70—278 Wednesday,Nov.7: LosAngelesatSanJose,8p.m. KennyPerry(82), $40,700 69-68-69-72—278 Seattle vs. RealSalt Lake LorenRoberts(82), $40,700 71-70-67-70—278 Friday,Nov.2: RealSaltLake0,Seatde0 Kirk Triplett(82j, $40,700 67-68-74-69—278 Thursday,Nov.8. Seattle atReal Salt Lake,6:30p.m. Willie Wood(82), $40,700 71-70-68-69—278 GaryHallberg(68), $34,000 65-72-70-72—279 ChienSoonLu(64), $32,000 70-73-67-70—280 DEALS PeterSenior(60), $30,000 72-66-72-71—281 MarkWiebe(58), $29,000 73-70-70-69—282 Transactions MarkMcNulty(54),$27,000 69-6 9-73-72 283 COLLEGE Jeff Sluman(52),$26000 67-72- 72-74— 285 KENTUCK Y—Firedfootball coachJoker Philips. Mike Goodes(50),$25,000 77-68-70-71—286 RogerChapman (50), $24,500 69-70-74-78—291 DanForsman(48j, $24,000 75-70-75-72—292
WGC WORLD GOLFCHAMPIONSHIPS HSGCChampions
Sunday At Mission Hills Golf Club, OlazabslCourse Shenzhsn, China Purse: $7 million Yardage: 7,301; Psr: 72 Final Round
FISH COUNT Upstream year to datemovement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonWednesday (morerecentupdatesnotavailab e). Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 589,100 143,630 233,704 84,807 The Dages 412,221 125,601 198,789 70033 John Day 335,443 108,693 162,083 61,631 McNary 340,663 63,146 149,762 51,074
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012• THE BULLETIN
MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR
NFL ROUNDUP
NBA ROUNDUP
Lakers top Pistons, finally get first win
Johnson
holds off l(eselowski to win at Texas By Stephen Hawkins The Associated Press
FORT WORTH, TexasJimmie Johnson and Brad K eselowski are i n q u i t e a fight for the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship. With two rounds to go, five-time champion John-
ae
son now has a bigger edge after a slugfest in Texas that included some hard banging late. J ohnson regained t h e lead on the final restart on the 334thof 335 laps before
holding off the young challenger in an ending shootout for a 1-2 finish in Texas. "It was an awesome race. I t's a great way to do i t when the gloves are off and it's bare-knuckle fighting," Johnson said. "I got a great restart and got by him. I knew we had the speed if I could just get by him." They were side-by-side on the final restart, but Johnson charged his No. 48 Chevrolet hard on the outside, cleared Keselowski on the backstretch and led for the final I't~ laps. Johnson won from the pole for the second week in a row, and increased his series lead by five to seven points. Though he led 168 laps, Johnson f o un d h i m self chasing for much of the final part of the race. And it wasn't until the last of three restartsin the final 19 laps that Johnson finally went ahead for good. After falling from first to ninth during the previous stop when he got slightly blocked in hi s stall a nd then caught in a jam on pit road, Keselowski opted for only left-side tires on his No. 2 Dodge when everybody else took four tires. He r estarted i n t he lead with 19 laps left, and the strategy might have worked. But t h ere w ere still two more restarts, and Johnson pulled ahead in the one that counted most. "Getting that last yellow, I felt like restarts are like rock, paper, scissors. Eventually you're going to lose them. It's just a matter of time," Keselowski said. "To win two out of three, I felt lucky to do that." They go to Phoenix next week, where Johnson was fourth and Keselowski fifth in the second race ofthe season eight months ago. Keselowski ha d n ever finished better than 14th at Texas before leading 75 laps in a runner-up showing that still wasn't good enough to make up ground on Johnson. " It was a fu n day f o r sure," K eselowski s a i d.
"We'll keep fighting."
Johnson's t e a m mates Jeff Gordon an d K a sey Kahne were involved in contact in the back of the field with Greg Biffle, setting up another restart with eight laps to go. After Johnson got loose when he was on the high side racing w it h K e selowski, the two made hard contact close to the startfinish line. They kept going forward, and Johnson had a slight lead at the end of that lap. Keselowski pulled ahead, and stayed there until Mark Martin spun out to set up a green-white-checkered finish. "I just pointed at him, just wanted him to use his head. No need to take us out in the process," Johnson said of the racing against Keselowski. "The cool thing about it, we walked up to that line, got to the edge, and it stopped." One of the people who went to Victory Lane to shake Johnson's hand was Keselowski. "I raced hard, and I'm sure someone would say dirty," K eselowski s a id. "But I raced hard and we both came back around, so there's something to be said for that."
D3
Bill Kostroun /The Associated Press
Pittsburgh Steeiers running back Isaac Redman (33) dives for the winning touchdown during the fourth quarter of Sunday's game against the New York Giants in East Rutherford, N.J.
eeers 0 i a n S in wa e 0 urrieane The Associated Press EAST RUT H E RFORD, N.J. — Sometimes, real life intrudes on the games we play. And s ometimes, we need those games to get away from real life. In the wake of Superstorm Sandy and the destruction it brought to the Northeast, everyone on the Pittsburgh Steelers and New York Giants understood that.
"There are so many bigger things going on around here that what we do is not as important as real life," Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger said Sunday after throwing for two touchdowns in a 24-20 comeback victory. "My thoughts and prayers go out to everyone else who
are going through so much. There were so many emotions going on, I didn't know what to expect from it. But maybe we were ableto take their minds off their problems just a little." That's all the local fans sought: temporary relief and the Giants (6-3) provided it for a while. But they couldn't stop Isaac Redman, who had little relief with Pittsburgh's other two main backs injured, yet rushed for a career-best 147 yards and the winning Iyard TD with 4:02 to go as the Steelers rallied from a 20-10 deficit in the fourth quarter. Overcoming unusual slop-
piness, the Steelers (5-3) dominated the second half. They did so after they arrived in New Jersey hours before the game, which might have accounted fortheir carelessness. They had the fewest giveaways in the NFL entering the game, butwere neglectful with the ball and in pass coverage; cornerback Keenan Lewis had 87 yards on tw o p a s s i n terference penalties. They wasted some great kick returns, too. The Steelers' long day began with a plane ride to New Jersey, a short side trip to their team hotel — they couldn't get enough rooms to stay in the area on Saturday night and needed aleague travelwaiver to arrive on game day — then on to the stadium. Outside, folks tailgated and tried to blunt some of the devastation from the week's superstorm. As Giants fan Courtney Davis, whose town of Sea Bright
was washed away by Hurricane Sandy, said in response to holding the game: "We need this." "Coming in the day of the game was tough and we had to deal with that adversity," Redman said. "But the Giants had to deal with adversity all week. We just had to come in here and be ready to play. The Giants saw their fourgame winning streak end. They seemed in controlas Michael Boley sprinted 70 yards with a fumble recovery in thesecond quarter fora 147 lead. Among Pittsburgh's gaffes: a fake field goal from the New York 3 early in the fourth quarter o n w h i c h k i c k er Shaun Suisham lost a yard. That wasted a 63-yard punt return by Sanders on his first such runback all season. Eli Manning threw for only 125 yards in one of the worst
111 yards against Buffalo's NFL-worst rushing defense. Andre Johnson caught eight passes for 118 yards and Foster scored for the fifth straight
game for Houston (7-1).
Panthers ...... . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Redskins...... . . . . . . . . . . . 13 LANDOVER, Md. — Cam Newton completed 13 of 23 passes for 201 yards with a touchdown and ran eight timesfor37 yards and a score as Carolina snapped a fivegame losing streak. Bears ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Titans..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Brian Urlacher became the latest Chicago defender to return an interception for a touchdown and Jay Cutler threw three TD p asses to Brandon Marshall. Cornerback Charles Tillman forced four fumbles and Chicago created five turnovers while winning its sixth in a row. games of his career. Seahawks ....... . . . . . . . . . 30 Also on Sunday: Vikings...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Colts..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 SEATTLE — M a rshawn Dolphins ...... . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Lynch ran for 124 yards and I NDIANAPOLIS — A n - a touchdown, rookie QB Rusdrew Luck broke the NFL's sell Wilson threw three firstsingle-game rookie record half touchdowns, and Seattle by throwing for 433 yards in overcame 182 yards rushing leading Indianapolis. Luck by Adrian Peterson. was 30 of 48 with two TDs. Broncos............ . . . ... 31 Indy (5-3) has won t h r ee Bengais..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 straight. CINCINNATI — P e yton Buccaneers............ ... 42 Manning overcame a p a ir Raiders...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 of interceptions by throwing O AKLAND, C a l i f . threetouchdownpasses. TrinRookie Doug Martin rushed don Holliday also returned a for a f r a nchise-record 251 kickoff a Broncos-record 105 yards and four touchdowns yards for a touchdown. and Ahmad Black intercepted Ravens...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 a Carson Palmer pass after Browns....... . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Oakland had cut an 18-point CLEVELAND Joe d eficit to three late in t h e Flacco threw a 19-yard touchfourth quarter. Martin, the down pass to Torrey Smith 31st pick in April out of Boise with 4:26 left as Baltimore State, became the first back won its 11th straight game insince at least 1940 to score on side the AFC North. three TD runs of at least 45 Lions...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
yards in one game, according Jaguars ............ . . . ... 14 to STATS LLC. Packers ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Cardinals ....... . . . . . . . . . . 17 GREEN BAY, Wis. — Tom Crabtree had a 72-yard touchdown that was Green Bay's longest of the season, and R andall Cobb a dded t w o scoring catches. The Packers (6-3) finished with a seasonhigh 176 yards rushing. Texans ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Bills...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 HOUSTON — Matt Schaub threw two touchdown passes and Arian Foster ran for
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. Mikel Leshoureran for three touchdowns, Calvin Johnson got involved early and Detroit (4-4) turned in its most complete victory of the season. Falcons....... . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 -
Cowboys............ . . ... 13
ATLANTA Michael Turner had a tiebreaking 3yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter, Matt Bryant kicked four field goals and the Falcons beat Dallas to extend their run as the NFL's only unbeaten team.
The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Dwight Howard scored 2 8 p o i nts, Kobe Bryant had 15 points and eight assists, and the Los Angeles Lakers finally g ot their first victory of the season, 108-79 over the winless Detroit Pistons on S u nday night. Metta World Peace scored 18 points and Pau Gasol added 14 for the Lakers, who went 08 inthe preseason and started the regular season 0-3 for just the fourth time in franchise history despite adding Howard and Steve Nash over the summer. The Lakers' growing worries about their new offense and their roster's durability vanished for a day against the struggling Pistons, who never led. Jonas Jerebko scored 18 points for Detroit in the second stop on a d i f ficult six-
second straight game with a small fracture in his left leg. H oward excelled i n t h e paint against Greg Monroe, hitting 12 of 14 shots — most of them right at the rim — and grabbing seven rebounds with just one foul. Bryant appeared to play easily on his sore foot, taking just 10 shots and grabbing seven rebounds. Also on Sunday: Knicks...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 76ers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84 NEW YORK — C a rmelo Anthony scored 27 points, JR Smith had 20, and New York beat Philadelphia in the opener of a home-and-home series. Raptors...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Timberwoives..... . . . . . . . . 86 TORONTO — Kyle Lowry and DeMar DeRozan each scored 22 points, Alan Anderson had 18 and the Raptors earned their first victory of the season, beating Minnesota. Magic ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 game road trip. Suns.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 L os Angeles took a 2 8 ORLANDO, Fla. — J.J. point lead in the first half and Redick scored 24 points, Arstretched it to 36 points in the ron Afflalo and Glen Davis third quarter, with H oward each had 22 points, and Nikola d ominating th e p a in t a n d Vucevic added 18 points and Bryant slipping easily into a 13 rebounds as the Magic ralplaymaking role in the injured lied to beat Phoenix. Nash's absence. Hawks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 The Lakers earned their Thunder.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 f irst victory i n n e arly f i v e OKLAH OM A CITY — Al weeks together since the start Horford had 23 points and of training camp, and they 12 rebounds, Lou Wi lliams occasionally resembled the added 10 of his 19 points durpowerhouse most expected to ing Atlanta's decisive fourthsee this season — even if it's quarter surge and the Hawks without Nash, who missed his beat the Thunder.
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
ConferenceGlance AllTimesPST
EASTERNCONFERENCE
w L
pn GB
w L
pn GB
usi
L.A. Lakers Denver Sacramento d-divisionleader
3 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0
0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 2 2 2 3 3 3
1 . 000 .6 6 7 1 .6 6 7 1 .6 6 7 1 .6 6 7 1 .6 6 7 1 .6 6 7 1 500 1 ' / z .5 0 0 1 '/~ .3 3 3 2 .3 3 3 2 .3 3 3 2 .2 5 0 2 '/~ .0 0 0 3 000 3
ATLANTA (104) Korver 1-51-3 4, Tolliver 2-6 0 0 6, Horford u191-2 23,Teague7-12 2-216, Stevenson3-9 0-0 8, Johnson5-60-210, Harris2-52-2 7,Wiliams5-14 8-919, Pachulia3-50-06, Morrow2-20-05. Totals 41-83 14-20 104. OKLAHOMA CITY (95) Durant7-177-8 22,Ibaka6-9 2-214, Perkins3-5 3-4 9, Westbrook5-182-2 14, Sefolosha2-3 0-04, Martin 8 0 6-6 28,collison2-3 0-04, Maynor0 4 0-0 0, Thabeet 0-0 0-00, Jackson0-1 0-00. Totals 33-71 20-2295. Atlanta 30 17 28 29 — 104 Oklahoma City 2 2 2 9 23 21 — 95
Magic115, Siins 94 PHOENIX (94) Beasley9-171-1 22,Scola10-19 4-524, Gortat 7-12 0-014,Dragic5-12 1-212, Dudley1-4 0-2 3, Brown3-9 0-06, Johnson1-50-0 2, Telfair 1-50-0 2,Morris2-60-24, O'Neal0-1 4-4 4, Tucker0-1 1-2 1,Zeller0-00-00,Marshall0-00-00.Totals39-91 11-18 94. 0RLAND0I115) Jones1-3 0-0 2,Davis9-224-422, Vucevic 916 0-0 18,Moore6-11 0-0 15, Afilalo 8-163-3 22, Redick9-143-4 24,Ayon0-1 0-00, McRoberts1-4 3-45, Smith 0 200 0 Nicholson2-31-25, O'Quinn 0-02-2 z Totals45-9216-19115. Phoenix 33 23 20 18 — 94 Orlando 26 20 40 29 — 115
Raptors105, T'wolves 86
Sunday'sGames
MINNESOT A(86)
NewYork100,Philadelphia84 Orlando 05 phoenix94 Toronto105,Minnesota86 Atlanta104,OklahomaC> ty95 L.A. Lakers108,Detroit 79
Kirilenko6-7 4-517, Wiiliams3-72-4 9, Pekovic 6-113-415, Ridmr3-52-28, Roy0-34-44, Shved 2-6 3-4 8,Budinger3-5 1-29, Cunningham2-7 0-0 4,Barea3-5 2-2 9,Stiemsma1-3 0-02,Comoy0 4 0-0 0, Amundson 0-1 1-41, Lee0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-64 22-3186.
Today'sGames
NewYorkatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. Minnesota at Brookyn,4:30p.m. PhoenixatMiami, 4:30p.m. Utah atMemphis, 5p.m. Portlandat Dallas,5:30 p.m. Indiana at SanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Golden Stateat Sacramento, 7p.m. ClevelandatLA. Clippers, 7:30p.m.
