Bulletin Daily Paper 12-09-12

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.5Q

SUNDAY December 9,2012

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IN COUPONS INSIDE

BUSINESS • G1

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Governor wants higher ed umbrella agency By Ben Botkln The Bulletin

Gov. John Kitzhaber wants more organization in the effort to fund and support Oregon's postsecondaryeducation system. Kitzhaber, in his budget for the 20132015 biennium, proposed a Department of Post-Secondary Education that would guide the state's work in higher education, including community colleges and universities. The idea is to put different parts of state involvement in postsecondaryeducation under one umbrella, said Kitzhaber's education policy advisor Ben Cannon. The proposed department isn't intended to replace or eliminate the local governance of community college boards, he said. "Our commitment is to ensure that community colleges remain governed by strong and independent local boards," Cannon said. See Governor /A5

By Elon Glncklich

LEGAL NOTICES AND THE LAW

A private mortgage database set up by the country's biggest lenders drove the home-financing industry to record profits over the last decade. But cracks in the Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems business model has h omeowners, attorneys, counties a n d states crying foul. They are pushing back against MERS, whose virtual cache of 27 million mortgages lets lenders sell them to investors and other lenders, allegedly without publicly recording each transfer

Editor's note: Thisreport is part of an occasional series about the legality of profits being made from the publication of foreclosurenotices, as well as the roles of banhs, trustees and the courts in this state-mandated process.Follow along at bendbulletin.com/foreclosures.

ELECTION 2012

Local precincts voted red with pockets ofblue If the vote for the presidency came down to Central Oregon, Mitt Romney would have won handily. Of the 100,305 votes cast for the presidency in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties (not counting ballots left blank or that had more than one bubble filled in), 53,895, or just under 54 percent, were for the Republican candidate. In county-certified results it appears that Republican support enjoys a large geographic advantage, though not all precincts contain the same number of voters. Most are concentrated in Central Oregon's cities, which in some cases means more Democratic support. VOTEDDEMOCRATIC

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ATLANTADorsey Med Group is conveniently located for patients near Atlanta's Buckhead district who are looking for a good internist. On paper, the clinic is headed by a respected physician with 39 years of experience. Patients might be a little put off by its size,

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DESCHUTESCOUNTY Deschutes County is the most politically divided in Central Oregon. Although the majority of precincts went for Romney,

Obama hadstrong support in several heavily populated precincts in Bend, although not as strong as in 2008. Deschutes County: Romney: 51.8% Obama: 45.1%

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dollar amount could be. But Commissioner Tammy Baney said the possibility of lost fees is a real concern. The Multnomah County Commission voted 5-0 last month to file a lawsuit against MERS. The commissioners said MERS' practice of selling mortgages without recording transfers in the county clerk's office deprived the county of $3 million to $24 million in recording fees, a portion of which could have been used to fund other programs. Multnomah County's lawsuit is expected to be formally filed in the coming weeks. See MERS/A6

The battle that pits homeownersagainst bankswill likely be waged again in the Oregon Legislature • Story on A6

the Warm Springs tribes voted to

The medical office could easily hold a box of sterilized latex gloves, but not much more. It's located at 2625 Piedmont Road Northeast, Suite 56331 — a UPS Store mailbox. And the doctor who is the clinic's namesake didn't know he was the CEO, as federal records show. See Loophole /A4

in the county in which the property is located. County clerks collect fees when legal documents are filed, with the proceeds typically financing clerk's office operations and supporting county general funds. So the failure to file property records would reduce revenues and preventthe public from knowing who owns or has an interest in their homes. Deschutes County may have been shortchanged millions of dollars in recording fees since MERS was founded in 1995. County leaders don't know what the actual

The Bulletin

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INDEX B usiness Gt-n commvoilr 83-8 Milestones 88 O regon News 83 B ooks F 4 - 6Crosswords C7, E2 Obituaries B 4 S ports D1 - 6 Classified E1-6 Local News B1-6 Opinion F 1- 3 TV&Movies C2

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2,60

D36 2,555

D17 2,741

*Since 2008, some Central Oregon precincts have been redrawn Source:County clerks

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EGYPT: Morsi rescinds powers, A3

Page B6

BANKS: New lawsuits, A3


A2 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

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Oregon Lottery results

If the president wants to avoid an economic calamity next year, he could always show up at a news conference bearing two shiny platinum coins, each worth ... $1 trillion. This sounds utterly insane. But some economists and legal scholarshave suggested that the "platinum coin solution" is one way to defuse a crisis if Congress cannot or will not lift the debt ceiling soon. At least in theory. The U.S. government is, after all, facing a real problem. The Treasury Department will hit its $16.4 trillion borrowing limit by February at the latest. Unless Congress reaches an agreement to lift the debt ceiling, the government will no longer be able to borrow enough money to pay all its bills. Last year, Republicans in Congress r e sisted r a i sing the debt ceiling until the last minute — and then only in exchange for spending cuts. Panic ensued. So what happens if there is another showdown this year? Enter the platinum coins. Under current law, the Treasury is technically allowed to mint as many coins made of platinum as it wants and can assign them whatever value it pleases. Under this scenario, the U.S. Mint would make a pair of trillion-dollar platinum coins. The president orders the coins to be deposited at the Federal Reserve. The Fed moves this money into Treasury's accounts. And just like that, Treasury suddenly has an extra $2 trillion to pay off its obligations for the next two years — without needing to issue new debt. The

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would have to start shutting down parts of t h e g overnment so it does not default on its debt. That, in theory, would prod Congress to act. "All those other ideas (such as the platinum coin option) are very uncertain, and they could lead to complicated litigation," Balkin said. "A government shutdown is much more straightforward." The platinum coin is only one of many out-of-the-box ideas that have been proposed to avoid a debt-ceiling crisis. Some

tj.S. Mint's current "$100coin" The U.S. Mint's American Eagleplatinum bullion coin was authorized by Congress and first issued in1997. The1-ounce piece is the first and only official investment-grade platinum coin

from the U.S.government. They are official and thus legal tender, though the facevalue ($100, the highest to ever appear onan American coin) is largely symbolic. Source. www.usmint.gov

ceiling is no longer an issue. "I like it," said Joseph Gagnon of the Peterson Institute for International Economics. "There's nothing that's obviously economically problematic about it." In theory, this is much like having the central bank print money. But, Gagnon said, the U.S. government would simply be using the money to keep spending at existing levels, so it would not create any extra inflation. And if it did cause problems, the Fed could always counteract the effects by winding down some of its other programs to inject money into the economy. Is the platinum coin option really legal? Apparently so. It was raised during the 2011 debt-ceiling crisis by Jack Balkin, a law professor at Yale Law SchooL Under law, he noted, there's a limit to how much paper money the United States can circulate at any one time, and there are rules that limit how many gold, silver and copper coins the Treasury can mint. But there's no such limit when it comes to platinum coins. It's right there in the U.S. legal code: "The Secretary may mint and issueplatinumbullion coins and proof platinum coins in accordancewith such specifications, designs, varieties,

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legalscholars have suggested that Obama could declare the debt ceiling unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment. quantities, denominations, and Last year, Gagnon suggested inscriptions as the Secretary, in that the Treasury Department the Secretary's discretion, may could start selling off its gold represcribe from time to time." serves to pay its bills until ConProblem solved, right? May- gress acted. be not. This strategy would not But theconsensus seems to be risk-free. Congress could be that all of these options are argue that the original law was wildly unlikely. A recent report intended to govern commemo- by Chris Krueger, a policy anarative coins — like the official lyst at Guggenheim Partners, platinum coin shown above suggestedthat such ideas as a — not to finance the operations 14th Amendment challenge or of the government. And, of the platinum coins "are VERY course, the political blowback low probability options." would be fierce. But not impossible. And if, Indeed, even Balkin now for whatever reason, Congress says he thinks the platinum does not raise the debt ceiling coin option is too risky. If Con- as part of the "fiscal cliff" negress cannot or will not lift the gotiations, then some of these debt ceiling, then most likely wacky ideas may get more the O bama a d m inistration attention.

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HAPPENINGS • Tens of thousands of

Palestinians aregathering in Gaza to mark the 25th

anniversary of Hamas.A3 • Today is "Christmas Card Day," honoring the creation of

the first seasonal card more than150 years ago inEngland.

IN HISTORY Highlights: In1987, the first Palestinian intifada began in Gaza. In1992, Britain's Prince

Charles andPrincess Diana announced their separation.

(They divorced in1996.) In 2011, most of theeuro nations floated a tighter financial union

to solve the monetary crisis.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Kirk Douglas is 96. Actress Judi Dench is 78. Actor Beau Bridges is 71. Football Hall-ofFamer Dick Butkus is 70. Former Sen. Thomas Daschle is 65. Actor Michael Dorn is 60. Actor John Malkovich is 59. Singer DonnyDsmond is55.Comedian Mario Cantone is 53. Actress Felicity Huffman is 50. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand is 46. Former "American Idol" judge Kara DioGuardi is 42. Singer Imogen

Heap is 35.Olympic gymnast McKayla Maroney is 17. — From wire reports

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• Police in Britain are in- sports teams. • vestigating Sir J i mmy The Cowboys g enerated Savile on allegations of child $500 million in total revenue sex abuse. What did Savile do in 2011, a record for a pro team to be knighted? If these allega- in the U.S., and made $108 tionsare proved to be true,can million more than any other his knighthood be revoked'? NFL team and "either the en• Savile, who died at age tire" NBA or NHL, according • 84 in 2011, was a popu- to Forbes. The franchise made lar disc jockey and TV host $80 million alone from sponand presenterfrom the 1940s sorship deals for C owboys through the early 2000s. He Stadium. was knighted for his contriT he Falcons, which h a d butions to charity throughout $239 million in total revenue + ++to+t his career. He raised more l ast year, according to t h e than $64.3 million, according magazine, ranked 28th in the to his obituary in The Daily 32-team NFL. Telegraph, often working with hospitals and people with disabilities. He w a s h onorary president of PHAB (Physically Handicapped in the Able Bodied community) from 1974 to 1988 and sponsored medical students at Leeds University. Savile was appointed Officer of the Order of the British LUX U R Y T O W N H O M E 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath,2251 sq. ft., end unit Empire in 1971 and as a Knight t ownhome w it h g r ea t r o o m fl o o r p l a n . Bachelor in 1996, according to Extensive windows and luxurious finishes. Chef's the BBC. He received a papal kitchen and large patio is perfect for entertaining. Closeto river. $429,000 CALLTERRY SKJERSAA knighthood later that year. AT 541-383-1426. MLS:201208792 The government's Honours Forfeiture Committee could strip Savile of his knighthood, if he's "judged to have brought the honours system into disrepute."There is precedent for having knighthood stripped while living but "no legal arElqjay THE FANT<STICylEWS r angements in place to r e From your custom home.3 bedroom, 2.5 bath,2400sq.ft.on move honours posthumously," corner lot. $335,000 CALLPETEVANDEUSENAT 541-480-3538. MLSt201206195 the BBC reported, because a knighthood expires when a person dies. More than 200 of Savile's SEVENTH MOUNTAIN potential victims have been RESORT identified, dating to 1959, and Scotland Yard is investigating.

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Equine Consignment

• The D a l l as C o wboys • are worth $2.1 billion; the Atlanta Falcons are worth $837 million. How is the value of sports teams determined? A combination of fac• tors, i n c luding t i c k et prices and revenue from TV deals, sponsorships and merchandising, helps determine the w ort h o f pr o f essional

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TOP T ORIES IN BRIEF Syrian rebel leaders begin coordinating B EIRUT — R e bel c o m manders from across Syria have joined forces under a united command they hope will increase coordination between diverse fighting groups and streamline the pathway for arms essential to t h eir struggle a gainst P r esident Bashar Assad. While many of the brigades involved in the fighting are decidedly Islamist in outlook and some have boasted about executing captured soldiers, two of the most extreme groups fighting in Syria were not invited to the rebel meeting in Turkey or included in the new council — a move that could encourage Western support. Disorganization has bedeviled Syria's rebel movement since its birth late last year, when some protesters gave up on peaceful means to bring down Assad's regime and took up arms, forming the base of what became theFree Syrian Army. But the movement has never actually been an army. Scores of rebelgroups battle Assad's forces across th e c o untry, m any coordinating with n o one outside of their own area.

Nelson Mandela hospitalized for tests JOHANNESBURG — South Africa's former President Nelson Mandela was admitted to a military hospital Saturday for medical tests, though the nation's president told the public therewas "no cause for alarm" over the 9 4-year-old icon's health. ThestatementissuedbyPresident Jacob Zuma's spokesman said that Mandela was doing well and was receiving medical care "which is consistent for his age." The statement offered no other details. Mandela, who spent 27 years in prison for f ighting racist white rule, became South Africa's first black president in 1994 and servedone five-year term.

Big donors get access at inauguration WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's finance team is offering corporations and other institutions that contribute $1 million exclusive access to an array of inaugural festivities, includingtickets to a"benefactors reception," a children's concert, a candlelight celebration at the National Building Museum, two reserved parade bleacher seats and four tickets to the president's official inaugural ball. The o ff erings a r e de tailed in an online inaugural fundraising solicitation provided by an Obama fundraiser; the document describesfour packages that Obama's finance team can sell, with differinglevels ofaccess depending on the level of contribution. Individuals who contribute $250,000 will receive the same package as million-dollar "institutional donors," which could include corporations, philanthropies, foundations and unions. The f i n ancing a r r a ngements are a departure from Obama's policy in 2009, when he refused corporate donations altogether. — From wire reports

HANUKKAH BEGINS

Morsi rescinds order granting him new powers The Washington Post CAIRO — Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi early today annulled most of an extraordinary Nov. 22 decree that gave him near-absolute power and has plunged this nation into a deeply divisive political crisis. The decree, which Morsi had said was necessary to move Egypt's d emocratic t ransition forward, will be replaced by a modified version of the original declaration. But the most controversial article, which placed all of Morsi's actions beyond judicial review, is gone, said Mohammad Salim al-Awa, spokesman for a n a t ional p olitical di a l ogu e he l d Saturday. That satisfies a key demand of opposition leaders, though the article has already served its purpose for Morsi. He had used it to protect an Islamist-dominated constitution-writing p a nel from dissolution by Egypt's highest court, enabling the panel to pass a controvers ial draft charter. And a Dec. 15 referendum that opposition forces had wanted canceled will go ahead as planned, Awa said. All but a handful of opposition figures had boycotted the national dialogue, saying that if the referendum was going ahead, there was nothing to talk about. It remains unclear wheth-

er the compromise will be enough to calm a political crisis that has split the revolutionary allies who ousted strongman Hosni Mubarak nearly two years ago. In recent days, the crisis has degenerated into violent scenes of division, with Morsi's Islamist backers and his secular, liberal and non-Islamist opponents beating each other bloody with rocks, sticks and clubs. Further details of the new constitutional decree were unclear. But as the national dialogue got underway Saturday, Morsi appeared to be preparing to grant the military broad powers to arrest civilians and keep public order until a new constitution is approved and parliamentary elections are held, according to a report Saturday in the state-run newspaper al-Ahram. The move was approved b y M o r si's c a binet, t h e newspaper said, and would require him to issue a new decree for it to take effect, which Morsi had not done by late Saturday, U.S. time. The nation's armed forces followed that report with a broadcast statement Saturday afternoon clearly supp orting Morsi's call for a dialogue to end the crisis, saying that anything else would lead the nation into a "dark tunnel that will result in catastrophe."

Hamas' leadersaysIsrael will becomePalestine New York Times NewsService GAZA CITY, Gaza StripKhaled Meshal, the political leader of Hamas, gave a defiant speech on Saturday, vowing to build an Islamic Palestinian state on all the land of Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Speaking before tens of thousands o f su p p orters t o celebrate the 25th a n niversary of t h e f o unding of Hamas, Meshal said the Jewish state would be wiped away through "resistance," or military action. "The state will come from resistance, not negotiation," he said. "Liberation first, then statehood." His voice rising to a shout, Meshal said: "Palestine is ours from the river to the sea and from the south to the north. There will be no concession on any inch of the land." He vowed that all Palestinian refugees and their descendants would one day return to their homes in what is now Israel. "We will never recognize the legitimacy of the Israeli occupation, an d t h erefore there is no legitimacy for Israel, no matter how long it will take," he said. "We will free Jerusalem inch by inch,stone by stone. Israel has no right to

Markus Schreiber /The Associated Press

Rabbi Yehuda Teichtaf, right, and Rabbi Segal Shmoel install a giant Hanukkah Menorah Friday at the Pariser Platz in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin. The eight-day Jewish Festival of Lights began Saturday.

Banks facenewwave of lawsuits New York Times News Service The nation's largest banks are facing afresh torrent of lawsuits asserting that they sold shoddy mortgage securities that imploded during the financial crisis, potentially a dding significantly to t h e tens of billions of dollars the banks have already paid to settle other cases. Regulators, p r o secutors, investors and insurers have filed dozens of new claims against Bank o f A m e rica, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and others, related to more than $1 trillion worth of securities backed by residential mortgages. Estimates of potential costs from thesecases vary widely, but some in the banking industry fear they could reach $300 billion if the institutions

lose all of the litigation. Dethe costscould depress profits and hamper the economic recovery by weakening the banks' ability to lend just as the housing market is show-

ing signs of life. The banks are battling on three fronts: with prosecutors who accuse them of fraud, with regulators who claim that they duped investors into

buying bad mortgage securities and with investors seeking to force them to buy back the soured loans. "We are at an all-time high for this mortgage litigation," said Christopher Willis, a lawyer with Ballard Spahr. Efforts by th e b anks to limit their losses could depend on theoutcome of one of the highest-stakes lawsuits

be in Jerusalem." He also promised Palestinian prisoners held in Israel that they would be freed using the same methods that have worked in the past — the kidnapping of Israelis and Israeli soldiers, like Gilad Shalit, who was released last year in a prisonerexchange after five years as a hostage. The anniversary of Hamas' founding is Dec. 14, but the organization moved the celebration forward to honor the first uprising against Israel. Meshal, on his first visit to Gaza after45 years of exile, having fled a West Bank village at 11 with his family during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, was in a joyous but not conciliatory mood. He promised Palestinian unity, but only on the basis of Hamas' principles, which would mean a subordinate role for Fatah, the main Palestinian faction in the West Bank. He called the United Nations General Assembly's vote g r a nting Palestinians enhanced status as a nonmember observer state — engineered by President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority, which governs the West Bank — "a small step but a good one."

3 1bs Beef Sirloin Roast • 2 lbs Beef Stew Meat 2 lbs. PortoFarm Bacon • 31bs Smoked Ham Hocks 2 1bs Smoked Ham-sliced (great for sandw i c hes)

nance Agency, which oversees the housing twins Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, filed against 17 banks last year, claiming that they duped the mortgage finance giants into buying shaky securities. Last month, lawyers for some of the nation's largest banks descended on a federal appeals court in Manhattan to make their case that the agency had waited too long to sue. A favorable ruling could overturn a decision by Judge Denise Cote, who is presiding over the litigation and has so far rejected virtually every defense raised by the banks, and would be cheered in bank boardrooms. It could also allow the banks to avoid federal housing regulators' claims.

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

Loophole Continued from A1 He certainly never made the 192-mile drive from his Albany practiceto Buckhead to see patients or review medical records. Federal officials probably should have grown suspicious two years ago when someone using the name Olga Teplukhina incorporated the fictitious medical practice, applied for a National Provider Identification number and claimed a UPS mailbox as the practice location. Then again, the box is the largest size UPS offers. "So have they been billing stuff'?" Dr. Harry Dorsey asked when the Atlanta Journal-Constitution told him the suspicious provider number was still active. "That's identity fraud, and that really ticks me off." For years, officials at the agency that administers Medicare have known that fraudsters sign up as health care providers using UP S Store mailboxes and other post office box like addresses as their location. But the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services says it lacks the technology to identify these locations because they look like legitimate street addresses, not like the easily identified post office box addresses. CMS doesn't even stop providersfrom using post office boxes, though. They k n ow they should and they know it's simple, but the agency still has in its system nearly 300 providers nationwide using post office boxes as their location, according to an AJC analysis of theCMS provider registry. So when will CMS be able to flag the providers using UPS Store addresses and boot any scammers? The agency says it has no timeline. CMS officials insist they don't need to hurry because

"If one company is defrauding the Medicare trust fund, that's one too m any," said Kelly McCoy, assistant special agent in charge of the watchdog agency in Atlanta. "This

Obtaining a fake provider number is much less difficult than canceling one. Scam artists can find almost all the information they need from a state medical licensing webagency will diligently pursue site. After that, they fill out a any evidence of fraud." short application on the CMS i website. Perpetrating a fraud That's it. Accurate estimates of the / CMS officials wouldn't discost of health care fraud do not cuss thisissue on the record, exist, Sparrow said. But he told but they said they know there the U.S. Senate in 2009 that are loopholes in the system. "Over the last several years fraud could siphon off $100 billion to $500 billion a year. we have stepped up our efforts The cost is borne by fedto fight Medicare fraud and f eral taxpayers who support we are continuing our work Medicare,state taxpayers who to crack down on anyone who support Medicaid and c u sBrantSanderlin/AtlantaJournal-Constitution tries to steal from seniors and tomers of privateinsurance Dr. Harry Dorsey, an internist in Albany, Ga., had his medical taxpayers," CMS officials said companies. license number stolen. In 2010 someone using a Buckhead in a prepared statement. Estimating the cost of spe- UPS Store mailbox as an address set up a fake corporation to They will face pressure to do cific fraud schemes, like a obtain a National Provider Identifier (NPI). so. scam using UPS boxes, is even CMS should address the trickier. But the scheme can be vulnerabilities identified by lucrative. The supposed obstetrics and ry Tech Corp. the AJC right away, said Sen. More Than Ready Comgynecology office was located And in 2010, Adilshin incor- Tom Carper, D-Del., the chairpany, located at a UPS store in a UPS Box Store mailbox in porated Meadows Med Group man of the Senate subcommiton Peachtree Industrial BouBaton Rouge. Inc. in Georgia. tee on Federal Financial Manlevard in Atlanta, was among According to CMS records, The fictitious family-medi- agement, in a statement to the a number of companies that Dr. Edan Moran is the CEO. cal practice is located in a UPS AJC. "Medicare officials should billed Medicare for fraudulent Moran is an obstetrician, but Store mailbox on Hugh Howell injections of medication. The his practice is in Alexandria, Road in Tucker, according to lay out specific steps to ensure provider billed Medicare for La., more than 100 miles from CMS. Agency records list Dr. that Medicare providersare $1.2 million. Eventually, sev- the UPS Store in Baton Rouge. David Derrer, a family physi- delivering legitimate health eral people were convicted of Moran said he d oes not cian at G eorgia H ighlands care servicesand not simply healthcare fraud as a result. know Adilshin and he does not Medical Services in Atlanta, setting up a post office box to More Than Ready Company know IEDM Services. as the CEO. help them collect federal re"Knowing that someone's still has an active provider But Derrer said he never imbursements for care they number, however. CMS says abusing the system using my heard of Meadows Med Group haven't provided," Carper said. that's because even companies information while I'm deliver- or Adilshin before receiving a "I will follow up with Medicare that used to commit health ing a baby at 2 o'clock in the phone call from the AJC. An officials to make certain that carefraud can stillrender ser- morning, yeah, that's aggra- extensive background search they are doing everything in vices for private health insur- vating," Moran said. by the AJC could not find any their power to ensure that taxance plans. Adilshin also created a fam- record of Adilshin in the Unit- payer funds are being spent These suspicious organi- ily medical practice called JPT ed States. properly." zations sprout up acrossthe Group Inc. It's located in a Derrer and Moran said they Trying to stop it country. Outside of Atlanta, UPS Store in Metairie, La. The are working on having the in spot checks the AJC identi- same day heincorporated Oak phony provider numbers in Once the fake providers are fied potentially fraudulent pro- Hill Health Services at a UPS theirnames canceled. in the system, their schemes viders in Louisiana, Florida, Store in Baton Rouge. Dorsey said h e c a nceled are difficult to spot. And they Kentucky, Ohio, Texas and In Florida, Adilshin incor- the fake provider number in are even more difficult to stop. Massachusetts. porated Mona Med Group and his name last month. It was Michel DeJesus Huarte and Two years ago, a man call- Fortal Tech Corp. In South a frustrating process. It took his associates billed Medicare ing himself Dulat A d ilshin Carolina, he started Saluda two weeks to convince CMS to for $61 million in fraudulent created IEDM Services Inc. Care Group, Inc. and Newber- cancel it. services by the time he was

caught, according to the U.S Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida. Huarte opened 29 clinics in Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina an d S outh Carolina, many in abandoned store fronts and others in UPS Store mailboxes. He paid straw owners up to $200,000 to incorporate the clinics and then flee the country if law enforcement found them. In Atlanta, Huarte's Elusive Quality, located at a UPS Store on P eachtree Street, billed Medicare for $3.5 million. Another clinic, Strong Hope Company, located ata UPS Store mailbox on Roswell Road, billed Medicare for $2 million. Both still have active CMS provider numbers. He used stolen insurance numbers from Medicare-eligible patients, obtaining them from employeesof a callcenter that signed people up for Medicare services. The criminal organization either bribed doctors for their billing information or, if that didn't work, they stole it. Huarte and his associates hired doctorsto serve as a medical director for clinics. If a doctor became suspicious and left, Huarte kept using their billing information. Even when law enforcement officials uncovered one of his phony c o mpanies, H u arte could easily abandon it and incorporate a new clinic at another UPS Store mailbox. Then he started billing again. "They hit us and then they're

gone," McCoy said. F ederal officials call t h i s kind ofenforcement a pay and chase system. Medicare pays out millions of dollars in fraudulent claims. Law e nforcement then chases down the bad guys. But at that point, the money is gone. Most is never recovered.

anyone trying to rip off a federal healthcare program would first need to enroll in the Medicare billing system. That

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process should — probably, hopefully — snag anyone using a UPS Store as a practice location because it involves a more stringent review. Don't tell that to Ryan Stumphauzer,a former federalprosecutor in the Southern District of Florida who specialized in health care fraud. "They've got a f ake NPI, they've got a fake address, but they're not concerned yet'?" he asked. "That's like seeing a man pacing back and forth in front of a bank with a mask on and he has something tucked under his shirt, but you don't do anything because he hasn't gone into the bank yet," Stumphauzer said. "Not addressing these problems up front is what costs the system $60 billion each year." Even if the phony health care provider doesn't bill Medicare directly, the government is left vulnerable to other fraud schemes, said Malcolm Sparrow, a professor of public management at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. Using a sham provider number and a UPS Store address, a scam artist can provide what looks like a real physician's approval for unnecessary or nonexistent medical services and equipment for a company that is registered to bill Medicare. Should CMS ask the doctor if the services or equipment were necessary, the agency's inquiry goes to the UPS Store mailbox. The fraudster then assures the agency of the need. While CMS o ff icials say they can't find these fake medical providers, identifying them is not hard. The AJC used an inexpensive software program and a list of UPS Store addresses found on the Internet. That turned up 131 CMS-registered medical p r o v iders a c r oss metro Atlanta claiming a UPS Store as their practice location. Most likely filled out their paperwork incorrectly and are not committing fraud. Some were alreadyunder investigation, while others have been identified as fronts for fraud schemes and theperpetrators prosecuted and convicted. But several physicians said they were stunned when the AJC told them a provider number was created using their name. And two dozen of the 131 identified by the AJC are now under review by a f e d eral contractorafter the newspaper brought its findings to the attention of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Office of the Inspector General.