TORONTO (105) Fields 2-41-1 5,Bargnani4-16 0-010, Valanciunas 2-8 0-0 4,Lowry8-10 4-422, DeRozan8-14 5-622, Ross1-40-02, Johnson 3-73-49, Davis 37 0-0 6,Calderon3-5 0-07, Anderson6-142-2 18, Lucas 0-1 0-0 0,McGuire0 0 0-0 0.Totals 40-90 15-17 105. Minnesota 24 23 26 13 — 86 Toronto 25 31 23 26 — 105
Summaries Sunday'sGames
Knicks 100, 76ers 84
Lakers 108, Pistons 79 DETROIT (79)
13 21 21 24 — 79 34 28 24 22 — 108
Hawks104, Thunder 95
d-Milwaukee 2 0 1. 0 00 d-New York 2 0 1. 0 00 d-Orlando 2 0 1. 0 00 Brooklyn 1 0 1. 0 00 '/z Chicago 2 1 .6 6 7 '/2 Indiana 2 1 .6 6 7 '/~ Miami 2 1 .6 6 7 '/2 Charlotte 1 1 .5 0 0 1 Atlanta 1 .500 1 Philadelphia 1 1 .5 0 0 1 Boston 2 . 333 1'/~ Cleveland 1 2 .3 3 3 1 '/z Toronto 1 2 .3 3 3 1 '/~ Washington 0 2 .0 0 0 2 Detroit 0 3 .0 0 0 2 '/z WESTERN CONFERENCE
d-SanAntonio d-Golden State d-Portland L.A. C ippers Dallas Houston NewOrleans Memphis Minnesota Oklahoma City Phoenix
40-7718-26 108. Detroit L.A. Lakers
Prince3-83-49, Maxiell 3-72-28, Monroe4-10 0-0 8, Knight1-80-0 2, Stuckey0-60-0 0, Jerebko 5-97-918, English2-5 2-28,Drummond 2-61-2 5, Bynum 4-11 2-210, Singler4-9 2-211. Totals 28-79 19-23 79. L.A.LAKEBS(108) WorldPeace7-11 1-2 18, Gasol6-16 2-2 14, Howard12-144-928, Blake2-4 0-0 6, Bryant5-10 2215, Hill 3 4 5511, Ebanks06 22 2, Morris2 5 1-2 6, Jamison2-41-2 6, Sacre1-1 0-0 2, Meeks 0-2 0-0 0,Duhon0-0 0-00, Clark0-0 0-00. Totals
PHILADELPHIA (84) Turner2-96-611, TYoung 7-142-316, Allen 3-4 0-0 6, Richardson0-10-0 0, Holiday11-180-0 27, N.Young2-100-05, Wright 5-0 0-1 11, Hawes4-6 0-08Wayns0-50-00,Ivey0-10-00.Totals34-79 8-10 84. NEWYORK(100) Brewer49 0-29, Anthony10-186 927, Chandler 1-20 02, Kidd4 82212, Felton5-100011, Smith 8-15 0-0 20,Thomas2-41-1 5, Prigioni 1-4 0-02, Novak2-5 0-06,Wallace1-1 1-23, White0-01-21,
Copeland1-I 0-0 zTotals39-7711-18100. Philadelphia New York
25 1 92 2 18 — 84 31 26 18 25 — 100
Lehman winsChampionsTour finale, points title The Associated Press S COTTSDALE, A r i z . — A sked about the season title scenarios entering the Champions Tour finale, Tom Lehman said all he knew was "if I win, I win." That's all he needed to know. Lehman won the Charles Schwab Cup Championship on Sunday at Desert Mountain to become the first player to win the season points title two straight years. After shooting 68-63-62 to take a one-stroke lead into the final round, Lehman birdied four of the last five holesfor a 5-under 65 and a six-stroke victory. "It was a great week from start to finish," Lehman said. "Absolutely, I played some of my best golf of the year. I'm very, very fortunate and thankful to
GOLF ROUNDUP be able to kind of bring my best when I needed it." Lehman won at the mountainside club where he first worked with Jim Flick, the noted swing instructor stricken by pancreatic cancer. "The more I thought about that, the more teary-eyed I would get," said Lehman, who spoke to Flick on the phone before the round. "I decided I can't play this round of golf with tears in my eyes. I have to wait until business is finished." Lehman finished at 22-under 258 on the par-70 Cochise Course to break the Champions Tour record for the lowest numerical score in a 72-hole event. Jack Nicklausset the previous record
of 261 at par-72 Dearborn Country Club in Michigan in the 1990 Mazda Senior TPC. Lehman received a $1 million annuity in the Charles Schwab Cup points competition and earned $440,000 for the tournament victory. Jay Haas shot a 69 to finish second. Jay Don Blake was third at 14 under after a 66, and Fred Couples and Fred Funk were another stroke back. Bernhard Langer was sixth at 11under after a 65.He finished second inthe season race, 435 points back after entering the week with a 211-point lead. Also on Sunday: Pouiter triumphs in China SHENZHEN, China — Ian Poulter won the HSBC Champions for his first victory of the season, overcoming a four-stroke deficit with a 7-under 65.
The Englishman finished at 21-under 267 on Mission Hills' Olazabal Course for a two-shot victory. Phil Mickelson
(68), Jason Dufner (64), Scott Piercy (65) and Ernie Els (67) tied for second. Lewis wins in Japan SHIMA, Japan — Stacy Lewis rallied to win the Mizuno Classic for her LPGA Tour-leading fourth title of the year, birdieing the final three holes for an 8-under 64 and a one-stroke victory over South Korea's Bo-mee Lee. 14-year-oid gets Masters invite BANGKOK — Guan Tianlang won the Asia-Pacific Championship, making the 14-year-old Chinese star the youngest player ever to qualify for the Masters. Guan easily surpasses the mark set by Italy's Matteo Manassero, who was about to turn 17 when he played in 2010.
D4
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012
NFL SCOREBOARD Summaries
East
Colts 23, Dolphins 20 Miami Indianapolis
3 14 8 3 — 2 0 7 6 7 3 — 23
First Quarter
Mia — FGCarpenter 37, 4:15. Ind — Wayne9passfrom Luck(Vinatieri kick),:47.
SecondOuarter Mia — Clay31passfromTannehi I (Carpenter kick), 13:25. Ind — FGVinatieri 23,9:37.
Mia — Bush18 run(Carpenterkick), 5:07. Ind — FGVinatieri 47,:07. Third Quarter
W N ew England 5 3 Miami 4 N.Y.Jets 3 Buffalo 3
Fourlh Quarter
Mia FG Carpenter 31,13:12. Ind — FGVinatieri 43,5:58. A—66,479.
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsI.ost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time otPossession
Buccaneers 42, Raiders 32 TampaBay Oakland
0 7 21 14 — 42 3 7 8 2 2 — 32
Pc t .62 5 .5 0 0 .375 .375
PF PA
H ome Away A FC NF C
2 62 170 170 149 168 200 180 248
2 - 1- 0 2 - 1-0 2 - 3-0 1 - 2-0
W 7 5 3 I
L 1 3 6 7
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t .87 5 .6 2 5 .3 3 3 .12 5
PF PA 237 137 159 191 182 308 117 219
Baltimore Pittsburgh Cincinnati Cleveland
W 6 5 3 2
L 2 3 5 7
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t .7 5 0 .6 2 5 .37 5 .2 2 2
PF PA 199 176 191 164 189 218 169 211
3 2 -0 2 - 3-0 1 - 2-0 2 - 3-0
4-1-0 3-3-0 3-4-0 2-4-0
1-2-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 1-1-0
Di v 2-0-0 1-1-0 2-2-0 0-2-0
H o m e A way 4 - 1-0 3 - 0-0 4 - 1-0 1 - 2-0 2 - 3-0 1 - 3-0 0 - 4-0 1 - 3-0
A FC NF C Di v 7-0-0 0-1-0 2-0-0 3-2-0 2-1-0 1-1-0 2-4-0 1-2-0 0-2-0 1-3-0 0-4-0 1-1-0
H o m e A way 4 - 0-0 2 - 2-0 3 - 0-0 2 - 3-0 1 - 3-0 2 - 2-0 2 - 3-0 0 - 4-0
A FC NF C Di v 5-1-0 1-1-0 3-0-0 2-3-0 3-0-0 1-0-0 2-5-0 1-0-0 1-3-0 2-5-0 0-2-0 1-3-0
North
West
Denver San Diego 281 41 9 Oakland 1 -12 4 - 2 9 KansasCity 3 -79 2 - 52 0-0 0-0 22-38-0 30-48-0
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Miami: Bush10-41,Thomas6-37, Miller1-7, Tannehii1-(mi l nus1).Indianapolis: Ballard16-60,Carter8-31,Luck1-5, Hilton1-1. PASSING— Miami:Tannehiff22-38-0-290.Indianapolis: Luck 30-48-0-433. RECEIVING —Miami: Hartline8-107,Bess6-67, Gaff ney2-27,Bush2-25,Thomas2-25,Clay1-31,Fasano 1-8. Indianapolis: Wayne 7-78, Hilton 6-102, Allen 6-75,Avery5-108, Baffard3-38, Braziff2-25, D.Brown 1-7. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Indianapolis: Vinatieri 48(WR),54(BK).
4 5 5
T 0 0 0 0
Houston Indianapolis Tennessee Jacksonvile
Mia Ind 20 27 3 65 51 6 18-84 26-97
2 -9 1- 1 4 4-53.3 2-49.5 1-0 2-0 8-79 1 1-91 25 06 34:54
L
South
Ind — Hilton 36 passfrom Luck(Vinatieri kick),
I:49.
Bal — Rice8 run(Tuckerkick), 8:32. Bal — Pierce12run(Tuckerkick),:01.
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Sunday'sGames
W L
T P c t PF
PA
Ho m e A w ay A FC NF C
5 4 3 1
0 0 0 0
175 15 7 22 9 240
310 2- 2- 0 2- 2- 0 0- 4 - 0
3 4 5 7
625 .5 0 0 .3 7 5 .1 2 5
23 5 185 171 133
22 -0 2 - 2-0 1 - 3-0 1 - 3-0
4-2 0 4-2-0 3-3-0 0-5-0
1-1-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 1-2-0
Di v 2-0-0 3-1-0 1-2-0 0-3-0
NATIONAL CONFERENCE East
W N.Y.Giants 6 Philadelphia 3 Dallas 3 Washington 3
L 3 4 5 6
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t .6 6 7 .42 9 .3 7 5 .3 3 3
PF PA 254 185 120 155 150 181 226 248
H o m e A way 3 - 2-0 3 - 1-0 2 - 2-0 1 - 2-0 1 - 2-0 2 - 3-0 1 - 3-0 2 - 3-0
NFC AFC 5-2-0 1-1-0 1-3-0 2-1-0 3-4-0 0-1-0 3-4-0 0-2-0
Di v 2-2-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 0-1-0
NFC AFC 4-0-0 4-0-0 2-4-0 2-0-0 1-3-0 1-2-0 2-6-0 0-0-0
Di v 1-0-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 1-2-0
South Atlanta
TampaBay NewOrleans Carolina
W 8 4 2 2
L 0 4 5 6
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t PF PA 1. 000 220 143 .5 0 0 226 185 .2 8 6 190 216 .25 0 149 180
H o m e A way 4 - 0-0 4 - 0-0 2 - 2-0 2 - 2-0 1 - 2-0 1 - 3-0 1 - 3-0 1 - 3-0
North Chicago GreenBay Minnesota Detroit
W 7 6 5 4
L 1 3 4 4
T 0 0 0 0
Pct .8 7 5 .6 6 7 .5 5 6 .5 0 0
PF PA 2 3 6 12 0 2 3 9 18 7 2 0 4 19 7 1 9 2 18 8
Ho m e 4- 0- 0 4- 1- 0 4- 1- 0 2- 1- 0
A w ay 3 - 1-0 2 - 2-0 1 - 3-0 2 - 3-0
NFC AFC Di v 4-1-0 3-0-0 1-1-0 4-2-0 2-1-0 1-0-0 3-3-0 2-1-0 1-0-0 3-3-0 1-1-0 0-2-0
West
First Quarter Oak— FG Janikowski29,:45. SecondOuarter TB — Jackson20 passfrom Freeman (Barth kick),
W L T P c t PF PA Hom e Away NFC A F C Div SanFrancisco 6 2 0 . 750 1 8 9 10 3 3- 1 -0 3-1-0 4-2-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 Seattle 5 4 0 . 556 1 7 0 15 4 4- 0 -0 1-4-0 4-4 0 1 -0-0 0-3-0 Anzona 4 5 0 . 444 1 4 4 17 3 3- 2 -0 1-3-0 2-4-0 2 -1-0 1-2-0 12:54. 5 0 . 375 1 3 7 18 6 3 - 2 -0 0-3-0 3-3-0 0 -2-0 2-0-0 Oak —Streater 25 passfrom Palmer(Janikowski St. Louis 3 kick), 1:20. Thursday' sGame Thursday'sGame Third Quarter San Diego 31, KarisasCity13 Indianapois atJacksonvile, 5 20p m. TB — Martin 45 run(Barth kick),12:09. Sunday' s Games Sunday, Nov. 11 TB Williams 4passfromFreeman (Barth kick), GreenBay31,Arizona 17 Atlantaat NewOrleans, 10a.m. 7:12. Chicago51,Tennessee20 Detroit atMinnesota,10a.m. TB — Martin 67 run(Barth kick),2.15. Houston21, Buffalo9 Denverat Carolina,10a.m. Fourlh Quarter Carolina 21, W a shi n gton13 San DiegoatTampaBay,10a m. Oak —Myers4passtrom Paimer (Janikowski kick), Detroit 31,Jacksonviffe14 Tennessee atMiami,10 a.m. 14.11. Denver31, Cincinnati 23 Buffalo atNewEngland, 10a.m. TB — Martin 70 run(Barth kick),13:51. 25,Cleveland15 OaklandatBaltimore, 10a.m. Oak —Myers I passfromPalmer (Janikowski kick), Baltimore Indianapolis23, Miami20 NY Giantsat Cincinnati,10 am. 9:48. Seattle30,Minnesota20 N.Y.JetsatSeatle,1:05 p.m. Oak Reece13 passfromPalmer (Criner passfrom TampaBay42, Oakland 32 St. LouisatSanFrancisco, 1:25p.m. Palmer),3:51. Pittsburgh24, N.Y.Giants20 Dallas atPhiladelphia,1:25p.m. TB — Martin1run (Barthkick),1:49. Atlanta19,Dagas13 Housto natChicago,5:20p.m. A—52,055. Open: N.Y.Jets, NewEngland, SanFrancisco, St. Open:Arizona,Cleveland,GreenBay,Washington Louis Monday, Nov. 12 TB Oak Today's Game KansasCityat Pittsburgh,5:30p.m. First downs 23 25 PhiladelphiaatNewOrleans,5:30 p.m. TotalNetYards 51 5 424 Rushes-yards 32-278 11-22 AH TimesPST Passing 237 40 2 PuntReturns 3 46 2-0 KickoffReturns 3 -62 1 - 22 InterceptionsRet. 3-37 0-0 22 13 Sea —Tate11 passfromWilson (kick blocked),:44. Comp-Att-Int 18-30-0 40-62-3 First downs 3 49 18 2 Third Quarter 1 -10 2 - 1 6 TotalNetYards Sacked-YardsLost Rushes-yards 35-158 22-68 Sea—Lynch3 run(Hauschkakick), 4:09. 4-38.5 4-54.5 Punts Passing 191 11 4 Min FG Walsh55,147 2-1 2-0 Fumbles-Lost 3-76 0-0 Fourlh Quarter 1 4-116 9 - 8 0 PuntReturns Penalties-Yards Kickoff Returns 5-173 4-100 Sea—FGHauschka40,6:23. Time ofPossession 28:04 31:56 Interceptions Ret. 1-3 1-7 A—67,584. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING — Tampa Bay:Mart in 25-251,Freeman5-22,Blount2-5.Oakland: McFadden 7-17, Palmer1-3 Jones1 2Goodson20. PASSING— Tampa Bay:Freeman18-30-0-247. Oakland: Palmer 39-61-3-414, Lechler1-1-0-4. RECEIVING —Tampa Bay: Williams 4 68, Martin 4-21,Jackson2-84, Clark2-22, Byham2-15, Underwood1-12, Ware1-12, Lorig1-11, Stocker12.Oakland:Reece8-95,Myers8-59,Goodson6-52, Heyward-Bey5-74, Moore4-66, Streater4-54, McFadden2-0,Gordon1-8, Hagan1-6,Jones1-4. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Tampa Bay:Barth35
(BK), 54 (SH)
Steelers 24, Giants 20 Pittsburgh N.Y. Giants
0 18 8 14 — 24 0 14 6 8 — 2 0
SecondQuarter Pit Sanders4passfrom Roethlisberger (Suisham kick), I2:09. NYG —A.Brown1run(Tyneskick), 7:01. NYG Boley70fumble retum(Tyneskick), 5:11. Pit — FGSuisham30,:00. Third Quarter NYG —FGTynes50, 8:25. NYG —FGTynes23, I:32. Fourlh Quarter Pit — Wallace 51 passlrom Roethlisberger (Suishamkick), 14:05. Pit — Redman1 run (Suishamkick), 4:02. A—80,991. P it
NY G
Comp-Att-Int
Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
21-30-1 10-24-1 4 -25 2 - 11 4-41.3 5-47.4 2-1 1-0 6 -119 7 - 40 35;15 24:45
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Pittsburgh: Redman 26-147 B.Batch2-7,Rainey1-4, WJohnson1-2, Roethlisberger 4-(minus1), Suisham1-(minus1). N.Y.Giants: Bradshaw15-48,A.Brown7-20. PASSING —Pittsburgh: Roethisberger 21-30-1216. N.Y.Giants: Manning10-24-1-125. RECEIVING —Pittsburgh: Cotchery4-50, Miler 4-48,Wallace3-66, Sanders2-20, A.Brown2-19, Redman2-4,Rainey2-(minus3),Paulson1-7,W Johnson 1-5 N.Y. Giants: Cruz5-67, Bennett 3-40,Nicks110, Hynoski1-8. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—N.Y. Giants: Tynes
51 (SH).
Seahawks30, Vikings 20 Minnesota Seattle
7 10 3 0 — 2 8 14 6 7 3 — 38
First Quarter Min—PetersonI run(Walsh kick), 13:I5. Sea Tate 6 passfromWilson (Hauschka kick), 8:52. Sea—Rice 11 passfrom Wilson (Hauschkakick), 3:15. SecondQuarter Min — Peterson4 run(Walsh kick),11:46. Min — FG Walsh 36,5:25.
Alabama Continued from 01 Oregon is still behind Alabama and Kansas State. Thanks to the Ducks' back-loaded schedule, a BCS title game between Oregon and Alabama seems to be the most likely scenario if all the unbeaten keep winning. S aturday's showdowns i n t h e Southeastern Conference and Pac-12 were played at the same time and for a while presented an almost comical contrast of styles. While the Ducks and Trojans were tradingscores on almost every possession, the Tide and Tigers were
banging heads and plodding along. By halftime, Oregon led USC 34-24 in a game that was clearly far from being decided. SEC fans scoffed at the lack of defense. Meanwhile, in Baton Rouge, La., Alabama held a 14-3 lead at half that had to seem insurmountable to even LSU fanS. The TigerS had rLtn their string of t ouchdown-less quarters against the Tide to 10. Fans tired of SEC superiority scoffed at the lack Of offense. After the break in Los Angeles, the Ducks and Trojans just kept on rolling, but USC never did get closer than three.No surprise there. The unexpected came in Death Valley, where LSU found its offense and picked apart an Alabama defense that has looked close to invincible this season. The Tigers put together two touchdown drives to take the lead before AJ McCarron and the Tide rallied with their only sustained drive of the second half.
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession
SecondOuarler Cle — FGDawson32,9:19. Cle—FGDawson28,1:47. Ce—FGDawson29,:03. Third Quarter Cle — FGDawson33,2 39 Fourth Ouarler Cle — FGDawson41,8:48. Bal — TSmith 19 passfrom Flacco (Boldin pass from Flacco),4:26. Bal FG Tucker43, 2:49. A—65,449.