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

AS

Taxmat s owsraisin to rate isn't enou By Jackie Cafmes New York Times News Service

DeWASHINGTON spite hints in recent days that President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner might compromise on the tax rate to be paid by top earners, a host of other knotty tax questions could still derail a deal to avert a fiscal crisis in January. The math shows why. Even if Republicans were to agree to Obama's core demand — that the top marginal income rates return to the Clinton-era levels of 36 percent and 39.6 percent after Dec. 31, rather than stay at the Bush-era rates of 33 percent and 35 percent — the additional revenue would be only about a quarter of the $1.6 trillion that Obama wants to collect over 10 years. That w ould be about half of t h e $800 billion that Republicans have said they would be willing to raise. That calculation alone suggeststhe scope ofthe other major tax issues to be negotiated beyond tax rates. And that is why many people in both parties remain unsure that a deal will come together before Jan. 1. Without agreement, more than $500 billion in automatic tax increases on all Americans and cuts in domestic and military programs will take hold, which could cause a recession if left in place for months, economists say. "The question is m a king sure that we hit a revenue target that's required for a truly balanced def i c it-reduction plan," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, the senior Democrat on the House Budget Committee. "And when the president and all of us say this is a question of math, we mean it. It's very hard to make the numbers work without the top rates going back to the full Clinton-era levels." The top tax rates are taking centerstage right now because Obama believes he won a mandate after campaigning relentlessly on the idea of extending George W. Bush's tax cuts only for households with annual income below $250,000. But the two parties also have ideological differences on taxes affecting savings, investment and inheritance, which have flared in battles going back to the Reagan years. To get a deal in the coming weeks, those differencesmust be addressed at least in broad terms, even if the details are left to a battle over revamping the tax code next year. The argument over rates is far from settled. Although the two sidesseem close enough on the percentages for easy c ompromise, principle a n d politics loom large: Republicans oppose raising rates as a matter of ideology, saying that it kills jobs, and the president insists that he will not keep the Bush-era rates on income above roughly $250,000 after two campaigns in which he vowed to return them to the levels of the Clinton years. "Just to be clear, I'm not go-

at the

ancement enter e 1CQ

Carolyn KasterI The Associated Press file photo

PresidentBarack Obama, accompanied by House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio,speaks to reporters in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington. As the two sides head toward the "fiscal ciff," a range of tax issues need to be negotiated, leaving many in both parties unsure a deal will come together by the Jan. 1 deadline. ing to sign any package that s omehow prevents the t o p rate from going up for folks at the top 2 percent," he said Thursday. In recent days,comments from some Republicans, including Boehner, their chief negotiator, have hinted that the party — recognizing its weak hand — might be moving toward a concession on tax rates. Seldom mentioned is that Obama's revenue total also reflects four other changes from Bush-era tax cuts: higher tax rates on investment income from capital gains and dividends, and the restoration of two other Clinton-era provisions limiting deductions and tax exemptions for affluent individuals. Together t h ose c h anges would raise $407.4 billion over a decade — nearly as much as the president's proposal on higher rates, which would raise $441.6 billion by 2023, for a total of $849 billion. Another $119 billion would come from higher estatetaxes, opposed b y Republicans and s o me Democrats. And both the president and Republicans are committed to raising hundreds of billions of dollars by overhauling the tax code to further limit or end the tax breaks that high-income taxpayers can claim, though they differ on how to do that. Republicans want to raise all $800 billion from overhauling the tax code, erasing tax breaks for high-income households and using the new revenues both to reduce deficits and to lower everyone's tax rates. But they have not proposed how to do that, and the president insists it cannot be done without hitting middleincome taxpayers. Obama has p r oposed to keep existing tax breaks but to limit the rate of those breaks for people in higher tax brackets to 28 percent, which would raise $584 billion in a decade. He has proposed variations of that proposal for four years, only tobe ignored by both parties because of opposition from

charitable groups, the housing industry,insurers and others to curbing deductions for char-

itable giving, mortgage insur-

ance and other purposes. Roughly splitting the difference on the top rates — settling at 35 percent and 37 percent — would collect nearly $200 billion over 10 years, under half the amount that would be raised if the rates reverted to Clinton-era levels, according to data from Citizens for Tax Justice and the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, research groups that advocate for a progressive tax code. In the years of debate over the Bush tax cuts, which predates Obama's first election, $ 800 billion ha s b een t h e rough estimate for how much revenue couldbe raised in the first decade by ending them for the highest-income 2 percent of taxpayers. But most attention focused on the top rates, which account for half of the revenue equation. The remainder would come fromthe other four tax changes for Americans with the highest income, two raising taxes on investment income from capital gains and dividends and two restoring restrictions on the itemized deductions and exemptions claimed by high earners. Under Obama's plan, the tax rates for long-term capital gains and dividends, now 15 percent, would revert to 20 percent for capital gains and to 39.6 percent for dividends, the same as for ordinary income. Republicans oppose the increases, and Senate Democrats oppose the proposed tax on dividends; their bill would tax both dividends and capital gains at 20 percent. People in both parties say that the four tax issues can be readily worked out. Obama is widely expected to give ground on the main sticking point, the dividends tax. Yet that would

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would bring those entities into the new department. Continued from A1 T he mission of t h e p r o The goal, he said, is to cre- posed department would not ate a one-stop agency for stu- include oversight of individual dents, faculty and others with schools, Cannon said. "The state is not in the busia stake i n p o s t-secondary education. ness of running institutions," P ost-secondary educ a - he said. "It's not in the busition falls into various pockets ness of governing and setacross state government, Can- ting policies for i n d ividual non said. "It's really a very institutions." fractured system," he said. For example, the proposed For example, the Oregon department would not set tuStudent Access Commission ition, which happens at the distributes need-based finan- board level, Cannon said. "We are, however, intercial aid. It also oversees Access to Student Assistance ested in making sure that the Programs in Reach of Every- investments Oregon makes to one (ASPIRE), a mentoring the institutions are effective in program for middle and high creatingaccess and affordabilschool students. The Depart- ity for Oregonians," he said. ment of Community Colleges Jim Middleton, president of and Work F o rce D evelop- Central Oregon Community ment has ahand in GED and College, said he's still looking retraining programs and aid- at the proposal and will meet ing workforce programs. The with colleagues at other comHigher Education Coordinat- munity colleges to review its ing Commission would also details. The local role and rebecome part of th e depart- sponsibility of the community ment, charged with putting college is more important than together a strategic plan and what label is assigned, Middlesetting policy tied to broad ton said. "The real strength of our state issues like student access and student completion and state's community college syssuccess. tem has been our local focus The governor's proposal and our local responsibility,"

he said, adding that the college will work with the governor to nurture that focus. Programs that the proposed department w o uld o v ersee have a presence in Central Oregon. For example, the ASPIRE program is noted in Bend-La Pine Schools for playing a strong role in encouraging students to seek education

beyond high school. "The whole point of it is to try to create a culture of high education," said Vicki Van Buren, assistant superintendent for post-secondary education at Bend-La Pine Schools. "It's a way for us to be able to work with students, especially those who might be first-generation college students as well as other students who may not have even been thinking about a p ost-secondary program a s part of their education." A sked about putting t h e ASPIRE program into a dep artment w it h o t h e r p r o g rams, V a n Bu r e n s a i d : "Sometimes by putting a variety of programs under one large umbrella, you can find some efficiencies and certainly coordination." — Reporter: 541-977-7185; bbotkin@bendbulletin.com.

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

MORTGAGES AND MERS

FORECLOSURES AND THELEGISLATURE

Two waystotrade mortgages Because of the complex process of securitization, a homeowner's mortgage may be sold to other lenders numerous times over the life of the loan. Mortgage investors purchase bundles of mortgages pooled together under the securitization process. Counties take in revenueQS from recording fees when mortgages are filed, sold and paid in full. Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, created in the1990s

by the country's biggest mortgage lenders, allegedly enabled banks to transfer mortgages numerous times without paying county fees required when loans aresold. Thescenarios are shown below, with Deschutes Countyastheexample.

re onma ac e me ia ion awa ain

:THETRADITIONAL WAY Q Borrower and mortgage ~ lender sign mortgageagreement. Lender records mortgagewith Deschutes County Clerk's Office

forQ$$48 fee, plusQS$5 for each additional page.

01f mortgage is sold to another 0 When the borrower completes lender, substitution of trustee mortgagepayments, deedof document is filed, withQS$48 reconveyanceisfiled, releasing ender fee plusQ$$5 for each borrower from future obligations. dditional page.Feeis repeated Lender paysQS$48in recordingfees, for each sale ofthe mortgage. plusQ$$5for eachadditional page. S

THE MERSWAY Borrower andmortgage lender sign mortgageagreemen . Lender records mortgagewith

0 Using MERS database, ortgage is allegedly ransferred to newowner with

Deschutes County Clerk's Office

MERS retaining status as holder of the mortgage, avoiding covniyiaaa.

forQ$$48 fee, plusQ$$5 for each additional page. Source. Staff research

0 Transfers under MERS continue until borrower pays off

loan, releasing them from future obligations. Lender paysQS$48 in recording fees, plusQS$5 for each additional page. Efon Glucklichand Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

MERS

for the upcoming fiscal year. Going after lost recording

Continued from A1 County leaders across the state are watching that case closely, including officials in Deschutes County. "I have asked our interim county administrator to put together a work session discussion soon so that we could discuss any next steps for Deschutes County," Baney wrote in an email to The Bulletin. Bend's single-family housing market was one of the hottest in the country from 200207, as more than 11,000 home sales caused median home prices to nearly double, according to Oregon Association of Realtors data. The MERS name was rubber-stamped on thousands of mortgage documents filedover that time, listing themselves as the beneficiary of loans being transferred from one title company to another, Deschutes County deeds records show. The legality of t hose documents is unquestioned. The real issue is whether or not MERS was overseeing additional transfers, out of the

fees could help plug some of the county's budget holes, Handy said. Most notable would be extra revenue for public safety, where cuts f orced sheriff's staff to release 32 inmates all at once on Nov. 29.

Courtchallenges

Help with foreclosure For information about

foreclosure prevention programs administered by the state of Oregon, visit

http://oregonhomeowner support.gov

By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

SALEM — A battle waging across the nation — pitting homeowners against bankswill also likely be fought again in the Oregon Legislature's

upcoming session. State lawmakers tackled the foreclosure crisis last session, creating a new law, Senate Bill 1552, that allows homeowners in nonjudicial foreclosures to get their lenders into the same room with a mediator to discuss ways to avoid foreclosure. But that law, combined with an Oregon Court of Appeals ruling that prevents lenders from foreclosingthrough a nonjudicial process unless they can show mortgage records were properly recorded, has had a chilling effect on the system. Lenders virtually ignored the mediation r equirement; the law had no provision to enforce it. They've also nearly abandoned th e n o njudicial foreclosure process and instead have taken their cases to state courts. Senate Bill 1552 does not require mediation in judicial foreclosures. The move to the courts has added work to a judicial system already stretched thin by reduced state funding and employee furloughs. It's also slowed the movement of foreclosed properties through the system, which, in turn, slows recovery in t h e r eal estate market. For the upcoming session, both lenders and consumer advocates are gearing up to push legislation they believe will improve the situation. Democratic law m a kers, w ho have control o f b o t h chambers of the Legislature, are advocating for an expansion of t h e m e diation law and favor adding an enforcement mechanism to ensure banks are at the table with homeowners.

Two waystoaforeclosure inOregon When homeowners stop making payments and their loans go into default, lenders generally have two ways in Oregon to fore-

close on the property: judicial and nonjudicial. In thejudicial process, the lender files a legal action in the state circuit court to authorize a sheriff's sale of the house. Then a

judge decides if the lender maysell the property. Thenonjudicial process,also known as foreclosure by advertisement and sale, occurs in cases in which the document securing the loan is adeedof trust. Parties in a deedof trust are the beneficiary, the lender; the trustee, a neutral third party that holds title to the house in trust until the loan is paid off; and the grantor,

or borrower. If the homeowner stops making payments, the lender tells the trustee to accelerate the loan and file anotice of default in the

county where the house is located. Thenotice, filed with county clerks, makes theforeclosure public and means the homecan be sold or transferred in about120 to 180 days.

However, the law requires that anyassignments of the trust deed by the trustee or beneficiary must be recorded in the county where the property is located. Sourcesi Oregon Department of Business and Consumer Services; Oregon Court of Appeals decision, Niday v GMAC Mortgage, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, et al.

WHAT ABOUTMERS? Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems lnc. is a company

created by the mortgage industry to bundle andsell promissory notes on the secondary market. Lenders, loan servicers, investors and others in the industry can become members of MERS. When a MERS member originates a home loan, MERS is named as the beneficiary of the trust deed and allows members to track their interests in loans and their trust deeds through its private database instead of publicly recording each assignment in

In Deschutes County, the MERS problem runs deeper than lost recording fees, noted by homeowners, counties county mortgage records. Commissioner Unger. and states. Company ofSources: Oregon Court of Appeals decision, Niday vs GMAC Mortgage, Mortgage It has t hrown a w r e nch ficials noted in past interElectronic Registration Systems, et al. into Oregon'sforeclosure pro- views that MERS has won cess. Other lawsuits involving more of thosecases than MERS, combined with a new it has lost, though many of state law requiring mediation the cases are in the appeals Lendersare hoping forfixes The state's Supreme Court is sessions for homeowners go- process. to the law, which they think is scheduled to hear oral arguing through foreclosure, have Deschutes County Clerk overly burdensome and cre- ments on the MERS case in prompted lenders to nearly Nancy Blankenship said ates too many liabilities. January. "I think what Multnomah abandon the nonjudicial fore- she's focused more on dayThey also plan to push lawclosure track and take their to-day operations than on makers to supersede an Or- County is doing, suing MERS cases to circuit courts — a lon- possible lost revenue. She's egon Appeals Court decision ... I would question why other aware that if some docuand take onthe issue created counties aren't doing that," ger, costlier process. In July, the Oregon Court ments that should h ave by Mortgage Electronic Regis- Kotek said. of Appeals ruled in favor of a been recorded were not, tration Systems Inc., with the She agreed that parts of Clackamas County r esident the office may have lost out goal that they could foreclose the mediation bill could be who argued that MERS could on revenue. without every l oan assign- streamlined, and she's open to "There have been connot act as beneficiary because ment being documented in discussing it with lender advoit had no financial interest in versations about it," she county records. cates. But she doesn't believe the resident's home. MERS said, "but how do you know House Speaker-elect Tina banks aren't participating in has appealed the case to the what you haven't got?" Kotek, D-Portland, said she mediation because of the new — Reporter: 541-617-7820, public eye. Oregon Supreme Court. doesn't foresee the Legislature law. Oregon law requires that Between Jan. 1 and Sept. 30, eglucftlich@bendbulletin.com taking on the issue of MERS. Continued next page each transferof a property's parties filed 323 foreclosure title be recorded in the county cases in Deschutes County in which it is located. If every Circuit Court, according to transferis recorded, the chain the trial court administrator. of title for a property is consid- Nearly half of them were filed \ ered complete. after the ruling by the Oregon n' rr If not, attempts to foreclose Court of Appeals. "The courts are challenged on a property can be challenged in court. with how full their dockets are Currently, the typical fee for now, especially with cases that filing a mortgage document in are pending," Unger said. Deschutes County is $48 for The Appeals Court ruling, i one page, plus $5 for each ad- and similar rulings across the ( ditional page. Those fees are country, cast doubt on the vacollectedwhen mortgages are lidity of MERS-backed foretransferredfrom one trustee closures, said Phil Querin, a to another, as well as when Portland real estate attorney the mortgage is originated and who specializes in foreclosure when the loan is paid in full. issues. But it's uncertain whether, or The question, Querin said, how many, Deschutes County boils down to who owns a mortgage transfers took place mortgage note: Is it M ERS, only within MERS' private da- which purports to be the bentabase, without being record- eficiary of 27 million active ed in county records. That's mortgagesacross the country, the essence of the Multnomah but has never collected a dime County lawsuit. in mortgage payments'? Asked by The Bulletin about A month after the Oregon possibly following Multnomah Court of Appeals ruling, the County's footsteps by taking Washington State Supreme MERS to c ouN, D eschutes Court issued a similar ruling County commissioners Baney, against MERS. Alan Unger and Tony DeBone The m o u nting l a w suits saidthey were not prepared to show the perils of giving a talk about specific proposals. company with just 80 employBut none of the commission- ees — or one for every 337,500 ers ruled out action against loans — power over such a MERS. massive mortgage v olume, "It's an issue I'm going to be Querin said. looking into," DeBone said. Lawsuits similar to the OrTwo Lane County commis- egon case have been filed in sioners also said they want Idaho, Arizona, Nevada, New to examine the MERS issue, York, Kansas, Texas, Michigan, concerned over potential lost Tennessee and other states. recordingfees in the Eugene Attorneys general in Louisiarea during the housing boom ana, Delaware and Ohio have years. sued MERS over lost recordBut one of those commis- ing fees. The district attorney sioners, Rob Handy, said the of Dallas County, Texas, filed board isn't likely to take ac- a lawsuit, as have county distion in the immediate future. trict attorneys in Iowa, Illinois, Handy an d C o m m issioner Kentucky and Alabama. Pete Sorenson want a work Few challenged the validWhen Jackie Tallaksonwas diagnosedwith breast cancer, she faced an session to discuss MERS, but ity of the MERS model before overwhelming number of treatment options andproviders. Thanks to our the other three Lane County the housing market c rash. commissioners voted against The company was founded by Nurse Navigator program, shehadsomeone by her side every step of the way. examining the issue further, Bank of America, JPMorgan according to Handy. Chase, Fannie Mae, Freddie From diagnosis to treatment to survivorship, a NurseNavigator is there as your H andy e s t imates L a n e Mac and other lending giants. "They just got together and County has lost about $10 miladvocate to guide youthrough the process, be a resource when questions arise, lion in recording fees since the said, 'We're going to have an CANCER CENTER off-the-record r e g i stration.' late 1990s. ensure different care providers communi c ate with each other, or simply "And those are conservative They got all the big boys in StCharlesHealthCare.org/cancer numbers," Handy said."I know lockstep and got the title comprovide emotional support when it's neededmost. It's just one moreway of a number of constituents panies to buy into it financially, here in (Lane) County who are as well as conceptually," Querin we're changing the meaning of the Big Cfor the better. For a cancer risk assessment call focused on this issue and have said. "Talk about hubris, and a 541 -706-5800 done a lot of research on it." recipe for disaster." The county has faced roughMERS o f ficials d eclined ly $10 million annual budget to answer questions sent by shortfalls over the past several email from The Bulletin. The MedicalOncologyI Radiation OncologyI Research I RadiologyI Survivorship programsI Social work I Nutrion I ComplementaryTherapies years, he said, and is facing a company has contested each $3 million to $5 million deficit of the lawsuits filed against it

No one shouldhave toface the Big Calone.

St. Charles


SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

From previous page So far, out of the thousands of homeowners each month who were eligible for the program, only four cases have been mediated under the new legislation. "I think we're all surprised by the reaction of the lenders not willing to participate," she said. "I think the banks have chosen to go the judicial route not because of our (mediation) program but because of the ruling on MERS." The Appeals Court r uled t hat lenders must b e a b l e to document a clear trail of transactions in county clerks' offices before foreclosing nonjudicially. K evin C h r i stiansen, t h e government affairs director with the Oregon Bankers Association, said it is the combination, the mediation law and court ruling, that have added so much uncertainty for lenders. C hristiansen said b a n k s would like to go back to foreclosing nonjudicially. It's more

affordable an d

Po ice:Boy,7,shot to death at gunstore in apparent accident The Associated Press MERCER, Pa. — A man's handgun went off while he was holding it as he got into his truck in the parking lot of a western Pennsylvania gun store Saturday, and the shot killed his 7-year-old son, authorities said.

pieceofpeopleowning ahome and having a good job is having a healthy housing market," Rosenbaum said. "And having a mediation program for atrisk homeowners is a big part of the solution." — Reporter,541-554-1162, Idake@bendbulletin.com

Joseph V. Loughrey, 44, of Sharpsville, was getting into the truck when the 9 mm handgun discharged, wounding Craig Allen Loughrey in the chest, according to state police. The boy died at the scene at Twigs Reloading Den in East Lackawannock Township, 60

wor

g e nerally

quicker, he said. He's in the process of working with lenders on drafting legislation that he hopes lawmakers will adopt. It would likely allow lenders to foreclose without having every loan sale documented in public records. "There is arguably a cloud over 70 to80 percent of the houses beingforeclosed on in the state, because of the lack of clarity," he said. "We would say this i s s omething that needs to be fixed." However, the more onerous the system, he said, the longer it will take the housing market to recover. "There are strong disincentives (right now) to enter this particular realm of lending," he said. Last session, Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-Sunriver, initially pushed to allow lenders and MERS to f oreclose without every transaction being documented in a county clerk's office. This session, he said, he's not sure if he would support something similar. He wants h omeowners to k no w w h o owns their loans, and said MERS should be addressed. "The big picture is, we need to get the foreclosures off the books so the system can move forward," he said. But, he pointed out, Republicans will be in the minority. "We're n ot carrying t h e ball; we'll be watching the ball game," he said. "But I'm willing to support something that helps homeowners and alleviates the system without the judicial overload." Lenders maintain it's in the best interest of the Legislature to take another look at the issue. States with a higher rate of judicial foreclosures, potentially slow down the housing r ecovery, according to T h e Wall Street Journal. "Judicial review may give troubled homeowners more time to work out problems, but critics of the system say the delays are postponing states' housing recoveries," according to the Nov. 15 article. Senate M ajority L e a der Diane Rosenbaum, D-Portland, said she won't support a "MERS bailout." Instead, she will push to r equire mediation i n b o t h judicial and nonjudicial foreclosures. The legislation to expand SB 1 552 i s b e i ng drafted. "Clearly we need something with teeth that will bring people to the table, and that's the principle of the mediation program," she said. What the mechanism would be, she wasn't sure. Sen. Lee Beyer, D-Springfield, who co-sponsored the original Senate bill, said he's working with Sen. Brian Boquist, R-Dallas, and with the state's top judge, to ensure mediation would be required no matter the route lenders took to foreclose. David Heynderickx, an attorney with the Office of Legislative Counsel, said the Legislature can impose mediation under current statute on the courts and has done so in the past. The problem, the state senators said, is that lenders aren't participating. "I think a s ou r economy slowly starts to recover, a big

A7

is ri t

miles north of Pittsburgh. Investigators said Loughrey told them he didn't realize there was a bullet still in the chamber. "This happens all too often where people think the gun was empty," Lt. Eric Hermick said. Loughrey was trying to sell

0

two guns at the store, state police said. The owners told Loughrey the store doesn't

buy guns so Loughrey and his son returned to the truck with them. Loughrey put the boy in the passenger seat and loaded the rifle into the truck, state police said. He was attempting

to get inside and reached to put the handgun in the center console when it fired, they said. The shooting is being investigated as an accident, although

Loughrey could face charges, including manslaughter and negligence, Hermick told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

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Oregon news, B3 Obituaries, B4

West news, B5

Weather, B6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

O www.bendbulletin.com/local

Petitioners aim to halt roun a out WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON — Af-

ter five days of debate on hundreds of amendments, the Senate passed the $63f billion National Defense Authorization Act on Tuesday by a 98-0 vote. The bill funds the military for another

year, with $525 billion for Pentagon spending, $88 billion for the war

in Afghanistan and $f8 billion for the Depart-

ment of Energy. Among the amendments that

passed weremeasures that continued the

military's use of biofuel,

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Opponents of a roundabout at the intersection of Reed Market Road and Southeast 15th Street are circulating a petition in the hope of persuading the city to rethink its plans. Tom Healy, owner of the Expressway gas station and convenience store at the intersection's northwest corner, said he began col-

lecting signatures opposing the roundabout about three weeks ago. He said around 500 have signed on, though the total could be higher as some peoplehave taken blank copies of his petition and gone door-to-door in the neighborhood to gather signatures.

Healy maintains the roundabout will do nothing to address the bigger problem that snarls traffic on Reed Market Road, the railroad crossing located about a quarter mile west of the intersection with 15th. Multiple times a day, Healy said, trains will block traffic for up to 20 minutes as they slowly move from track to track in the switching yard south of Reed Market Road. The proximity of the rail crossing makes the intersection of Reed Market Road and 15th Street different than other locations where the city has installed roundabouts, Healy said. He suspects vehicles will clog the roundabout whenever a train is parked across Reed

Market Road, backing up traffic in all directions and giving drivers no opportunity to choose an alternate route around the train. "I'm all for roundabouts, I really like them," Healy said. "This just happens to be the wrong place to put one."

$30 million bond With a total bill estimated at $18.3 million, the Reed Market Road improvements are the largest project funded under a $30 million bond approved by Bend voters in May 2011. Beyond the roundabout, the project includes realignment of the American Lane bridge over the canal, a signaled intersection where American Lane meets Reed

Market Road and widening of Reed Market Road to three lanes between Third and 27th streets, including sidewalks and bike lanes along its entire length. Construction east of the intersection of Reed Market Road and 15th Street is set to start next spring, with work on the bridge beginning late next year and construction of the western portion — including the proposed roundabout — in early 2014. Nick Arnis, the city transportation engineering manager,said Healy raises some good points, as no traffic studies look specifically at how a roundabout performs when located near a rail crossing. See Roundabout/B2

imposed stricter eco-

nomic sanctions on lran for its ongoing nuclear program and require the Department of Defense to submit a report to Congress on the possibility of a no-flyzone

in Syria. U.S. SENATEVOTE • National Defense Authorization Act

Merkley (D) ..................Y I/I/yden (D).................... Y SeeWeek/B2 ep. rr

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Photos by Scott HammersI The Bulletin

Owen Baker, from left, Ethan Graham and Luke Roberts of Lava Ridge Elementary Schoolput their Lego robot through a test run Saturday at the Central Oregon Lego Robotic Tournament at Mountain View High School in Bend.

enss ow 0 ro OS eo e o i n c o n es

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By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

By the time Heather Davenport and Katie Slough realized what had happened, it was too late. Under the gaze of hundreds in the Mountain view High School gym Saturday, the girls watched their Lego robot scoot across a pooltable sized platform before abruptly veering off course. Their puzzlement turned to horror as the robot plowed through the course, scattering tiny plastic bricks in its wake and bumping into the walL Still, minutes later, Heather and Katie and the rest of their team, "Girls on Fire," were laughing at their misfortune Roughly 160 kids from 9 to 14 years old participated in this year's Lego Robotics Tournament, which drew 21 teams from around Central

d IZ

Heather Davenport, left, and Katle Slough reactwhen they realize their robot has gone off course. Oregon.Tournament director Lance Kansari said six of the teams will be selected to move on to the next level, a statewide tournament in Portland early next year. Kansari said the teams had been practicing since

September, when the governing body that oversees Lego robotics events unveiled the course for this year's competitions. With a theme of "Senior Solutions," the course was designed to approximate tasks

that can be difficult for senior citizens with limited mobility. The Lego robots, built and programmed by the kids, navigate on wheels around obstaclesand use mechanical arms to push and lift items in simulated missions like "turn stove burners off" or "fix a chair." At the heart of each Lego robotisa computer processor, slightly larger than a mobile phone. With the robot connected to a laptop computer, the team members load instructions onto the processor, telling the robot where to go and what to do. The unscheduled rampage by the Girls on Fire robot was determined to be human error, the result of sending the robot out to perform the "gardening" mission when it should have been set to "move a quilt." SeeRobots/B2

Deschutes County

bond sale a success Bulletin staff report The sale of $12.6 million in general obligation bonds by Deschutes County on Thursday came off better than anticipated, thanks to eager buyers and low interest rates. Twelve banks or investment firms bid on the bond issue. Low bidder Morgan Stanley & Co. was awarded the sale, said Kieu-Oanh Nguyen, of Western Financial Group, the county investment advisor. Morgan Stanley bid.567 percent interest, 33 points lower than the highest bidder, U.S. Bancorp Investments Inc. The bidding was accomplished online, said county Finance Director and Treasurer Marty Wynne. The county figured on selling this issue at 1.18 percent interest, that is, it counted on paying 1.18 percent interest on money it borrowed by selling bonds, which it pays back with taxes it collects from property owners. But, the true interest cost — the rate paid Morgan Stanley plus other fees and costs, such as printing, bound counsel and rating feesand state fees— comes to.82 percent, still lower than estimated. That means the county saves $1.09 million in costs to service its debt on a 2002 bond issue. The sale Thursday represents a refinancing of that debt at a lower interest rate. Wynne said he originally expected a savings of $990,000. While taxpayers save overall, individuals won't see much of a dent in their tax bills, he said. The actual amount will change each year of the bond life, he said. "Not a huge amount," he said. The bond sale is actually a second refinancing of bond measures approved by Deschutes County voters in the 1990s, Wynne said. One, at $25.434 million, paid for construction of the Deschutes County Fairgrounds in Redmond. These general obligation bonds are considered very secure — the county en-

joys a high, Aa2 rating by Moody's — and in high demand, even in an economy in which local and state governments are reducing services and cutting costs. "These bonds are not affected," Wynne said. "When voters approved these ballot measures a few years back, they agreed to

pay. In other words, the bonds are backed by county government's power to collect property taxes. Deschutes, Nguyen said, also enjoys a high credit rating because it's fairly well managed. The first payment comes due in six months; the bonds mature in four years.

• Community events: Email event information to communitylife@bend bulletin.com Orclick on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least f0 days before the desired date of publication. Details: Thecalendar appears on Page 3 inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements,

Wildfires causedonly $75 damage in CrookCounty in1912 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archived copies of The Bulletin at the DesChutes Historical Museum.

marriages, partnerships, anniversaries:

100 YEARS AGO

Details: The Milestones page publishesSundayin Community Life. contact: 541-383-0358

For the week ending Dec. 8, 1912

Miller and A.O. Hunter go East to Chicago Kempster B. Miller, general manager ofthe Bend Water,

Light & Power Co. and A.O. Hunter left this morning for

Chicago. Mr. Hunter, who came in with Mr. Miller last week, expects to be in Ohio for several months. To him is due the credit of interesting Mr. Miller and his associates in their recent purchase of the local power, water and lighting plants and appurtenant power properties, he having spent the last six months working

YESTERDAY on the proposition. While he has nothing to say just now, it is understood that the purpose of his eastern visit concerns another deal of importance to the town. "I am glad to say this, however," stated Mr. Hunter, in discussing general conditions, "Bend never looked better to me. The outlook all over the country is excellent. Prosper-

ity is sure. Locally, affairs are in splendid shape. Another very important group of men has been added to the already powerful backing of the town, and all interests are pulling together splendidly. It is my firm belief that the next ten months will see some remarkable developments in Bend." Before leaving, Mr. Miller stated that the machinery has been ordered for the larger power plant that is to be in-

stalled in the new building as soon as it is completed. As stated last week, the initial cost of the poser plant unit that is to be installed immediately is $40,000, this in addition to the plant already operating. During the week a boom has been placed at the lower end of the pond above the dam to keep floating ice from getting into the flume and damaging the water wheels. SeeYesterday/B2


B2 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 20'l2

Roundabout Continued from B1 The city has recently set up some cameras to learn how traffic behaves when a train is stopped across the road with the existing traffic light, he said, and is considering a twolane roundabout that would provide drivers better opportunities to exit the roundabout when a train is crossing, as well as electronic signs that would notify drivers of crossing trains as they approach the roundabout. Outside of peak traffic periods orother rare circumstances — such as a train across the road — roundabouts are more efficient a t m o v in g t r a f fic through an intersection, Arnis said, while reducing the risk of a severe injury crash by 80 to 90 percent. Arnis said that while the railroad crossing is a major problem along the Reed Market Road corridor, solutions

New roundadout

Reed Market Rd.

New intersection with signal 3

BNSF Railway Greg Cross/The Bulletin

are prohibitively expensive. An overpass or an underpass would cost $13 m i llion-$15 m illion, he said, nearly as much as the city is preparing to spend on the entire twomile length of Reed Market Road. Moving the switching yard out of town, another suggestion of Healy and other opponents, is also challenging, he sald. "What (Burlington Northern Santa Fe has) told us is, 'That's fine, you find us a new place and you pay for it and we'll think about it," Arnis said.

Public process Peggy Barnett, the original owner of the Expressway and the owner of undevelopedproperty on the northeast side of the intersection, said she's concerned the roundabout could hurt the gas station's ability to stay in business. Barnett said realigning the road, altering the station driveways and new medians on the approach to the roundabout could make it difficult for fuel trucks to supply the station. Additionally, the station's underground fuel tanks are located on theproperty corner closest

The Houseof Representatives Tuesdaypassedthe American Energy Manufacturing Technical Corrections Act, whichtweaks

Week

to the proposed roundabout; Barnett said traffic vibrations could create a leak. "People can't get close to those and start driving, they'll shake them loose and who knows what will happen'?" she said. Healy and Barnett both plan on bringing their concerns and the signatures they've collected to the City Council, but have not decided when they will do so. Healy said he's had some discussions about the project with Councilor Mark Capell, talks which both men say have been productive. "I think the public process has been fairly open — and, quite a bit of it — to give people an opportunity to make comments," Capell said. "I think Tom had some good concerns, and staff is now looking at options to see that those concerns aren't going to be a problem once the project is completed."

Continued from B1 Wednesday, the Senate failed to ratify a United Nations treaty that would ban discrimination against people with disabilities. Needing a majority to be ratified, the matter failed, 61-38, with eight Republicans voting with

efficiency standards for walk-in

the Democratic majority. Supporters of ratification maintained

bill by unanimousconsent, sending the bill to PresidentObama's

that it would have brought the rest of the world in line with the Americans With Disabilities Act,

desk to be signed into law.

Yesterday Continued from B1 The Bend Water, Light & Power Co. hereafter will have its office in the building on the south end of Wall Street

formerly occupied partly by the library, where it has had a storeroom for some time. Elmer Ward is to be the office man for the new management.

No fire risk in Bend timber Three timber fires in all of Crook County last season, with a total loss of about $75, is the remarkablerecord for the district, says Clyde McKay, deputy state fire warden. "There you have the big reason why the Deschutes pine belt offers the safest timber investment in America," said Mr. McKay. "There is absolutely no danger of fire loss, incidentally, one can get anywhere in the timber quickly, by auto or rig, in case small fires start." Mr. McKay, who is also vice president of The Bend Company, and local representative of the Mueller timber interests, is very optimistic concerning the local timber and lumber outlook.

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending Dec. 8, 1937

Bandits find Westerners too tough for train robbing Two bold young men from the east who outfitted themselves with six shooters, ten gallon hats and cowboy boots and tried to revive the obsolete business of robbing a train, were held today for a taste of western justice. They p r obably w i l l be charged with homicidal robbery because they killed a railroad man in the scuffle after they had gone through one coach relieving 20 passengers of watches, rings and wallets. They were a badly beaten pair of outlaws when the train stopped yesterday morning to deliver them to the sheriff. The passengers had pounded them unmercifully and t ied t hem down to seats. H enry Lorenz is 2 2 a n d Harry Dwyer, 27. Lorenz came west from Brooklyn where he worked. Dwyer was a native of Massachusetts. They had been out several days scouting to see what the wild west had to provide, and a train robbery seemed about as good a stunt as it ever was when the Dalton boys and Billy the Kid got rich and notorious along these trails. "We thought it would be an

50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Dec. 8, 1962

27 Bombers now have been pulled out by Russians The Defense Department announced todaythat 27 IL28 bombers now have been pulled out of Cuba by the Russians. A Soviet ship was underway today from the port of Mariel with 15 of th e subsonic jet bombers on board. The Defense Department saidtherewere "more than 30" of the bombers on the island at the time of the Cuban crisis. (Other U.S. sources said, however,that Russia has informed the U.S. that it had put 42 of the jet bombers in Cuba and that they would be removed. These sources also had talked previ-

The Bulletin

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com

Continued from Bl Only a handful of the Girls on Fire were involved with Lego robotics before this year. Katie had been part of a team at her school last year, but as the team's only girl, she felt like her input was often ignored by her teammates. Though she did prevail in naming her team last year — "Three Bad Apples and a Peach" — this year, she set out to organize a girls-only squad through her 4-H club. M embers said w it h n o boys on their team, it's easier for them to have a voice in team decisions. "I sort of feel like we're more equal a s a l l g i r ls," Heather said. For the fourth- and fifthgraders on the Lava Ridge Elementary School t e am, Saturday's competition was a first. This is the first year the school has fielded a team, and its members set their expectations realistically.

ously interms of "more than 30"

Northwest and the nation. bombers.) R obberson, known to h i s U.S. officials said that there friends as Gordy, has served were still "several thousand" four, two-year terms on the Russians in Cuba, and that the Ford Dealers' Council, an electCubans still had "some MIG15 ed body of 20 dealers who serve and MIG21 f i ghter p l anes as a sounding board between capable ofcarrying nuclear dealers and the parent compaweapons. ny. He also is the current presiBut these officials said there dent of the Oregon Automobile was no evidence the Russians Dealers Association and has were operating as an organized served four times on the Northseparate military unit, or that west Ford Dealers Advertisthere are nuclear weapons in ing Committee. He could also Cuba. They said the Russians joke with the late Henry Ford II were wearing T-shirts or sports about haircuts and paunches. "I feel that my community shirts and were with Cuban antiaircraft and ground defense whether it's Bend or the auto units. About 40 0 R ussians business, has given a great deal were aboard the ships which to me and I owe it back," said removed Soviet missiles from Robberson who's also a former Cuba. President of the Bend Chamber The Soviets have indicated of Commerce and member of that they will demand at this the St. Charles Medical Center point that President Kennedy board of trustees. give the formal pledge against His old dealership was loany invasion. cated in the present MastersonSt. Clair Hardware building Guevara admits plans downtotttm. There was no sales forrocketstrikesatU.S. lot.Cars were ferried back and Ernesto (Che) Guevara Inter- forth from the second floor on national Communism's "Man an elevator. "The first three years, 13 in Havana" was disclosed today to have told a Communist franchise dealers did close up reporter that Fidel Castro had for one reason or another," Robplanned nuclear attacks of key berson said, recalling that when U.S. cities, including New York. he arrived there were three In an exclusive interview Chrysler-Plymouth dealers, a with the European Communist Studebaker dealer and another correspondent in Havana, Gue- who sold a tiny French car vara said "if the rockets had called the Izeta. "The town, the economy itremained we would have used them all and directed them self was really negative," Robagainst the very heart of the berson remembered. "It was United States, including New a logging town and a logging York, in our defense against town only." aggression. R obberson l a te r mo v e d In onestatement suppressed his dealership to South Third by the Communist press, Gue- Street across from the present vara said international commu- Bob Thomas location, and then nism's "most effective form of to his present location north of help" in Latin America would Payless in 1971. He called that be in "the armed struggle al- as a "scary move." "It was all solid rock and old ready taking place in a number of Latin American countries houses that the Forest Service where the people are in achad brought in," said Robbertion to overthrow American son, who has witnessed the imperialism." evolution of the auto and its products over the years. "It took a lot of imagination to envision 25 YEARS AGO a dealership here." For the week ending Robberson is gradually passDec. 8, 1987 ing the reins onto his son, Jeff, who left the trucking industry Robberson: It's who you are a year ago to join his father's that counts business, and his sales managGordon Robberson has been er, Tom Collier. But it will be a in the news lately not for who he few more years before he even is, but more for who he knows thinks about retirement. "I don't want to quit," he said. new Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci is his former "This is a fun job. I still work six brother-in-law and l ongtime days a week, 10 to 12 hours a friend. day and I enjoy it." But that's not really fair to Robberson who last week celebrated his30th anniversary at the helm of Robberson Ford of Bend. In that capacity he has become one of the most notable Ford dealers in Oregon, the

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Fourth-grader Owen Baker said the Lava Ridge robot is fairly primitive compared to those built by some of the more seasoned teams, and was regularly falling short of completing the missions his team selected for it. Just the same, he said the team was sitting near the middle of the standings with a chance to move up in the final competition of the day. "We have fun, and we're getting better at teamwork," Owen said. Kansari said finding a way as a team to overcome setbacks is one of the primary lessons kids take away from competing. "It's just like real world engineering — it's a messy world, and things never work like you want them to."

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Robots easy job and we could just stop the train, drop off in the desert and never get caught," they sa>d. They were captured by the simplest expedient, a trick that was the first thing any of the old master train robbers would have watched for — a passenger stuck out his foot in the aisle and tripped one of them. Trainmen and passengers were ontop ofhim in an instant. The other robber turned to see what caused the noise, and he was grabbed. His gun went off and the bullet killed W.L. Smith, who was en route west to see his sick wife. Smith was a Rock Island railway man but he had a trainman's aversion for robbers on any line, and he was one of the first men to go after the robber who turned his head. It was at Deming, N.M., that the two bad men bought their cowboy regalia. They worked for a carnival there for a few days, then went to El Paso. There they boarded the train. The passengers marked them at oncefortenderfeet. One of them confronted the conductor and said "This is a holdup." The other robber was waving a gun and shouting threats and commands. One of them fired a shot to prove that it was a real holdup and to rouse the sleeping passengers so they could get their wallets and watches ready. With their loot tied in a bundle, one of them ordered the brakeman to stop the train and thenthe robber wastripped and the gun was fired and the passengers and trainmen pounded them both. The two men, who are now experts on how not to rob a train, signed written confessions today, the sheriff said.

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • T HE BULLETIN B 3

REGON NEWS

Portlandpolice offer advice for those High-profile inmates going toWashington for 'pot tourism' had secret loveaffair By Terrence Petty

equivalent of a speeding ticket. And for those who want to go the legal route, they can get a medical marijuana card. Still, obtaining pot in Oregon is not without its hassles, in the eyes of some who use it. Federal drug agents have been cracking down on some medical marijuana pot grow-

The Associated Press

PORTLAND — Now that marijuana is legal in neighboring W a s hington s t a te, Portland police are offering some helpful advice to Oregon pot users. Sure, you can go over to Washington state to "smoke some weed," a police advisory states, but you might get arrestedfor driving under the influence if you're pulled over coming home, even if you're on a bike. And if you are among the 55,000 people with an Oregon medical marijuana card, Port-

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land police say you'll be able

Nigel Duara/The Associated Press file photo

to get your allowed amount of medicine in Washington state. Still, even though you now can't get busted for toking in Tacoma or elsewhere in Wash-

David Kosmecki, left, talks to Idaho State Police Trooper Justin Kiitch in June in Fruitland, Idaho. Kosmecki was stopped and charged with possession of marijuana after leaving Oregon. Now that Washington has legalized marijuana for recreational use, neighboring states are waiting to see what the conseington (though you could get a quences for them will be. ticket for public use), it will be

a year before selling or buying it is legal. As th e E v ergreen state works out the various complications of its new law — including the fact that marijuana is still illegal under federal law — neighbors of Washi ngton ar e w a t ching w i t h curiosity, and perhaps some apprehension. If the federal government doesn't attempt to intervene in the new law, and if Washington state sets up a supply system whose mechanics are yet to be defined, Washington may well become a greater source of pot for users in Oregon and Idaho. "It would be like a place

people go to get cheap beer. We're not talking about medical marijuana. We're talking about people who just want to get high," said Josh Marquis, district attorney for Oregon's Clatsop County. Marquis is not totally opposed to marijuana. He thinks the f e d e ra l gov e r nment should do what Oregon has done: decriminalize possession of small amounts, and allow people wit h g enuine medicalneeds to have access

The Associated Press PORTLAND — J a ilers near Portland say defendants in two of Oregon's highest-profile recent crime sprees carried on a clandestine relationship behind bars, devising a complex communication strategy fit for a spy novel. Columbia County jail officials uncovered the relationship last month when they found a love note written by Andrew Barnett, accused of perpetrating a recent anthrax hoax that targeted a number of Portland law enforcement and commercial centers. The object of his affection was Holly Grigsby, charged in a three-state kill-

out of state. There has also been pressure on dispensaries that have sprung up in Oregon that provide medical marijuana fora fee to cover costs of operation. Law officials in some counties have raided such operations, saying they are selling pot for profit. If Washington state sets up a pot supply system, it is likely some Oregon holders of medi-

ing spree. Barnett's note was found hidden in a law book on a library shelf. Most of the fourpage letter was vulgar and sexually explicit, and it included a racist rant against the African American judge presiding over both their cases, Lt. Tony Weaver, a j ail supervisor, told T h e Oregonian. Barnett devised a complex way to communicate that involved book bindings marked with stars and other symbols, dog-eared pages and a numeric code so Grigsby could find the book where he hid his letters, Weaver said. At least two other inmates also were using books in the library as dead-drops for secret communications. " They called i t th e i r 'email' system," W eaver sard. A uthorities moved t h e jail's law library to a more secure location on Nov. 16, he said, and inmates can still access those books. But

cal marijuana cards will go

north for their medicine, advocates say. for treatment. pockets defined by b orders In Canada, another WashBut one of his greatest con- and demographics that could ington neighbor, pot is illegal cerns, echoed by other law en- create new challenges for law under federal l aw . B o rder forcement officials, is people enforcement. enforcement of drug laws is going over t o W a shington One of them i s M oscow, stringent, but enforcement for to obtain weed and driving home to th e U n iversity of possession for personal use home stoned. Idaho campus and more than is relaxed. Grass is smoked "If I'm going to drive on the 11,000 students — just a 10- openly in parks and at pot caOregon coast at night, in the minute drive to the Washing- fes in British Columbia. Distridriving rain, I want the person ton State University campus bution of medical marijuana on the other side of the road to i n Pullman. More than 70 to patients with needs deemed be completely unimpaired," miles to the north is the busy legitimate through pot dispenMarquis told The Associated suburban corridor connect- saries is also allowed Press. ing Spokane, Wash., and the A spokesman for the Royal Idaho law officials are also Idaho cities of Post Falls and Canadian M ounted P olice, watching what's happening Coeur d'Alene. Sgt. Duncan Pound, said it is in Washington state. Unlike Idaho police say increased too early to predict what efOregon, Idaho has no medical arrestsfor marijuana could fects legalization in Washingmarijuana law and possession intensify stress o n c o unty ton will have. in any form is against the law. jails and caseloads for county B ack in O r egon, the t i p Simple possession of less than prosecutors. sheet to marijuana users isthree ouncesisa misdemeanIdaho State Police Lt. Chris sued by Portland police states or, punishable by up to a year Schenk, says people in north that possession of less than in jail and a $1,000 fine. Idaho are joking about so- an ounce has been a " l ow Idaho officials already have called "pot tourists" crossing law enforcement priority for their hands full with Idahoans the border to take advantage 35 years in Portland and this obtaining medical marijuana of Washington's relaxed law. will not change due to the new cards out of state. The Gem But he says it's going to take Washington law." State borders three medical time to gauge any increases in But the advisory also has marijuana states, a r e ality arrests for possession or driv- this caution: If you go to Washthat has caused medical mari- ing under the influence. ington to "buy some weed," the "Portland Police Bureau juana arrests to outpace those O regon has some of t h e of traffi ckers or other users. most permissive pot laws in cannot predict or control the Although Idaho is a largely the nation. Possession of less enforcement activities of fedconservative state, there are than an ounce will get you the eral authorities."

to read general fiction and nonfiction books, they must pick them off a cart that rolls from cell to cell. Grigsby is awaiting trial on federal racketeering charges alleging that she and an accomplice, David "Joey" Pederson, killed four people last fall as part of a campaign to "purify" and "preserve" the white race. Both have pleaded not guilty. Barnett has a long history of challenging authorities from behind bars. He's accused of mailing a parcel in December 2011 with a mysterious white powder toa federalprosecutor, which the government alleges was an attempt to convey that it was anthrax and that a biological attack was occurring. After the first letter sent to the prosecutor, a slew of similar parcels showed up at six other Portland buildings, including the Port of Portland's office at the airport. The letters were all determined to b e n ontoxic. He's pleaded not guilty. Barnett got permission to use thelibrary so he could prepare to defend himself against his federal charges. Inside the library, he found a ventilation shaft that connected to the women's housing unit in the next room. By shoutingthroughthe vent, he made contact with Grigsby, Weaver said.

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husband. His body was left at the base of a steep cliff near Applegate Creek in Northern PORTLAND — A n arM EDFORD — P o lice i n California last month. mored car company is offering Oregon have a rrested two a maximum $10,000 reward women in connection with the Republicans keep for information leading to the shooting death of one of their leader in state Senate arrest and conviction of the husbands in northern Califorrobber who grabbed two cases nia last month. SALEM — State Sen. Ted of money from an armored Authorities in Medford say F errioli o f J o h n D a y w i l l car employee in n o r theast they took 26-year-old Patricia continue as the Senate's top Portland. MacCallum and 27-year-old Republican. Portland police say the Loo- Amber Lubbers into custody GOP lawmakers selected Fermis Armored U.S. employee on Friday after learning from rioli Saturday for a fifth term as reported that a man grabbed California investigators that caucus leader. Democrats have the money and ran off as she the women may be in the area. a 16-14 edge in the new Senate, was walking from her vehicle Siskiyou County Sheriff Jon which convenes Jan. 14. to an ATM at a credit union. Lopey tells the Medford Mail Sens. Larry George of SherSgt. Pete Simpson described Tribune that investigators be- wood and Brian Boquist of Dalthe hard black plastic cases as lieve the women worked tolas will be deputy GOP leader, being similar to shoeboxes. gether to fatally shoot 34-year- and Alan Olsen of Canby will The amount ofmoney in each old Michael Christopher Mac- be the GOP whip. was not disclosed. Callum, Patricia MacCallum's — From wire reports

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

BITUARIES

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DEATH NOTICES Alice C. Graham, of Bend

Garrett William Broadley, of Bend

June 3, 1908 - Dec. 4, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471. Please visit the online registry at

Dec. 26, 1960 - Dec. 4, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: Private family services will be held.

www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: At her request, no services will be held. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701.

Christine Elisabeth Hanson, of Bend Sept. 23, 1959 - Oct. 11, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Chris' Life will be held Sunday, December 16, 2012, at Aspen Hall located at 18920 Shevlin Park Road in Northwest Bend from 3 to 7 p.m. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Eleanor C. Bohning, of Bend Feb. 21, 1924 - Dec. 3, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471. Please visit the online registry at

www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: Private family services will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 or to the High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Highway 97, Bend, OR 97702.

Janet Irene Brott, of Crooked River Ranch Dec. 22, 1933 - Nov. 20, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond, 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A family gathering will be held at a later date.

Kathleen "Katie" Marion Culler, of La Pine (Wild River

area) Feb. 21, 1922 - Dec. 5, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services will be held, per her request. Contributions may be made to:

Newberry Hospice, P.O. Box 1888, La Pine, OR 97739; (541) 536-7399.

Randy S. Berends, of La Pine Oct. 17, 1954 - Nov. 29, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will be held on Saturday, December 15, at 1:00 p.m., at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah'sWitnesses, located at 52412 Antler Lane in La Pine. Contributions may be made to:

A Donation Fund has been set up to help Randy's family. Donations are appreciated and can be made at any U.S. Bank branch.

Richard LeRoy Smith, of Bend Aug. 25, 1924 - Nov. 27, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: A Memorial Mass will be held Monday, December 17, 2012 at 11:00 AM at St. Theresa Catholic Church, 1260 NE 132nd Ave., Portland, OR 97230, with Inurnment to follow at Willamette National Cemetery in Portland at 2:30 PM. Contributions may be made to:

St. Francis Catholic Church Building Fund, 2450 NE 27th St., Bend, OR 97701.

Karen Emily Clark (nee Mastrud) July 21, 1943 - Nuv. 30, 2012 K aren passed on t o h e r L ord o n N o v e mber 3 0 t h , 2 012 due t o c a n c er. S h e was 69. She was born in Clarissa, M innesota o n Ju ly 2 1, 1943, to Arthur k B e atrice Mastrud. She m oved t o Bend, OrI

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e gon

w hen s h e w as 5 years old. In Ju ly 1974, she m oved t o Karen Clark Caldwell, Idaho where she worked at the Canyon County Courthouse until moving back to Bend in 1983. She worked for the D eschutes County C ourthouse u n ti l r e t i r i n g in 2002. She m ar r i e d L ar ry S chossow o n O c t o ber Z , 1960. They had three children together. A fter m o v i n g b a c k to Bend in 1983, she met the l ove of he r l i f e , D a vi d A Clark. They w ere married on July 5, 1986. Last year she and D avid c elebrated t heir 25th w e d d ing a n n i v ersary at t h ei r h o m e i n Burns, Oregon, where they have lived since 2007. While living in Burns she met many new friends and b ecame reunited w it h o l d friends from her past. She j oined a k ni t t i n g g r o u p w hich gave her t h e n i c k " The A f gh a n name Q ueen". Sh e k n i t t e d a l m ost e v e r y d ay si nc e childhood. A si d e fr om k nitting sh e l o ve d c a m p i ng and f i shing. She w a s a lso a n a v i d r e a d er , a l ways having a book close b y. Bu t m o s t o f a l l s h e l oved spending t im e w i t h her family and friends. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r h usband, D av e C l a r k o f Burns; her children, Kerri Lynne of Bend, Kip 8z Stacey Schossow of Caldwell; Idaho, K y le & A n it a Schossow of Bend, and her s tepson, Michael Clark o f Canby, C a l i f ornia; grandc hildren, S a r ah , J e r e my , Abigail, Jennifer, Jessica, N icholas, an d Tr ev o r ; g reat-grandchildren, D o r o the, A n i s t on , Ma d d o x , C amille, A y la , L u cy , a n d Sawyer; siblings, Harold 8r. Merilyn Mastrud, Lowell 8. Sharon Mastrud, Marshall & Dorie M astrud, Dale 8. Shelli Mastrud, all of Bend, M ark M a s t ru d o f Ti l l a mook, Arlene Buechner of Salem, Marietta and Harry Lucas of Redmond, Susan B ill L e B r ey , a l s o o f Tillamook, and Judy Meye rs of B e nd ; an d n u m e r ous nieces and nephews. S he w a s p r e c e ded i n death by her parents, older b rother, Ron M a strud, in fant d a ughter, B . S c h o ss ow a n d f ir s t h u s b a n d, Larry Schossow. She was loved by all who k new her and she w il l b e greatly missed. Two m e m o r ia l s e r v i ces will be held — December 13, 2 012 at 11:00 a.m. at t h e P ioneer Pr esby t e r i an Church in B u r ns, and December 20, 2012, at 11:00 a.m. a t Th e De s c h u tes B rewery M o u n tain R o o m in Bend. In lieu of f l o w ers, donat ions may be m ade to t h e American Cancer Society.

ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Lars Hormander, 81: Swede who won the Fields Medal, often called the Nobel Prize of mathematics, for his groundbreaking work on partial diff erential e q uations, w h i ch has found broad applications a cross many b r a nches o f physics. Died Nov. 25 in Lund, Sweden. Saul Steinberg, 73: One of thebest-known corporate raiders of the 1980s, known for his lavish lifestyle. Died Friday at his home in Manhattan. — From wire reports

Doris Pearl Gregory Greenleaf Young Biglajzer August13, 1935- Dec. 5, 2012

July16, 1920- December 5, 2012

G regory Gr een l e a f Young of Bend, OR, since 2008 a n d M i nn e a p olis, M N, s i n c e 19 3 5 , di e d peacefully i n h i s Ben d h ome o n Decemb er 5, 2012. Greg f ought a v aliant 2 1 /2 y e a r battle w ith l i v e r cancer. Gregory He w as Greenleaf b orn on Young August 13, 1 9 35, i n M i n n eapolis, M N , to Mabel and Edward Young. On June 16, 1961, he married Donna A n derson, his wife of 51 years. He is survived by l o v ing wife, D o n n a ; dau g h t er, S ally Y o u n g of Sea t t l e W A; d a u g h t er , V i r g i n i a Young and p artner, Janie Lowe of Portland, OR; son, M ichael Young an d w i f e , Angela Mack; and g r anddaughter, L uc i a M ack Y oung o f Se a t t le , W A ; brother, Edward Young of Madison, WI; sister, Sally Y oung o f M a d i s on , W I ; and brother, Jim Young of M inneapolis, M N: an d m any d ev o t e d ni ec e s , nephews and friends. Greg was an active memb er i n th e Ep i sc o p a l Church, s e r v in g o n t he boards of Episcopal Comm unity S e r vices an d t h e Episcopal Group Home. He was a member of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, M i nneapolis, MN, St. Martin's by t he L ak e Ep i sc o p a l C hurch, i n M i n n e t o n k a B each, M N a nd Tr i n i t y Episcopal Church in Bend, O R, serving o n t h e v e s tries in multiple roles. G reg attended th e U n i v ersity o f M i n n esota an d received his Bachelor and Masters degrees. G reg worked for IB M 2 6 years as a senior systems engineer. He continued to work in i n f o r mation technology as a consultant. With a love for life, Greg was an a v i d c o ok , s k i er , sailor and reader. He loved m usic, theater an d l i v e l y p olitical d i s c ussions. H e had a dry sense of humor a nd a c o ntagious love o f l ife. He t aught hi s f a m i ly a nd f r i ends h o w t o l iv e w ith passion and die w i t h g race. We t h an k h i m f o r all that he gave us and will work to carry on his spirit each day. In lieu of flowers, memor ials m a y be g iv e n t o Cancer Care - St. Charles Foundation (designated Cancer Care) Z500 NE Neff Rd., Bend, OR 97701, Hospice — Partners i n C a r e , 2 075 N E W ya t t Cou r t , Bend, OR 97701, or Trinity Episcopal Ch u r c h , 469 N orthwest W a l l St r e e t , Bend, OR. Baird Funeral Home was honored t o ser ve t he family. (541) 3 8 2 - 0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com

D oris B i g l ajzer, 9 2 , o f B end, Or e g on , p as s e d away December 5, 2012. Doris embraced life with absolute gusto and living it t o it s f u l l est. Sh e h a d a c reative c u l i n ar y v i s i o n w ith h ealth a n d b o d y i n m ind. H e r ar t i s ti c a n d agricultura l ent h u s i asm she made a house a home t o include a s m al l f a m i l y farm. W i t h h e r p a s s i ng, her family and their homes a re strengthened b y t h e m emories a n d l o v e fo r Doris. Doris is survived by her husband, Hans; and sister, Wynn; t h r e e da u g h t ers, A ndrea, K at h l ee n a nd J ulia; grandchildren, A l l i son an d J a m es, L i n d sey a nd J o s hua, J a r e d a n d Hannah, R.J., Shachaf, and Erez; great-grandchildren, Rowan and Eden. S ervices will b e h eld o n Monday, December 10, at 12 noon, a t N i s w o n gerR eynolds Chapel, 105 N . W. Irving Ave., Bend. Interment will be at Deschutes Memorial G a rdens at I:30 p.m., following the service.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all

correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

FEATURED OBITUARY

Weege was creator of TV's 'Night Court' By Rebecca Trouuson Los Angeles Times

Reinhold Weege, who created the popular Emmy-winning sitcom "Night Court" about a n ofte n -anarchic, after-hours New York courtroom and its cast of memorably loony characters, has died. He was 62. Weege, who also wrote and co-produced the television series "Barney Miller," died Dec. I of natural causes at his home in La Jolla, Calif., said Bonnie Covelli, his former assistant. "Night Court," which aired on NBC from 1984 to 1992, starred a boyish Harry An derson as th e u n orthodox, fun-loving judge Harry Stone and John Larroquette as lecherous prosecuting attorney Dan Fielding. Beneath the carnival-like atmosphere of Stone's courtroom, the show pushed the envelope for network television at the time, with occasionally edgy story lines and characters seemingly drawn f r om the streets of New York City. Weege said the show was grounded in r e ality, insisting that he had seen actual courtrooms that were more bizarre. But "Night Court" was bestknown for its humor and assortment of lovable oddballs, including its j eans-wearing, Mel Torme-obsessed judge; its towering, dimwitted bailiff; and a character known as "Phil th e d erelict," who became t h e p ro s ecutor's personal lackey. Pimps and prostitutes also made regular appearances, and Weege later disclosed that he had named most of them after his friends. The series, which began as a midseason replacement, was among the most popular television shows of its era, part of a powerhouse Thursday-night lineup for NBC that included "The Cosby Show," "Family Ties" and "Cheers." It won seven Emmys, including an unprecedented four consecutive supporting comedy actor awards for Larroquette. "We do great jokes," Larroquette said of "Night Court" in a 1988 Los Angeles Times interview. "The show may not be in any way intellectual and we don't make any pretense of dealing with issues that are impossible to address or solve in the sitcom format ... But if you just want to forget it all for a minute and laugh at pies in the face and pants around the ankles, that's what we do very well." W eege r e c eived t hr e e Emmy nominations for "Night Court" and one for "Barney Miller," the long-running ABC sitcom starring Hal Linden.

jessie Higgins /The World

Marshfield High School history teacher Jeff Eberweinuses props to show the students in his aviation history class in Coos Bay the difference between planes flown by the Tuskegee Airmen, and the planes the Germans flew in WWII.

Coos Baystudents learn history of flight By Jessie Higgins

of his students, who w as raised in poverty, coming COOS BAY — T u c ked through his class and becoma way in a f a r c o r ner o f ing "absolutely enthralled Marshfield High School, a with flying," he said. "He group of about 20 students ended up getting a scholarin Jeff Eberwein's fourth- ship to college and he chose period history class learn a school where he could beabout a life of a dventure, come a pilot." travel and flight. Another o f h i s f o r m er It's a life, Eberwein tells students, at Marshfield on his students, that could be exchange from Germany, theirs. is now training to be an airThe elective aviation histo- line pilot for Lufthansa in ry class takes students from Germany. Leonardo da Vinci's flight Eberwein reminds his stum achine drawings to t h e dents you don't have to be a Wright brothers' first flight, pilot to work in the aviation through more than 100 years industry. of aviation's advances up to McKenzi Seggerman, 18, the space program. said she spent most of her "It supplements all other high school career directionhistory classes, as the his- less. Then in the first weeks tory of f l ight i s i nextrica- of this year's aviation history bly linked to the history of class, the students watched a the world," Eberwein said. documentary on the 9/11 terIt a ls o e x c ites s t udents' ror attacks. "I saw w hat t h e f l i ght imaginations. "If you want to do some- a ttendants di d f o r t h o s e thing in life, you have to go people," Seggerman said. out and make it happen," The flight attendants stayed said Mike Martin, one of calm, she said, telling people Eberwein's many guest lec- to call loved ones. turers, the son of a Tuskegee Seggerman now plans to Airman from World War II. attend the International Air "Right now is the time to get and Hospitality Academy in the skills so you can go out Vancouver, Wash. to become and make it happen." a flight attendant when she Eberwein remembers one graduates. The World

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September 22, 1918 — December 4, 2012 Jerry James Ogle of Bend, Oregon, passedaway peacefully on December 4, 2012. He was 94. Public visitation will be held on Sunday, December 9, 2012, 3-5 PM at Autumn Funerals, 61555 Parrell Rd. in Bend. A Graveside service will take place on Monday, December 10, 2012 at 11 AM at Redmond Memorial Cemetery, 3545 South Canal Blvd. A Memorial Service with potluck luncheon will immediately follow at the Redmond VFW, 1836 SE Veterans Way.

Jerry was born September 22, 1918 in Alfalfa, Oregon, to George and Jessie iPyattl Ogle. He served in the U.S. Marine Corp as a dog trainer during World War II. Jerry spent his entire life living and working in Central Oregon. He worked as a Millwright at Brooks-Scanlon, eventually retiring from Korpine. Jerry was an active member of VFW Post 4108 in Redmond and was proud to be a member of the fraternal order of Freemasons. He enjoyed wood and metal working and hunting. Jerry, along with his wife Madia, also loved square dancing and traveling.

Jerry is survived by his wife of nearly 40 years, Madia Ogle; his three daughters, Betty Culwell of Prineville, OR, Davena Buck of Salem, OR and Carol, lhusband Ed) McDaniel of Madras, OR; and a son, Dale Deboy of Eagle Point, OR. Other survivors include nine grandchildren and 14great-grandchildren and many nieces and nephews. He is preceded in death by his parents; his first wife, Marie Rutherford Ogle; a daughter, Cindy Ogle; two brothers, Tomand Michael Ogle: and one grandchild. Memorial contributions in Jerry's memory may be made to Humane Society of CentralOregon, 61170 SE 27th Street, Bend, Oregon 97702. www.hsco.org Autumn Funerals Bend is honored to serve the family, (541) 318-0842, www.autumnfunerals.net.


SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • T HE BULLETIN B S

THE %7EST

SmugglingrisesonWest Coast Senator seeks 15 million asroutesonlan are locke for tsunami debris deanup By Becky Bohrer New York Times News Service

L OS ANGELES — T h e small, open-hull fishing boats head north from Baja Mexico, traveling at night, their navigation lights off. It is an

old smuggling route, popular with tequila runners during Prohibition in the 1920s and then little used for nearly a century. But as a result of a security crackdown along the border with Mexico, the waters off S outhern C a l i fornia h a v e a gain been t e eming w i t h s mugglers in t h e l a s t f e w years, as drug cartels seek new avenues to move illicit cargo into the United States. Last week the resurgence claimed its first American life when smugglers rammed a small Coast Guard vessel with their 30-foot fishing boat, killing a Guard member who was thrown overboard. "There's been an uptick in

tions Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, said HONOLULU — An Alaska he hasn't taken a position yet senator wants $15 million for on how much money may be tsunami debris cleanup on the needed for debris cleanup. West Coast included in a fed- "There are significant discuseral disaster relief package for sions yet to be had but I agree statesaffected by Superstorm that there is a need for funds Sandy. to help mitigate the effects of Sen. Mark Begich said it's tsunami debris impacting our embarrassing that the govern- shores," he said in a statement. ment of Japan has put more Some states haven'tyet used funding toward the debris their$50,000 grants provided cleanup than the U.S. govern- by NOAA earlier this year. In ment has. He said the impact Washington state, for examof debris from the 2011 earth- ple, after seeing an increase in quake and tsunami in Japan debris from May through July, reaching U.S. shores is as officials say things have quimuch a natural disaster as a eted down and the state's plan hurricane, drought or wildfire for dealing with the debris — it's just unfolding in slow callsfor conserving resources motion. where possible. NOAA an"We have to recognize that nounced the grants to the five it's different than any other West Coast states in July. type of disaster because if In Alaska, the grant's gone, it's like Sandy, you see it; it's having gone toward cleanup right there in your face, every- along 25 miles out of about thing at once," he said. "And 2,500 in the state before the in this situation it's kind of weather turned too nasty for like climate change. Things crews to be out. The work don't happen overnight, they was done by Gulf of Alaska happen over a period of time, Keeper, which is dedicated to and when it h appens and cleaning marine debris from accumulates you look back the Alaska coastline. Monitorand say, 'Why didn't we do ing by the group found a huge something?' jump in the weight of debris "We have that option right found at four sites it regularly now to do something," he said. visits. "It's just devastating, just Japan has pledged $5 million for t sunami debris sick," said the group's presicleanup, more than the entire dent, Chris Pallister, who worNational Oceanic and Atmo- ries about the impact of the spheric Administration bud- debris on fish and wildlife. get for dealing with marine Tsunami debris is difficult debris in general in fiscal year to monitor, given that debris 2012. Begich said he considers can break up and winds and a three-to-one match of the ocean currents consistently Japanese funding "the very change. And it's tough to disleast" the federal government tinguish it from the everyday can do to help cleanup efforts debris that has been an ongoin Alaska, Hawaii, California, ing problem for coastal comOregon and Washington. munities for years. At least 16 I t's not c l ear j ust h o w items from among more than quickly Congress will take up 1,400 reports have been firmly the aid package, or how big it traced to the tsunami, includmight be. Senate Appropria- ing a 20-foot boat, pieces of The Associated Press

By laa Lovett

Steve Lee/ U.S. Coast Guard

A rescue helicopter from Alr Statlon Los Angeles flies by the Coast Guard cutter Halibut. As land routes are blocked, smugglers bringing drugs and illegal immigrants are increasingly turning to maritime routes.

In just a few y ears, officials said, drug and human trafficking off the coast here has grown into an elaborate, smuggling at sea because we highly lucrative and increashave been successfulin mak- ingly dangerous operation, as ing it difficult for smuggling smugglers venture farther out organizations at the land bor- to sea and farther north along der," said Claude Arnold, the the coast in search of safe special agent in charge for places to deliver their cargo Immigration a n d C u s toms undetected. Enforcement in Los Angeles. Coast Guard officials said "They're trying everything the death of Chief Petty Offithey can to get their products cer Terrell Horne, 34, was the into the country." first time a Coast Guard memEpisodes involving smug- ber had been killed by smugglers off the California coast glers since prohibition. But have increased fourfold since as rare as it was, the deadly 2 008, with m ore t han 2 0 0 encounter early last Sunday smuggling vessels spotted by near an island off Santa BarU.S. law enforcement agen- bara also demonstrated some cies during the last fiscal year. of the bold tactics smugglers Marijuanaseizures from mar- are using here, putting law enitime smugglers, meanwhile, forcement atever greater risk. "As the ships ar e g oing were up fourfold from just one year earlier. And some smug- further offshore and further glers are also carrying human north, we are dealing with cargo, circumventing the se- larger boats and more horsecurity along the land border power," said Rear Adm. Karl for those with the means to Schultz, the Coast Guard compay for it. mander in the region. "It does Federal officials said there increase the challenge and the was no way to know precisely inherent danger out there to how many smugglers had suc- our folks on the water." cessfully reached California's When the surge in maritime shores, but they believe that smuggling began here around "a largershare" of smugglers 2009, Schultzsaid, smugglers m ake it t h r ough. An d t h e mostly used small boats with flow of drugs and people into single engines that delivered the country from the sea has their payloads to sites in San clearlyundercut some of the Diego County, rarely travelprogress the authorities have ing more than 50 miles north made in blocking off overland of the Mexican border. supply routes. As the government devot-

ed more resources to curbing smuggling, however, the Sinaloa drug cartel, which officials say controls smuggling corridors on both land and sea, has adapted. Coast Guard surveillance aircraft have detected smuggling vessels up to 100 miles offshore, Schultz said, and in the last two years, smugglers have been arrested along remote stretches of beach on California's Central C o ast, more than 300 miles north of the border. To make these longer journeys, smugglers have moved from cheap 20-foot fishing vessels to boats that are often twice that size and sometimes equipped with multiple

engines. H elicopters a n d pl a n e s watch from the air — it was a Coast Guard aircraft that spotted the smugglers before the deadly e ncounter l a st Sunday — while ships pursue smugglers farther and farther offshore. And the authorities have convened a series of task forces, bringing together local, state and federal agencies to fight maritime smug-

which were recovered earlier this month in Hawaii. The Japanese government estimated that 1. 5 m i l lion tons of debris were floating in the ocean in the immediate aftermath of the tsunami, but it's not clear how much is still floating nearly two years on or just what will reach U.S. shores, when. NOAA estimates the bulk of what is coming either has arrived or will in the next year or so — but that's a rough guess. The Japanese government last month predicted the most buoyant debris, such as buoys that littered some A l aska beaches earlier this year, has already arrived. Lumber from houses and boats is expected to begin reaching the West Coast around this month, and mostly submerged debris, like driftwood or waterlogged lumber, is expected around June next year. In Oregon, after a fairly normal year for debris — save for the massive dock that washed ashore from Japan — a recent storm brought foam and other rubbish onto isolated sections of shoreline, said Chris Havel, spokesman for the state's Department of Parks and Recreation. State response teams were also recently activated to dispose of a gas can that washed up. Havel shares Pallister's concerns about the environmental impact of debris as it breaks up. Unlike in Alaska, where beachesare often remote and treacherous during the fall and winter,beaches in Oregon are

largelyaccessible year-round, and Havel was placing orders earlier this week for another 10,000 bags that will be used in cleanup. He placed his last order in July, but anticipates needing more as the winter wears on.

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gling here. " We have directed a l o t of resources towards this because we recognize it as a huge p o tential s ecurity vulnerability," A r nold s aid. "Who's to say they wouldn't be willing to smuggle a terrorist into the country?"

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Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 37/32 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high........ 61 m 1976 Month to date.......... 0.40" Recordlow........ -15in1972 Average monthtodate... 060"

Average high.............. 40 Year to date............ 8.09" Average low .............. 23 Average year to date..... 9.76" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.17 Record24 hours ...0.58 in 2004 *Melted liquid equivalent

S K IREPORT

Astoria ........45/40/0.12....49/41/sh.....50/42/pc Baker City......30/26/0.02....33/27/pc.....42/26/sh Brookings... MM/MM/0.00....58/46/pc.....60/44lpc Burns..........35/30/0.00....36/21/pc.....42/21/pc Eugene........47/37/0.01 ....50/40/pc.....51/39/pc KlamathFalls .. 40/20/000 ...44/23/pc ... 42/21/s Lakeview.......37/27/0.00 ...40/23/pc..... 45/23/s La Pine........37/29/0.00....39/23/pc.....42/26/pc Medford.......43/36/0.00....41/36/pc.....43/35/pc Newport.......46/41/0.13....50/42/sh.....51/40/pc North Bend......52/41/NA.....54/43/c.....55/40/pc Ontario........42/33/0.00....36/24/pc......42/27/c Pendleton......40/35/0.00.....43/33/c.....45/33/pc Portland .......47/38/0.02....48/42/sh.....50/41/pc Prineville.......38/30/0.00.....39/28/c.....46/25/pc Redmond.......41/29/0.00....42/30/pc.....46/27/pc

for solar at noon.

Snow accumulation in inches

1 L 0

ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires.

Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . . 6 . . . . . . . . 30 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 -0 . . . . . . . . 26 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .23-46 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . .46-62 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . . . 44 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl..... . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 . . . . . . . . 50

Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report

Pass Conditions Wigamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0.0...no report 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... . . . . .Chains > 10,000 lbs. Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . . . . 19 Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California..... 0.0... . . .60-70 Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . . . . 20 Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires SquawValley, California..... . .0.0 . . . . . 4-59 Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . .11-51 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Roseburg.......46/39/0.02.....50/39/c......53/37/c Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .11 14 Salem ....... 46/39/0 00 ...49/40/sh ...51/39/pc Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season V ail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . . . 1 8 Sisters.........41/32/0.00.....40/26/c.....44/24/pc For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The Dages......49/35/0.00.....45/35/c.....48/36/pc www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze, sh-showers,r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn-snow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog,dr-drizzle, tr-trace

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

(in the 48 contiguous states):

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:48 a.m...... 3:25 p.m. Venus......5:16 a.m...... 3:04 p.m. Mars.......9:40 a.m...... 6:30 p.m. Jupiter......3 48 p m...... 6:53 a.m. Satum......3:55 a.m...... 2;26 p.m. Uranus....12:56 p.m......1:13 a.m.

Yesterday S unday M o nday The higher the UV Index number, the greater ski report from around the state, representing Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:

Yesterday's state extremes

Jordan Valley

Chr i stmas Valley

Silv e r

36/24

40125

37/22

3 7/21

• 54/44

8E

La Pine39/23

Cr escent • Fort Rock 40/25

Juntura

PLANET WATCH

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

OREGON CITIES

EAST Expect partly sunny and season ably cold conditions.

• Pa ulina 35/24

42127 "

Coos Bay

35 21

Moonsettoday ....1:42 p.m

CENTRAL

33/27

Florence•

HIGH LOW

36 17

Pi •

Sale

HIGH LOW

44 29

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE WEST Mostly cloudy with Sunrisetoday...... 7:29 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday...... 4 27 p.m patchy fog early N ew First F ull Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:30 a.m and showers in the Sunset tomorrow... 4:27 p.m north late. Moonrise today....3:01 a.m Dec. 13 Dec. 19 Dec. 28

'A

Lincoln City '

HIGH LOW

47 25 BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE 5easidev'ssx

HIGH LOW

CONDITIONS • ++tQ

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W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday 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 ......72/36/0.00..54/30/pc.. 45/23/s Grand Rapids....42/30/0.20..40/33/sh. 34/24/sn RapidCity.......40/19/000..20/10/pc.. 33/18/c Savannah.......74/46/0.00 ..75/60/pc. 76/56/pc Akron ..........52/41/006..52/45/sh..46/27/rs GreenBay.......38/27/0.00..34/25/sn.28/17/pc Reno...........52/27/0.00...47/25/s.. 54/27/s Seattle......... 44/38/0.0045/41 .. Ish.. 49/40/c Albany..........43/36/010..44/36/pc...54/33/r Greensboro......63/46/000..68/54/pc. 73/48/sh Richmond.......64/50/0.00..61/53/pc.. 72/44/c SiouxFalls.......29/25/0 00..... 22/0/ .. 22/15/s Albuquerque.....59/30/000.. 46/18/rs. 40/21/pc Harnsburg.......47/39/0.02..46/41/sh. 60/38/sh Rochester, NY....46/39/0.08..42/41/sh.. A8/29/r Spokane....... 35/21/trace... 31/25/c .. 32/28/c Anchorage .......18/6/001..28/23/sn. 31/18/sn Hartford,CT .....45/42/0.25..46/35/pc. 56/36/sh Sacramento......57/42/0.00... 63/39/s .. 64/40/s Springfield, MO ..50/46/000 ..51/23/sh. 34/17/pc Atlanta .........70/54/006..71/57/pc...66/43/t Helena..........31/12/0 33...24/20lc.. 34/22/cSt. Louis.........49/44/024 ..56/29/sh .34/21/pc Tampa..........79/64/0 00 ..81/66/pc. 80/68/pc Atlantic City.....55/48/147..54/50/sh. 61/43/sh Honolulu........83/68/000..82/71Ipc. 82/71/pc Salt Lake City....43/28/002 ..31/22/pc. 35/26lsn Tucson..........72/46/0.00...69/36/s.. 62/34/s Austin..........83/56/000...7536/c.. 49/24/s Houston ........83/62/000...82/46/t.48/34/pc SanAntonio.....78/62/001... 81/41/c .. 50/29/s Tulsa ...........55/49/0.00...49/23/c.. 38/21/s Baltimore .......54/46/000 ..49/45/sh. 66/40/sh Huntsville.......69/57/0.00..70/53/pc...54/32/t SanDiego.......6457/0.00... 67/47/s.. 68/48/s Washington, DC..54/48/000..51/48/sh. 68/40lsh Bitings.........36/16/000..26/17/pc. 37/19/sn Indianapolis.....49/43/0.03... 56/36/t. 39/23/sh SanFrancisco....59/46/0.00... 64/50/s.. 63/51/s Wichita .........46/25/0.00...39/14/c.. 36/20/s Birmingham .. 65/60/000 ..71/60/pc...65/35/t Jackson, MS.....71/56/000... 78/55/c .. 60/35/t SanJose........62/42/000.. 64/45/s 64/46/s Yakima .........45/29/000...38/28/c. 43/29/pc Bismarck........30/15/001 ... 8/2/pc. 25/16/sn Jacksonvile......70/57/000 ..76/60/pc. 80/60/pc SantaFe........52/20/000...35/7/sn. 34/13/pc Yuma...........77/50/0.00... 70/49/s .. 65/44/s Boise...........43/31/0.07 ..36/25/pc. 43/27/pc Juneau..........25/20/0.00.. 36/35/rs...40/33/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........45/43/034 ..49/40/pc. 58/40/sh Kansas City......46/35/0 00...41/20/c .. 32/23/s Bndgeport,CT....50/44/0.23..50/42/pc. 59/41/sh Lansing.........41/29/0.15 ..39/33/sh. 35/23/sn Amsterdam......36/21/000 46/41/sh 39/31/sh Mecca..........79/77/000 .88/70ls.. 87/68/s Buffalo.........45/38/0.18 ..43/43/sh...45/30/r LasVegas.......66/44/0.00...58/36/s .. 57/3B/s Athens..........59/33/010 ..60/44/sh.48/44/pc Mexico City......73/41/0.00..72/46/pc. 73/44/pc Burlington, VT....45/35/001 ..37/31/pc...46/28/r Lexington.......61/52/011 ..65/52/sh. 54/28/sh Auckland........68/55/0.00... 68/54/s.67/51/pc Montreal........39/34/0.01...29/26/s...38/20Ii Caribou,ME.....35/21/001 ..32/18/pc...33/23/i Lincoln..........40/19/000...30/9/pc.30/18/pc Baghdad........68/53/0.00... 68/52/c. 70/57/pc Moscow........25/25/026...28/14/c.. 20/15/c Charleston, SC...70/48/000 ..74/59/pc. 72/57/pc Little Rock.......69/55/0.00... 73/40lt. 44/26/pc Bangkok........81/79/0.19... 92/73/s .. 91/74/s Nairobi.........64/61/0.00 ..76/56/pc...77/56/t Charlotte........69/47/000 ..71/56/pc .. 72/48/c LosAngeles......66/53/0 00... 66/52/s .. 72/51/s Beifng..........19/14/0 00 .. 22/19/pc. 31/22/pc Nassau.........82/68/0 00 .. 79/69/sh. 78/74/pc Chattanooga.....70/54/000 ..69/54/pc...56/36/t Louisville........60/52/0 75..65/44/sh. 46/28/sh Beirut..........68/59/1.2968/58/pc. .. 68/55/pc New Delh/.......57/50/0.00...79/50ls ..76/50/s Cheyenne.......40/23/001 ...19/9/pc.. 31/15/c Madison Wl.....39/27/000.. 36/21/rs. 26/15/pc Berlin...........25/10/000..29/27/sn.32/23/sn Osaka..........50/37/0.00 ..44/33/pc. 45/35/pc Chicago.........42/36/015..43/27/sh.31/20/pc Memphis....... 63/60/008 ..72/40/t. 45/28/sh Bogota.........68/50/0.00..67/46lpc .. 74/49/s Oslo.............25/7/0.00 .. 16/12/sf... 14/7/c Cincinnati.......57/49/ON ..58/45/sh.47/28/sh Miami..........82/71/0.02..82/72/pc. 82/72/pc Budapest........28/21/000..29/16/pc.. 27/21/c Ottawa.........36/32/0.14...28/23/s. 36/19/sh Cleveland.......48/39/006 ..51/43/sh. 44/29/sh Milwaukee......38/33/0.13..40/25lsh. 28/20/pc Buenos Aires.....84/57/0.00... 88/64/s...88/57/t Paris............39/27/0.14..43/38/sh .. 36/33/c Colorado Spnngs.55/18/000...19/7/sn. 34/17/pc Minneapolis.....33/25/0 01... 32/4/sn. 16/11/pc CaboSanLucas ..81/61/0.00 ..81/60/pc.. 80/54/s Rio de Janeiro....95/81/0.00... 78/71/t...82/74/t Columbia,MO...46/41/0.07..46/22/sh.. 32/18/s Nashvite........64/59/0.21 ..70/50/sh. 52/27/sh Cairo...........70/55/0.00... 72/54/c. 70/50/pc Rome...........55/37/0.00... 46/31/s .. 50/40/c Columbia,SC....72/49/0.00..74/57/pc. 74/58/pc New Orleans.....77/55/0.00 ..76/64/pc...72/42/t Calgary..........10/I/0.00 ..25/22/pc .. 27/20/c Santiago........88/54/0.00... 68/52/s .. 66/56/s Columbus GA....71/53/000 ..73/57/pc...71/47/t New York.......50/44/0 32..51/47/sh. 65/45/sh Cancun...........82//000..81/71/pc...83/71/t SaoPaulo.......84/73/0.00... 73/65/t...81/70/t Columbus OH....54/48/005 .. 55/47/sh. 49/29/sh Newark Nl......50/42/0 25..51/46/sh. 65/44/sh Dublin..........45/32/0 00 .. 47/32/pc. 40/34/pc Sapporo ........28/25/0.00 30/23/sn .. ..33/22/sf Concord,NH.....38/32/024..45/30/pc...51/34/r Norfolk,VA......63/52/001 ..64/54/pc. 73/48/pc Edinburgh.......48/30/0 00.. 39/33/pc. 34/27/pc Seoul............18/9/0 00 .. 21/16/pc. 27/14/pc Corpus Christi....85/69/0.00...88/50/c. 57/37/pc OklahomaCity...54/44/0.00...46/22/c .. 37n7ls Geneva.........37/28/0.22... 29/26/c. 32/25/sn Shangha/........37/34/0.00..47/34/pc. 47/37/pc DallasFtWorth...70/50/000...72/32/c.. 42/25/s Omaha.........40/29/000....30/8/c. 27/18/pc Harare..........79/63/000 ..72/60/sh...72/62/t Singapore.......81/79/0.00... 86/78/t...88/78/t Dayton.........54/46/004 ..55/42lsh...44/27/r Orlando.........81/63/0.00 ..82/64/pc. 83/65/pc Hong Kong......68/64/000 ..68/65/pc. 68/63/pc Stockholm........28/5/0.00 ..21/19/pc.. 29/26/c Denver..........52/22/000 ..24/10/sn.36/22/pc PalmSprings.....77/48/000... 74/47/s .. 73/46/s Istanbul.........52/43/0.03... 56/53/r.50/42/sh Sydney..........81/66/000 82/60/sh. .. 70/61/pc DesMoines......40/27/000...36/13/c. 28/17/pc Peoria..........42/36/0.03..45/25/sh. 31/17/pc lerusalem.......56/49/009... 65/52/c.62/46/pc Taipei...........59/59/0.00 57/56/pc. .. 60/59/pc Detroit..........43/36/020..42/37/sh. 41/29/sn Philadelphia.....52/45/019 ..51/49/sh. 63/42/sh Johanneshurg....82/59/0.00...79/60/t...65/54lt Tel Aviv.........64/57/010...72/59/c.70/56/pc Duluth..........26/16/000...30/6/sn..14/5/pc Phoenix.........73/51/000...68/45/s.. 65/44/s Lima...........73/66/0.00 .. 76/64/pc.75/64/pc Tokyo...........61/41/0.00 ..47/34/pc. 45/33/pc El Paso..........67/49/000 ..65/32/pc.. 50/28/s Pittsburgh.......54/48/012 ..52/49/sh...51/30/r Lisbon..........55/46/000 ..50/45/pc 59/47/pc Toronto.........41/36/0 12 33/31/sf. 37/29/sh Fairbanks...... -22/-28/000 ..-5/-11/sn...1/-7/sn Portland,ME.....39/34/0.21..47/30/pc...46/37/r London.........43/37/0 00.. 48/35/sh. 36/28/pc Vancouver.......41/32/0.09..37/35/sh.39/37/sh Fargo...........32/19/000...13/4/c.14/10/pc Provrdence......49/44/038..49/38/pc. 59/40/sh Madrid .........52/36/0.00... 51/32/s .. 52/33/c Vienna..........27/21/0.01...30/26/s..34/25/rs Flagstaff........51/23/000 ..39/14/pc .. 42/16/s Raleigh.........66/50/0 01 ..70/57/pc .. 76/52/c Manila..........82/77/000..88/76/pc. 86/75/pc Warsaw..........23/9/0 06..26/20/pc.. 25/20/c