(WR).
Bears 51, Titans 20 Chicago
Tennessee
28 3 6 1 4 — 51 2 3 7 8 — 28
First Quarter
Chi — Wootton 5blocked puntretum(Gould kick), 6:44. Ten —Teamsafety, 4:51.
Chi — Forte 8run (Gould kick), 340.
Bal
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards
Cle
Chi — Urlacher 46interception retum(Gould kick), 2:59.
Chi — Marshall 13 passfromCutler (Gouldkick),
18 17 1:33. 282 290 SecondOuarter 37-137 27-116 Chi — FGGould 40,11.44. Passing 145 17 4 Ten FG Bi r onas 39, 00 2 -7 5 - 54 PuntReturns Third Quarter KickoffReturns 4 -80 3 - 74 Ten —Washington30passfromI-lasselbeck(BiroInterceptions Ret. 2-27 0-0 nas kick),11:25. Comp-Att-Int 15-24-0 20-37-2 C hi FGGould25,7:37. 1-8 1-2 Sacked-YardsLost Chi — FG Gould22,:38. Punts 7-44.7 4-42.5 Fourth Quarter Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0 Chi — Marshall 39passfromCutler (Gouldkick), Penalties-Yards 9 -82 4 - 31 11;21. Time ofPossession 31;32 28:28 Chi — Marshall 5 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 10:20. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Ten —C.Johnson80 run(Britt passfrom Hassel-
RUSHING —Baltimore: Rice25-98, Pierce7-26, Leach2-8,Taylor1-4, Flacco2-1. Cleveland: Richardson25-105,Weeden2-11. PASSING —Baltimore: Flacco 15-24-0-153. Cleveland:Wee den20-37-2-176. RECEIVING —Baltimore: Boldin 5-57, TSmith 4-46, Pitta2-33,Dickson2-11, Rice2-6. Cleveland: Richardson6-31, Little5-52, Smith3-8,Gordon2-38, Watson2-22,Benjamin1-19 Massaquoi1-6 MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.
Texans 21, Bills 9 Buffalo Houston
8 6 3 8 — 9 7 0 7 7 — 21 First Quarter Hou—Daniels 39passfromSchaub (S.Graham kick),:36.
SecondOuarler
Buf — FGLindeff22,1:42. Buf — FG Lindeff 38,:05. Third Quarter
Hou—Foster 3 run(SGrahamkick), 1211. Buf FG Lindeff39,7:41. Fourlh Quarler
Hou—G.Graham 5 passfrom Schaub (S.Graham
kick), 11:25. A—71,698
B uf
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penaties-Yards Time ofPossession
Hou
17 21 3 08 37 4 16-78 32-118 230 256 4 -37 2 - 34 4 -52 4 - 62 0-0 0-0 25-38-0 19-27-0 3 -9 2 - 12 5-49.4 5-49.4 1-1 0-0 3 -15 7 - 42 25:57 34:03
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Buffalo: Spiller 6-39, FJackson621, Fitzpatrick 3-18,B.Smith1-0. Houston: Foster 24-111,Forsett6-7, Martin1-1,SchaubI-(minus I). PASSING —Buffalo: Fitzpatrick 25-38-0-239. Houston: Schaub19-27-0-268. RECEIVING —Buffalo: Jones 6-65, Spiller 563, FJackson5-14, Chandler3 51, StJohnson 3 29, Graham 2-4, Dickerson 1-13.Houston: Johnson8-
beck), 10 09
First downs
2-11
MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Buff alo: Lindeg 37 (WR).Houston: S.Graham46(BK).
Lions 31, Jaguars14 Detroit Jacksonville
8 21 8 10 — 31 8 0 0 1 4 — 14
:50. A—63,050.
D et Ja c First downs 26 19 TotalNetYards 434 279 34-149 20-64 Rushes-yards Passing 2 85 21 5 0 -0 2- 1 2 PuntReturns INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 0 -0 3 - 48 Kickoff Re t u rns RUSHING —Minnesota: Peterson 17-182, HarRet. 2-18 0-0 vin 4-24,Ponder5-23,Gerhart1-14. Seattle: Lynch Interceptions 22-33-0 27-38-2 26-124,Wilson9-27, Turbin 5-21, Tate2-21, Robinson Comp-Att-Int 1-0 1-5 Sacked-YardsLost 3-2. Punts 2-49.5 4-50.5 PASSING—Minnesota: Ponder 11-22-1-63. 0-0 0-0 Fumbles-Lost Seattle: Wilson16-24-0-173,Rice1-1-0-25. 5 -42 3 - 40 RECEIVING —Minnesota: Peterson3-11, Harvin Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession 35;30 24:30 2-10, Jenkins2-8, Simpson114, Reisner1-13,Effison1-4, Gerhart1-3. Seattle: Rice4-54, Tate4-28, INDIVIDUAL STA TISTICS Miller 2-47,Lynch2-26, Robinson2-22, Turbin1-9, RUSHING —Detroit: Bell 13-73, LeShoure 16Baldwin1-6,Kearse1-6. 70, K.Smith3-8,Stafford2-(minus 2). Jacksonville: MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Jennings12-45,Parmele5-15, Gabbert 3-4. PASSING —Detroit: Stafford 22-33-0-285. Ravens 25, Browns15 Jacksonville: Gabbert 27-38-2-220. RECEIVING —Detroit: Johnson 7-129, Broyles Baltimore 14 8 D 11 — 25 6-52, Bell 3-36,Scheffler 2-28,TYoung2-20, Petti8 9 3 3 — 1 5 grew 1-11,K.Smith1-9 Jacksonville: Robinson6Cleveland First Quarter 41, Spurlock5-35, Blackmon5-32, Lewis4-41, Shorts
BowlChampionshipSeries standings list Through Saturday's games: Harris USA Today Computer BGS R k Pts P c t Rk Pts P ct R k P ct Avg PV 1. Alabama 1 2867 . 9 9721 1 4 751.0000 1 9900 .9957 1 2. Kansas St. 3 2664 . 9 266 3 1 3 70.9288 3 9400 .9318 2 3. Oregon 2 2735 . 9 5 132 1 3 9 9.9485 5 8500 .9166 4 4. Notre Dame 4 253 3 . 88104 1 2 8 9.8739 2 9600 .9050 3 5. Georgia 5 2345 . 8 1575 1 2 18.8258 6 8100 .8171 6 6. Florida 7 2 1 54 .74927 1 0 9 1.7397 4 8700 .7863 7 7. LSU 8 2 0 11 .69959 9 9 8 .6766 7 7400 .7054 5 8. South Carolina 11 1654 .5753 11 880 .5966 8 6900 .6206 8 9. Louisville 10 182 5 . 6348 10 940 .6373 13 5400 .6040 10 10. Florida St. 6 2223 . 7732 6 1 1 47.7776 19 2400 .5969 9 11. Oregon St. 1 2 1 5 8 8 .552312 807 .5471 8 6900 .5965 11 12. Oklahoma 1 3 15 5 6 .541213 800 .5424 10 6600 .5812 12 13. Clemson 9 1969 . 6 8498 1 0 13.6868 16 3600 .5772 13 14. Stanford 14 14 3 1 .4977 15 705 .4780 12 5500 .5086 14 15. Texas A8 M 15 1 320 .459114 736 .4990 11 5600 .5060 16 1 6. Nebraska 16 992 .3 4 50 16 513 .3478 14 5000 .3976 20 17. Texas 17 860 . 2991 17 485 .3288 15 4500 .3593 23 1 8. UCLA 21 587 .20 4 2 19 333 .2258 17 3300 .2533 NR 19. Southern Cal 18 69 0 . 2 40022 224 .1519 23 1200 .1706 17 20. Louisiana Tech 19 659 . 2292 18 363 .2461 30 0000 .1584 25 21. Mississippi St. 20 603 . 2097 23 186 .1261 25 1000 .1453 15 22. Texas Tech 2 5 2 0 3 . 0 70627 68 .0461 18 3100 .1422 18 2 3. Rutgers 22 475 .1 6 52 20 264 .1790 28 0200 .1214 NR 24. Northwestern 24 259 . 0 901 21 234 .1586 27 0400 .0962 NR 2 5. Toledo 26 160 .0 5 5 725 108 .0732 24 1100 .0796 NR
C hi
Te n
21
12
Total NetYards
minutes of Saturday night's win over Oklahoma State watching from the sideline, the coaching staff having taken away his helmet to keep him from trying to get back in the game. The Heisman Trophy frontrunner
18 24 3 30 33 7 27-129 32-151 2 01 18 6
2-8 2 +4)
2 -49 3 - 55 0-0 0-0 13230 23390 0 -0 4 - 29 5-32.2 3-45.7 0-0 0-0 7-60 1 3-97 24:40 3 5:20
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Carolina: Stewart 10-51, Newton 8-37, D.Wiffiams6-37, Tolbert 3-4. Washington: Morris 13-76,Griffin gl 11-53,Morgan19, Royster 4-6, Banks1-3,Young1-3, Briscoe1-1. PASSING —Carolina: Newton 13-23-0-201. Washington: Griffin ffl23-39-0-215. RECEIVING —Carolina: Olsen5-48, Smith 3-41, A.Edwards1-82,Barnidge1-13,Tolbert1-7, Stewart1-
6, Murphy1-4.Washington: Morgan6-46, Paulsen 5-59, Hankerson3-49, Royster 3-30 Banks2-(minus 7), Paul1-22,Briscoe1-8,ARobinson1-6, Moss1-2. MISSED FIELDGOALS —Carolina: Medlock 50 (SH).
Broncos 31, Bengals 23 3 7 7 1 4 — 31 0 3 10 1D — 23
First Quarter Den—FG Prater 43 7:55. SecondQuarter Cin FG Nugent28,1412 Den—Decker 13passfromManning (Prater kick), 10:15. Third Quarler Den—Hogiday 105kickoff return (Prater kick),
3 58 33 3 36-160 18-159 198 17 4 5-69 0-0 1-26 7 -145 1-46 0-0 14:49 Comp-Att-Int 19-26 0 20-35-1 Cin — Green 10 passtrom Dalton (Nugentkick), Sacked-YardsLost 3 -31 2 - 2 0 11:33. Punts 3-38.3 7-42.7 Cin — FGNugent49,1:17 1-1 6-4 Fumbles-Lost Fourth Quarter Penalties-Yards 5 -37 968 Cin — Green-Ellis 2 run(Nugentkick),14:10. Time ofPossession 37.01 22:59 Den—Dreessen1 passfromManning(Prater kick), 11.47. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Den—Decker 4 passfrom Manning (Prater kick), RUSHING —Chicago: Forte12-103,Affen10-32, 3:36.
Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret.
Bush10-16,Cutler 1-12,Campbell 3-(minus3). Tennessee: C.Johnson16-141,Hasselbeck2-18. PASSING —Chicago: Cutler19-26-0-229.Tennessee: Hasselbeck 20-35-1-194. RECEIVING —Chicago: Marshall 9-122,Bennet 4-22, Forte2-45, Hester2-19, Bush1-17, Louis1-4. Tennessee: Britt5-67,C.Johnson4-4,Washington 2-35, Wright2-30,Stevens2-26, Wiliams 2-19, Cook 2-6, Thompson 1-7. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None.
Packers 31, Cardinals17 Arizona GreenBay
0 7 1D 8 — 1 7 7 14 1D 8 — 31
First Quarter GB — Cobb 13 passfrom Rodgers (Crosby kick),
Cin — FGNugent41,:52. A—63,623.
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickotfReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
5:31.
SecondQuarter Ari Stephens-Howling1run(Feelykick),13:26. GB — Cobb 21 passfrom Rodgers (Crosby kick), 7:44.
GB —Ja.Jones28passfromRodgers(Crosbykick),
1:54.
Third Quarter GB — FGCrosby33,13.12. Ari — Fitzgerald 31 passlromSkelton(Feely kick), 8;21. Ari — FGFeely20,:50. GB — Crabtree72passfrom Rodgers(Crosby kick), :00. A—70,504. First downs Tota NetYards Rushes-yards
Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession
Ari GB 16 20 3 40 38 4 18-54 39-176 2 86 20 8 4 19 346 3 -61 3 - 90 1-6 1-2 23-46-1 14-30-1 2 -20 1 - 10 8-43.0 6-42.5 3-1 1-0 8-57 1-5 26:30 3 3:30
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Arizona: Stephens-Howling17-51, Powell 1-3.GreenBay: Starks17-61,Green11-53, Rodgers 8-33,Cobb3-29. PASSING —Arizona: Skelton 23-46-1-306.
Green Bay:Rodgers14-30-1-218. RECEIVING —Arizona: Fitzgerald 6-74, F oyd 5-80, Housle5-55, r Roberts4-86, Stephens-Howling 2-8, Sherman1-3.Green Bay:Ja.Jones4-61, Cobb 3-37, Green2-25, Boykin2-7, Crabtree1-72, Driver 1-10, Finley1-6. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Green Bay:Crosby
44 (WL).
Panthers 21, Redskins 13 Carolina Washington
7 7 8 7 — 21 3 D 3 7 — 13
First Quarter Was —FGForbath 47,4:20 Car — D.Wiffiams 30run(Medlockkick),:24. SecondQuarter Car Smith19 pass fromNewton (Medlock kick),
:57.
Third Quarter Was —FGForbath 25,6.02
Fourth Quarter Car — Newton I run(Medlockkick),12:46. Was —Royster 2run (Forbathkick),1:28. A—79,767.
C ar W a s
and undisputed catalyst for the Wildcats had sustained an undisclosed injury in the third quarter. Even his teammates weren't sure how badly he was hurt — or how long he'll be Out. So what did we learn? The Crimson Tide might not be as far away from the rest ofthe field as many have suspected. Its defense, thought to be impenetrable, allowed ZaCh Metteytberger and the LSU Offense to play their best game of the season. Mettenberger had completed 46 percent of his passes and thrown two touchdowns in f our p revious SEC games. He went 24 for 35 for 296 yards an d t w o t o u chdowns Saturday. Logic would dictate that if Mettenberger and LSU could find success against the Tide, maybe Oregon (or Kansas State or Notre Dame) would be able to as well. Maybe? Alabama-Oregon seems to be the matchup most fans without a team in the hunt want to see. For what it's worth, the Ducks gained ground on the Tide in the eyes of the oddsmakers on Saturday. A hypothetical Alabama-Oregon BCS title game now has the Tide favored by four, according to R J Bell of Pregame.com. It had been six.
Going up "We didn't play our best game," coach Nick Saban said. "But I told OLtr guyS I haVe neVer been PrOuder of a team." Meanwhile, Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein spent the final 25
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. CompAtt-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
Denver Cincinnati
A—69,143.
118,Daniels4-62,Casey3-49,Walter 2-28, G.Graham
SecondQuarter Det—LeShoure7run(Hansonkick), 12:16. Det—LeShoure1 run(Hansonkick), 7:58. Det—LeShoure8run (Hansonkick), 29 M in Sea Fourlh Quarler 16 28 Det — FGHanson42,13:56. 2 87 38 5 Jac — S pur l o ck 5passfrom Gabbert (Jenningspass 27-243 45-195 from Gab bert), 8.36. 44 190 Det Beg 10run(I-lansonkick), 2:42 3 -1 2- 2 1 Jac — Blackmon6passfromGabbert (passfailed), 3 -79 1 - 19
0-0 1-0 11-22-1 17-25-0 4-19 18 3-48.3 4-48.8 1-1 1-0 6 -33 4 - 49 24:00 36:00
3-56, Jennings 3-7, Parmele1-8. MISSED FIELDGOALS—Detroit: Hanson 47
UCLA moved up eight spots to No. 17 in the latest rankings after a 66-10 victory against Arizona. The Bruins (7-2) have already exceeded expectations in coach Jim Mora's first season, and the best could be yet to come for a program
D en
Cin
20 22 3 59 366 26-68 25-91 291 275
2-2 3-(-1)
3-119 4-114 1-0 2-0 27-35-2 26-42-1 0 -0 5 - 24 3-46.7 4-51.5 0-0 0-0 5 -29 8 - 83 30;37 2 9'23
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS
RUSHING — Denver: McGahee 23-66,Hillman 1-4, Manning2-(minus 2). Cincinnati: Green-Ellis 17-56, Da ton2-16, I.eonard4-15, Green1-6, Hawkins I-(minus2). PASSING —Denver: Manning 27-35-2-291. Cincinnati: Dalton26-42-1-299. RECEIVING — Denver: Decker8-99,D.Thomas 6-77,Dreessen 4-38, Stokley 3-43,Tamme 3-18, Ball 1-7, Hillman1-5, McGahee1-4. Cincinnati: Green 7-99,Gresham 6-108,Hawkins4-32 Leonard 3-13, Sanu2-29, Green-Ellis 2-(minus3), Tate1-17, Charles1-4. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Cincinnati: Nugent 46 (WR).
Falcons19, Cowdoys13 6 8 0 7 — 13 8 6 0 1 3 — 19 First Quarter Dal — FGBailey 23,10.46. Dal — FGBailey32,342
Dallas Atlanta
SecondQuarter
Atl FG Bryant45,1415 Atl —FGBryant 46,:00. Fourlh Quarler
At —Turner3run(Bryant kick),14:16. Atl —FGBryant 36,7:49.