WEST NEWS

Reduced snowfall from warming harms winter sports industry By Peter FImrlte San Francisco Chronicle

Snow and ski industry dollars have been vanishing at an alarming pace around the country as winter temperatures have risen, but California's Sierra Nevada has yet to feel the full effect of what researchers said this week is an impending global disaster. The ski and snow sports industries in 38 states have lost 27,000 jobs and as much as $1 billion in revenue over the past decade aloneas a result of reduced snowfall and shorter winters, according to a study commissioned by the environmental advocacy groups Protect Our Winters and the NaturalResources Defense Council. "We need to protect one of America's greatest assets — a

stable climate," the report, titled "Climate Impacts on the Winter Tourism Economy in the United States," concluded. "Without it, a vibrant winter sports industry, the economies of mountain communities everywhere, and the valued lifestyle of winter will be gone, not just for us, bttt for our children." But while the rate of warming has tripled in the rest of the United States since 1970, California has partly sidestepped Mother Nature'stemperature tantrum, the report and previous scientific studies revealed. The study's temperature charts show that the mountainous regions of California, including the Lake Tahoe region, were the only places in the country where wintertime temperatures remained stable

Well-known wolf slain outside ofYellowstone New York Times News Service Yellowstone National Park's best-known w o l f , b e l oved by many tourists and valued by scientists who tracked its movements, was killed Thursday outside the park's boundaries, Wyoming wildlife officials reported. The wolf, known as 832F to researchers, was the alpha female of the park's highly visible Lamar Canyon pack and had become so well known that some w i l d life w a tchers referred to her as a "rock star." The animal had been a tourist favorite for most of the past six years. The wolf was fitted with a $4,000 collar with GPS track-

ing technology, which is being returned, said Daniel Stahler, a project director for Yellowstone's wolf program. Based on data from the wolf's collar, researchers knew that her pack rarelyventured outside the park, and then only for brief periods, Stahler said. This year's hunting season in the northern Rockies has been especially controversial because of the high numbers

of popular wolves and wolves fitted with r esearch collars that have been k i l led j u st outside Yellowstone in Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. Wolf hunts, sanctioned by recent federal and state rules applying t o t h e no r t h ern Rockies, have been fiercely debated in the r egion. The wolf p o p ulation h a s r ebounded since they were reintroduced in the mid-1990s to counter their extirpation a few years earlier. Many ranchers and hunters say the wolf hunts are a reasonable way to reduce attacks on livestock and protect big game populations. This fall, the first wolf hunts in decades were authorized in Wyoming. The wolf killed last week was the eighth collared by researchers that was shot this year after leaving the park's boundary. The deaths have dismayed scientists who track wolves to study their habits, population spread and threats to their survival. Still, some found 832F's death to be particularly disheartening.

or went down over the past 42 years. That information is

upon us, but I remind them that the year before we had over 800 largely backed up by Scripps inches of snow and we were skiResearch I n stitute s t u dies ing On the July 4th weekend." showing the southern Sierra That doesn't mean things are snowpack has actually gotten hunky dory inthe Golden State, larger and the central Sierra said Chris Field, the director of has generally remained the the department of global ecolsame over the past 50 years. ogy at the Carnegie Institution "There have arguably been for Science. shortened seasons because of While winter snowfall has a lack of snow, but there have not declined over much of the also been seasons when the Sierra, "California temperasnow was great and jobs were tures haveincreased dramaticreated," said A ndy W i r t h, cally over the past century," president and chief executive said Field who is also a profesofficer of the A lpine Mead- sor of biology and environows and Squaw Valley resorts mental earth systems science near Lake Tahoe, where jobs at Stanford University and and revenues have remained co-chairman of an I ntergovrelatively stable. "This last ski ernmental Panel on Climate season we had people really Change working group. strongly suggesting that the The state has warmed 1 deimpacts of climate change were gree Fahrenheit, from an aver-

shown that the Sierra snowpack in 2100 could be as little as 10 percent of what it is today, he said. The winter tourism study, conducted by two University of New Hampshire researchers, went a step further, projecting that winter temperatures will

be 4 to 10 degrees higher by the end of the century, causing SnOW depthS tO deCline n25 to 100 percent in the Western United States." As a result, thousands of jobs could be lost at ski resorts, which would impact local businesses, including restaurants, hotels, grocery stores, gas stations, winter snowmobile and sports equipment rental, and retail outlets. That could mean billions of dollars in lost revenue and tax dollars.

8

age temperatureof58.5 degrees to 59.5 degrees since 1895, he said. Consequently, the snowpack in the northern part of the Sierra has been shrinking. So too has the amount of annual snow overthree-quarters ofthe Western United States, an area that includes Montana, Wyoming and New Mexico, he said. "In general across the U.S. we see m or e p r ecipitation across the northern tier states and less precipitation in the southwestover the past 50 or 100 years," Field said, nbut the warming trend year round is clear across the whole U.S. over that time." What that means, he said, is that the Sierra snowpack is likely to shrink over the next 30 years, largely as a result of climate change. Projections have

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Primary Care. Specialty Care. Urgent Care. Total Care. Bend Eastside Clinic I Bend Westside Clinic I Sisters I Redmond beridmemorialclinic.com I Call 541-382-4900 to make an a o i ntment


TVS Movies, C2

Calendar, C3 Horoscope, C3 Milestones, C6 Puzzles, C7 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

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Courtesy Barb Gonzalez

Rainforests of the World, a four-story glass dome that contains a living tropical rainforest, is the centerpiece of the newly redesigned California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. More than 1,600 live animals live in the 90-foot-diameter hemisphere.

• San Francisco'sGoldenGate Park is packedwith interest, including a living tropical rainforest By John Gottberg Anderson

GoldenGatePark

FRANCISCO 8AY

I

Golden Gate Bridge

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OAKLA

LombardSt; Geary Btyd.

San FranciscoOakland Bay Bridge

• Bend OREGON

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Sciences building — was designed by famed architect Renzo Piano, SAN FRANCISCO — The Golden whose smaller prototype dome, and Gate Bridge. Fisherman's Wharf. the only other one of its kind in the Alcatraz. Chinatown. To the long list world, stands in his native Italy. of this California city's remarkable The Academy building notably attractions, add a new one — a living features a dramatic, 2'/z-acre living tropical rainforest roof covered with entirely contained California NpRTHWE5T TRAVEL native within a four-story plants and wildglass dome. flowers. Beneath Next week: Virginia City, Nev. f t f its seven manmade the World is the hills, the recreated centerpiece of the newly redesigned museum has restoredevery element California Academy of Sciences in housed in the original 1915 strucGolden Gate Park. It is a spectacular ture that was torn down in 2004 to permanent exhibit, one that provides make way for the new building. Its a home for more than 1,600 live Kimball Natural History Museum, animals and thousands of individual Steinhart Aquarium and Morrison plants in a hemisphere measuring 90 Planetarium, as well as renowned feet in diameter. research and education programs, This exhibit — and, indeed, the persist in 21st-century form. entire new $488-million Academy of See Golden Gate/C4 For The Bulletin

!

RA N

.San Francisco

Greg Cross /The Bulletin

Springsteen biographer to speak inBend—possibly with special guest Ifyou go What:"Bruce" author Peter Ames Carlin

When:6:30 p.m. Thursday Where:East BendPublic Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend

Cost:Free Contact:http://j.mp/brucereading or 541-350-3537

By David Jasper

or C) the Rosalita behind "Rosalita

The Bulletin

(Come Out Tonight)"?

Let's play a game. When "Bruce" — as in B r uce Springsteen — biographer Peter Ames Carlin visits Bend on Thursday as part o f D eschutes Public Library's "Know Heroes" series, he may (note: may) have with him one of the real-life inspirations behind a Springsteen song. Is it A) the Johnny of "Johnny 99," B) the Sherry from "Sherry Darling"

Carlin revealed the answer toward the end of a fascinating phone interview about Springsteen last week. Through his earnest reporting, Carlin, a Portland-based writer who'd already written biographies on Brian Wilson and Paul McCartney, earned himselfunprecedented access to Springsteen. When he set out to begin work on the book in the fall of 2009, Carlin

had no connection to Springsteen or his camp. Fellow music writer Dave Marsh advised him to "put in your request with his spokesperson, and they're going to say 'No,' but when they do, just go ahead and write the book you want to write. Eventually, they'll deal with you or they won't, but you'll still end up with the book that you wanted to write," Carlin recalls Marsh

saying. See 'Bruce'/C7

• e

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!

Peter Ames Carlin, the Portland author of "Bruce," wrote the Bruce Springsteen biography with the musician's cooperation.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

T

a M O V IES

Barbara Walterspresents

'FascinatingPeople'picks By Chuck Barney Contra Costa Times

"The Mistle-Tones" 8 tonight, ABC Family "The Mistle-Tones" sounds like yet another gooey, madef or-TV h oliday m o vie. I t ' s

pegged to a couple of crooning frenemies (Tia

Rod Stewart, Blake Shelton and Carly Rae Jepsen.

"Barbara Walters Presents the 10 Most Fascinating People of 2012" 9:31 p.m. Wednesday, ABC Another year,more famous folk. And now it's

M owry and Tori T y g ppTLigHT Spelling) who head up rival ensembles destinedfor a Christmas Eve

sing-off. "The Amazing Race" 8 tonight, CBS All that panting and gasp-

ing you hear is coming from the final four teams in "The Amazing Race." They'll cross the finish line in New York tonight and promptly search out a good masseuse. "All About Christmas Eve" 9 tonight, Lifetime Call off the search party. "American Idol" finalists (and

real-life couple) Ace Young and Diana DeGarmo have been located. They make cameo appearances as themselves in the new film "All A bout Christmas Eve."

"American Country Awards"

t i m e for the vet-

eran newswoman to tell us who was all that. Her list includes New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, "Fifty Shades of Grey" author E L James, Olympic gymnast Gabby Douglas, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, actorproducer-director Ben Affleck, "Family Guy" mastermind S eth MacFarlane, and t h e wildly popular boy band One Direction. Who's No. I'? You'll have to watch to find out. "Arrow" 8 p.m. Wendesday, The CW On "Arrow," Oliver (Stephen Amell) throws a family Christmas party in an attempt to returna sense of normalcy to the Queen household. Funny, there's nothing "normal" about a guy who dresses up in a weird costume and shoots pointy objects at bad people.

"Glee"

8 p.m. Monday, Fox Apparently, country music singers just haven't been feted enough this year. Tonight brings the "American Country Awards" with Trace Adkins and Kristin Chenoweth presiding over an honor roll chosen by fan votes.

9 p.m. Thursday, Fox Tonight's h o l iday-themed "Glee" episode is a tribute to the 2003 film, "Love Actually." We have no idea how it will turn out, but we predict that someone will sing a song or two.

"Michael Buble:

"Rudolph the Red-Nosed

Home for the Holidays"

Reindeer"

10:01 p.m.Monday, NBC Despite all the recent flak involving Elmo's puppeteer, the "Sesame Street"character will still be part of the "Michael Buble: Home for the Holidays" special. Other guests include

8 p.m. Friday, CBS Yes, we've seen it something like, a thousand times, but "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" is still a holly-jolly TV treat. It fact, you might even say it glows.

LOCAL MOVIE TIMES FOR SUNDAY,DEC.9

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

BEND

700 N.W. BondSt., Bend, 541-330-8562

Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S.Highway 20, Bend,541-382-6347

ANNA KARENINA(R) 12:30, 3:45, 7 ARGO(R) 1, 4:15, 7:15 LINCOLN(PG-13) Noon, 3:15, 6:30 THE SESSIONS (R) 1:15, 4, 6:15 SKYFALL(PG-13) 12:15, 3:30, 6:45 SMASHED(R) 12:45, 3, 6

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & 1MAX 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend,541-382-6347

CLOUDATLAS(R) 12:30, 4:15, 8 THE COLLECTION (R) 1:45, 4:45, 7:55, 10:10 END OFWATCH(R) 12:50, 3:55, 7:10, 9:50 FLIGHT (R) 12:35, 3:45, 6:55, 10:05 KILLING THEMSOFTLY(R) 1:35, 4:35, 7:15, 9:40 LIFE OF PI(PG) 1:25, 7:25 LIFE OF PI3-D (PG) 12:10, 3:10, 4:30, 6:10, 9:25, 10:20 LINCOLN (PG-13) Noon, 1, 3:20, 4:20,6:40,7:45, IO PLAYING FOR KEEPS(PG-13) 1:05, 3:50, 6:30, 9:15 RED DAWN(PG-13) 1:50, 4:50, 7:35, 10:15 RISE OFTHEGUARDIANS (PG) 12:25, 3, 6 RISEOF THE GUARDIANS 3-D

BALTO (1995 — G) 3 FRANKENWEENIE(PG) Noon LOOPER(R) 9 THE PERKSOFBEINGA WALLFLOWER(PG-13) 6 After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only.Youngerthan21may attend screenings before 7 p.m.if accompaniedby a legalguardian.

869 N.W. Tin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271

REDMOND Redmond Cinemas

KATU

I'j K TVZ 0 0 0 KBNZ 0 K OHD 0 0 0

at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 tt /MAX. • There may be an additional fee for 3-Oand IMAX films. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.

FLIGHT(R)3: I5,6: I5 LINCOLN (PG-13) 3, 6:15 PLAYINGFORKEEPS(PG-13) 2, 4:15, 6:45 SKYFALL(PG-13) 2:45, 6 WE GREW WINGS (no MPAA rating)

WRECK-IT RALPH(PG) Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:50

PRINEVILLE

1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505

PLAYING FOR KEEPS(PG-13) 12:40, 2:45, 4:50, 7 RED DAWN(PG-13) 1:05, 3:10, 5:15, 7:20 RISEOF THE GUARDIANS 3-D (PG) 12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:10 THE TWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKING DAWN — PART2 (PG-13) 2:10, 4:35, 7

Pine Theater 214 N. Main St., Prineville 541-416-1014

CLOUDATLAS (R) Noon, 3:30, 7 RISEOF THE GUARDIANS (UPSTAIRS — PG)1:10, 4:10, 7:10 Theupstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

1535 S.W. DdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777

RED DAWN(PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 RISE OFTHEGUARDIANS (PG) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 SKYFALL(PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 2:30, 5:45, 9 THETWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKING DAWN — PART2 (PG-13) 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:30

Chooset)d dishwasher that's riciht for you!

SKYFALL (PG-13) 12:05, 3:15, 6:25, 9:35 SKYFALL IMAX (PG-13) 12:15, 3:30, 6:45, 9:55 THE TWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKINGDAWN— PART2 (PG-13) 1:15, 4:05, 7, 9:45 WRECK-IT RALPH(PG) 12:45, 3:35, 6:15, 9:10

ALSO INHD;ADD600 To CHANNELNo '

Accessibility devices are

available for somemovies

720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800

Madras Cinema 5

HOLY MOTORS (no MPAA rating) 6 SIGUR ROS: VALTARI FILM EXPERIMENT(no MPAA rating) 8:30 STARLET(no MPAA rating) 1 WUTHERINGHEIGHTS(no MPAA rating) 3

(PG) 9

EDITOR'S NOTES:

Sisters Movie House

MADRAS

Tin Pan Theater

Come in now for year-end specials on many models.

HNsoN TV.APPLIANCE

LDCALTV LIsTINr.s SUNDAY PRIME TIME 12/9/12

SISTERS

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

Providing Unparaiied service across a variety of industries since 1983.

541-389-1505 400 SW Bluff Dr Ste 200 Bend, OR 97702

E~vress

Lin Lin is nn opproximotely 4 yeor old Female dilute Tortie Domestic Medium Hoir. She wns recently living in on indoor/outdoor home and wns very comFortable with thatsituation. Linhopes to find a home where she cnn enjoy the ottrnctions of the outdoors, ond still have a saFe nnd cozy place inside where she cnn totolly relox. If you ore interested in taking Lia home, come by the shelter ond meet her todoy.

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Oregon Feed + Pet

*In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/BlackButte Di ital PM-Prineville/Madras SR-Sunriver L-LaPine

t 1RK~RRRX~RKHK~RER2RRRK~RRK~RREK~RRR2RREI~~RKHK~REEK~RERE~~ REHK~RDiRH KATU News World News K A TU News at 6 (N) n ce America's Funniest Home Videos Prep. Landing Prep 8 Landing "ChristmasWithHolly" (2012)SeanParis. Premiere. n 'PG'cc KATU News (11:35) Castle

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(11:01) Bethe Boss(N) 'PG'

(3:00) ** nyotting Hill" (1999) Julia **"yours, Mine8 Ours" (2005) DennisQuaid, ReneRusso.The marriage ot **** "Mirac/e on 34th Street" (1947) Maureen0'Hara, John Payne. An (10:15) **** "Mirac/e on34th Street" (1947, Fantasy) Maureen0'Hara. An Roberts. Premiere. « two widowed parents createsone large family. « adwoman'sboyfrienddefendsMacy's Santa in court. « adwoman'sboyfrienddefendsMacy's Santain court. « *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Gator Boys n 'PG' cc Finding Bigfoot: Further Evidence Finding Bigfoot n 'PG' RattlesnakeRepublic (N) n 'PG' Gator Boys: Xtra Bites (N) n '14' Finding Bigfoot (N) n 'PG' Gator Boys: Xtra Bites n '14' BRAVO1 37 4 4 Real Housewives/Beverly Real Housewives/Beverly Shahs of Sunset The Real Housewives of Atlanta The Real Housewives of Atlanta (10:01) Shahs of Sunset (N) Wha t Happens Housewives/Atl. R e ba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc R e ba 'PG' cc C MT Artists of the Year 2012 n 'PG' cc ** "Rumor HasIt..." (2005)Jennifer Aniston, Kevin Costner. Premiere. ir « CMT 190 32 42 53 Reba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc Rumor HasIt... CNBC 54 36 40 52 Danger. Rich Secret Lives of Faking the Grade: Classroom A m erican Greed 60 Minutes on CNBC Cruise Inca Big Money/High Seas American Greed Paid Program Octaspring Ma. CNN 55 38 35 48 Who is Black in America (N) Pie rs Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom(N) Who is Black in America Piers MorganTonight CNN Newsroom Who is Black in America coM 135 53 135 47(4:16) ** "Semi-Pro" (2008)Wil Ferrell. « (6:18) *** "HolTub TimeMachine" (2010)JohnCusack. « (8:34) *** 'Wedding Crashers" (2005,Comedy)OwenWilson, VinceVaughn. « (11:05) Tosh.0 Futurama '14' CDTV 11 (4:30) City Club of Central Oregon Talk of the Town Local issues. D e sert Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Adv Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW The Yoga Show The YogaShow Talk of the TownLocal issues. CSPAN 61 20 12 11 Q&A Prime Minister Road to the White House Q&A Prime Minister Road to the White House W ashington ThisWeek *DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie Good.oharlie Dog With a Blog Good-Charlie "Secret of theWings"(2012)Premiere. n cc Shake It Up! 'G' Dog With a Blog Jessie 'G' cc Good-Charlie Shake It Up! 'G' Austin 8 Ally n Jessie 'G' cc *DISC 156 21 16 37 Moonshiners n '14' « Moonshiners n '14' ©c Moonshiners n '14' « Mythsusters n 'PG' « Volcano TimeBomb(N) n « Bra i nwashed n '14' « Mythsusters n 'PG' « *E! 1 36 2 5 Giuliana & Bill 'PG' Giuliana & Bill'PG' Giuliana 8 Bill DaddyDuty'PG' L eann Rimes (N) Keeping UpWiththeKardashians IceLovesCoco LeannRimes The Soup '14' ESPN 21 23 22 23 Sportsoenter College Football Bowl ManiaSpecial (N) (Live) « Sportsoenter (N)(Live) « Sportsoenter (N) (Live) cc Sportsoenter cc ESPN2 22 24 21 24 World Series of Poker Europe FinalTableFromCannes, France. 2012 World Series of Poker FinalTableFromLasVegas. World Series of Poker -Europe ESPNC 23 25 123 25 The Dotted Line « 30 for 30 cc 30 for 30 cc 30for30 cc The Dotted Line « Manute Bol H-Lite Ex. H-L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. H.L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. ESP NFC Prese H-Lite Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124203SportsNation Sportsoenter Sportsoenter (N)(Live) cc Sportsoenter (N)(Live) cc *** "Holidayin Handcuffs" (2007)Melissa JoanHart. 'PG' "TheMislie-Tones"(2012)Tori Spelling, Tia Mowry.Premiere. 'PG' "TheMistie-Tones" (2012, Musical) ToriSpelling, Tia Mowry.'PG' FAM 67 29 19 41 "Santa Baby 2:Christmas" FNC 57 61 36 50 Huckabee(N) Fox NewsSunday Geraldo at Large(N)'PG'cc Huc kabee Stossel Geraldo at Large n 'PG' cc Fox NewsSunday *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Mystery Diners Health Inspect Diners, Drive Diners, Drive The Next Iron Chef: Redemption Sugar Dome RockStar Concert T he Next Iron Chef: Redemption Restaurant: Impossible (N) Res t aurant Stakeout ** "Step Brothers" (2008,Comedy)Wil Ferrell, John C.Reily. *** "TheOther Guys"(2010,Comedy)Wil Ferrell, MarkWahlberg, Eva Mendes. *** "TheOther Guys"(2010)Wil Ferrell. FX 131 (3:00) ** "TheProposal" (2009) HGTV 176 49 33 43 Property Brothers 'G' « House Hunters Hunters Int'I M i l lion Dollar Rooms 'G' « Extreme Homes'G' « Property Brothers 'G' « House Hunters Renovation (N) 'G' House Hunters Hunters Int'I *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' Ax Men All orNothing(N)'PG' B a mazon (N) '14' cc (11:02) OutbackHunters (N)'14' "ChristmasAngel" (2009)K.C. Clyde,Kari Hawker. « "Ali AboutChristmasEve" (2012)Haylie Duff. Premiere. « LIFE 138 39 20 31 "Hoiiy's Holiday" (2012,Romance-Comedy)Claire Coffee. 'PG'a« (11:02) "Christmas Angel" (2009) MSNBC 59 59 128 51 Caught onCamera(N) MaximumDrama(N) To Catch a Predator Petaluma1 Lockup InsideAnamosa LockupMiami'sprisonsystem. Lockup NewMexico Meet the Press cc Girls"(2004,Comedy)LindsayLohan,RachelMcAdams,TinaFey.n MTV 192 22 38 57 Teen Mom 2 n Teen Mom 2 Catfish: The TVShow Kim8 Matt Catfish: The TV Show n '14' 1 0 D n Top Most Stylin Stars *** "Mean Jersey Shore NICK 82 46 24 40 Victorious 'G' iCarly 'G' cc M arvin Marvin Spongesob S p ongesob S p ongeBob S e e Dad Run "Merry Christmas, Drake 8Josh" (2008) Drake Bell. n 'Y7' cc The Nanny'PG' Friends n 'PG' (11:33) Friends Dprah's Next Chapter Usher'PG' Oprah's Next Chapter Fergie 'PG' Dprah's Next Chapter 'PG' « Dpr a h's Next Chapter (N) n Dpr a h's Next Chapter 'PG' « Dpr a h's Next Chapter 'PG' « OWN 161103 31 103Dprah's Next Chapter n 'PG' ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Tennis College Basketball Valparaiso atNewMexico High School Football WIAAClass4A Championship: Skyline vs. Bellarmine Prep The Lott Trophy Presentation (N) ** "Mission:Impossible" (1996)TomCruise. Treachery in Pragueputs anagentonthe run. « SPIKE 132 31 34 46 (5:14) ** "Walking Tall" (2004,Action) TheRock, JohnnyKnoxville. n (10:18) ** "Mission: Impossible" (1996)n « *** 'Yndiana Jonesandthe Last Crusade" (1989, Adventure) HarrisonFord, SeanConnery. cc ** "indiana Jonesand theKingdom of the Crystal Skull" (2008)Harrison Ford,Cate Blanchett. SYFY 133 35 133 45"Inthe Nameof the King" TBN 05 60 130 Joel Dsteen K e rry Shook B e lievervoice Creflo Dollar M ary and Joseph: A Story of Faith Behind Scenes Christmas with The Well « The Perfect Gift *TBS 16 27 11 28 Madea Goes * * "Tyler Perry's ** "Tyler Perry'sWhyDid I GetMarried Too?" (2010) Tyler Perry. «(DVS) ** "Tyler Perry's WhyDid / GetMarried Too?" I CanDoBad Aii By Myself" (2009)Tyler Perry. cc(DVS) *** "We'reNo Angels" (1955,Comedy)HumphreyBogart, Aldo Ray.Three ** "Ladyin the Lake" (1946)Robert Montgomery,AudreyTotter. Philip Mar- **** "TheCrowd" (1928,Drama)Eleanor Boardman,JamesMurray. Silent. *** "L'Amore" (1948) AnnaMagnani TCM 101 44 101 29 Devil's Islandescapeescometo theaid ot a family. « lowe gets involvedwith murder, graft andwomen. « A couplestruggle tomakethe most ot city life. Sylvia Bataille. Premiere. *TLC 178 34 32 34 Hoarding: Buried Alive 'PG' « Hoa rding: Buried Alive 'PG' « Hoa rding: Buried Alive 'PG' « Sis t er Wives Fr '14' « Sister Wives PolygamisCults t '14' Sin City Rules (N) rt '14' « Sister Wives PolygamisCults t '14' *** "TheTown"(2010,CrimeDrama) BenAffleck, RebeccaHall, Jon Hamm.cc ***"The Town (2010)BenAtfleck. « *TNT 17 26 15 27 Assault-Precnct ** "S.W.A.T." (2003,Action) SamuelL. Jackson, Colin Farrell. Premiere. rc 'TOON 84 Adventure Time Adventure Time "PokemontheMovie:Kyurem vs.theSword" Dragons: Riders Looney Tunes Dragons: Riders The Oblongs n King of the Hill King of the Hill Cleveland Show Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' 'TRAV 179 51 45 42 Toy Hunter 'G' cc ToyHunter'PG' ToyHunter'PG' ToyHunter'PG' ToyHunter'PG' Sturgis: BikerMadness'PG' Stu r gis: MetalMania(N)'PG' Da n gerousaroundsBolivia'PG' Sturgis:Cops'PG're TVLND 65 47 29 35 Roseanne'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King ofQueens NCIS Capitol Offense 'PG'cc NCIS Heartlandn 'PG' rz NCIS Silent Nightn '14' ac NCIS Faithrr 'PG' ~c NCIS FalseWitness n 'PG' rc ** "Quantumof Solace" (2008) USA 15 30 23 30 NCIS AgentAfloat n '14' cc ** "Notorious" (2009,Biography) Angela Bassett, DerekLuke, JamalWoolard. rr T.l. and Tiny Marrying, Game Marrying, Game VH1 191 48 37 54 Most Shocking Music Moments Planet Rock: TheStory of Hip Hop and the Crack Generation ci *AMC 102 40 39

**"Click" 2006, ComedyAdamSandler. Fr'PG-13' « ThomasCrown ENCR 106401 306401(4:30) ** "An unfinished Life" 2005'PG-13' « (6:20) ** "My FavoriteMartian" 1999 'PG' « (9:50) ** "Bringing Down the House" 2003 « ***"Men of Honor"2000, DramaRobert DeNiro, CubaGooding Jr. 'R' « ***"Fre quency"2000,FantasyDennisQuaid.'PG-13'« FMC 104204104120***"Men of Honor"2000, DramaRobert DeNiro, CubaGoodingJr. 'R' a« UFC: Hendersonvs. Diaz Prelims The Ultimate Fighter n '14' The Ultimate Fighter n '14' UFC: Hendersonvs. Diaz UFC Tonight UFC Champion The Ultimate Fighter n '14' FUEL 34 Golf FranklinTempletonShootout, Final RoundFromNaples, Fla. (N) Golf Central (N) Golf FranklinTempletonShootout, Final RoundFromNaples, Fla. GOLF 28 301 27 301Golf *** "A Princess forChristmas" (2011) KatieMcGrath. 'G' « "Helpforthe Holidays" (2012)SummerGlau. Premiere. 'G' « "MatchmakerSanta" (2012, Romance)Lacey Chabert. 'G' « HALL 66 33175 33 (4:00)"TheCasefor Christmas" **"The Changeup" 2011,ComedyRyanReynolds. Anoverworked lawyer Girls Pilot n (4 30) *** "Rio"2011 Voi c es ot Anne (615) ** "Journey 2: The Mysteri o us Isl a nd" 2012 Dwayne Johnson. A di s (10 35) Girls Va- (11 05) Enlight- (1135) EnlightHBO 25501 425501 'MA' cc Hathaway. n 'G' cc tress signalleads ateen to anisland ot treasures. n 'PG' and his carefreebuddyswitch bodies. n 'R' cc gina Panic 'MA' ened Pilot 'MA' ened n 'MA' * "Friday the 13th — A NewBeginning"1985 John Shepard. 'R' "Fridaythe 13th-New" I FC 105 1 0 5 "Friday 13th: Final Chapter" Whisker Wars Portlandia '14' * "Friday the 13th:TheFinal Chapter"1984 Kimberly Beck. 'R' (435) *** "Chronicle" 2012Dane ** "Half Pass" 2011OwenWilson. Twomarried menget (745) **** "L A. Confidential"1997, Crime DramaKevin Spacey, Russell Crowe,GuyPearce. ** "A Very Harold 8 Kumar 3DChristmas"2011, Com- "Sweet Prudence M AX 00508 5 0 8DeHaan.Fi 'PG-13' « oneweektodowhatevertheyplease.'R' A youngpolice officersearchesfor justice in 1950sL.A. rr 'R' « edy JohnCho, Kal Penn.Fr'R' « 8 Erotic" Dragon Wars: Fire andFury 'PG' Drugs, Inc. (N) '14' Alaska StateTroopers (N)'14' D r ugs, Inc. '14' Alaska State Troopers '14' Dragon Wars: Fire andFury 'PG' Wicked Tuna '14' N GC 157 1 5 7 S p ongeBob L e gend-Korra Legend-Korra Dragon Ball Z Iron Man: Armor NTDON 89 115189115Ddd Parents Ddd Parents W ild Grinders Wild Grinders Planet Sheen Planet Sheen Robot, Monster Ddd Parents Spongesob Hu n t Adventure Realtree Road Live 2 Hunt W i l dgame Ntn Ljlt. Adventures The Season OUTD 37 307 43 307Hunt Adventure Wildgame Ntn Realtree Road Truth Hunting Bushman Show Bone Collector Craig Morgan Red Arrow

History of the United States Dexter The Dark... WhateverHan- Homeland Saul catchesupwith an Dexter Do YouSeeWhat I See?(N) Homeland The Mother... With a Tur- Dexter Do YouSeeWhat I See?n 5 0 0 (4:00) *** "The King'sSpeech"201 Untold '14' n 'MA'« 'MA' cc nah's father visits. n 'MA' « Colin Firth. n 'R' old friend.n 'MA' « ban (Njrr 'MA'cc SPEED 35 303125303GoodwoodRevival (N) FIA World Rev. My Classic Car My Classic Car Car Crazy 'G' British Touring CarChampion G oodwood Revival FIA GT1World Champ.Highlights Unique Whips '14' ** "Cars 2" 2011,ComedyVoices oi OwenWilson. n 'G' « STARZ 00408 00408(4:00)Thinice (5:40) ** "Bad Teacher" 2011CameronDiaz. n 'NR' « (7:20) *** "t3 Goingon 30" 2004'PG-13' « (10:50) ** "John Carter" 2012 * "SpyKids:Aii the Timein the World" 2011, Adventure ** "Theuninvited" 2009,Horror ElizabethBanks, Emily (11:10) ** "Sex & Drugs tt Rock ag (4:30) ** "Limelight" 2011, Documentary n 'NR' cc (6:25) ** "The7 Adventures of Sinbad" 2010, Action TMC 2 5 25 Patrick Muldoon. n 'PG-13' « Jessica Alba, AlexaVega. Fr'PG' « Browning.ri 'PG-13' « Ro/r 2010AndySerkis. W h itetail Revol. Gun It w/Spies Buck Elk Fever 'PG' Tred Barta Ru g by Seven Worl Series d - SouthAfrica Costas Tonight 'PG' Poker After Dark NBCSN 27 58 30 209Bucks Tec. *WE 143 41 174118Bridezillas Gabrielle 8 Kym '14' B r idezillae Kym &Porsha '14' Br i dezillas Porsha Glori&a '14' B r idezillas Where Are The Best of Bridezillas 3 '14' Bri dezillas Kym Porsha & '14' Bri dezillas Sara Natalie & '14' S HO 00


SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

C3

ADVICE & ASTROLOGY

Womanreadyto sayyes to a 4-year-oldproposal Dear Abby: I'm a 24-yearold woman and have been in a committed relationship with "Max" for six years. He

4'-

DEP,R ABBY

proposedfour years ago and I told him I wanted to marry him, except I wasn't ready at that time. The years have gone by, and we have flourished as a couple. Most people would swear that we're already married. However, I have been worrying lately that I m i ght have blown my chance for another proposal. Max doesn't mention marriage anymore except if I initiate conversation with a related topic. Some of our mutual friends are now engaged and Max has made no comment on the future of OUR relationship. He seems content in our current state. I feel silly for wanting to be proposed to again, but it is important to me. I don't want to be pushy and force Max into it. Should Italk to him about it or wait it out and see? — Hopeful Future Bride in Nevada

Dear Hopeful: Max is n o t a mind reader. The squeaky wheel gets the grease, so if you want a second proposal, squeak up and tell him s o . Because you put him off before, he may think you are still no t r e a dy f o r f u r t h er commitment. Dear Abby: I can't believe I'm actually writing to you, but I need an answer to this question. What is the time limit

I went into a total meltdown. Life just st o pped f o r m e . Would it b e a p propriate to "come clean" and tell everyone that I was grossly overwhelmed (an understatement) with my grieving, or should I just send a short acknowledgment, thanking them for the time they took to attend my mother's memorial? — Wondering in West Virginia

Dear Wonderlng:Grief is an individual process. N o t w o people grieve exactly alike, and most of us u nderstand that. It is never too late to say thank you, and if you include an explanation with your ack nowledgment, it w ould b e appreciated. Dear Abby:I am sending out our annual Christmas cards. I do not want to include my husband's name on them this year. We haven't spoken to each other in two years. We still occupy the same house — but thank God it's large so we don't have to seeeach other often. We have a son away at college. Please tell me it is OK. — Married and Not, Albany, N.Y.

Dear Married and Not:If you follow your impulse and omit your husband's name from the cards, it will be like announcing that he is dead or that you for acknowledging someone's have separated. While I symattendance at a me m o rial pathize with you, do not omit service? his name unless you are preMy mother passed away pared toanswer the questions nine months ago. Our relation- that will surely follow. If you're ship had not been an easy one. ready to "make an announceShe had been ill, but the end ment," then do as you wish.

came veryquickly.My youngest sister had died two years before. To make a long story short,

— Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscope:HappyBirthday for Sunday,Dec.9, 2012 Tonight: Be a duo. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * * S o meone who gives you butterflies in your stomach might surprise you with an impromptu visit. You simply feel different around this person. Decide to catch up on others' news. Visit with a neighbor youdon'tsee muchofanymore. Tonight: Have dinner with several friends. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * H ow you treat yourself when you're tired will make all the difference in howyou enjoythe holidays. Choose a relaxing activity to help you recharge your battery. Onceyou areableto kickback, you'll come up with a dynamic idea. Tonight: Pick up the tab at dinner. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * * Y ou are in your element. Perhaps you should grab a child and go ice skating. Some of you are happiest when you give in to a whim involving a loved one. The rule of thumb for today is: If you don't love it, don'tdo it! Tonight: So whatif tomorrow is Monday? SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * * You haveeasy an time daydreaming and imagining ** * You are happiest staying close to home, where you can relax. different scenarios. The problem m ight bewhenyou have to accept Foronce,do notassume thatyou need to go out or touch base with the fact that these dreams are not reality. Acreative personality others. Take aday for yourself. You in your life adds zest to the could be surprised at how much moment. Tonight: Let others make you get done when you're left alone. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. suggestions. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * You might want to rethink ** * * F riends don't have the your plans, especially if you same plans asyou,butthey have promised to go to the movies or a the intention of bringing you along holiday concert with someone. You with them. There is a festive quality to their plans, whether you end also could have promised an older person thatyou'd spend time with up watching a Christmas play or listening to a holiday concert. him or her. Try not to cancel your plans. Tonight: Could go to the wee Tonight: Where the action is. hours. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed. 18) CANCER(June 21-July 22) ** * Know when to stay in and ** * * * D eferring to others could worry less about plans. Inevitably, be especi allyfun.Howyou say you'll get an unusual amount of calls and invitations. Rather than what you need could make all the difference. Don't worry — you will saying no, you just might prefer to make the correct choice. Go with screen your calls. Use care with your the flow. You might want to share finances, as you easily could make a mistake involving a gift. Tonight: a personal secret that involves a friend you are with. Tonight: Fun and Orderin. games. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * * J ust follow your sixth ** * Make calls in the morning. sense,and youwillknow howto Howyou deal withsomeone close handle a situation at a distance. Your instincts give you a heightened to you and the manner in which you express yourself could affect sense of awareness. Detach from an emotional situation, and you will a key person. Your ability to get past problems is far more dynamic know what to do. Be spontaneous. than others' ability to do so. Plan Tonight: Put on some holiday music. on spending the day closetohome. By Jacqueline Bigar This year you come within reach of many of your dreams, particularly those that pertain to your personal and home life. Be aware that how you come off to others could prevent you from fulfilling these desires. You might want to listen to others' feedback if you do not see this issue. If you are single, check out a new suitor or admirer with care. This person might not be exactly who you think he or she is. If you are attached, the two of you benefit from taking a vacation together. SCORPIOmakes a great healer for you. The Stars Showthe Kind of Day You'll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * You are open to others' feedback, and you'll wonder what more you can do. Youwant to bring afriend closer, so start by giving this person more one-on-one attention. You might thinkyou have a creative solution, but it could be just a flight of fancy. Tonight: Add some candlelight. TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

© 2012 by King Features Syndicate

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Please email 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. Kimberly Jensen talks about her book "Oregon's Doctor to the World: Esther Pohl Lovejoy and a Life in "WE GREW WINGS": A Activism"; free; 3 p.m.; Des Chutes screening of the documentary Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho about the University of Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-389-1813 or women's track and field www.deschuteshistory.org. team, and the progression of women's sports over the last 40 OPERATIONELFBASH:A holiday party with food, live music, a DJanda years since Title IX's passing; raffle and a toy drive; new, unwrapped $10;1 p.m.; Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court; toy donations benefit Operation Elf 541-549-8800. Box; $15 in advance, $20 at the door; 5-10 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. GRIMES'CHRISTMAS Century Drive, Bend; 541-383-3300 SCENE:A display of lighted or www.bendradiogroup.com. and mechanical Christmas decorations; open through Dec. AUTHORPRESENTATION:John 24; free;1-7 p.m.; Crook County Schwechten recites a selection of Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., his poetry, followed by a Q&A; free; Prineville; 541-447-5006 or 6 p.m.; The Nature of Words, 224 grimes@crestviewcable.com. N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-6472233, info@thenatureofwords.org OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: or www.thenatureofwords.org. Fiddle music and dancing. Additional jam format from KNOW HEROES: Wiliam Akin 12-1 p.m. includes junior, adult discusses, "From 4-Color to 3D: A and senior fiddlers from the History of the American Superhero"; region; informal acoustic jam free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public for non-performing musicians Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-312in the Auxiliary room of the VFW 1034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ hall from1-3 p.m; donations calendar. accepted; 1-3:30 p.m. dance; STORIESFROM TERRA MADRE VFW Hall, 1836 S.W.Veterans AND POTLUCK:Hear stories from Way, Redmond; 541-647-4789. delegates who recently returned "HIGH DESERTNUTCRACKER": from Italy, with a potluck; free; 6:30 Redmond School of Dance p.m.; Cascade Culinary Institute, presents the classic holiday 2555 N.W. Campus Village Way, ballet, in a style inspired by Bend; 541-279-0841. present day Central Oregon; $11, MATT THEELECTRICIAN: The $5 ages10 and younger; 2 p.m.; roots-pop artist performs; $10; 7 Ridgeview High School,4555 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; Sisters; 541-815-9122 or 541-548-6957 or www.redmond www.belfryevents.com. schoolofdance.com. RAINBOWGIRLS: TheCalifornia"IT'SA WONDERFUL LIFE": based folk act performs; free; 7 p.m.; The Bend Experimental Art McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Theatre presents the classic 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382holiday tale about George Bailey 5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. and his guardian angel; $15, $10 students ages 5-18; 2 p.m.; DEANACARTER:The country artist performs, with Aaron Benward 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. and Brian McComas; with a toy Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419drive; $20, $15 with an unwrapped 5558 or www.beattickets.org. toy, plus fees; 8 p.m.; Maverick's CENTRALOREGON MASTERSINGERS: The47-voice Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or choir presents "Ring Noel" www.maverickscountrybar.com. under the direction of Clyde Thompson, with the Bells of Sunriver; $16 plus fees; 2 p.m.; THURSDAY Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or GRADUATION AUCTION: Silent www.towertheatre.org. auction to benefit Summit High SECOND SUNDAY: KristyAthens School's graduation party; free reads from a selection of her admission; 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Athletic work; followed by an open mic; Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www .deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. MENORAHLIGHTING:A lighting of a giant menorah; followed by music, crafts and more; free; 5 p.m.; Center Plaza, the Old Mill District, Southwest Powerhouse Drive between TheGapand Anthony's, Bend;541-633-7991. FOUNTAINVIEWACADEMY ORCHESTRAAND SINGERS: The group from British Columbia performs, "0 Holy Night"; free; 7 p.m.; Bend Seventh-dayAdventist Church, 21610 N.E.Butler Market Road; 541-647-1726 or www.fountainofmusic.com.

TODAY

MONDAY BELLSOF SUNRIVER: Ring in the season with handbell choir the Bells of Sunriver, as they play familiar holiday tunes; free; 11 a.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ calendar.

Drive; 541-408-0344 or www. summitstormboosters.com. GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:A display of lighted and mechanical Christmas decorations; open through Dec. 24; free; 2-6 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5006 or grimes©crestviewcable.com. SCIENCEPUB:Melissa Cheyney talks about maternal health in "The Politics and Science of Being Born: Location, Location, Location"; registration requested; free; 5:307:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-322-3152 or www.mcmenamins.com. KNOW HEROES: Peter Ames Carlin, the author of the biography, "Bruce," gives a lecture about the rock icon titled, "Bruce Springsteen: An American Musical Hero"; free; 6:30 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-3503537 or http://j.mp/brucereading. "IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE":The Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the classic holiday tale about George Bailey and his guardian angel; $15, $10 students ages 5-18; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www.beat tickets.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Michael Stevens talks about his book, "Being an Ordinary Buddha: Practicing the Natural Mind"; with an art sale benefiting the Ten Friends Relief Center and the Natural Dharma Center; free; 7-9 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-388-3352 or www.naturalminddharma.org. POETRYREADING:Creative writing students from Kilns College share their poetry, with an open mic; free; 7-9 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066. CURRENTSWELL:The Canadian roots-rock act peforms; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation.com/venue/ thehornedhand.

Sisters will encourage a healthy ecosystem;bring a sacklunch; included in the price of admission; $12 adults, $10 ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; noon-1 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:A display of lighted and mechanical Christmas decorations; open through Dec. 24; free; 2-7 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds,1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5006 or grimes@crestviewcable.com. DIRKSENDERBYKICKOFF PARTY: Featuring live music, an artauction, a raffle and more; proceeds benefit Tyler Eklund; $5 suggested donation; 6-11 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-480-1414. "BELLS & BELLOWS": A Christmas concert featuring organist Mark Oglesby and the Bells of Sunriver; free; 7 p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church & School, 2450 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-382-3631. "IT'SA WONDERFUL LIFE": The Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the classic holiday tale about George Bailey and his guardian angel; $15, $10 students ages 5-18; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www.beattickets.org. BILLKEALE HOLIDAY CONCERT: Featuring a performance by the local Hawaiian folk-pop artist; $20; 7-9 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-408-0561 or www.billkeale.com. HOLIDAY MAGICCONCERT: The Central Oregon Community College Cascade Chorale performs holiday songs under the direction of James Knox; with soloist Lindy Gravelle; proceeds benefit Abilitree; $17; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-771-6184 or www.bendticket.com. SUNRIVERMUSIC FESTIVAL CHRISTMASCONCERT:The Chuck Israels Jazz Orchestra performs classical and Christmas music; $30, $10ages18 and younger; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Resort, Homestead Room, 57081 Meadow Road; 541-5939310, tickets©sunrivermusic.org or www.sunnvermus>c.org.

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TUESDAY CASCADE HORIZONBAND: The senior band performs their annual Christmas concert with popular holiday music; free; 11:30 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E.Reed Market Road; 541-639-7734, cascadehori zonband@aol.com or www.cascadehorizonband.org. ADVENTLECTURE:A presentation by author, scholar and theologian Marcus Borg, titled "The Birth Stories - What Are They About?"; free; 7 p.m.; St. Helens Hall, Trinity Episcopal Church, 231 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-382-5542. HISTORYPUB:A presentation by Dr. David James on the declining monarch butterfly populations in California and the Pacific Northwest; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com.

WEDNESDAY GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:A display of lighted and mechanical Christmas decorations; open through Dec. 24; free; 2-6 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5006 or grimes©crestviewcable.com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:

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C4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 •

Golden Gate

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Continued from C1 But the unqualified highlight is Rainforests. Temperature- and humidity-controlled to emulate tropical climates of Borneo, Madagascar, Costa Rica and the Amazon jungle, it is home to 250 free-flying birds and butterflies, nearly 1 00 reptiles and amphibians, and hundreds of flowering plants, including 30 species of orchids and other bromeliads. An elevator raises visitors to the top of the dome, from where a spiraling ramp leads them downward through the various levels of rainforest canopy. And at the foot of the dome, an acrylic tunnel passes through a 100,000-gallon "Flooded Forest" tank inhabited by tropical freshwater fish — and exits into the aquarium.