Dal — Ogletree 21 pass lromRomo (Bailey kick),
5:21. Atl—FGBryant 32,:17. A 70,840
First downs Total NetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
Dal Atl 18 21 377 453 18 65 26-123 312 330 1-37 2-6 3 -73 2 - 45 0-0 0-0 25-35 0 24-34-0 1 -9 3 - 12 4-45.5 2-40.0 0-0 1-0 7 -50 2 - 15 27:17 3 2:43
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING— Dallas:FJones9-39,Dunbar8-26, Tanner1-0.Atlanta: Turner20-102, Jones1-8, Ryan 1-8, Sneffing1-5,Rodgers3-0. PASSING —Dallas: Romo 25-35-0-321. Atlanta: Ryan24-34-0-342. RECEIVING —Dallas: Austin7-76,Witten7-51, FJones5-70, Ogletree3-96, Bryant1-15,Beasley18, Vickers1-5. Atlanta: White7-118, Jones5-129, Rodgers4-53, Gonzalez4-36, Sneling 3-1, Palmer 1-5. MISSED FIELDGOALS—Dallas: Bailey 54 (WL).Atlanta: Bryant37 (WR), 43(WR).
that usually p l ays l i t tle b r other to USC in the crosstown football rivalry. UCLA (4-2) is in first place in the Pac-12 South, with a half-game lead over the 21st-ranked Trojans (6-3,
4-3). The last time UCLA had a better record than USC this late in the season was 2001, which was also the laSt time the BrLtinS finiShed With a better record than the Trojans. The last time UCLA and USC were both ranked and the Bruins were ranked higher was 2000. UCLA won the Pac-12 South last year by default because USC was ineligible for the postseason. The Bruins play USC in the Rose Bowl on Nov. 17 in a game that could give UCLA a title with no strings attached.
Going down LSU probably deservesbetter after nearly beating No. 1 Alabama, but the Tigers' second loss of the season sent them tumbling four spots in the rankings to No. 9. The Tigers finish with consecutive home games against No. 22 Mississippi State and M i ssissippi, before closing the regular season at Arkansas. Mississippi State also has been heading in the wrong direction lately. The Bulldogs have lost two straight to Alabama and No. 15 Texas A8 M after a 7-0 start, and done so in humbling fashion, by a combined score of 76-20. After reaching ashigh as No. 13 in the rankings, Mississippi State is now No. 22.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012• THE BULLETIN
Cyclocross Continued from D1 Cogswell-Kelley, the financial development and events director for the Mt. Bachelor Sports E ducation F oundation, has made these footwear adjustments because she is missing the front part of her right foot, up t o a bout the arch. When she was a toddler and living in Great Falls, Mont., the rest of the foot was amputated following an accident involving a riding lawn mower. The injury has done little to limit Cogswell-Kelley, who is now married and mother to a young daughter of her own. She has skied, competed in the high jump in track, and played tennis, she says, and has also done some road cycling and mountain biking. And she has done so in ways that work for her. When it comes to her right foot, Cogswell-Kelley describes herself as a minimalist. She does not use a prosthesis. "I am adamantly opposed to it f o r m y self because I know what works for me, and I'm afraid of altering how I do things and the way that I've always done it has just worked," she explains. "It's nothing fancy — just a roll of toilet paper in my shoes." And besides that, when it comes to sports, CogswellKelley also buys a right shoe
Rob Kerr /rhe Bulletin
Molly Cogswell-Kelley lost half of her right foot in a lawn mower accident when she was a toddler. She has adapted a cycling shoe (top) for that foot by wearing a smaller size and placing the cleat (the part of the cycling shoe that attaches to the clipless pedal) farther back, near the middle of the shoe.
races beforethe end of the season. (She describes herself as a fair-weather racer and says that the mud, a frequent feature on cyclocross courses, intimidates her.) She has already shown some glimpses of talent, despite riding her bike only sparingly outside of races: Twice in Cross Crusade races with field sizes of more than 40 b e ginner w omen, Cogswell-Kelley has finished in the top 10. She has noticed improvement in h e r b i k e-handling skills, she says, and friends have been giving her sound advice. She has set a goal of winning, if she is able, a coupleraces, after which she might decide to upgrade from the beginner class to Catego-
— Reporter: 541-383-0393, amiles@bendbulletin.com.
held at Redmond's Ridgeview
High.
LOOKING BACK
Contlnued from D1 " At the beginning of t h e year, state wasn't even on our radar," Albrecht added. "We only had seven girls out."
Quarterfinal and semifinal matches for all of O regon's state volleyball tournaments will be on Friday, with the state finals for all six tourneys scheduled for Saturday night.
Athlete of the week:Summit's Travis Neuman won his second
Oregon's state v olleyball championships are set to begin Friday, and the tournament brackets are loaded with Central Oregon teams. At the Class 5A tourney in Hillsboro, Summit and Bend play in the quarterfinals Friday morning at 10 o'clock. At the 4A tournament in Eugene, Crook County, Madras and Sisters are all slated to play in the quarterfinal round F riday. The C o wgirls a n d White Buffaloes would meet in the semifinals if both win their q uarterfinal m atches. The Outlaws are on the other side of the bracket and would not play either of their two regional rivals until either the consolation final on Saturday afternoon or the championship final on Saturday night. In Central Oregon, Culver High plays Tri-River Conference rival Kennedy at I : 15 p.m. on Friday in the 2A state tournament, which is being
All-league water polo teams Summit's A i d a n So l e s, Tommy Brewer, Brent Soles and Stuart Wettstein have all been named to the Central Oregon League boys water polo all-league first team. Mountain View's Noah Cox and Nate Cox were also first-team selections, as was Ian Goodwin of Madras. Aidan Soles also received th e l e ague's most valuable player award. R edmond H i g h pla c ed three players on the COL girls all-league first team: Tegan Perkins, Jenny White and Rachel Haney. Madras' Aurora G erhardt — the girls M V P — and Brianna Hunt, as well as Summit's Ky Heffner and Kaylin Ivy, rounded out the all-COL first team. For the rest of the Central Oregon League's all-league water poloteams, see Scoreboard on Page 02.
what our players are trying to do." Continued from 01 T he t h ir d s c h ool f r o m " Now, let's hope i n t w o "Kentuckiana" is Louisville. m onths that that's not t h e The Cardinals have Gorgui case.... I like our talent. I like Dieng back i n t h e m i d dle our size. I like our length. We and Peyton Siva will again have some guys with pretty run the offense. Coach Rick good speed. We're just not a Pitino had Louisville in the good basketball team right Final Four last season, but now. Too many young guys they lost to Kentucky in the t hat we're t r y ing t o b r i n g semifinals. along." Pitino, 60, signed a f iveThe Wildcats were picked year c o n t r ac t ext e n sion third in the AP's preseason through 2021-22. "The one thing I realized poll, behindtwo veteranteams — Indiana and Louisville. is that I don't know if I could The last time Indiana was live without basketball," Pion top of the preseason poll, tino said. "I wouldn't have Bob Knight was coaching the the highs and the lows, and Hoosiers and the 1980s were I guess every coach livesfor just getting started. that. I've been playing this Now, with 7-foot sophomore game since I was 6 years of centerCody Zeller anchoring age, and it's been such a pasa team with all it s starters sion of mine." back and a talented freshman T he A P p r e season A l l class coming in, Tom Crean's America team had a distinclong-term plan to restore the tive mid-major feel to it. In program to national signifi- addition to Zeller, Tim Burke cance has worked. Indiana of Michigan an d D e shaun has five national champion- Thomas of Ohio State gave ships, the last in 1987. the team a Big Ten feel. But "I'm not even going to try Doug McDermott of Creighto downplay that it's not a big ton, C.J. McCollum of Lehigh deal. It's not a 'Hey, we told and Isaiah Canaan of Murray you so.' It's none of that. We State were also on the team, lived it. And I think it's a great really good players from the testament to everybody that's kind of schools we've been been a part of that program getting used to seeing at the with sticking with it and mov- Final Four. ing onward a n d u p w ard," S peaking o f B u t ler a n d Crean said. "It's an incred- VCU, they are making the ible program. It's an incred- move this season to the Atible school. We need people lantic-10. I t ' s i mp r e ssive that are going to come in and when a conference can add leave it in a better place than they found it. That's exactly
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CROSSCRUSADE:Eight-race cyclocross series; each day, first race starts at 8:40 a.m. and last MOVIE NIGHTAT MCMENAMINS: race starts at 3:15 p.m.; race Thursday, Nov. 15; 9 p.m.; No. 7 isSunday,at Washington McMenamins Old St. Francis County Fair Complex, Hillsboro; School, Bend; "Road to Paris," race No. 8 isSunday, Nov. 18, at a documentary chronicling the Portland lnternational Raceway preparations of Lance Armstrong in Portland; divisions for men, and the U.S. Postal Service team women, masters, Clydesdales, for the 2001 Tour de France; $5 single speed, juniors, unicycles per person (age 21 and older), or and kids (age12 and younger); $5free for individuals who donate $30 per race, $40-$210 for series; blood to the American Red Cross OBRA membership required; by the screening date; schedule crosscrusade.com. appointment at redcrossblood. SOUTHERN BAJA, MEXICO org/make-donation and email SINGLETRACKTOURS:Dec. Henry©PineMountainSports. 8-12, Feb. 2-7and Feb. 16-20; com with appointment time; fundraiser for American Red Cross Baja, Mexico; includes four days of riding and five nights of and Central Oregon Trail Alliance; accommodations, all meals and pinemountainsports.com. a Specialized full suspension bike rental; tours limited to12 riders; $925 (airfare not included); 541RACES 385-7002; cogwild.com/multiday-vacations/baja-singletrack. U.S.GRAN PRIX OF CYCLOCROSS DESCHUTESBREWERYCUP: Saturday and Sunday, Dec. 8-9; 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; Old Mill District, TRAILS Bend; divisions for juniors, COG WILDSHUTTLES:Tuesdays Categories 2-4, masters, single and Thursdays;5:30 p.m.; speed and professional $15-$45; from Cascade Lakes Brewery to usgpcyclocross.com/racesl Swampy Lakes and Dutchman deschutes-brewery-cup. sno-parks; $10 per person; available weekly, call Cog Wild Bicycle Tours 8 Shuttles to RIDES reserve seat; 541-385-7002; other BEND BELLA CYCLISTS: Weekly shuttle times available, call for women-only group road and details.
consecutive Class 5Aboys cross-country state title on Saturday, turning in a time of15 minutes, 29 seconds onthe 5,000-meter
MISC.
course at Lane Community College in Eugene. With Neuman leading the way, the Storm successfully defended their team
championship from ayear ago. Contest of the week:Sisters earned a spot in this weekend's Class 4A state volleyball tournament with a five-set victory over RidgeviewHighon Saturday,25-23,22-25,23-25,25-20,15-10. Megan Minke and Duree Standley led the Outlaws with17 kills apiece. Katrina Johnson had a monster game for the visiting Ravens, recording 27 kills and four blocks in the loss.
LOOKING AHEAD Contests to watch for this week:
Tuesday Class 5Adoyssoccer state playoffs, Franklin at Summit, 3p.m.:The Storm (10-1-3 overall), who are looking for their first boys soccer state title, start the postseason at home against the Quakers (7-5 overall), who took third in the Portland
Interscholastic Leaguethis year. Friday Class 5Astate volleydall puarterflnals, Bend vs. Summitat Liberty High in Hillsdoro, 10 a.m.:The two crosstown rivals
open the 5Astate tournament against one another with a berth in the semifinal round on the line. The Storm defeated the Lava Bears both times they played this season, but their last match was
an extremely close five-set affair. Class 5Astate football playoffs, Churchlll at Redmond, 7 p.m.: Despite ending the regular season No. 1 in the OSAA's ranking system, the Panthers open the state playoffs against a Lancer
team that is 7-3 overall. Redmond (9-0 overall) is hoping to advance to the state quarterfinals for the first time since 2001.
— Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbulletin.com.
Basketball
Weekly Arts Br Entertainment Inslde IuLGAztNE
mountain bike rides; see website for dates and meeting times; meet at Pine Mountain Sports, 255 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; bendbellacyclists.org. INDOOR CYCLINGCLASSES: At TRINITY BIKES RIDE: Group road Powered by Bowen, 143 S.W. bike ride starting in Redmond Century Drive, Bend; limited to at Trinity Bikes, 865 S.W. 17th eight riders per class; classes St.;Mondays;6 p.m.; somewhat are based on each rider's power casual pace; 541-923-5650. output for an individual workout PINEMOUNTAIN SPORTS BIKE in a group setting; all classes RIDE:Twice-monthly guided 60 minutes in length except for mountain bike rides hosted by on Saturdays (85 minutes) and Pine Mountain Sports and open Sundays (180 minutes); at noon to all riders; 5:30 p.m. on thefirst onMondays; at6:30 a.m., 8 andthir dWednesdays ofeach a.m., 9:30 a.m., 4:45 p.m. and 6 month;free; rental and demo bikes p.m.on Tuesdays; at 6:30 a.m., available at no charge (be at the 8 a.m., 9:30 a.m., noon and 5:30 shop at 5 p.m.); meet at 255 S.W. p.m.on Wednesdays; at6:30 Century Drive, Bend; 541-385a.m., noon, 4:45 p.m. and 6 p.m. 8080; www.pinemountainsports. onThursdays;at 8 a.m. and com. 9:30a.m. onFridays;at7 a.m. EUROSPORTS RIDE: Group road and 8:30 a.m. onSaturdays;at bike ride starting in Sisters from 8a.m.on Sundays;$18 or15 Eurosports,182 E. Hood St.; points on Power Pass per class; Saturdays;check with the shop for www.poweredbybowen.com, start time; all riders welcome; 541541-585-1500. 549-2471; www.eurosports.us. YOUTH HUTCH'S NOON RIDE: Group road bike ride starting in Bend DEVELOPMENT from Hutch's Bicycles east-side BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY location, 820 N.E. Third St., at CYCLOCROSS TEAM:Ages 10-18; noon onMondays, Wednesdays, Tuesdays throughThursdays Fridays;and from Hutch's westthrough Nov. 25,option to extend side location, 725 N.W. Columbia to Jan. 6;4 p.m.-6 p.m.; for St., at noon onTuesdays, beginners to advanced riders; Thursdays;pace varies; 541-382teaches bike handling skills, 6248;www.hutchsbicycles.com. fitness workouts and race strategy HUTCH'S SATURDAY RIDE: Group in a fun and safe environment; road bike ride begins at10 a.m. beginner participants may use Saturdaysin Bend from Hutch's mountain bikes; team offers Bicycles east-side location, 820 weeklytraining sessions N.E. Third St.; approximately 40 and fully supported travel to miles; vigorous pace; 541-382Oregon Junior Series races; 6248;www.hutchsbicycles.com. bill©bendenduranceacademy. org or enroll online BendEnduranceAcademy.org. OUT OF TOWN
CAMPS/ CLASSES/ CLINICS
"Getting better just makes you want to do it that much more," she observes. And while Cogswell-Kelley is unique in some respects, she is among many riders to fall in love with cyclocross and is not the first to find selfdiscovery — at least in part — on a bike. "It's a great c o nfidence boosterforme because Inever thought I could be athletically really good at something," she says. "Because I'm improving each time I race, it just makes me want t o c o ntinue that much more."
Prep sports
State volleyball starts Friday
CYCLING CENTRAL CALENDAR
ry C. c onsiderably s m aller t h a n ticipants race on bikes over the left — maybe a size 5 as circuits of grass, dirt and/or opposed to a 9'/~ or 10 — so pavement and dismount to that her foot does not slip out. climb over obstacles and run That does mean she has to up steep hills — as goofy and buy two pairs of shoes to ac- s illy an d w e l coming, a n d c ommodate both feet. A n d she talks about the engagshe is careful on sharp right ing atmosphere atcyclocross turns; that right cycling cleat events. "Every time I race, it's the hits more at midfoot, rather than on the ball, so her foot only thing I think about, and can hit the wheel if it is angled I just love it," she says. "I can't steeply. wait to race again." In c y clocross, CogswellC ogswell-Kelley, who d i d Kelley has found a sport that compete in one cyclocross seems to suither gregarious race in 2011, has raced more and o u tgoing p e r sonality. than half a dozen times this She refers to 'cross — a cy- year already and says she cling discipline in which parmay hop into a couple more
three-time national champion. Among the bigger names "One of our biggest keys to change jobs were Frank is we just focused on what Martin from Kansas State to a re the core values of t h e South Carolina,John Groce conference,"said Bernadette f rom Ohio University to I l McGlade, who i s s t a r t ing linois and Bruce Weber from her 13th season as A-10 com- Illinois to Kansas State. missioner. "We're a basketAmong the newcomers as ball-centric conference. We head coaches are R i chard can't get distracted by all the Pitino at Florida Internationother noise out there in the al, where he succeeds Isiah business." T homas, and Danny M a nSome o t he r c o n f erence ning at Tulsa. moves for this season include: Then there is Larry Brown. Missouri and Texas A8 M to The 71-year-old Hall of Famer the SoutheasternConference, takes over at SMU, his first West Virginia and TCU to the college job since leading KanBig 12, Nevada and Fresno sas — and Manning — to a naState to the Mountain West tional championship in 1988. "When I look in the mirand Hawaii to the Big West. Then there are the schools ror, I get kind of scared," said playing a farewell season in Brown, the only man to win their old conference before an NCAA and NBA title. "But moving on . S y racuse and inside, I feel like I can do this P ittsburgh are g oing f r o m forever." the Big East to the Atlantic T he transfer l i k eliest t o Coast Conference and Notre make an impact right away Dame will soon follow. SMU, is Alex Oriakhi, who was a Houston, Central Florida and member of Connecticut's naMemphis are in their last sea- tional championship team in son in Conference USA be- 2011 and now will add size to fore heading to the Big East Missouri's front line. and Temple is saying goodThe season starts Nov. 9 bye to the Atlantic-10 before and ends April 8 i n A t l anleaving for the Big East. ta. Welcome to the 2012-13 Coaches were on the move season. as always and nearly 50 start the season with new business cards. The most prominent name
two teams that have that kind of national exposure.
among departing coaches is Hall of Famer Jim Calhoun, who turned Connecticut from
WILSONSofRe dmond
CYCLING IN BRIEF
Cyclocross • Central Oregonianswin at CrossCrusade: Five Bend residents rode to victory in the sixth Cross Crusade race of the
season, stagedSundayat Barton Park in Barton. Sarah Max
(masters women35+A), Andrew Sargent (masters men35+A) and LanceHaidet (junior men) all picked up their fourth wins of the series and padded their
overall series standings leads. Other class winners wereCary
Cyclocross CrossCrusade Race No.6 Sunday,Barton Central OregonTop-10Finishers Men
CafegoryA —5,BenThompson, Bend,5959 6, DamiaSch n mitt, Bend,k00:07. 7, BrennanWod tli, Bend,1.00:11. Masters 35+ A — 1AndrewSargent, Bend 1:03:15. 7,TimJones,Bend,1:05:00. Category B —6, Cliff Eslinger,Bend,51:2Z Masters 35+ C —3, Kenny Wolford, Bend 44:3Z 9,DavidAnderson, Bend,45:20. Masters 50+ — 9, Mark Reinecke,Bend 45.49.10,EricSchusterman,Bend45:53
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Schwarz (masters women35+ B), who narrowly leads theoverall standings in hercategory, and Serena BishopGordon (women Category A). Additionally, Cameron Beard (junior men), Michelle Bazemore (women45+) and Kenny Wolford (masters men 35+ C), another overall standings leader, recorded third-place efforts. For a listing of top-10 Cen-
tral Oregon finishers in Sunday's race, seeCycling Scoreboard, see this page. — Bulletin staff report
CYCLING SCOREBOARD
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264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- GardeningSupplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGE SALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses and Equipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood
Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h a sing products or serNov. 9: 10am-5pm vices from out of the Nov.10: 10 am-5 pm area. Sending cash, South Sister checks, or credit inConference Hall, f ormation may b e Deschutes County subjected to fraud. Fairgrounds, Redmond For more i nforma50 local artisans 8 tion about an advercrafters will be selltiser, you may call ing their handcrafted items. A d m ission: the O r egon State Attorney General's $1.00 donation to be Office Co n s umer iven to The Kid's Protection hotline at enter & CASA of 1-877-877-9392. Central Oregon Information: 541-536-5655 Gerrrng cental 0 egon since rgeg
Beecrafty Holiday Show
I Want to Buy or Rent Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006 WANTED: RAZORS,
Double or singleedged, straight razors, shaving brushes, mugs & scuttles, strops, shaving accessories & memorabilia. Fair prices paid. Call 541-390-7029 between 10 am-3 pm.