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The California Academy of Sciencesfaces upon the Music Photos courtesy Barb Gonzalez Concourse at the heart of his- The 2'h-acre living roof of the $488-million California Academy of Sciences building rises above the lush Music Concourse in the I • I toric Golden Gate Park, direct- heart of Golden Gate Park. The Academy's seven manmade hills are cloaked with native California plants and wildflowers. I I II ly opposite the similarly spec• as tacular new de Young Museum of fine art. A full day's visit could easily be split between these two museums. But Golden Gate Park is so much more. a !I One of the largest urban rs parks in the world — at 1,017 r, f:.;,:"T acres, it is greater in size than N ew York's C entral P a r k — Golden Gate Park stretches 3!/g miles due east from Ocean Beach, on the Pacific Ocean, to San Francisco's fabled Haight,E~ )' lr'hki.,'':l((!!',. i II III '. Ashbury n eighborhood. It's '4. only one-half mile wide, but its curving drives connect at 20 different spots along the V park perimeter with the grid of streets of the Richmond district, to the north, and the SunWE'LL GIVE YOU A $100 SHOPPING SPREE set district, to the south. JUST FOR STAYING 2 NIGHTS WITH US! T he museums are in t h e eastern section of the park, less ON-SITE DINING,SPA r than a mile from the Haight. AND SHOPPING So, too, are such other leading Erected in 1879, the Conservatory of Flowers is the oldest surviving wood-and-glass greenattractions as the Conservato- house in the United States. A much-loved San Francisco landmark in Golden Gate Park, it i o ry of Flowers, the Japanese Tea contains 1,750 species of rare tropical flowers and plants, including a fine collection of orchids. Garden and the San Francisco Botanical Garden at Strybing Arboretum. West of circular Stow Lake, Dinner, Crustacean: $51.79 Gas, Bend to SanFrancisco which dominates the heart of Museum admissions: $121.90 (round-tripj, 1,004 miles © Golden Gate Park, broad woodl To book your stay call $3.50/gallofj: $140.56 Lunch, AcademyCafe: $25 land-fringed meadows extend bendbulletin.com 541-743-4099 past seven smaller lakes. In all Lunch each direction en route, Dinner, Beach Chalet: $82.89 directions are facilities for a In-N-Out Burger: $37 Lunch, de YoungCafe: $21 wide range of sports and recreTheBulletin Dinner, Cliff House: $89.09 3 nights (with breakfast), ational pursuits — tennis, golf, Queen Anne Hotel: $406.98 Total: $977.02 soccer, horseback riding, polo, a rchery, h o rseshoes, l a w n bowling, handball, f ootball, softball, fly c asting, rowing Moderate to expensive. INFORMATION and remote-controlled model • Golden Gate Park. McLaren • Cliff House. 1090 Point boats (in Spreckels Lake), as Lodge, 501 Stafjyan St. Lobos Ave. (OceanBeach); well as the more obvious run(Haight-Ashbury); 41 5-831415-386-3330, www.cliff ning, walking, bicycling and 2700, http://sfrecpark.org/ house.com. Three meals. in-line skating. There's even a destination/golden-gate-park/ Expensive. bison paddock where the shaggy bovines graze. • San Francisco Travel • Crustacean. 1475 Polk St. Several roads are closed to Association Visitor lnformation (Nob Hill); 415-776-2722, I I vehicular traffic on Sundays Center. Hallidie Plaza, 900 www.anfamily.com. Lunch year-round and Saturdays in Market St. (at Powell Street); and dinner. Moderate. summer, sovisitors should be 415-391-2000, www.san • De Young Cafe.DeYoung prepared to explore by foot francisco.travel Museum, 50 HagiwaraTea at these times, or board a free Garden Drive (GoldenGate LODGING shuttle that operates weekends Park); 415-750-2613, www • Great Highway Inn. 1234 every 15 to 20 minutes. Great Highway (OceanBeach); .deyoung.famsf.org. Breakfast These shuttles are not cable 41 5-731-6644, 800-624-6644, and lunch. Moderate cars — but, then, Golden Gate www.greathwy.com. Rates ATTRACTIONS Park was already 2 years old from $135 • California Academy of by the time Andrew Hallidie • Metro Hotel San Francisco. Sciences. 55 Music Concourse invented the cable car in 1872. 319 Divisadero St. (HaightDrive (GoldenGate Park); 415To look at the park today, one Ashburyi; 415-861-5364, 379-8000, www.calacademy might never guess that when its www.metrohoteisf.com. Rates .Drg. Admission $29.95 boundaries were established in from $76 • Conservatory of Flowers. 100 1870, it was a swath of wind• The Queen Anne. 1590 Sutter John F.Kennedy Drive (Golden swept sand dunes. Indeed, it St. (Pacific Heights); 415-441didn't appear to have much Gate Park);415-831-2090, 2828, 800-227-3970, www www.cofjservatoryofflowers future as parkland. But its vi.queenanne. com.Ratesfrom .org. Admission $7 sionary first superintendent, $99 William Hammond Hall, set • De Young Museum. 50 • Stanyan Park Hotel. 750 to work stabilizing the dunes Hagiwara TeaGarden Drive into hills and valleys by anStanyan St. (Haight-Ashbury); (Golden GatePark); 415-750415-751-1000, www.stanyan choring the shifting sand with 3600, www.deyoufjg.famsf vegetation. park.com. Rates from $172 .org. Admission $10 Hall's successor, a young • Japanese TeaGarden. 1 DINING Scottish e s t at e ga r d ener • Academy CafeandThe Moss Music Concourse Drive named John McLaren, took (Goldefj Gate Park); 415-750Room. California Academy, over as superintendent in 1890 0741, www.japanesetea 55 Music Concourse Drive • • • r • r with a Park Commission mangardensf.com. Admission $7 (Goldefj Gate Park); 415-876date to make the park "one of 6121, www.themossroom • San Francisco Botanical w • • the beauty spots of the world." .com.Lunchonly.Moderate. Garden Society at Strybing Over the next 53 years, McLarArboretum. Lincoln Way • Beach Chalet Brewery 8 en experimented extensively and 9th Avenue(Golden Restaurant. 1000 Great with sand-holding grasses and Gate Park). 415-661-1316, Highway (Ocean Beach); 415plants from all over the world, www.sfbotanicalgardefj.org. 386-8439, www.beachchalet built up the soil with clay and Admission $7 .com. Lunch and dinner. manure, a n d tr a n sformed Golden Gate Park into one of the nation's loveliest urban • A De Young Museum parks. years. McLaren's first test was the Directing an army of garThe original de Young muS k k world's fair of 1895, conceived deners with the skill of a sym- seum might still be a part of e k • • • • • by San Francisco Chronicle phony conductor, M cLaren Golden Gate Park, had it not publisher Michael H. de Young carried the park into the Sec- been badly damaged in the 0 • 4 as a means of jolting the city ond World War years. The Loma Prieta earthquake of • • 4 into economic recovery follow- most trying period, perhaps, 1989. At that time, it housed ing a nationwide depression in came in the days and weeks not only the de Young collec1893. Elaborate exhibits such following the devastating 1906 tion — mainly American fine as the new Japanese Tea Gar- earthquake, when scores of and decorative arts from the den and the pre-existing Con- suddenly homeless refugees pre-Columbian era to the presA servatory of Flowers helped set up temporary shelters in ent — but also, in an adjoin• • w draw 2.5 million people into the park. Perhaps McLaren's ing wing, the city's renowned the park, where they visited spirit was still looking over Asian Art Museum. pavilions representing 20 na- the park during 1967's "SumBoth institutions closed here • a • tions. Also erected at this time mer of Love," when thousands in the fall of 2001. The Asian was the Fine Arts Building, of hippies camped in the park Art Museum reopened a year which subsequently stood as and gathered fo r c o ncerts later in a new building at the the M.H. de Young Museum and other events at Speedway San Francisco Civic Center. of Fine Arts for more than 100 Meadow. Continued next page

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN A colorful pagoda rises in the midst of Golden Gate Park's five-acre Japanese Tea Garden. More than 100 years old, the garden has wedded traditional Japanese landscaping and architecture to create an atmosphere of serenity and tranquility.

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and humidity, with a ramp spiraling down to the Steinhart Aquarium. Here you may meet Claude, an albino alligator who shares his home with snapping turtles. You'll see the world's deepest display of living corals in a recreated Philippine reef. You'll explore the diversity of San Francisco's own offshore waters.You'll see a "discovery tidepool," where children may touch sea life under the watchful eye of docents. You may see a giant octopus, a chambered nautilus, an electric eel and a schoolofferocious piranhas. Then you'll head back for the show at the Morrison Planetarium, the largest all-digital planetarium in the world. Its

changing programs assure a great finish to a full day — or two — in Golden Gate Park. — Reporter j anderson@

Founded in 1853, the old- Seismic preparedness is a bendbulletin.com. est scientific institution in the catchword throughout CaliWest has been housed in the fornia; these displays explain www.AgateBeachMotel.com park since 1915. It has three dis- the causes of earthquakes and Prlvate, vintage,oceanfront getaway tinct divisions — the Kimball advise what to do when one re: se po~rt,oR Natural History Museum, one occurs. 1400-755-5674 of the 10 largest in the world, Then it's time to take the with access to more than 20 elevator into th e R ainforest million specimens; the Stein- dome — three stories of heat hart Aquarium, oldest in the U.S. (1923) and home to an ess timated 38,000 marine animals —~ ~ RR "" of 900 species;and Morrison Planetarium, which takes visiPhotos courtesy Barb Gonzalez tors from our solar system into I l I A bicyclist cruises past the Dutch windmillin the Queen Wilhelmina Tulip Garden, on the west the far reaches of space. Ilb ' side of Golden Gate Park near Ocean Beach. The windmill, which pumped water for irrigation in Rainforests of t h e W o rld the 19th century, was restored for decorative purposes in 1981. and the Morrison Planetarium dominate the main floor of the Academy like two giant orbs rF +• From previous page and work of legendary dancer- house appears as a white bub- on opposite sides of a central The de Young moved its col- choreographer Rudolf Nureyev, ble amid a sea of flowering for- plaza. I suggest heading first to lection into storage, demolished and it is a moving tribute. On mal gardens, with two wings the left from the main entrance, tt the original building and be- display are more than 80 cos- flanking an octagonal central where you can reserve a seat gan work on a new one, which tumes from Nureyev's personal rotunda. It holds 1,750 species for a planetarium show before finally welcomed the public collection, along with v ideo of rare tropical flowers and heading into an exhibit called If you are 55 or better, sign up for our free slot again in 2005. footage of some of his most plants, representing the flora of "Islands of Evolution." tournament! Sessions are I IAM, l2PM and I PM, Herzog & de Meuron, a Swiss grandiose productions in New more than 50 countries. Within This exhibit focuses on the with the Championship round at 2 PM. architecture firmwhosedesigns York and around the world. the five galleries are exhibits unusual creatures of MadagasFirst Place: 5200 • Second Place: 5100 include London's Tate Gallery of medicinal and economically car and Ecuador's Galapagos of Modern Art, was hired to Gardens andbeyond important rainforest plants. Islands. Adjacent is an area Third Place: 575 • Fourth Place 550 design the new museum. ConOne of the park's most beJust outside the Conserva- where short films are presented Fifth through Seventh Places: S25 in Free Play structed ofrecycled redwood, loved attractions is the 5-acre tory are gardens of dahlias (the on new scientific discoveries. Contact Bonus Club for complete details and registration. eucalyptus and copper, it stands Japanese Tea Garden, immedi- official flower of San Francis- The flow of visitor traffic then three stories tall and is crowned ately west of the de Young and co), fuchsias, roses and rhodo- takes you through the African by an observation tower 144 feet practically over the fence from dendrons. Nearby is a Shake- Hall, the only section of the above the surrounding acreage, the art m useum's sculpture speare Garden, p r esenting original Academy of Sciences offering panoramic Bay Area garden. plants mentioned in the Bard's to be recreated in the new buildviews at no charge. More than 100 years old, plays, and the National AIDS ing with 21 natural-history diLIMITONE COUPON PER PERSON PER VISIT COUPON • EXPIRES JAN. 20,2013 Pa. ' 'Qa And although the new de the garden has wedded tradi- Memorial Garden. oramas, as well as a live colony Young occupies 2 fewer acres tional Japanese landscaping T he southeast corner o f of African penguins. of parkland than its predeces- and architecture to create an Golden Gate P ark, a c ross Next, cross to the other side ru Call for reservations, location fft times: 541.783.1529 oxt.209 Qn sor, its multi-story construction atmosphere of serenity and S haron Meadows from t h e of the plaza, where indoor and gives it twice the gallery space. tranquility. Points of special in- Conservatory, is where San outdoor cafes flank an extenMiles or o Kiama a s g 3 5 Miles South of Crater Lake That's great news for lovers of terest include a bronze Buddha Francisco opened the country's sive exhibit on earthquakes. 34333Hwy.91 NortP Chiloqnin,Oregon 97624-I541.183.752Ã 888-Kl AMOYA American art. dating from 1790, a pagoda, a first public playground in 1887. I began my recent visit on the Zen rock garden, a hillside of Like so many other features of main gallery level, winding first bonsai trees with a miniature the park, it too has been renothrough several rooms of Meso- waterfall, and an open-air Jap- vated, to the tune of $3.8 milamerican, Mayan and Native anese tea shop offering cookies lion. The new Koret Children's American art, including cer- and green tea. Quarterreopened in 2007 with emonial and funerary objects. Opposite the Japanese gar- its famous 1914 Herschell-SpillThen I wound down a hallway den is a secondary entrance to man carousel remaining as its into additional galleries of 20th the Strybing Arboretum, home centerpiece. and 21st-century A m erican to the San Francisco BotaniWest of the Botanical Garart, with special emphasis on cal Garden Society. With more den, a footbridge leads over Featuring Cascade Chorale such famed California artists than 7,000 plants from all over moat-like Stow Lake, which as Wayne Thiebaud, Richard the world spreading over 55 doubles as a paddleboat playof COCC 8i Lindy Gravelle Diebenkorn and Jay De Feo, as acres of rolling terrain, this ground and an irrigation reswell as New York-based paint- outstanding collection puts pri- ervoir. At its heart is 428-foot ers Mark Rothko, Robert Moth- mary emphasis on regions of Strawberry Hill, th e p a rk's erwell, Willem de Kooning and Mediterranean climate, such as highest point but one too woodRobert Rauschenberg. South Africa, Australia, Chile ed to allow views. One floor above, the galler- — and California. In the northwest corner of Presented By COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION ies that feature pre-20th-cenOther attractions here in- the park, the Queen Wilhelmitury American artare espe- clude the Garden of Fragranc- na Tulip Garden, a small but cially strong in portrait and es, where plants are labeled in beautiful formal garden that landscape paintings, as well as Braille; a hillside garden of suc- blooms in early spring, protrompe I'oeil still lifes. Painters culents; the New World Cloud vides a setting for the Dutch like Albert Bierstadt, Thomas Forest, where special mistwindmill, which pumped water Moran and Frederic Reming- emitters supplement the San for irrigation during the early Cascade Chorale is ton are prominent. I also dis- Francisco fog; and a Redwood years of the park. The windcovered a fine exhibit of early Trail planted in 1898 with coast mill was restored for decorative directed by American decorative arts, in- redwoods. purposes in 1981. James W. Knox cluding furniture, silver, glass Probably the park's bestGolden Gate Park's westandporcelain. known repository of plant life ern boundary is delineated by The international collection is the Conservatory of Flowers. Ocean Beach, now adminisemphasizes sub-Saharan Af- Erected in 1879, the oldest sur- tered by the Golden Gate NaFeaturing Premier rican artsand Oceanic pieces, viving wood-and-glass green- tional Recreation Area. Though Soloist especially New Guinean masks house in the United States was few brave the chill waters withLindy Gravelle and tribal totems. There's also shipped in prefabricated parts out wetsuits, Ocean Beach is a a section on world textiles, in- from Dublin, Ireland, to be in- haven for joggers, beachcombcluding what is claimed as the stalled on a San Jose estate, ers and pensive strollers. finest collection of high-quality but by the time it arrived, its Anatolian kilims (flat-woven purchaser had died. A group Academyof Sciences Please Join Us pile-less tapestries) outside of of San Francisco businessmen I love all of Golden Gate Turkey. then bought it for the new Gold- Park, but my favorite spot reThrough mid-February, a en Gate Park. mains the California Academy Summit High School Auditorium special exhibit recalls the life The ornate Victorian green- of Sciences.

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C6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

Milestone forms are available at The Bulletin, 1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend, or email milestones@bendbulletin.com to request an engagement, wedding, anniversary or birthday announcement form. Forms must be submitted within one month of the celebration; engagements must be submitted at least three weelzs before the wedding. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

MILESTONES

Oregon newlyweds 'Bachelorette' no more: Hebert weds herbeau spend honeymoon talking to strangers

BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend

Delivered at St. Charles Redmond

Kyle Buxton andStacie Schmidling,a boy, Ely Duane Buxton, 9 pounds, 13 ounces, Nov. 20. Michael and Stephanie Widler, a boy, Samuel Malcolm Widler, 5 pounds, 11 ounces, Nov. 21. Joseph andKatherine Graven, a boy, Joseph Van Craven, 8 pounds, 5 ounces, Nov. 20.

Landon andMarcy Rasmussen, a boy, Trenton Boone Rasmussen,8 pounds, Nov. 24. Raymond andJulie Rogers, a girl, Amelia Courtney, 8 pounds, 10 ounces, Nov. 26. Humberto RuizGarcia andSilvia Arzate Villa,a boy, Maximillian Ruiz Arzate, 7 pounds15 ounces, Nov. 21.

By John MacCormack

when they g o t h o p elessly lost in Philadelphia. And so SAN ANTONIO — As far, they said, they haven't honeymoons go, the one met any s c ary o r c r e epy chosen by Matt W ebber strangers. "We haven't encountered and Courtney Dillard falls somewhere between odd the person who wants to have and adventurous. breakfast in their basement," For the past four months, Dillard said. the couple from Portland The couple say the experihave been driving around ences on the trip have only the country in a beige 1997 fortified their original theory, F ord A e r ostar, h a v i n g that America is a better place breakfast with interesting than it might appear in the strangers and listening to mass media, and that orditheir stories. nary people are resourceful, "It's been a wonderful accepting of others and often honeymoon. I don't think happy with their lives. "The people we are talking I could have envisioned anything better, although to are taking the optimistic someone did tell me I was s pirit and f ervor of A m e r a van wife," said Dillard, ica and applying it to their 41, who teaches commu- d reams, rather than to t h e nications a t W i l l amette monolithic American Dream. University.. There are many more paths T he idea b ehind t h e to happiness in America," she whimsical journey of dis- said. covery was to challenge B y the t i m e t h e y w r a p the sense that A m erica things up in P ortland in a is increasingly a divided couple of weeks,the couple country, where strangers estimate they will have spent are dangerous and people about $12,000 of their own h ave stopped talking t o money, on top of $8,300 proeach other. vided by sponsors. Along the way, they said T hey plan o n w r i t in g a they've learned much from book, including summaries ordinary people about tak- of the 50-some breakfast ining chances. terviews. And w h i l e t h ere "At a lot of these break- may be a sequel — "Breakfast fasts, you hear about peo- with Strangers in Europe"ple coming to a crossroads, they rule out the possibility of and those who took the any television spinoffs. "The worst-case scenario much harder path are happier for doing that, even if would be that they create a not all of them were suc- reality TV show and make cessful," said Webber, 37, us fight with the people we're a political and community having breakfast with," Dilorganizer. lard joked. The couple's personal San Antonio Express-News

ENGAGEMENT

Z.J

Ross Leonard and Katie Geurts.

Geurts — Leonard

where she studied political science. She works as an executive assistant. The future groom is the son of Rick and Tina Leonard, of Boston. He is a 2007 graduate of Summit High School and a 2011 graduate of Oregon State University, where he studied new media communications. He works in online marketing and advertising.

Katie Geurts and Ross Leonard, both of Bend, plan to marry Oct. 5 at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Bend. T he future b r ide i s t h e daughter of Carlton and Mary Geurts, of Bend. She is a 2008 graduate of Mountain View High School and a 2012 graduate of Oregon State University,

MARRIAGE

pilgrimage brought them to Jim's Restaurant in San Antonio. There, for Breakfast No. 42, they bought local gay activist John Dean Domingue, 21, the "Texas Two Step Breakfast." Months earlier, Domingue responded to the online invitation at breakfastwith strangers.com to share a meal, andwhen the couple finally hit town, thethree sat down for a leisurely talk. "I wanted to challenge myself by telling my story to a complete stranger, and also someone who might put it on a website or in a book," Domingue said. Afterward, he said he felt somewhat changed by the experience. "I realized I was revisiting parts of my story I hadn't been through in a long time, which reminds me why I'm i nvolved in activism. Second, I reali zed how important it i s for people to tell their stories and take bold steps," he said. Four months into their mission, Webber and Dillard say things have gone quite well, with only one b usted b r eakfast d a t e ,

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Melody Kortlever and Larry Gallagher.

Kortlever — Gallagher Melody Kortlever and Larry Gallagher, both of La Pine, were married Sept. 15 at The Riverhouse in Bend, with a reception following. The bride is a 1967 graduate of North Salem High School. She works as a caregiver for her daughter.

The groom is the son of Zee Gallagher, of La Pine. He is a 1967 graduate of Grants Pass High School. He worked for Retzloff Dodge dealership in Grants Pass and then Lithia Motors in Medford until his retirement. The couple plan to take a honeymoon cruise at a later date. They will settle in La Pine.

The Associated Press N EW Y OR K — A sh ley Hebert is no l onger a "Bachelorette." The 28-year-old Maine native got hitched last weekend in Pasadena, Calif.,to 35-yearold New York resident J.P. Rosenbaum, who proposed to her on the seventh season of the ABC dating reality show "The Bachelorette." A spokeswoman for show producer Warner Bros. Tele-

vision says the wedding will be aired Dec. 16 on ABC. Hebert also competed on the 15th season of "The Bachelor." She grew up in Madawaska, Maine, and is a dentist. The couple lives in the New York City area. Only one other couple that became engaged on the TV show's finale has married. B achelorette Trista R e h n married Vail, Colo., firefighter Ryan Sutter in 2003.

The Bulletin MILESTONE

G UI Ko

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

'Bruce'

'Invested in every syllable'

Carlin had been a SpringContinued from C1 steen fan since high school, Carlin took the advice to when Springsteen released heart and set out for New Jer- "Darkness on th e E dge of sey to write a heavily reported Town" in 1978. "It was just book about Springsteen. He a bunch of guys in jeans, Twanted to spend time on the shirts, funky hats and stuff, ground in Springsteen's home- coming out on a bare stage town of Freehold, and Asbury a nd playing extremely i n Park, where the young musi- tense rock 'n' roll music for hours. cian began carving his name 3I/g M i nto r ock h i s To see Bruce — I'd never tory in the early seen someone so investedin 1970s. every syllable and he played He began by and sang like his life dependtalking to music ed on it, which, in a w eird i ndustry t y p e s way, it sort of did, u he says. at Columbia Re- C a rlln After such a n e x p erience, uyou walk away with a differcords and elsewhere, finding that "folks who ent expectation of what mudidn't have an ongoing con- sic, culture and art can be." nection with Bruce were more He would c atch S pringor less happy to talk," he says. steen's Seattle concert during the promotion of that album All-access pass in December 1978, and since Carlin had plenty of sources that time he's caught every and material by spring 2011, tour since 1978 except "Born when Jon Landau, Springs- in the USA" — and he only teen's manager, called to say, missed that one because he "Hey, maybe we should talk," was in Europe at the time. Carlin says. Nevertheless, Carlin says, M He said they were ready when it came to his first faceto cooperate with me. I think to-face meeting with Springsthey were put at ease by the teen, "The fanboy part of me books I'd written earlier, and that would have been peeing a lso, from w hat t h e y h a d in his pants got locked up in heard from people I'd spoken a cage because I just couldn't to, the impression was that let that guy come with me. "There was nervousness, I was somewhat of a decent character." but by that point there was so That gained Carlin access to much time and energy and so members of Springsteen's E- much of a body of work that StreetBand, music producers, counted on t h is," h e s ays. engineersand others closer to MYou get to a place where you his subject, but not Springs- just don't have the bandwidth teen himself. to be nervous. It's a little like M I slowly g o t c l o ser t o I imagine brain surgeons feel Bruce, but there was no indi- like, only what they do is a cation that Bruce was going million times more i mporto be interested in talking to tant than what I do. You're me,u he says, "even after he cracking o p e n s o m eone's was obviously cooperating head, and you've got to go in and even making phone calls and fiddle around with little to encourage people to speak w ires, and if you f- - i t u p , to me.u then that guy's dead. And if M If he was ever going to talk you get it right, you've done to me, it was going to be at the magical things." very end," he says. T he t w o bo n de d o v e r Sure enough, with the book d rinks a n d p i z z a . "From a couple of weeks overdue, the there, he made it clear that he call came in October 2011. was all in, and he really, reA t the t i me, Carlin w a s ally was, n Carlin says. Thus in New Jersey visiting with began a nine-month working Springsteen's mother, aunts relationship — Carlin stops and s i s t ers. S p r i ngsteen just short of calling it a colwanted to meet Carlin at his laboration — with the man Aunt Dora's house and go out some call The Boss. for an off-the-record talk over Carlin says t hat g etting drinks. such great access to Spring-

steen was a confluence of luck and timing. "Bruce was i mpressed by t h e w o r k a day aspect of what I'd done before he got involved," he says, "but also, I came at a moment when they (band members) were beginning to think about legacy and these stories that needed to be told. They had reached a p oint in their lives where some of those voiceswere beginning to disappear." Voices l ik e a c c ordionist Danny Federici, who died in 2008 and saxophonist Clarence Clemons, who died this year. Carlin believes he was the last person to do a major interview with Clemons, in March. He and Springsteen would become familiar enough to text one another, but what one has to know is this: What is Springsteen like in person? "He's very warm. He's very conscious of who he is, and conscious of how that could rattle people. So he goes out of his way t o e xtend himself and to be, really, a good guy,n he says. "He's very conscientious." No subjects were off limits, though occasionally Springsteen would attempt to steer the conversation, and journalist Carlin would attempt to steer back: "We'd have one of those writer-subject duels,"

he says. But by that point, Carlin says, he had enough information he could tell Springsteen, "'Well, look, that's not what your mom told me,'and he'd be like, 'Whut'? My mom'?'"

'Rosalita,' come out Thursday night Carlin does an ace Springsteen impersonation, for the r ecord. That's all w ell a n d good, you're thinking, but please tell me who the heck Carlin may have with him on Thursday. "Believe it or not, Rosalita might actually show up,n says Carlin. «I'm not even kidding about that. Put t hat t h ere: The rea/ Rosalita may well be there. She lives in Bend." Wait. The Rosalita? "That's not quite her name," he says. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djaSPer@bendbulletitLCom

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 20'I2

nun iscoveie oc e o coo on e ucaan By Austin Considine

Coqui residences there. Bonato and I sipped coffee amid the gardens blooming with f r angipanis, gardenias and lime t rees behind t he couple's Valladolid perfumery. Their various projects on the Yucatan began, she said, when Malleville fell in love with Tulum and bought his "little piece of sand"there in 2002,the year before the couple met. Around that time, he began researching perfume formulas developed by Franciscan monks who colonized the Yucatan in the 16th century; he attempted to blend those formulas with ingredients prized in ancient Mayan medicine, the fruits of which led to the founding of Coqui Coqui perfumes. In 2005, Hurricane Katrina destroyed much of their property at Tulum (which has since been restored) and the couple moved to Valladolid, where they turned a run-down old colonial house on the Calzada

New York Times News Service

S omewhere between t h e grilled watermelon with panela cheese and my second taco de cochinita — a Yucatecan taco stuffed with pork, black beans and pickled onions — I put down my fork. I couldn't eat another bite. "Maybe you didn't notice how heavy the food is here?" said my friend Guillaume Guevara. We were sitting in the Taberna de los Frailes in Valladolid, a colonial city of Spanish arcades and 16th-century spires on the Yucatan Peninsula. Guillaume was right: The food was filling. The two days I spent there in March were punctuated with rich, sleep-inducing meals: deep-fried tortillas, cream-based soups and enough beans, pork and nopal cactus to keep me teetering on the edge of a constant food coma. A few days earlier, we had celebrated Guillaume's wedding in the eco-chic beach resort town of Tulum, an hour's drive to the southeast; several of us in the wedding party had come to Valladolid to recover from 72 hours of tireless partying. The city, often overlooked by travelers making a beeline to the Yucatan's flashier hot spots, provided just the right antidote to the f ashion-conscious whirlwind i n T u lum. Here we found artists and artisans peddling their wares in

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Francesca Bonato, seated center,owner of leather-goods store Hacienda Montaecristo, is among those attracting friends and well-heeled creative types to Valladolid.

Founded by invading Spaniards in 1543, Valladolid has an Iberian feel with its colonnades, pastel stucco and paving-stone streets. The central cathedral, a fortress of ascetic Franciscan architecture, is standing room only on Sunday evenings. As in Spain, shops are often shuttered each afternoon for siesta. "This is a nice place because you can have everything without all the noise," said Alejandra Rivero Flores, who works at her family's business, Tequileria Poncho Villa, a little liquor store that I s tumbled upon on bustling Calle 41 (No. 216), drawn in by the life-size, colorfully dressed skeleton doll propped out front. Inside, surmom-and-pop shops, friendly rounded by countless varieties residentsand refreshingly un- of tequilas, Flores ticked off pretentious nightlife. Valladolid's attributes: great Of course, cool, undiscov- shopping and food, a close-knit eredplaces rarely stay cooland community for r aising chilundiscovered, and one might dren and an urbanity that has expect Valladolid to become developed in tandem with the the next Tulum or even Can- city's recent efforts to restore cun, which isn't that far away. its buildings and byways. But its distance from the beach You can also find the natural means that Valladolid prom- splendor of the Yucatan, which ises to remain a sophisticated not only surrounds the city, but refuge. also permeates it. The flat, poThere is a budding cosmo- rous limestone shelf of the penpolitan spirit these days, as insula is penetrated by thousome expatriate tastemakers sands ofsinkholes, or cenotes, restore old haciendas and start filled with fresh water. I found businesses. Ariane Dutzi, for one of them, the Cenote Zaci, instance, a former correspon- about three blocks east of the dent from Germany who now central square. Though it's not runs her own line of locally exactly remote, the stone steps handmade bags, Dutzi Design, leading down to the sinkhole, just opened her first boutique which lies within a cavelike in Valladolid. Tulum had be- formation surrounded by juncome "overrun" with tourists, gle foliage, delivered me to anshe said, but in Valladolid, she other world. Lizards and birds has found "something more were perched in the nooks and authentic." crannies of the limestone walls Authentic: It's a word that that rose up around the sinkis frequently used when de- hole; the cool, blue water, about scribing Valladolid. Culturally 280 feetdeep, was perfect for speaking, it's a layered authen- diving. A thatched roof cafe beticity. The city is deeply Mayan, side the cave mouth is a great from the cuisine — sweet and place to unwind with a cerveza spicy, heavy on the beans and and a taco. "You see what it's like here slow-roasted pork — to the guttural consonants of the Mayan all the time," said Francesca language heard on its streets. Bonato on the Calzada de los Many women wear the tradi- Frailes (another name for Caltional Mayan huipil — white le 41/A), a long, narrow street cotton blouses o r d r e sses lined with colorfully painted, adorned with bright, flowered single-story haciendas, many embroidery and sold in places of which have been recently like the Mercado de Artesanias, restored or c o nverted i nto a block from the city's beauti- boutiques. Bonato, an Italian ful, newly refurbished Parque accessory line owner, and her Principal, or central square. husband, Nicolas Malleville, It is also distinctly Spanish: an Argentine fashion model,

6 845 3 1 9 2 7

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It's possible to spend the equivalent of a few dollars for a filling meal, as I discovered at the coveredmarket on the centralsquare's northeast corner. I loved the panuchos — deepfried b ean-stuffed t o rtillas. And if you're hankering for pizza, try the Casa Italia, a pizzeria on the Parque de La Candelaria, a park anchored by the Iglesia de Candelaria, with its high arches in the Moorish style and bright, salmon-colored stucco. The architecture, the quiet evenings spent strolling down narrow streets, and the endless rounds of feasting are among the charms that led my friend Guillaume and his wife, Olivia Villanti, who live in Brooklyn, to bring their wedding party to Valladolid after Tulum. "In Valladolid, you're in the middle of the city and you can take a walk down the street and you'll end up somewhere beautiful," Olivia said.

de los Frailes into the gorgeous new perfumery, showroom, spa and guest suite. Bonato also is an owner of Hacienda Montaecristo, a line of accessories featuring hand-stitched leather wares made locally and sold in a rustic showroom a few doors down. For fine Yucatecan food in the peaceful garden setting of a hacienda courtyard, there's nowhere better than Taberna de los Frailes, across the street from the monastery. Try the pook chuuk — grilled pork fillets marinated in Mayan white spices and sour orange, or the tikin xic, snapper grilled in annatto sauce. At Las Campanas on the square, I was treated to traditional songs accompanied by two marimbas as I feasted on queso relleno, a chunk of hard aged cheese stuffed with pork, swimming in a w h i te cream-based soup.After that meal, my ambitions for the next few hours were thwarted.