The Bulletin
BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds Just bought a new boat? appear every day in the Sell your old one in the print or on line. classifieds! Ask about our Call 541-385-5809 Super Seller rates! www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
Adult companion cats FREE to seniors, disabled & veterans! Tame, altered, shots, ID chip, more. Will always take back if circumstances change. 389-8420. Visit Sat/ Sun 1-5. Photos, info: www.craftcats.org. AKC SIBERIAN HUSKY
pups. $700 8 up. M/F. stones-siberians I live .com 541-306-0180
Gen«ng Cenlral Oregonr nre rggl
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BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are pu p pies, still over 2,000 folks in our community without Aussie Z u born September 11th, permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift ready for new homes. camps, getting by as best they can. Great family pets, first The following items are badly needed to shots and worming inhelp them get through the winter: cluded. Free delivery @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ to Bend. $600 Kelly New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. 541-604-0716 S WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. ~OO PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT For Special pick up please call Ken @ 541-389-3296
PLEASEHELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE.
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing
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Bid Now!
Nov. 10 & 11th, 2012
www.euiietlneldneuy.com tettgRRIIRGutt naarlai
The Bulletin
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GUN SHOW
Deschutes Fairgrounds Buy! Sell! Trade! SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 $8 Admission, 12 8 under free. OREGON TRAIL GUN SHOWS 541-347-2120 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com Remington 870 Wingmaster 12 Ga. 2-3/4, recently refininshed stock, I've h ad it f o r 3 y r s , hardly use it. $250 obo - call or t ext 541-480-3331 Ruger Mini 14 semi auto rifle, $700. A uto-Ord. Colt style 1911 45acp Gold USMC C omm., $1275. Colt M4 AR-22, $550. 541-647-8931
Health 8 Beauty Items
Bid Now!
www.eulletmeldneuy.com
Buy New...Buy Local
You Can Bid On: One Cool Sculpting Treatment Central Oregon Dermatology (Bidding ends Nov. 13, at 8pm)
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
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Consumer P rotec- • t ion ho t l in e at I l 1-877-877-9392.
Call theBulletin ClassifiedDept. 541-385-5809or541-382-1811
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/ call t h e Or e gon / ' State Attor ney '
SNOWM OBILES ,. fj/P25L~N 8I ATVS ONLY!
MorePixat Bendbuletin,com
Oregonians agree
I advertiser, you may l
BUYTWOWEEKS ANDGET TWO WEEKSFREE!
Barn/shop cats FREE, some tame, some not. We deliver! Fixed, shots. 541-389-8420
246
Antiques & Collectibles
Boxer Pups, AKC / CKC, HAVANESE P U PPIES 541-504-9078 1st shots, very social AKC, Dewclaws, UTD $700. 541-325-3376 shots/wormer, nonshed, The Bulletin reserves h ypoallergenic, $ 8 5 0 Buy New...Buy Local the right to publish all CANARIES 541-460-1277. You Can Bid On: Buy New...Buy Local ads from The Bulletin 2012 Waterslagers, ~GMore Pix at uendbulletircc $2500 Gift You Can Bid On: newspaper onto The Staffords, Red FacCertificate $200 Fishing Gear Bulletin Internet webtors, 2 males, 12 feKittens/cats avail. thru M. JacobsFine & Tackle site. males, $45 ea. Terrerescue group. Tame, Furniture Gift Certificate bonne, 541-420-2149. shots, altered, ID chip, (Bidding ends Ken's Sporting more. Sat/Sun 1-5, call Nov. 13, at 8pm) Genng CentralOregon ance rger Chihuahua pups, very Goods re: other days. 65480 tinv, 1st shots/dewormed. (Bidding ends 78th, Bend. Cherry table 8 matching 2 O $250. 541-977-4686 Nov. 13, at 8pm) 541-389-8420 or hutch w/glass, 6 chairs & 541-598-5488; Info at • S k i Equipment Dachshund AKC mini table protectors, beautiwww.craftcats.org www.bendweenies.com ful s e t , $450. Large Big Game Rod & Reel, $375. 541-508-4558 b o okcase, Labradoodies - Mini 8 solid oa k with Penn SW-30 Int. 2 Bid Now! med size, several colors $150. 541-610-8797 www.euiietineidneuy.com speed reel. Ex. Cond. Dachshund male,9 wks 541-504-2662 'ti a'etI/g f Q $500. (541) 389-9302. old, 1st shots, adorwww.alpen-ridge.com GENERATE SOME exable. $300 to good citement i n your Iat Buy/Sell/Trade all firehome. 541-447-0113. Lionhead baby bunnies, neighborhood! Plan a arms. Bend local pays variety color, $10 ea. garage sale and don't cash! 541-526-0617 DACHSHUND, mini 541-548-0747 forget to advertise in long-haired, 6 weeks, classified! Buy New...Buy Local CASH!! Maremma Guard Dog only 1 male left 541-385-5809. You Can Bid On: For Guns, Ammo & pups, purebred, great from a litter of 6 Reloading Supplies. d ogs, $ 35 0 e a c h ,GE Profile white dryer, Family Season Pass lovable puppies! $300. 541-408-6900. HooDoo SkiArea 541-546-6171. large drum, works great, 541-306-7784 (Bidding ends $100 obo. 541-475-6797 Papiiion P ups, AKC Nov. 13, at Bpm) DON'T MISS THIS DO YOU HAVE Reg, 3 males left! Par- Matching table lamps, 2 ents on site, $350. Call SOMETHING TO pair. $60 8 $40 Cash 541-480-2466 SELL only. 541-316-1265. DO YOU HAVE FOR $500 OR Golf Equipment POODLE pups, AKC toy Mattress/boxsprings, LESS? SOMETHING TO POM-A-POO pups, toy. queen, pillowtop, bamSELL Non-commercial So cute! 541-475-3889 boo fabric, used 9 mos, FOR $500 OR advertisers may Bid Now! $899 new; make off e r ! www.euiietineidneuy.com LESS? place an ad with Queensiand Heelers OUI' Non-commercial standard 8 mini,$150 & SE Bend. 541-508-8784 "QUICK CASH advertisers may up. 541-280-1537 http:// Microwave oven 8 cabiplace an ad SPECIAL" Flghtwaytanch.wotdpteee.com net, $50. Cash only. with our 1 week 3 lines 12 541-316-1265. "QUICK CASH o ~2a aka Ror Want to impress the Ad must include SPECIAL" relatives? Remodel 1 week 3 lines 12 price of single item Buy New...Buy Local your home with the ot' of $500 or less, or You Can Bid On: multiple items help of a professional Complete set of ~2a aka Ror Ad must whose total does Ladies Cleveland from The Bulletin's include price of not exceed $500. Bloom (Berry), "Call A Service nl a t a o t $500 Queen-size Canopy 14 piece set. ~ Professional" Directory Call Classifieds at L og Bed $ 5 00. 1 or less, or multiple Pro Golf of Bend 541-385-5809 screw stripped, easy items whose total (Bidding ends www.bendbulletin.com fix. 541-550-6567 does notexceed Nov. 13, at 8pm) USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! $500. Refrigerator, good cond, English Bulldog Puppy, Door-to-door selling with white, $95. Won't last Call Classifieds at only one left! AKC reg- fast results! It's the easiest long! 541-526-5854 541-385-5809 Guns Hunting istered. All shots up to way in the world to sell. www.bendbulletin.com date & m icrochipped, Washer: Maytag front & Fishing $1500. 541-416-0375 load, cherry red, 3 yrs The Bulletin Classified $350. 5 41-923-7394 2010 H8R Handi-Rifle, Check out the English Bulldogs AKC 541-385-5809 or stickbug@q.com .243 Win., syn stock, classifieds online Registered, white facmount & rings in box, tored, $2500, r e adyShih-tzu purebred male, www.bendbuilet!n.com $250. 541-749-0636 around Christmas. Leave 10 weeks old, $475. The Bulletin Updated daily recommends extra bakpaknbowOgmail.com message, 541-728-6533 Call 541-788-0326 ! oa.to. n a p. chasing products or • Siberian Husky, AKC! Find exactly what services from out of I you are looking for in the Beaut, sweet female, 1yr, $500. 541-977-7019 l the area. Sending l CLASSIFIEDS cash, checks, or Yorkie AKC 2 male pups, l credit i n f o rmation small, big eyes, shots, may be subjected to health gua r antee,l FRAUD. For more $850+, 541-316-0005. information about an l
People Look for Information St. Thomas Altar About Products and Society Homespun Services Every Daythrough 210 Holiday Bazaar FINEST Craft Fair •Handmade TheBulletin Classifieds Furniture & Appliances & Religious This Year! Items•Baked Goods Aussie Mini/Toy AKC, all Frenchton pups, ready Sat., Nov. 10, 10-3 • Lunch, 11am-1pm! colors, starting at $275. now! Registered par- A1 Washers&Dryers BEND ELKS LODGE St. Thomas Parish Parents on site. Call ents on site. Puppy $150 ea. Full war• Santa on-sitea/i day! package incl. $700Hall, 1720 NW 19th 541-598-5314/788-7799 ranty. Free Del. Also • ATM available $750. 5 4 1-548-0747 St., Redmond wanted, used W/D's • Elks Lodgesells lunch Sat. Nov. puppies or 541-279-3588 10th, 9-3pm Aussie-Shepherd 541-280-7355 Beautiful gifts, wreaths, 1st shots/dewormed, BIOOBMorePix at Bendbulletirccl swags,garden art, cards, $150. 541-771-2606 205 goat milk soaps, looml . we'< r e Items for Free woven jewelry, scarves, t eaa eaa a4 aua red, purple hats, jewelry, rings, stunning artisan FREE m obile home Aussies, Mini & Toy jewelry,quiltings, knitted trusses. After 3 p.m. sizes, all colors, 7 socks, jams, jellies, call 541-325-3114. weeks $300 cash. chutneys, baked goods. 541-678-7599 Unique, quality, artisan Horse Manure, large gifts HERE! loads, perfect for garOo Boyd Acres at Empire d ening, w i l l lo a d , t ru Ave., in Bend FREE. 541-390-6570.
THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m.
O r e g o n
Breyer collectible horses vintage from 1 9751980 Prices vary at $20 or less. Also tack 8 s t ables for sale.
www.eulletmerdneuy.com
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - ExerciseEquipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health andBeautyItems 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, StereoandVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 -Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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Youhavearighttoknowwhatyourgovernmentisdoing. Current Oregon law requires public notices to be printed in a newspaper whose readers are affected by the notice. But federal, state, and local government agencies erroneously believe they can save money by posting public notices on their web sites instead of in the local newspaper. If they did that,you'd have to know in advance where, when, and how to look, and what to look for,in order to be informed about government actions that could affect you directly. Less than 10% of the U.S. population currently visits a government web site daily,* but 80% of all Oregon adults read a newspaper at least once during an average week, and 54% read public notices printed there.**
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
E2 MONDAY NOVEMB ER 5 2012 •THE BULLETIN
541 e385-5809
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD No. 1001
Edited by Will Shortz Across 1 Muslim pilgrim's destination 6 Indian prince 10 Kemo 14 Map collection 15 "'Tis a pity" 16 Shortly, to a poet 17 Bloodhound's trail 18 Move like a butterfly 19 Watch chains 20 Second first lady 23 Daydream 25 Doctorate grillings 27 Declare 28 American Dance Theater founder 32 Mister: English:: : German 33 Part of the eye around the pupil 34 Football field units: Abbr. 35 Oscar-winning actor for "Little Miss Sunshine"
40 K2 and 66 Part of the U.S. Kilimanjaro: Abbr. that's usually
first with election returns 44 Prefix with 67 Some Scots dynamic 68 One giving orders 48 Tennis champion 69 Alimony givers or receivers with a stadium named after him 70 Precipitation around 32' 52 t h e Impaler
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Thursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Fr i d ay. . . .. . • • • • • • . • • • • • • . • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3: 0 0 pm FrI • Sunday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5e00 Pm FrI •
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Place aphotoin your private partyad for only $15.00 perweek.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
'UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days ................................................ $16.00
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4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
*Must state prices in ad
Puzzleby Susan Gelfand
37 Airport info: Abbr. 46 Comic Charlotte 38 Grant-giving org. 47 Gets too high, for 39 Special short? Operations 49 Property dividers warrior that may need 40 PC alternative clipping 41 Vibrating effect 42 Leaves high and 50 Card game for romantics? dry 45 Target for a 51 Photo lab abbr. certain bark beetle 55 Witty put-downs
57 "My country,'tis of 58 April 1 news story, maybe 59 Comfort 60 Occupation 63 Corrida cheer
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( * ) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at bendbullefin.com any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
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PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on 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 OregonMarketplace eachTuesday.
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• Building Materials •
or go to www.bendbuiletin.com
Lost & Found •
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Horses & Equipment
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Employment Opportunities
F ound c a mera a n d SE Bend Boarding MOVING SALE Can be found on these pages: charger unit, vicinity of $195/rn. Top Quality Leather divan, chair, otBid Now! Building Supply Resale VA Clinic and old C.O. grass hay, pen/shelter. DO YOU NEED toman $500. High-end www.sulletinsidnsuy.com Audiology Clinic. Over 1000 acres to ride. A GREAT EMPLOYMENT FINANCEAND BUSINESS wicker patio set, $500. 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 541-447-6934 541-382-1560 541-419-3405 Rocking chair, $75. PorEMPLOYEE 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts www.steelduststable.com Open to the public. celain top table/4 chairs RIGHT NOW? 421 - Schools andTraining 514 -Insurance Found Chainsaw, call to $135. Landscape tools, Call The Bulletin 358 identify: 210-749-9198 454- Looking for Employ ment 52 8 - Loans and Mortgages king down c omforter, before 11 a.m. and (in Bend). Farmers Column 470 Domestic & In-Hom 8 Posit i ons 543 St oc ks and Bonds $75. Inflatable pontoon • Heating & Stoves • get an ad in to pub476 - EmploymentOpportunities boat $295. Front load 5 5 8 - Business Investments Found ring at Tumalo lish the next day! Wanted: Irrigated farm Buy New...auy Local washer/dryer set $300. Falls trail head. Email: 486 - Independent Positions 573 - Business Opportunities NOTICE TO 541-385-5809. ground, under pivot irYou Can Bid On: Titleist irons/bag $125. gbquissell@ ADVERTISER VIEW the riqation, in C e ntral $500 Toward Hearts Calloway driver/fairway Since 476 476 September 29, bendbroadband.com Classifieds at: 0 . 541-419-2713 on Fire Diamond metals $25/ea. SS gas 1991, advertising for Lost man's gold Harley www.bendbulletin.com Employment Employment ÃBE~i88Q Jewelry grill $150, misc items. Look at: used woodstoves has Davidson ring in area Call 520-232-3272 Opportunities Opportunities Saxon's Fine 8 558EcM Bendhomes.com been limited to modof Northside Bar & Emergency Jewelers els which have been for Complete Listings of G rill on 10/2 5 . Pfaff Model Quilt ExpresRemember.... (Bidding ends Medical sions 4.0, l ike n ew, c ertified by th e O r - 541-497-0224. Area Real Estate for Sale A dd your we b a d - Looking for your next Nov. 13, at spm) Technician employee? sewing, quilting, $1200 egon Department of dress to your ad and R EMEMBER: If you Environmental QualPlace a Bulletin help firm. 541-777-0101 The have lost an animal, 253 Jefferson CountyEMS readers on ity (DEQ) and the fedwanted ad today and District has an open- Bulletin' s web site E n v ironmental don't forget to check reach over 60,000 TV, Stereo & Video S olid cherry desk & eral will be able to click The Humane Society ing for a full-time EMT chairs top, need reProtection Ag e n cy readers each week. 528 automatically $50 0 ;Crosley (EPA) as having met in Bend 541-382-3537 position. JCEMSD, lo- through Your classified ad Sony stereo component done Loans & Mortgages to your site. Redmond, cated in Madras, Orc abinet. $35. C a s h stereo stackable record smoke emission stanwill also appear on 541-923-0882 only. 541-316-1265. changer AM/FM CD/ dards. A cer t i fied egon, is a 911 ser- Sales Consultant bendbulletin.com WARNING Prineville, Cass, matching stand, w oodstove may b e vice that provides ALS which currently The Bulletin recom541-447-7178; $385. 10k Btu window identified by its certifiambulance coverage ROBBERSON 4 receives over 1.5 mends you use cauNeed to get an ad OR Craft Cats, A/C used 1 mo. $375; cation label, which is to a large rural commillion page views tion when you pro541-389-8420. 45 rpm r ecord coll. munity. Closing date every month at permanently attached 421 in ASAP? vide personal over 1800 1950s-70s to the stove. The BulRobberson Ford for applications is onno extra cost. 286 Schools 8 Training information to compa$2000. All prices firm, letin will no t k n owPre-Owned Sales, November 23. 2012. Bulletin Classifieds nies offering loans or cash only. A n ytime ingly accept advertis- Sales Northeast Bend home of Bend's best Fax It to 541-322-7253 Call 541-475-7476 for Get Results! TRUCK SCHOOL credit, especially 541-316-1265. warranty, is seeking a applications. ing for the sale of Call 385-5809 those asking for adwww. IITR.net top producing experiThe Bulletin Classifieds uncertified or place Redmond Campus vance loan fees or S TUDDED TI RE S , ** FREE ** Food Service enced sales profesyour ad on-line at companies from out of 185/70 R14 F a lken woodstoves. Student Loans/Job Waitresses, bartenders sional. We are locally Garage Sale Klt bendbulletin.com Waiting Toll Free state. If you have Euro Winter M odel and line cook for busy owned and recently Place an ad in The 1-888-387-9252 concerns or quesHS4044, 4 for $125 country-style restauwon both the I Com puters Bulletin for your ga486 Fuel & Wood tions, we suggest you OBO. 541-390-7159. rant in Redmond. Min. President's Award for rage sale and re470 consult your attorney 2 years exp. customer service and Independent Positions T HE B U LLETIN r e ceive a Garage Sale Domestic 8 or call CONSUMER paying cash Please send resume to the Chamber of quires computer ad- WantedKit FREE! WHEN BUYING HOTLINE, Hi-fi audio & stu1greatseat4u2@gmail In-Home Positions Commerce Large vertisers with multiple for 1-877-877-9392. FIREWOOD... Sales dio equip. Mclntosh, .com Business of the Year KIT I NCLUDES: ad schedules or those J BL, Marantz, D y Circulation • 4 Garage Sale Signs Will do housecleaning in Livestock Truck Driver Award. To avoid fraud, selling multiple sysHeathkit, San• $2.00 Off Coupon To Terrebonne & Crooked Must have CDL,2yrs exp, We offer competitive Promotions The Bulletin Get your tems/ software, to dis- naco, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Use Toward Your River Ranch. Have pay, and outstanding We are seeking a full recommends payclose the name of the Call 541-261-1808 progressive co., 401k, benefits business Next Ad openings Tues, Wed. including emtime Sales Rep to ment for Firewood business or the term $50,000/yr, insurance • 10 Tips For "Garage Thurs. 541-379-1741 ployee medical, den"dealer" in their ads. only upon delivery Ioln our successful NW only. 541-475-6681 Sale Success!" 262 tal, and supplemental team of i n depen- a ROW I N G Private party advertisand inspection. 476 insurance, vacation, dent con t ractors. Commercial/Office • A cord is 128 cu. ft. ers are defined as Employment Machinist 4' x 4' x 8' 401k & profit sharing. Must be goal o rithose who sell one Equipment & Fixtures PICK UP YOUR KEITH Mfg. Co. with an ad in Opportunities Clean driving record ented, m o t ivated, • Receipts should computer. GARAGE SALE KIT at has an opening for a required. e nthusiastic, p e r The Bulletin's include name, File cabinets: letter size, 1777 SW Chandler CNC Mac h i nist. 257 sonable, outgoing, phone, price and Apply in person at locking, no dents or Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Caregiver "Call A Service Perform setup and Prineville Senior care optimistic and good I Musical Instruments scratches, 4-drawer, kind of wood purRobberson Ford Professional" h ome l o oking f o r operate a variety of with people. Sales Pre-Owned $70, 2 drawer, $45. chased. Mazak CNC lathes, Caregiver for multiple • Firewood ads experience is preDirectory 541- 389-6167 Ask for Tony or Greg i ncluding live t o ol 2770 N.E. 2nd Street, s hifts, p art-time t o ferred, positive attiMUST include spefull-time. Pass and fourth axis, to tude required! Must BANK TURNED YOU cies and cost per 263 Bend, OR 97701. prec i sion criminal background make have a valid driver's cord to better serve DOWN'? Private party Tools Robberson Ford is a parts. Maintain recheck. 541-447-5773. license, insured veour customers. will loan on real esdrug free workplace. il quired tooling suphicle and cell phone. mkGOSR tate equity. Credit, no Caregivers EOE. plies. Inspect parts We offer a complete Piano, Steinway Model problem, good equity Bid Now! - Experienced and adjust programs sen aa Central Oregon ence 603 training program, all is all you need. Call 0 Baby Grand 1911, www.sulletinsldnauy.com Part time & 24 h r s and tools to conform The Bulletin tools and supplies now. Oregon Land gorgeous, artist qualcaregivers. Home ln- to prints. Minimum 2 I Recommends extra needed for success, ity instrument w/great Mortgage 388-4200. All Year Dependable stead Senior Care is years e x p erience caution when purgenerous commisaction & S teinway's Flrewood: Sp lit, Del. c urrently seek i ng CNC Lathe Set Up, chasing products or I sion, d a il y an d LOCAL MONEY:We buy warm, rich sound. Will Bend. Lod g epole, Caregivers to provide with an emphasis on services from out of • weekly secured trustdeeds & bo n uses, adorn any living room, Pine: 1 for $180 or 2 in-home care to our Mazak lathes and I the area. Sending note,some hard money cash incentives and church or music stu- Buy New...auy Local for $350. Cash, check seniors. Candidates Mazak Hay, Grain & Feedg pr o g ramloans. Call Pat Kelley c ash, c hecks, o r unlimited in c o me dio perfectly. New reo r credit card O K . must be able to lift, You Can Bid On: ming software. Must I credit i n f o rmation 541-382-3099 ext.13. potential. Email retail $ 6 9,000. Sacri541-420-3484. 1 Week Rental Good horse hay, barn transfer, provide per- b e able to l ift 5 0 I may be subjected to sume to m i stertafice at $26,000 OBO, 331 Mini Excavator stored, no rain, $225 sonal care & assist in pounds. C o mpetiNeed help fixing stuff? FRAUD. clrnaeteraal.cco call 541-383-3150. Dry Juniper Firewood Bobcat of ton, and $8.25 bale. various home duties. tive wage and benFor more informaCall A Service Professional $200 per cord, split. Alzheimer/ Dementia/ Central Oregon Delivery ava i lable. efit package. Send tion about an adverfind the help you need. T echnics piano k e y 1/2 cords available. 541-410-4495. ALS e xperience a (Bidding ends cover letter and re- I tiser, you may call board perfect cond. Was www.bendbulletin.com Immediate delivery! needed. Must h ave Nov. 13, at Spm) sume to: $1500 new; sell $425 the Oregon State Wanted: Irrigated farm ability to pass back541-408-6193 obo. 541-388-2706 KEITH Mfg. Co. I Attorney General's ground, under pivot ir- ground checks 8 have Human Resources, Office C o n sumer r Automotive Sales riqation, i n C e n tral valid DL & insurance. 265 Split, Dry PO Box1, Protection hotline at l OR. 541-419-2713 Training provided. Call Building Materials Lod~epole Misc. Items Madras, OR 97741 I 1-877-677-9392. ASTART YOUR NEW CAREERA $20 / ord, 541-330-6400, or fax Wheat Straw: Certified 8 or fax to Delivery included! Bedding Straw & Garden resume to: 541-475-2169 LTlxe Bulleti Central Oregon's Largest Auto Group of New and 541-923-6987, Iv msg. Straw;Compost.546-6171 Bid Novv! 541-330-7362. Bid Now! www.sulletlnsldnsuy.com Pre-owned automobiles, Sm olich H y u n dai www.sulletinsidnsuy.com Store, is looking to fill positions within our expandIndependent Contractor Looklng for your ing auto network. Smolich Motors is an industry MORNIN(jiSTAR Gardening Suppliesi next employee? leader with 8 new car franchises and Central CNnnIIIK unuf • & E q uipment • Placea Bulletln Oregon'5 finest choice of pre-owned vehicles. We Prineville Habitat ReStore
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1-Year Middle SchoolTuition Deeteaf edlyade Ihefh Chiisrearef eaalie
Buy New...Buy Local
You Can Bid On: One Year Middle School Tuition Morning Star Christian School (Bidding ends Nov. 13, at Spm)
Buying Diamonds /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers
Buy New...auy Local
You Can Bid On: $2500 Bathtub or Shower Makeover Gift Certificate Re-Bath of Central Oregon (Bidding ends Nov. 13, at Spm) Bid NofN!
www.sullelinsldnsuy.com
541-389-6655 BUYING
Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.
ll Ia---gg Buy New...auy Local
help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. 541-385-5800 Your classifled ad To place an ad, call will also 541-385-5809 appear on or email classified@bendbulletm.com bendbulletln.com whlch currently The Bulletin Serv na Central Oregon enze elB recelves over 1.5 milllon page vlews every SUPER TOP SOIL month at no www.hershe soilandbarfccom extra cost. Screened, soil & comBulletin post m i x ed , no Classlfieds rocks/clods. High hum us level, exc. f o r Get Results! flower beds, lawns, Call 541-385-5809 straight gardens, or place your ad s creened to p s o il. on-line at Bark. Clean fill. Debendbulletln.com liver/you haul. For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at
You Can Bid On: 22' X 22' Stick Built All gold jewelry, silver Garage 541-548-3949. and gold coins, bars, HiLine Homes rounds, wedding sets, (Bidding ends class rings, sterling silNov. 13, at Spm) ver, coin collect, vin• Lo s t & Found • taqe watches, dental go1d. Bill Fl e ming, MADRAS Habitat FREE CHICKENS Attn: archery hunters 541-382-9419. A VARIETY RESTORE camped at L o okout 541-923-5066 Building Supply Resale Mtn. just outside PraiCOWGIRL CASH Quality at rie City... they l e ft We buy Jewelry, Boots, TURN THE PAGE Vintage Dresses & LOW PRICES something at camp, I 84 SW K St. found it and would like More. 924 Brooks St. For More Ads 541-475-9722 541-678-5162 to return it. Call Dave The Bulletin www.getcowgirlcash.com Open to the public. 541-643-5990 BUYING &
S E LLING
*Supplement Your Income* Operate Your Own Business
++++++++++++++++++
Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor
® Call Today © We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:
* Prineville *
offer the opportunity for you to achieve the levels of successand job satisfaction. We are looking for highly motivated individuals to join our team of professionals. You must have excellent verbal skills, display a professional and positive demeanor, sales experience is helpful, but not necessary. We provide all of the tools you need to succeed, including a professional training program that will give you the knowledge and confidence to maximize your potentiaI.
We Provide: • Guaranteed Income While Training • Paid Medical Insurance • 401K Retirement Plan
• Drug Free Work Environment • Central Oregon'5 Largest New & Pre-Owned Inventory • $75,000 Annual Earning Potential At Smolich Hyundai we are looking for sales pro-
Must have reliable, insured vehicle.
fessionals from all career fields. Previous automotive sales experience is not required. What is required is 8 willingness to commit yourself to a rapidly growing industry, start your new career now!
Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933
We will be holding interviews for 2 days only from 1pm —3pm on Tuesday and Wednesday,
Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours.
during business hours
November 6th and 7th at:
apply vja email at online©bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
Smolich Motors - Hyundai Store 2250 NE Hwy 20 Bend, OR 9770|. 541-749-4025
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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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 NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 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
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Rooms for Rent NE Bend: private bath/entry/patio; internet/cbl svc; laundry. No smkg. $575 incl utils. 541-317-1879
Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & linens. New owners. $145-$165/wk 541-382-1885
The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
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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 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 634
654
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Houses for Rent SE Bend
GET THEM BEFORE
20257 Knights Bridge
Place, brand new 2 bdrm, 1 bath deluxe 3 bdrm, 2t/g bath, $530 & $540 1880 sq. ft. home. Carports & A/C included! $1195. 541-350-2206 Fox Hollow Apts. (541) 383-3152 Good classified ads tell Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co the essential facts in an *Upstairs only with lease interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not 636 the seller's. Convert the Apt./Multiplex NW Bend facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will 141 NW P o rtland, 2 help them in someway. bdrm, oak cabinets, DW, This W/S/G & cable paid, advertising tip laundry facilities. $650, brought to you by $500 dep. 541-617-1101
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Apt./Multiplex Redmond 1550sq ft 3 bdrm 2 bath,
W/D hkup, gas frplce, close to RHS, fenced yd w/garden, 2-car garage. $925. 541-604-4694
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J Building/Contracting L andscaping/Yard Care
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Mobile/Mfd. Space • Space rent $180 mo. • Homes for rent $350 - $495 mo. • Large treed lots • J.D. Riverfront lots • Playground and Community Center • Next to Thriftway • RVs Welcomed, Riverside Home Park 677 W. Main, John Day, Oregon Call Lisa 541-575-1341 riversidemhp.jimdo.com
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Boats & Accessories
Travel Trailers
GENERATE SOME ex- ROUA Digorgio 1971 citement in your neig- fridge, heater, propane & elec. lights, awning, borhood. Plan a garage sale and don't 2 spares, extra insuforget to advertise in lation for late season hunting/cold weather classified! 385-5809. camping, well maint,
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Snowmobiles
Serving Central Dregon smte 1903
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16-ft wide-body canoe, hand-laid fiberglass, long paddles 8 Stearns vests, $350. 541-233-8944
860
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. Call 541-647-3718
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CHEVYBLA2ER, 1991 4x4 Tahoe LT, tow, air, tilt, leather interior, customwheels and trim, loaded, $8,900 080.
DINING TABLE, oak, w/8 chairs $400; 5-piece oak dinette $100; Gold La-Z-Boy sofa sleeper & rocker recliner $200; 4-piece dble . maple bdrm. set $100. All items must go nowi
DINING TABLE,oak, w/8 chairs $400;5-pieceoakdinette$100; Gold La-Z-Boy sofa sleeper & rocker recliner $200; 4-piece dble. maple bdrm. set $100. All items must gonow!
MINI BEAGLEPUPPIES 2 femal es,$250,2 males,$350, AKC registered. Cute!
bold headlines
MINI BEAGLE PUPPIES 2 femal es,$250,2 males,$350, AKC registered. Cute!
Attention-
The Bulletin
Blow-oufs
541-749-0724
541-480-9277
Winter Tires 4 Bridges tone 2 2 5/55 R 1 6 95W on alloy rims like new, tire pressure monitors incl. (Retail@$1900) $650. In Bend 619-889-5422
Peterbilt 359 p o table Antique & 2007 SeaDoo water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, Classic Autos 2004 Waverunner, slide,Bunkhouse style, Big-Foot motorcycle lift, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp sleeps 7-8, excellent 1/3 interest i n w e l l- p ump, 4 - 3 e hoses, ideal f o r Ha r leys. excellent condition, LOW hours. Double condition, $ 1 6 ,900,equipped IFR Beech Bo- camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. $275. 541-788-4844 trailer, lots of extras. 541-390-2504 nanza A36, new 10-550/ 541-820-3724 Harley Davidson Soft$10,000 prop, located KBDN. Tail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , FIND IT! 541-719-8444 1921 Model T $65,000. 541-419-9510 white/cobalt, w / pasSUY IT! Delivery Truck Utility Trailers • senger kit, Vance & SELL IT! published in aWaRestored 8 Runs Hines muffler system Ads Executive Hangar tercraft" include: Kay- The Bulletin Classifieds $9000. at Bend Airport 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. 541-389-8963 c ond, $19,9 9 9 , aks, rafts and motor(KBDN) ized personal 60' wide x 50' deep, 541-389-9188. Big Tex Landscapwatercrafts. For w/55' wide x 17' high Harley Heritage " boats" please s e e ing/ ATV Trailer, bi-fold door. Natural Softail, 2003 Class 870. dual axle flatbed, gas heat, office, bath7'x16', 7000 lb. $5 000+ in extras 541-385-5809 room. Parking for 6 $2000 paint job, GVW, all steel, c ars. A d jacent t o 30K mi. 1 owner, Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 $1400. For more information ~ Servin CentralOregon since S903 29', weatherized, like Frontage Rd; g reat 541-382-4115, or Chevy C-20 Pickup visibility for a viation please call n ew, f u rnished & 541-280-7024. 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; 880 541-385-8090 ready to go, incl Wine- bus. 1jetjocktN q.com auto 4-spd, 396, model or 209-605-5537 Motorhomes ard S a t ellite dish, 541-948-2126 CST /all options, orig. 26,995. 541-420-9964 owner, $22,000, I Automotive Parts, • 541-923-6049 HD FAT BOY Service & Accessories Chevy flatbed pickup 1996 lg lii nn gi —JIJ I Completely rebuilt/ 1969, 3 2 7 en g i ne, (4) 5-lug wheels w/LT235 $4000. 541-388-3029 customized, low -75R15 mud terrain tires, miles. Accepting ofs v ee l e fers. 541-548-4807 Country Coach Intrigue Weekend Warrior Toy ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP $200 cash 541-318-4577 j~y' ~ 20' 2007, Gen, 2002, 40' Tag axle. Hauler 4 Studless winter trac• SHA R E LEFT! HD Screaming Eagle 400hp Cummins Die- fuel station, exc cond. Economical flying in tion tires on wheels, sleeps 8, black/gray Electra Glide 2005, sel. tw o s l ide-outs. your ow n C e s sna 225/60R-16, $350. 103 n motor, two tone 4 1,000 m iles, n e w i nterior, u se d 3X , • 172/180 HP for only 541-410-0886 candy teal, new tires, tires & batteries. Most $24,999. Chevy Wagon 1957, $ 10,000! Based a t 541-389-9188 23K miles, CD player, options. $95,000 OBO 4-dr., complete, BDN. Call Gabe at Four 185/70R studded hydraulic clutch, ex541-678-5712 tires on wheels, used . $15,000 OBO, trades, Professional Air! cellent condition. $ 120 O BO . J e r ry Looking for your please call 541 -388-001gg Highest offer takes it. 541-382-0956. next employee? 541-420-5453. 541-480-8080. Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and Honda Elite 80 2 001, reach over 60,000 1400 mi., absolutely readers each week. like new., comes w/ Your classified ad carrying rack for 2" Econoline R V 1 9 89, will also appear on receiver, ideal for use fully loaded, exc. cond, bendbulletin.com w/motorhome, $995, 35K mi. , R e duced which currently re$17,950. 541-546-6133 541-546-6920 ceives over 1.5 million page views evCAN'T BEAT THIS! ery month at no Softail Deluxe L ook before y o u extra cost. Bulletin 2010, 805 miles, buy, below market Classifieds Get ReBlack Chameleon. value! Size & milesults! Call 385-5809 age DOES matter! $17,000 or place your ad Class A 32' HurriCallDon @ on-line at cane by Four Winds, 541-410-3823 bendbulletin.com 2007. 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V10, Ithr, cherry, slides, 870 882 like new! New low Boats & Accessories Fifth Wheels price, $54,900.
50rj0~
Sprinkler
Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call
$325. 541-593-1268.
Tires (4) LT265/70R17 on Ford 8-hole wheels 4 0% t r e ad , $ 4 0 0 .
Motorcycles & Accessories
Need to get an ad in ASAP? 541-548-5216 You can place it 13' Smokercraft '85, 28' HR Alumascape online at: good cond., 15I-IP Gul!stream S cen i c 1998 with slider, very Zt,trN 4 gua/riI Cruiser 36 !t. 1999, nice, clean. $6500. gas Evinrude + www.bendbulletin.com Za~<0a ~/,. Cummins 330 hp die- Bend, 206-915-1412. Minnkota 44 elec. sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 motor, fish finder, 2 541-385-5809 tractors Board (CCB). More Than Service in. kitchen slide out, extra seats, trailer, A n active lice n se Peace Of Mind tires,under cover, extra equip. $3200. new means the contractor hwy. miles only,4 door i s bonded an d i n 541-388-9270 fridge/freezer ice Fall Clean Up s ured. Ver if y t h e Don't maker, W/D combo, track it in an Winter contractor's CCB 17' 1984 Chris Craft Interbath t ub & Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 •Leaves c ense through t h e - Scorpion, 140 HP shower, 50 amp pro•Cones by Carriage, 4 slideCCB Cons u mer • Needles inboard/outboard, 2 pane gen 8 m o r e! outs, inverter, satelWebsite • Pruning depth finders, troll$55,000. lite sys, fireplace, 2 www.rtireaccensedcontractor. • Debris Hauling 541-948-2310 ing motor, full cover, flat screen TVs. com EZ - L oad t railer, or call 503-378-4621. $60,000. $3500 OBO. 541-480-3923 The Bulletin recomGutter 541-382-3728. mends checking with 745 Cleaning the CCB prior to conHunter's Delight! PackHomes for Sale tracting with anyone. age deal! 1988 WinCompost 17' Seaswirl 1988 Some other t r ades nebago Super Chief, BANK OWNED HOMES! also req u ire addi- Applications open bow, rebuilt 3 8K m i l es , gr e a t FREE List w/Pics! Chev V 6 e n g ine, tional licenses and Use Less Water shape; 1988 Bronco II www.BendRepos.com certifications. new uph o lstery, 4 x4 t o t o w , 1 3 0 K Fleetwood Wilderness $$$ SAVE $$$ bend and beyond real estate $3900 obo. Bend. mostly towed miles, 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, 20967 yeoman, bend or Improve Soil 707-688-4523 nice rig! $15,000 both. rear bdrm, fireplace, Debris Removal 541-382-3964, leave AC, W/D hkup beauNo Reserve 2013 Maintenance msg. Timed Online tiful u n it! $30,500. JUNK BE GONE Package Available AUCTION 541-815-2380 weekly, monthly I Haul Away FREE Ends Nov.14th Itasca Spirit Class C and For Salvage. Also Building Lot in Prong2007, 20K miles, front one time service Cleanups 8 Cleanouts h orn S u b . 23 0 1 3 entertainment center, Mel, 541-389-8107 Canyon View Loop all bells & whistles, EXPERIENCED 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Selling to the Highest extremely good conCommercial Volvo Penta, 270HP, Bidder 28 Properties dition, 2 s l ides, 2 I Domestic Services & Residential in 5-States! low hrs., must see, HDTV's, $45,000 K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 slide, AC, TV, awning. www.corbettbottles.com $15,000, 541-330-3939 OBO. 541-447-5484 Professional houseNEW: tires, converter, 208-377-5700 cleaning: 25 yrs. exbatteries. Hardly used. Senior Discounts perience, references, $15,500. 541-923-2595 = 541-390-1466 Senior discounts! NOTICE 541-420-0366 Same Day Response All real estate adver20.5' 2004 Bayliner tised here in is sub- 205 Run About, 220 N OTICE: OREGON ject to t h e F e deral HP, V8, open bow, Landscape ContracHandyman tors Law (ORS 671) F air H o using A c t , exc. cond., very fast Jayco Seneca 2 007, w/very low hours, r equires a l l bus i - which makes it illegal ERIC REEVE HANDY 17K mi., 35ft., Chevy nesses that advertise to advertise any preflots of extras incl. SERVICES. Home & 5500 d i e sel, to y MONTANA 3585 2008, erence, limitation or tower, Bimini & to p e rform L a n dCommercial Repairs, hauler $130 , 000. exc. cond., 3 slides, discrimination based scape C o nstruction custom trailer, Carpentry-Painting, 541-389-2636. king bed, Irg LR, Arcon race, color, reliwhich inclu d es: $19,500. Pressure-washing, tic insulation, all op541-389-1413 p lanting, decks , gion, sex, handicap, Honey Do's. On-time tions $37,500. fences, arbors, familial status or napromise. Senior 541-420-3250 tional origin, or intenDiscount. Work guar- w ater-features, a n d tion to make any such installation, repair of NuVya 297LK H i tchanteed. 541-389-3361 preferences, l i mitairrigation systems to Hiker 2007, 3 slides, or 541-771-4463 tions or discrimination. be licensed with the 32' touring coach, left Bonded 8 Insured 20.5' Seaswirl SpyWe will not knowingly Landscape Contrackitchen, rear lounge, CCB¹t 81595 Immaculate! der 1989 H.O. 302, accept any advertist ors B o a rd . Th i s many extras, beautiful Beaver Coach Marquis 285 hrs., exc. cond., ing for r eal e state 4-digit number is to be 40' 1987. New cover, c ond. inside & o u t, stored indoors for USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! included in all adver- which is in violation of life $11,900 OBO. new paint (2004), new $34,499 OBO, Prinevtisements which indi- this law. All persons 541-379-3530 ille. 541-447-5502 days inverter (2007). Onan Door-to-door selling with cate the business has are hereby informed 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, 8 541-447-1641 eves. that all dwellings ada bond, insurance and fast results! It's the easiest parked covered $35,000 workers c ompensa- vertised are available Ads published in the 541-419-9859 or way in the world to sell. "Boats" classification obo. tion for their employ- on an equal opportu541-280-2014 nity basis. The Bulleinclude: Speed, fishees. For your protecThe Bulletin Classified ing, drift, canoe, tion call 503-378-5909 tin Classified 541-385-5809 house and sail boats. or use our website: 750 For all other types of www.lcb.state.or.us to P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h watercraft, please see check license status I DO THAT! Redmond Homes wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Class 875. before con t racting Home/Rental repairs TV,full awning, excel541-385-5809 with th e b u s iness. Small jobs to remodels Monaco Dynasty 2004, lent shape, $23,900. Persons doing land- Looking for your next Honest, guaranteed loaded, 3 slides, die- 541-350-8629 emp/oyee? scape m a intenance work. CCB¹151573 sel, Reduced - now do not require a LCB Place a Bulletin help Dennis 541-317-9768 $119,000, 5 4 1-923wanted ad today and license. 8572 or 541-749-0037 reach over 60,000 readers each week. i YOUR BOAT... i I Home Improvement Nelson Landscape Maintenance Your classified ad with o u r sp e c ial sn g t will also appear on Kelly Kerfoot Const. Serving rates for selling your I 28 yrs exp in Central OR! bendbulletin.com boaf or wafel'cralf! Pilgrim In t e rnational Central Oregon Quality & honesty, from which currently re2005, 36' 5th Wheel, Residential carpentry 8 handyman ceives over Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 / Place an ad in The Southwind 35.5' Triton, & Commercial 1.5 million page jobs, to expert wall covFall price $ 2 1,865. Bulletin w it h ou r 2008,V10, 2 slides, Duering install / removal. views every month 541-312-4466 / 3-month p ackage pont UV coat, 7500 mi. Sr. discounts CCB//47120 at no extra cost. ~ which includes: Licensed/bonded/insured Bought new at Bulletin Classifieds 541-389-1413 /410-2422 $132,913; Get Results! ~qg 4 : I *5 lines of text and asking $93,500. Call 385-5809 or • Snow Removal a photo or up to 10 Call 541-419-4212 place your ad on-line BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS • Sprinkler Repair ) lines with no photo. at *Free online ad at 881 Search the area's most • Back Flow Testing bendbuHetin.com comprehensive listing of I bendbulletin.com • Fall Clean up Travel Trailers Regal Prowler AX6 Exclassified advertising... *Free pick up into •Weekly Mowing treme Edition 38' '05, real estate to automotive, ~ The Central Oregon ~ Senior Discounts 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all 775 merchandise to sporting f Nickel ads. maple cabs, king bed/ Bonded & Insured Manufactured/ goods. Bulletin Classifieds bdrm separated w/slide 541-815-4458 Mobile Homes appear every day in the glass dr,loaded,always I Rates start at $46. I LCB//8759 print or on line. garaged,lived in only 3 Call for details! Bend Landscaping FACTORY SPECIAL mo,brand new $54,000, Call 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 Sprinkler Blowouts, New Home, 3 bdrm, Pioneer Spirit 1 8CK, still like new, $28,500, www.bendbulletin.com and Winterization $48,900 finished 2007, used only 4x, AC, will deliver,see rvt.com, 541-382-1655 on your site,541.548.5511 gThe Bulleting electric tongue j ack, ad¹4957646 for pics. The Bulletin Senmg Centrai Oregon vnre fgoa LCB¹ 7990 www.JandMHomes.com $8995. 541-389-7669 Cory, 541-580-7334 NOTICE: Oregon state law req u ires anyone who c o n tracts for construction work to be licensed with the C onstruction Co n -
Aircraft, Parts & Service
G K E A T S pringdale 2005 27', 4' slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 obo. 541-408-3811
Automotive Parts, Ser v ice & Accessories
NEED HOLIDAY $$$? We pay CASH for Junk Cars & Trucksi Also buying batteries 8 catalytic converters. Serving all of C.O.! Diamond Reo Du m p Call 541-408-1090 Truck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 yard box, runs good, Studded winter radial tires (4) used part of 1 $6900, 541-548-6812 season, P235/75R-15
very roomy, sleeps 5, reat f o r hu n t ing, 2950, 541-410-6561
Used out-drive S nowmobiles (2) o n trailer, s n o wmobiles parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt man eed s o m e wor k rine motors: 151 $1500. 541-312-9292 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435 Snowmobile trailer 2002, 25-ft Interstate & 3 sleds, $10,900. 541-480-8009
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Trucks & Heavy Equipment
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2females,$250,2 males,$350, AKC registered. Cute!
To place your ad, call 385-5809 or visit us online at www.bendbulletin.com
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www.bendbulletin.com
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
E4 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2012•THE BULLETIN • s •
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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- RVsfor Rent
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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
Nissan Sentra, 2012-
12,610 mi, full warranty, PS, PB, AC, & more! $16,000. 541-788-0427
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE City of Bend Request for Proposals Water, Sewer and Stormwater Rate Consultant Services
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to O.R.S. 86.705 etseq. and O.R.S. 79.5010, etseq. Trustee's Sale No. 09-CC-120876
cial carriers with traveler information and conditions o f t he roadway. The site will a lso k ee p O D O T c rews i nformed o f conditions at the site to help prioritize work.
NOTICE TO BORROWER: YOU SHOULD BE AWARE THAT THE UN-
DERSIGNED IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND THAT ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust made by, WILLIS E ALBIN, JR., AN UNMARRIED MAN, as grantor, to DESCHUTES COUNTY TITLE Porsche 911 1974, low COMPANY, as Trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISmi., complete motor/ The City of Bend reTRATION SYSTEMS, INC.AS NOMINEE FOR SOUTHWEST STAGE trans. rebuild, tuned quests proposals from suspension, int. & ext. qualified f i rm s to Copies of the signed FUNDING, LLC DBA CASCADE LAND HOME FINANCING, ITSSUC933 935 CESSORS AND ASSIGNS, as beneficiary, dated 8/5/2010, recorded refurb., oi l c o o ling, serve as the Consult- Decision Memo are Pickups Sport Utility Vehicles at the 8/12/2010, under lnstrument No. 2010-31398, records of DESCHUTES shows new in 8 out, a nt o f R e cord f o r available p erf. m e ch. c o n d. W ater, Sewer a n d Ochoco National For- County, OREGON. The beneficial interest under said Trust Deed and the secured thereby are presently held by SOUTHWEST STAGE Much more! Stormwater Rates for est Supervisor's Of- obligations FUNDING, LLC DBA CASCADE LAND HOME FINANCING. Said Trust $28,000 541-420-2715 Chrysler 300 C o upe a five year period. The fice, 3160 NE Third Deed encumbers the following described real property situated in said Street, Prineville, OR, 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Ford F250 XLT 4x4 selected firm will be PORSCHE 914 1974, county and state, to-wit: or on the internet at auto. trans, ps, air, expected to provide Roller (no engine), Lariat, 1990, r e d, LOT FOURTEEN, BLOCK SEVEN, TALL PINES 2ND ADDITION, frame on rebuild, re- 80K original miles, lowered, full roll cage, specific rate studies, http://data.ecosystemDESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON painted original blue, 4" lift with 39's, well Porsche Cayenne 2004, 5-pt harnesses, rac- review and p r ovide management.org/neThe street address or other common designation, if any, list.php original blue interior, maintained, $4000 ing seats, 911 dash & advice on rate mod- paweb/project 86k, immac, dealer of the real property described above is purported to be: original hub caps, exc. obo. 541-419-5495 instruments, decent eling and/or maintain ?forest=110607. maint'd, loaded, now 16061 ELKHORN LANE LA PINE, OR 97739 chrome, asking $9000 shape, v e r y c o ol! rate models, develop The 30-day comment The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of $17000. 503-459-1580 or make offer. financial plans, and $1699. 541-678-3249 the above street address or other common designation. Both the benefiperiod for this project 541-385-9350 provide advice a nd ended on October 15, ciary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy consultation on Utility Vans Toyota Camry'sr • 2012. Since no com- the obligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been related financial is1984, $1200 obo; ments opposed to the recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for sues, as needed. 1985 SOLD; project were received which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due, the Chrysler SD 4-Ooor 1986 parts car, Sealed pro p osals during the comment following sums: Amount due as of October 9, 2012 Delinquent Payments 1930, CD S R oyal Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, must be submitted by period, this decision is from April 01, 2012 7 payments at $1,120.00 each $7,840.00 (04-01-12 $500. Standard, 8-cylinder, 7 1K, X- c ab , X L T, not subject to appeal through 10-09-12) Late Charges: $403.20 Beneficiary Advances: $ November 27, 2012, Call for details, body is good, needs auto, 4 . 0L, $ 8 4 00 3:00 PM, at City Hall, (36 CF R 2 1 5 .12). 645.00 SuspenseCredit:$ 0.00 TOTAL: $8,888.20 ALSO, ifyou have 541-548-6592 some r e s toration, OBO. 541-388-0232 Implementation may failed to pay taxes on the property, provide insurance on the property or 710 NW Wall Street, Chevrolet G20 Sportsruns, taking bids, pay other senior liens or encumbrances as required in the note and deed man, 1993, exlnt cond, Toyota Corolla 2004, 2nd Floor, Bend, Or- begin immediately. 541-383-3888, of trust, the beneficiary may insist that you do so in order to reinstate your Find It in $4750. 541-362-5559 or auto., loaded, orig. egon, 97701, A t tn: PUBLIC NOTICE 541-81 5-331 8 account in good standing. The beneficiary may require as a condition to Notice of Regular The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-663-6046 owner, non smoker, Gwen Chapman, Purreinstatement that you provide reliable written evidence that you have paid chasing Ma n ager. Board of Trustee exc. cond. $7000 firm 541-385-5809 all senior liens or encumbrances, property taxes, and hazard insurance Proposals will not be Meeting Chevy Astro Prineville 503-358-8241 premiums. These requirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by accepted after deadCargo I/an 2001, the undersigned Trustee. By reason of said default, the Toyotas: 1999 Avalon line. The outside of T he F o u r Ri v e rs contacting pw, pdl, great cond., beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said 254k; 1996 Camry, the package containVector Control Disbusiness car, well deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following: 98k, 4 cyl. Lots of ing the proposal shall trict will hold a regular trust maint'd, regular oil UNPAID PRINCIPAL BALANCE OF $165,687.92, PLUS interest thereon I nternational Fla t miles left in these identify the p r oject: FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Board Meeting on 12 changes, $4500. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 at 5.500% per annum from 3/1/2012, until paid, together with escrow cars. Price? You tell W ater, Sewer a n d November 2012, 7:00 advances, foreclosure costs, trustee fees, attorney fees, sums required for door panels w/flowers ton dually, 4 s pd. Please call me! I'd guess S tormwater Rat e & hummingbirds, p.m., at 56478 Solar 541-633-5149 trans., great MPG, $2000-$4000. protection of the property and additional sums secured by the Deed of white soft top 8 hard Consultant. Drive, B e nd , OR the Your servant, Bob at could be exc. wood Trust. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee, top. Just reduced to 97707. Topics of dis- will on February 8, 2013, at the hour of 11:00 AM, in accord with the 541-318-9999, no hauler, runs great, Chevy G-20 c u stom Solicitation p a c kets cussion are general standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at MAIN ENTRANCE TO $3,750. 541-317-9319 new brakes, $1950. charge for looking. conversion travel van may be obtained from business. or 541-647-8483 541-419-5480. THE DESCHUTES COUNTY JUSTICE CENTER, 1100 NW BOND 1994 128k, 5.7L, rear Good classified ads tell C entral Oreg o n PUBLIC NOTICE STREET, BEND, County of DESCHUTES, State of OREGON, sell at elect. bed, 75% tires. a Builder's E x c hange the essential facts in an real beauty in 8 out! The Bend Park & Rec- public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the interest in the said (COBE) at www.planinteresting Manner. Write Travel in economy and reation District Board described property which the grantor had, or had the power to convey, at style and under $4000. from the readers view - not sonfile.com (click on of Directors will meet the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any Public Works) or 1902 in a work session and interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the the seller's. Convert the Bob, 541-318-9999 NE 4th Street, Bend, facts into benefits. Show busi n ess execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby P r oposers regular Ford Galaxie 500 1963, the reader how the item will Oregon. meeting on Wednes- secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable m ust r egister w i t h 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, help them in someway. ay, November 7 , charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in 2500 2003, 5.7L COBE as a document d 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 RAM V8, This 2012, at th e D istrict ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date hd, auto, cruise, holder to receive noradio (orig),541-419-4989 hemi Buick Lucerne CXL 799 SW Colast set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. advertising tip tice of addenda. This Office, 2009, $12,500, low l umbia, Bend, O r - trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount Advertise your car! 541-420-3634/390-1285 brought to you by can be done on the low miles; 2000 Buick Add A Picture! egon. The work ses- then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due COBE website or by Reach thousands of readers! Century $2900. You'll 935 The Bulletin sion will begin at 5:30 had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of Semmg CenlalO rega snce l903 phone at Call 541-385-5809 not find nicer Buicks p m. The board will herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance Sport Utility Vehicles 5 41-389-0123. P r o The Bulletin Ctassifieds One look's worth a receive and r eview required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said Volkswagen Jetta SE, posers are responthousand words. Call 2008. 40,500 mi, Great draft of Chapter 5 sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by Ford Mustang Coupe sible for checking the the Bob, 541-318-9999. condition, FWD, ABS, of the comprehensive paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation 1966, original owner, website for the issufor an appt. and take a automatic, AC, moonamendment. A and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding V8, automatic, great ance of any addenda plan drive in a 30 mpg. car roof, CD/MP3 & much business meeting will the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the shape, $9000 OBO. prior to submitting a more! $12,950 concluded beginmasculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular 530-515-8199 Cadillac E / D o r ado proposal. P r oposal be 541-771-2312 n ing at 7 : 0 0 p . m . includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to 1 994, Total c r e a m results are available Agenda Buick Enclave 2008 CXL puff, body, paint, trunk items include the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the Ford Ranchero from COBE. AWD, V-6, black, clean, as showroom, blue Garage Sales consideration of con- performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words 1979 mechanicall y sound, 82k "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, tract awards for the leather, $1700 wheels Garage Sales The City of Bend rewith 351 Cleveland miles. $21,995. Pine Nursery archi- if any. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds w/snow tires although serves the right to: 1) modified engine. Call 541-815-1216 and engineer- whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those car has not been wet Garage Sales reject any or all pro- tecture Body is in ing, Miller's Landing objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same. NOTICE TO posal not in compli- grading, excellent condition, Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 in 8 years. On trip to and RESIDENTIAL TENANTS: The property in which you are living is in Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., 4x4. 120K mi, Power ance with public so- paving, utilities $2500 obo. Find them P o n derosa foreclosure. A foreclosure sale is scheduled for February 8, 2013. Unless licitation p rocedures Park restroom 541-420-4677 seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd $5400, 541-593-4016. conthe lender who is foreclosing on this property is paid, the foreclosure will in row seating, e xtra and requirements, 2) struction, c o nsider- go through and someone new will own this property. The following tires, CD, privacy tint- Cadillac Seville STS reject any or all pro- ation of adoption of a The Bulletin information applies to you only if you occupy and rent this property as a Ford T-Bird 1966 ing, upgraded rims. 2003 - just finished posals in accordance fees an d c h a rges residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The information Classifieds Fantastic cond. $7995 $4900 engine work 390 engine, power with ORS 279B.100, policy, and consider- does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a residential everything, new Contact Tim m at 3) select consultant by Certified GM meation of adoption of tenant. If the foreclosure goes through, the business or individual who 541-385-5809 541-408-2393 for info chanic. Has everypaint, 54K original on the basis of the ark n a mes. T h e buys this property at the foreclosure sale has the right to require you to or to view vehicle. miles, runs great, proposals or to con- p thing but navigation. board will convene as move out. The buyer must first give you an eviction notice in writing that excellent cond. in 8 duct interviews with Too many bells and Looking for your Local C o ntract specifies the date by which you must move out. The buyer may not give out. Asking $8,500. the highest qualified the w histles t o l i s t . next employee? Review Board followyou this notice until after the foreclosure sale happens. If you do not leave 541-480-3179 proposers after scor- ing the business ses- before bought a new one. Place a Bulletin help the move-out date, the buyer can have the sheriff remove you from ing, 4) seek clarifica$4900 wanted ad today and to hold a public the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the court tions of any or all pro- sion 541-420-1283 reach over 60,000 pursuant to hearing.FEDERAL LAW REQUIRES YOU TO BE NOTIFIED IF YOU posals, and 5 ) t o hearing readers each week. RS 279A & C t o ARE OCCUPYING AND RENTING THIS PROPERTY AS A select the p roposal O GMC Yukon XL S LT Your classified ad hear public testimony, RESIDENTIAL DWELLING UNDER A LEGITIMATE RENTAL which appears to be consider 2004, loaded w/facwill also appear on findings of AGREEMENT, FEDERAL LAW REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU in the best interest of bendbulletin.com tory dvd, 3rd s eat, fact and conclusion Hof NOTICE IN WRITING A CERTAIN NUMBER OF DAYS BEFORE THE the City. which currently relaw to s upport exBUYER CAN REQUIRE YOU TO MOVE OUT. THE FEDERAL LAW GMC Y~ton 1971, Only $7100. 541-280-6947 ceives over 1.5 milempting the construc- THAT REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU THIS NOTICE IS $19,700! Original low Honda Odyssey 2006 Publish: lion page views tion of the Ponderosa EFFECTIVE UNTIL DECEMBER 31, 2012. Under federal law, the buyer mile, exceptional, 3rd November 5, 2012 90k mi. Chrysler Sebring 2006 every month at Skate Park p roject must give you at least 90 days notice in writing before requiring you to owner. 951-699-7171 $11,795 ¹068946 Fully loaded, exc.cond, no extra cost. Bullefrom competitive bidmove out. If you are renting this property under a fixed-term lease (for Gwen Chapman very low miles (38k), tin Classifieds ding, through the use example, a six-month or one-year lease), you may stay until the end of Purchasing Manager always garaged, Get Results! Call of the D e sign-Build your lease term. If the buyer wants to move in and use this property as the 541-385-6677 transferable warranty 385-5809 or place Oregon p rocess, and c o n- buyer's primary residence, the buyer can give you written notice and incl. $8600 your ad on-line at ANroSource LEGAL NOTICE s ider a d option o f require you to move out after 90 days, even if you have a fixed-term lease 1965, Exc. All original, 541-330-4087 bendbullefin.com Oregon Department of 541-598-3750 Resolution No. 347, to with more than 90 days left. STATE LAW NOTIFICATION 4-dr. sedan, in stor- aaaoregonautcsource.com Transportation Remote approve the findings. REQUIREMENTS: IFTHE FEDERAL LAW DOES NOT APPLY, STATE age last 15 yrs., 390 Weather Information Following the conclu- LAW STILL REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU NOTICE IN Ford Crown Vic. High C o m pression The Bulletin recoml Site (RWIS) at sion of t h e L o c al WRITING BEFORE REQUIRING YOU TO MOVE OUT IF YOU ARE 1997 4 door, 127k, engine, new tires & limends extra caution t Ochoco Summit on C ontract Revi e w OCCUPYING AND RENTING THE PROPERTY AS A TENANT IN GOOD d rives, runs a n d c ense, reduced t o pu r c hasing i US26 MP 49.89 B oard session t h e FAITH. EVEN IFTHE FEDERAL LAW REQUIREMENT IS NO LONGER looks great, extra i when $2850, 541-410-3425. products or services USDA Forest Service board will convene an EFFECTIVE AFTER DECEMBER 31, 2012, THE REQUIREMENT set of winter tires on from out of the area. Ochoco National executive ses s ion UNDER STATE LAW STILL APPLIES TO YOUR SITUATION. Under rims, only $3000. i S ending c ash , Forest pursuant t o ORS state law, if you have a fixed-term lease (for example, a six-month or Jeep Willys 1947,custom, 541-771-6500. checks, or credit inLookout Mountain 192.660(2)(h) for the one-year lease), the buyer must give you at least 60 days notice in writing small block Chevy, PS, formation may be I Ranger District purpose of consulting before requiring you to move out. If the buyer wants to move in and use OD, mags+trailer. Swap i subject toFRAUD. Crook County, Oregon with legal counsel re- this property as the buyer's primary residence, the buyer can give you for backhoe.No am calls Infinity G35 Coupe For more informagarding current litiga- written notice and require you to move out after 30 days, even if you have please. 541-389-6990 2004, B l a ck , 1 i tion about an adverDistrict Ranger Slater tion or litigation likely a fixed-term lease with more than 30 days left. If you are renting under a Plymouth B a r racuda owner, no accidents, tiser, you may call Turner signed a Deci- to be filed. The No1966, original car! 300 month-to-month or week-to-week rental agreement, the buyer must give manual trans., great I the Oregon State s ion Memo on N o - v ember 7, 2012 , you at least 30 days notice in writing before requiring you to move out. hp, 360 V8, centercond., n a v igation, Attorney General's s vember 1, 2012, ap- agenda and meeting IMPORTANT: For the buyer to be required to give you notice under state lines, (Original 273 7 4K m i . , $6200. Office C o n sumer I proving the Oregon report is posted on the law, you must prove to the business or individual who is handling the eng & wheels incl.) Please call i Protection hotline at Department of Trans- district's 541-593-2597 webs i te, foreclosure sale that you are occupying and renting this property as a 541-593-2321 or 1-877-877-9392. portation (ODOT) www.bendparksanresidential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The name and email PROJECT CARS:Chevy Remote Weather Indrec.org. For m o re address of the business or individual who is handling the foreclosure sale 2-dr FB 1949 & Chevy Lincoln Navigator 2005 johnmason2280@ formation Site (RWIS) information call is shown on this notice under the heading "TRUSTEE". You must mail or Servtng Central Oregon since 1903 Coupe 1950 - rolling great cond., 124k mi., gmail.com project. This decision 541-389-7275. deliver your proof not later than 1/9/2013 (30 days before the date first set chassis's $1750 ea., 3 rows seats, DVD w ill allow ODOT t o for the foreclosure sale). Your proof must be in writing and should be a Just bought a new boat? Chevy 4-dr 1949, com- player, $11,500 cash Mitsubishi 3 00 0 G T Sell your old one in the p lace an R WIS a t Call The Bulletin At copy of your rental agreement or lease. If you do not have a written rental plete car, $1949; Ca- only. 541-475-3274 541-385-5809 1 999, a u to., p e a r l classifieds! Ask about our Ochoco Summit in oragreement or lease, you can provide other proof, such as receipts for rent dillac Series 61 1950, 2 ~ Qo w hite, very low m i . der to p r ovide t he Place Your Ad Or E-Mail you paid.ABOUT YOUR SECURITY DEPOSIT Under state law, you may Super Seller rates! dr. hard top, complete PiXafiititIIII)illletin.COm $9500. 541-788-8218. public and commer- At: www.bendbulletin.com apply your security deposit and any rent you paid in advance against the 541-385-5809 w/spare front c l ip., MOre current rent you owe your landlord. To do this, you must notify your $3950, 541-382-7391 landlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of your security t deposit or prepaid rent from you rent payment. You may do this only for DOI I,MISS THIS the rent you owe you current landlord. If you do this, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys this VW Karman Ghia property at the foreclosure sale is not responsible to you for any deposit or 1970, good cond., prepaid rent you paid to your landlord. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY AFTER new upholstery and Check T HE FORECLOSURE SALE The businessor individual who buys this convertible top. property at the foreclosure sale may be willing to allow you to stay as a The Bulletin Classified $10,000. tenant instead of requiring you to move out. You should contact the buyer 541-389-2636 to discuss that possibility if you would like to stay. Under state law, if the buyer accepts rent from you, signs a new residential rental agreement with you or does not notify you in writing within 30 days after the date of the foreclosure sale that you must move out, the buyer becomes your new landlord and must maintain the property. Otherwise, the buyer is not your landlord and is not responsible for maintaining the property on your behalf and you must move out by the date the buyer specifies in a notice to you. YOU SHOULD CONTINUE TO PAY RENT TO YOUR LANDLORD UNTIL VW Thing 1974, good THE PROPERTY IS SOLD TO ANOTHER BUSINESS OR INDIVIDUAL cond. Extremely Rare! OR UNTIL A COURT OR A LENDER TELLS YOU OTHERWISE. IFYOU Only built in 1973 & DO NOT PAY RENT, YOU CAN BE EVICTED. AS EXPLAINED ABOVE, 1 974. $8,000 . •
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The Bulletin
Jod Hunting?
YOU MAY BE ABLE TO APPLY A DEPOSIT YOU MADE OR PREPAID
541-389-2636
I
Pick u ps
Chevy y~-ton 1992, PS, PB, AT, new plates, runs grt, $1500. 541-923-4338
RENT YOU PAID AGAINST YOUR CURRENT RENT OBLIGATION. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAYMENTS YOU MAKE AND OF ANY NOTICE YOU GIVE OR RECEIVE CONCERNING THE APPLICATION
BEING SPENT?
OF YOUR DEPOSIT OR YOUR PREPAID RENT. ITIS UNLAWFUL FOR
How Do YOU Krtow?
Ford 250 XLT 1990,
6 yd. dump bed, 139k, Auto, $5500. 541-410-9997
Ford F250 2002 Supercab 7.3 diesel, 130,000 miles, great shape with accessories. $14,900. 541-923-0231 day or 541-923-2582 eves.
TURN To YOUR rtEWSPAPER'S PUBLIC NOTICES FOR ANSWERS...
t
The Bulletin
You have a right to know how state R' local governments spend your hard-earned tax dollars — and it's your responsibility to find aut. That's where newspapers come |n. Every day, your newspaper publishes this and other important information in their public notices section. Information about projects and services that you pay for. Read the public notices in your local newspaper-
IT'S HOW YOU ICNOW.
Classif jcds www.bendbulletin.com
N 541-385-5808 Newspapel A5$DCI4tloh
of America'
ANY PERSON TO TRY TO FORCE YOU TO LEAVE YOUR HOME WITHOUT FIRST GOING TO COURT TO EVICT YOU. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU MAY WISH TO CONSULT A LAWYER. If you believe you need legal assistance, contact the Oregon State Bar at 800-452-7636 and ask for lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is included with this notice. If you do not have enough money to pay a lawyer and are otherwise eligible, you may be able to receive legal assistance for free. Information about whom to contact for free legal assistance may be obtained through Safenet at 800-SAFENET. DATED: 10/9/2012REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORPORATION Trustee By: LISA HACKNEY, AUTHORIZED AGENT 616 1st Avenue, Suite 500, Seattle, WA 98104 Phone: (206) 340-2550 Sale Information: http://www.rtrustee.com A-4313832 10/15/2012, 10/22/2012, 10/29/2012, 11/05/2012
People Look for Information Just bought a new boat? Need heip lixing stulf? Sell your old one in the About products and classitieds! Ask about our Call A Service professional Services Every Daythrough find the help you need. Super Seiier ratesl TheBulletin ClassiNeds www.bendbulletin.com 541 385 5809