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Scoreboard, D2

Prep sports, D5 NBA, D3 Skiing, D6 College basketball, D3, D4 Golf, D6 NFL, D4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

COLLEGE FOOTBALL Three Beavers arrested in brawl

NFL

Month of Sundaysto set stagefor playoffs Manziel

Three Oregon State football players could

By Judy Battista

spend the weekend in jail after their arrest

Has your team clinched a playoff spot, leaving you wondering what to pay attention to with a month to go in the NFL regular season? In an unusually top-heavy and familiar season — it is possible that only two of the 12 playoff teams will be different from last season — you have plenty of company. Three divisions have been settled and two more could be this weekend, but the playoff picture is still spectacularly scintillating. Colts-Broncos in the Peyton Bowl? Sign

early Saturday following a brawl with two men at a downtown Corvallis

night spot. According to Lt. Cord Wood of the Corvallis

Police Department, the arrests occurred at about 2:20 a.m. Satur-

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

New York Times News Service

On TV

us up. But subplots — and no shortage of firings, benchings and questionable decisions — abound to tide us over until January. Put down the holi-

Today's NFLgameson television: 10 a.m.:Dallas Cowboys at Cincinnati Bengals, Fox. 1 p.m.: Miami Dolphins at

day catalogs and keep this guide handy.

Rookie showstoppers Sit back and enjoy what may be the greatest performances by rookie quarterbacks in NFL history. Andrew Luck, Robert Griffin III and Russell Wilson might all lead their teams to the

San Francisco 49ers, CBS. 1 p.m.:Arizona Cardinals at Seattle Seahawks, Fox. 5:20 p.m.:Detroit Lions at

playoffs.

Green BayPackers, NBC.

See NFL/D6

day after a fight outside

• The Texas AKM QB beatsNotre Dame's MantiTe'o

the restroom of the Impulse Bar and Grill at

1425 N.W. MonroeAve. Rudolf Fifita, 26, a

is first freshman Heisman winner

U.S.GRAN PRIX OF CYCLOCROSS

senior defensive end; Mana Rosa, 21, ajunior

By Ralph D. Russo

defensive tackle and Dyllon Kalana Mafi,

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Johnny Football just got himself a way cooler nickname: Johnny Heisman. Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manzielbecame the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy, taking college football's top individual prize Saturday night after a recordbreaking debut. Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o finished a distant second and Kansas State quarterback Collin Klein was third in the voting. In a Heisman race with two nontraditional candidates, Manziel broke through the class barrier and kept Te'o from becoming the first purely defensive player to win the award. Manziel drew 474 first-place votes and 2,029 points from the panel of media members and former winners. "I have been dreaming about this since I was a kid, running around the backyard pretending I was Doug Flutie, throwing Hail Marys to my dad," he said after hugging his parents and kid sister. SeeHeisman/D4

20, all were arrested and booked into jail

on felony charges of third-degree assault and disorderly conduct, police said. Mafi also

was charged with being a minor in possession of alcohol and "misrepresenting age by aminor," for using someone else's ID to buy alcohol. The three football players likely will be

arraigned in Benton County Circuit Court at 1:20 p.m. Monday and might spend the week-

end in jail, Wood said Saturday afternoon. Out of the three play-

ers arrested, Fifita saw the most action this

season, playing in all 12 games andcompiling 25 tackles and 2~/~

sacks. Rosa also played in12 games while Mafi saw action in two. The Beavers will

take part in the Alamo Bowl against Texas on Dec. 29 in San Antonio.

There is no word on the players' status for the

3-.

bowl game. Coach Mike Riley was out of town and unavailable for comment, but is

NATIONAL FINALS RODEO

expected to discuss the matter when practice

resumes on Monday.

Two locals earn checks on third night of NFR

— Corvaltlis Gazette-Times

COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL Oregon wins, reaches Final Four OMAHA, Neb.— In

a season of milestones, Oregon's volleyball program achieved yet another one, and the Ducks did it in the most difficult of environments. Pac-12 player of the

year Alaina Bergsma had 23 kills in a domi-

Above, junior racer Alec Miller runs his bike up a hill on a muddy section of the U.S. Gran Prix of Cyclocross Deschutes Brewery Cup course on Saturday in the Old Mill District in Bend. At left, racers ride and walk up a hill on Saturday. In Saturday's men's elite race, Bend's Ryan Trebon was the winner, while fellow Bend rider Adam Craig took third. The USGP continues today with races starting at 8 a.m. For results from Saturday'sraces,see Scoreboard, D2.

g.

\

.sts c Photos by Joe Kline i The Bulletin

nating performance, and fifth-seeded Or-

egon advanced to the NCAA semifinals for the first time with a four-set victory over fourthseeded Nebraska in the

Omaha Regional final. The Duckslostthe first set 15-25, then won the next three 2522, 25-18, 25-17 before

GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL

Redmond backto.500 after loss to Cascade Bulletin staff report REDMOND — For 3 2

a pro-Cornhusker crowd 9,382 strong at CenturyLink Center. "Obviously, I feel

Redmond High endured an aggres-

very honored, and we talked a lot about our

alumniand peoplewho came in to really turn this program around," Bergsma said. "A couple years ago, Oregon wasn't even in the

top half of the (Pac-12). So for us, it means a lot, just being that team that finally got it turned

around. That proves to the nation that we're a team to be reckoned with."

The Ducks (29-4), who were playing in their first regional final, head to Louisville, Ky.,

to play top-seeded Penn State on Thursday. — The Associated Press

m i nutes,

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Redmond's Chantel Dannis (42) defends Cascade's Esther Suelzle (33) during the first half of Saturday's game in Redmond.

sive style of play from Cascade, an i n-your-face tactic that " t ook t h e wind out of our sails," according to Redmond coach Angela Capps. The Cougars' h i gh-octane approach was especially effective in the second quarter as 4A Cascade outscored the 5A Panthers 22-7 in that period en route to a 71-42 nonconference girls basketball win on Saturday afternoon. "Going in, we knew they were going to be a really good team, and they were going to be in our face," said Capps, whose team dropped to 2-2 overall. "That second quarter was huge for us. If we hit some of those shots, the game wouldn't have gotten away from us like it did." Senior Kendall Current finished with eight points and six rebounds to lead the Panthers. Brittny Benson added eight points and four rebounds, but that second quarter put Redmond in a 19-point halftime deficit, one the

Panthers could not overcome. Redmond, which played its third game in four days on Saturday, shot 14 of 30 from the field and one of seven from three-point range, but Capps said that "it felt like it was worse than that." "You can think of a ton of excuses," Capps said. "You're tired, you're flat, but the reality is, if you want to be a state-tournament team, you have to win three or four in a row. It's just taking it one day at a time." Cascade (3-0), which won the 4A state title two seasons ago, saw four

players scorein doublefigures,paced by Alejandra Marquez's 13 points. Austyn Lowder recorded 11 points, and Ali x B i d dington an d S a die Trump posted 10 points apiece for the Cougars from Turner. " Our girls u nderstand that w e have 100 percent faith in them," said Capps, whose team visits Ridgeview High on Wednesday. "We're going to figure it out and put everything together. It's just a matter of getting on the same page."

Bulletin staff report LAS VEGAS — Redmond's Steven Peebles and Terrebonne's Russell Cardoza led the Central Oregon contingent at the National Finals Rodeo by placing in the money on Saturday night at Thomas 8t Mack Center. Peebles took sixth in the third go-round of bareback riding with a ride of 81 points, earning him $2,944.71. It was Peebles' first check of the 10night NFR. Culver's Bobby Mote (78) and Brian Bain (78) tied for ninth, out of the money. Will Lowe, of Canyon, Texas, won the round with an 88-point ride. Mote, the four-time world champion, is currently in seventh place in the projected world standings with seven rounds remaining, according to the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association website. In team roping, Cardoza partnered with Colby Lovell to take sixth place with a time of 4.7 seconds, earning a check of $2,944.71. It was Cardoza's first cash of this NFR. Prineville's Charly Crawford and teammate Jim Ross Cooper did not post a time on Saturday. Erich Rogers, of Round Rock, Ariz., and Kory Koontz, of Sudan, Texas, won the round with a time of3.9 seconds. In barrel racing, Brenda Mays finished in a tie for eighth place with a time of 13.93 seconds. Mary Walker, of Ennis, Texas, wonthe round with a time of 13.69. For full results from Saturday, see Scoreboard, 02.


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TELEVISION Today GOLF

2:30 a.m.:European Tour/

Monday SOCCER 11:55 a.m.:English Premier

SunshineTour,Nelson Mandela League, Fulham vs.Newcastle, Championship, final round, Golf ESPN2. Channel. 2p.m.:English Premier League, Noon:PGA Tour, Franklin Manchester City vs. Manchester Templeton Shootout, final round, United (taped), Root Sports. NBC. FOOTBALL FIGURE SKATING 5:30p.m.: NFL, Houston Texans at New England Patriots, ESPN. 10a.m.:ISU Grand Prix Final (taped), NBC. BASKETBALL BOWLING 7 p.m.:NBA, Toronto Raptors at 10 a.m.:Professional Bowlers Portland Trail Blazers, Comcast Association, World Tour Finals SportsNet Northwest.

(taped), ESPN. FOOTBALL

10a.m.: NFL,DallasCowboysat Cincinnati Bengals, Fox. 1 p.m.: NFL, Miami Dolphins at

San Francisco 49ers, CBS. 1 p.m.:NFL, Arizona Cardinals at Seattle Seahawks, Fox. 5:20 p.m.:NFL, Detroit Lions at

Green BayPackers, NBC.

RADIO Monday BASKETBALL 7 p.m.: NBA, Toronto Raptors at Portland Trail Blazers, KBND-AM 1 10, 1 KRCD-AM 690.

SKIING Noon:Deer Valley Celebrity

Skifest (taped), CBS. BASKETBALL

Noon:Men's college, Fresno State at Washington State, Pac12 Network. Listingsare the mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby 7V or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

Football • Cowdoychargedafter teammate dtes Inauto accldent:Police charged Dallas Cowboys defensive lineman Josh Brent with intoxication manslaughter Saturday after he

flipped his car in apre-dawn accident that killed teammate Jerry

Mixedmartial arts • Henderson dominates Diaz for UFC lightweight title:

Benson Henderson camehome and impressively retained the UFC lightweight championship Saturday night in Seattle, unani-

mously outpointing a flustered Nate Diaz. Henderson controlled

Brown. Irving police spokesman the main event from the start, John Argumaniz said the accidenthappened about 2:20 a.m.

Saturday in the Dallas suburb, hours before Brent was to be on a team flight to Cincinnati for the Cowboys' gametoday against the Bengals. Argumaniz said the 25-year-old Brown — a practice-squad linebacker who also was Brent's teammate at the University of lllinois for

three seasons —wasfound unresponsive at the sceneand pronounced dead at ahospital. • Navy topsArmy: Keenan Reynolds extended Navy's dominance against Army, scoring the winning touchdown late in the fourth quarter in a 17-13 victory in the 113th rivalry game Saturday in Philadelphia. Navy

(8-4) won the Commander-inChief's Trophy awarded to the team with the best record in

games among the three service academies. Army andNavy each beat Air Force, putting the prestigious trophy up for grabs in the regular-season finale for

just a few miles from where he

grew up in FederalWay.With the partisan crowd chanting Henderson's name throughout the fight, he took a decisive 50-43, 50-45 and 50-45 decision, his

second successful title defense.

Soccer • U.S. womendeat Chtna:Dn a day she andAbby Wambach were both kept off the score-

board, Alex Morgan still managed to reach a rare milestone. Morgan becamethe second player in U.S. women's national team history with at least 20 goals and 20 assists in the

same year, and theAmericans scored twice in the second half

to beat China 2-0 on Saturday in Detroit. Morgan set up Sydney Leroux's goal in the 84th minute after Carli Lloyd had given the U.S. the lead in the 50th. Mor-

gan has 28 goals and 20assists in 2012. Mia Hamm finished with20and 20in1998.

the first time since 2005. • Cincinnati hires Tnbervllle: Texas Tech's Tommy Tuberville

Baseball

was hired Saturday asCincinna-

road back' after surgery:Alex

ti's next football coach, leaving the Big 12 for a school trying to

move up to a better conference. The agreement cameone day after Butch Jones left to become Tennessee's next football coach, ending a week of uncertainty for

the Bearcats (9-3). Cincinnati has won a share of four of the past five Big East titles and will play in the Belk Bowl. Tuberville went 20-17 in three seasons at

Texas Tech, after coaching at Mississippi and Auburn.

Boxing • Marpnez knocks ont Pacpntao: Juan ManuelMarquez knocked MannyPacquiao out cold with a vicious right hand at the end of the sixth round Saturday night in Las Vegas, putting a ferocious end to the fourth fight

between the two boxers. Pacquiao had beendown in the third round but knocked Marquez down in the fifth and the two

were exchanging heavy blows in the sixth round before Marquez threwa right hand that flattened

Pacquiao face down onthe canvas at 2:59 of the sixth round. The referee waved the fight to an

end as Marquezcelebrated and the sold-out crowd at the MGM

erupted. Pacquiao wasdown for about two minutes before his handlers managed to get him up. After being helped to his corner, Pacquiao sat on a stool, blew his

nose and stared vacantly ahead as his handlers cut his gloves off. It was a stunning end to a furious fight and it may have

• A-Rod committed to 'hard Rodriguez went to see doctors with hopes of finding something wrong. When they actually

located a problem, only then did he start feeling a bit better. The New York Yankees' third baseman said Saturday that plans

are set for him to havesurgery on his left hip in mid-January, and that he's eager to embrace the challenge of coming back

from both the operation and an unbelievably abysmal finish to last season. It's expected that Rodriguez, who will be making his sixth trip to the disabled list in six seasons, could be sidelined until the All-Star break. "I'm not concerned,"

Rodriguez said. "I'm actually, in many ways, relieved that there's something tangible that we can

go fix." • Phlllles get Youngfrom Rangers:Michael Young chose a full-time role over staying home. A person familiar with the trade said the Philadelphia Phil-

lies have acquired the seventime All-Star infielder from the Texas Rangers for two relief

pitchers. Young agreed to waive his no-trade clause onSaturday, the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the deal hadn't been announced. The Rangers also will pay a significant portion of Young's

salary for 2013. Young is due to earn $16million, and reports stated the Phillies will pay him only about $6 million of it. The Phillies sent right-hander Josh

Lindblom and minor league righty Lisalverto Bonilla to the signaled the end ofPacquiao's career. "I threw a perfect punch," Rangers to get Young, who fills Marquez said."Iknew Manny a void at third base. — From wire reports could knock meout at anytime."

Knowles,MountVernon, Ore.,4.1. 8 (tie), K.C.Jones, Decat ur,Texas,andTom Lewis,Lehi,Utah,4.6each. 10 (tie), DeanGorsuch,Gering, Neb.,andLesShepTuesday Boys basketball: Bend at South Medford, 6 p.m.; person, Midwest,Wyo., 4.7 each.12. BeauClark, ade,Mont.,5.4.13.GabeLedoux,Kaplan,La., Burns at CrookCounty, 6:30p.m.;Ridgeviewat Belgr 6.1.14 EthenThouvenell, Napa,Calif.,13.8 15. Todd La Pine, 7p.m.; Madrasat Sisters, 7 p.m.;Trinity Suhn, Hermosa,SD., NT. Lutheran at Mitchell, 6 p.m. Team Roping Girls basketball: SistersatMadras, 7p.m.; LaPine 1. ErichRogers,RoundRock, Ariz./Kory Koontz, at Ridgeview, 7 p.m.; Trinity Lutheranat Mitchell, Sudan,Texas,39seconds,$18,257 each. 2. Trevor 4:30 p.m.; Summit atRedmond, 7p.m. Brazile, Decatur,Texas/Patrick Smith, Lipan,Texas, Wrestling: Summiat t Redmond, 7p.m. 4.0, $14,429. 3. KalebDriggers, Albany,Ga./Jade Corkill, Fallon, Nev.,4.3, $10,895. 4. Derrick BeWednesday Wrestling: Gilchrist at Crook CountyNovice, 5 gay, SebaDalkai, Ariz./Cesarde la Cruz,Tucson, Ariz., 4.5, $7,656. 5.KevenDaniel, Franklin, Tenn./ p.m. ChaseTryan, Helena,Mont., 4.6, $4,712. 6. Colby Girls basketball: Redm ondatRidgeview,7p.m. Lovell, Madisonville, Texas/RussellCardoza,TerreBoys basketball: Ridgeview atRedmond,7p m. bonne,Ore.,4.7, $2,945. 7 (tie), Clay Tryan,Bilings, Mont./TravisGraves,Jay, Okla., andSpencer Thursday Girls basketball: CrookCountyvs.Junction Cityat Mitchel, Colusa, Calif./Dakota Kirchenschlager, Stephe nville, Texas,9.3 each. 9. Brock Hanson, JunctionCity/CottageGroveHoliday Tournament, CasaGrande,Arizi/RyanMotes,Weatherford, Texas, 6:30 p.m.; 96 10. Dustin Bird, CutBank Mont./PaulEaves, Wrestling: CrookCountyatBend,7p.m. Swimming: Henley,Mazamaand Klamath Unionat Mil sap,Texas,14.6.11. ChadMasters, CedarHil, Tenn./ClayO'BrienCooper, Gardnerville, Nev., 14.7. Madras,4:45p.m. 12 (tie), Luke Brown, Stephenvile, Texas/Martin Lucero, Stephenvile,Texas.Travis Tryan,Billings, Friday Boys basketball: Bend at SouthAlbany,7 p.mxLa Mont./JakeLong,Cofeyvile, Kan CharlyCrawford, Pine atRedmond,7p.m; DouglasatCrookCounty, Prineville, Ore./JimRossCooper, Monument, N.M., 7 p.m.; Pendetonat MountainView,7:15 p.m.; and TurtlePowell, Stephenvile,Texas/DuganKelly, Summivs. t AshlandatAshland RotaryHoopsClas- PasoRobles,Calif, NT. Saddle BroncRiding sic, 7 p.m.;GladstoneatSisters, 7p.m.; Culvervs. Crane atCulver Tournament,6:30 p.mzGilchrist at 1 (tie), JesseWright, Milford, Utah, onFrontier North Lake, 8:30 p.m.; Trinity Lutheranat Triad, 7 Rodeo'sLet Er Rip,andJake Wright, Milford, Utah, p.m.; Gilchrist atNorthl.ake, 8:30p.m.; Sherman on Bar TRodeo's Big John, 87points, $16,343each. 3.WadeSundell,Boxholm,lowa,85,$10,895.4. at CentralChristian,7:30p.m. Girls basketball: Bendat Pendleton, 7p.m.; Moun- CodyTaton,Corona,NM., 83.5, $7,656. 5 Sterling tain View atColumbiaRiver(Wash.), 7p.m.; Crook Crawley, CollegeStation, Texas, 80.5, $4,712. 6. County at JunctionCity/CottageGroveHoliday Cody Wright, Milford, Utah,79.5, $2,945. 7. Cody Tournament,TBD;Gilchrist at NorthLake,7 p.m.; DeMoss,Heflin, La.,78.8. ColeElshere, Faith, S.D., 77. 9. ChadFerley, Oelrichs, S.D., 76.5. 10.Taos Sherman at Central Christian, 6p.m.;Trinity l.utheran atTriad, 4 p.m.; Sisters vs. Gladstoneat Muncy,Corona,N.M.,75.5.11. CortScheer, Elsmere, GladstoneHoliday Classic, 7:30 p.m.;; Summit Neb., 71.12. Tyrell Smith,Cascade,Mont., 65.5. 13. vs. Ashland atAshlandRotary HoopsClassic,5.30 (tie) JacobsCrawley, CollegeStation, Texas. Bradley pm.; Redm ondat LaPine,7 pmJCulvervs. Crane Harter,Weatherford,Texas,and IsaacDiaz, Davie, at CulverTournam ent, 5 p.m.;Gilchrist at North Fla., NS. Tie-DownRoping l.ake, 7p.m. Swimming: Bend,Redmond, Ridgeview,Mountain 1. CodyOhl, Hico,Texas,7.1 seconds, $18257. View at BendInvite at Juniper Swim 8 Fitness 2.JustinMaass,Giddings,Texas,7.2,$14,429.3. Center,4 p.m. AdamGray,Seymour, Texas,7.4, $10,895. 4. Clint Wrestling: CrookCounty, Bend,Mountain View, Robinson,Spanish Fork,Utah, 7.6, $7,656.5. Matt Redmond,Summ it, Ridgeview,Sisters at Adrian Shiozawa,Chubbuck, Idaho, 7.8, $4,712. 6. Tuf Irwin Tournaem nt at Ridgeview,3:45 p.m. Cooper,Decatur,Texas,8.0, $2,945. 7. (tie) Cory Solomon,PrairieView,Texas, andShaneHanchey, Saturday Sulphur, La., 82 each. 9. Clif Cooper, Decatur, Boys basketball: Redmond atBurns, 2 p.m.; Glad- Texas,8.4. 10.BradleyBynum,Sterling City,Texas, stone at CrookCounty,1 p.mJPaisleyatGilchrist, 8.6. 11 (tie), RyanJarrett, Comanche, Okla., and 4p.mx CentralChristianat Nixyaawii, 3:30p.m.; Monty Lewis,Hereford, Texas,8.8each. 13.Fred Summitvs.GrantsPassat Ashand Rotary Hoops Whitfield, Hockley,Texas, 9.0. 14.HoustonHutto, Classic, noon;Douglasat Sisters, 5 p.m.; Culver TombaI, Texas,9.8. 15. Hunter Herrin, Apache, at CulverTournam ent, TBD;Paisley at Gilchrist, Okla., 17.3. 4 p.m., Hosanna Christian at Trinity Lutheran,4 Barrel Racing 1 Mary Walker, Ennis, Texas,13.69 seconds, p.m. Girls basketball: Mountain View at Skyview $18,257. 2. Kelli Tolbert, Hooper, Utah, 13.73, (Wash.), 2 p.m.;; Burns at Redm nd, o 4 p.m.; $14,429. 3. LindsaySears, Nanton, Alberta, I3.76, Crook County at Junction City/CottageGrove $10,895. 4 (tie), SherryCervi, Marana,Ariz.. Lisa Holiday Tournam ent, TBD;Paisley at Gilchrist, Lockhart, Oelrichs, S.D., and BenetteBarrington2:30 p.m.,Central Christian atNixyaawii, 2 p.m., Little, Ardmore,Dkla.,13 82, $5,104each. 7. Brittany Hosanna Christian at Trinity Lutheran,5:30p.m., Pozzi, Victoria,Texas,13.91. 8 (tie), BrendaMays, Sisters atGladstoneHoliday Classic, TBD;Sum- Terrebonne,Ore., and Trula Churchill, Valentine, mit atAshlandRotary HoopsClassic, TBD;Culver Neb.,13.93each.10.Nikki Steffes,Vale,S.D.,14.03. at CulverTourname nt, TBD;Paisley at Gilchrist, 11. Kaley Bass, Kissimmee,Fla., 1406 12. Lee 2:30 p.m. Ann Rust,Stephenvi e, Texas, 18.84. 13.Christina Wrestling: Crook County,Bend, Mountain View, Richman,Glendora, Calif.,19.73.14. Christy Loflin, Redmond, Summit, Ridgeview,Madras,Gilchrist at Franktown,Colo., 19.77.15. CarleePierce,StephenAdrianIrwinTournament atRidgeview,TBD; Culver ville, Texas,24.76. at CentralLinnTourneinHalsey„TBD Bull Riding Swimming: SummitatCVCInvitationa at KrocCen1. CodyTeel, Kountze, Texas, 88 points on ter in Salem, 1p.m. Kesler Rodeo'sWhiskeyJack, $18,257. 2. Beau Nordic skiing: OHSNO classic raceat Meissner Schroeder,China,Texas,84.5, $14,429. 3.Shane Sno-park,11a.m. Proctor,GrandCoulee, Wash.,83,$10,895. 4 Seth Glause ,Cheyenne,Wyo.,82,$7,656.5.TagEUiott, Thatcher,Utah,81.5, $4,712. 6. BrettStall, Detroit Lakes, Minn., 78 $2,945. 7(tie), J.W.Harris, MulCYCLING lin, Texas.TreyBenion IR,RockIsland, Texas.Ardie Maier, TimberLake,S.D.. Trevor Kastner,Ardmore, Cyclocross Okla.. TateStratton, Kellyville, Okla.. CodySamora, U.S. GranPrix of CyclocrossDeschutes Cortez,Colo.. CodyWhitney, Sayre,Okla.. Clayton BreweryCupNo.1 Savage,Casper,Wyo., and KaninAsay, Powell, Saturday, Bend Wyo., NS. Elite/U23 men — 1,RyanTrebon, Cannondale/ Clement,1:01:21.2, TimothyJohnson,Volkswagen/ peopleforbikes/Cannondale1:01:22. , 3,AdamCraig, FOOTBALL GiantRabobankTeam,1:0215 4, DanielSummerhil, ChipotleDevelopm entTeam, I:0219. 5,ZachMcDonNFL ald, Rapha-Focus,1:02:22.6,YannickEckmann,California Giant/Specialized,1:02.22. 7,JamesDriscoll, NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All TimesPST Jamis/SutterHome,1:02.23. 8, BenBerden, Raleigh Clement,1:02:37. 9,ToddWells, SpecializedFactory Racing, 102:57. 10,Justin Lindine, Redline,102:57 AMERICANCONFERENCE 20, BarryWicks,Kona,I:05:15. 29,BrennanWodtli, East 1:05:53.44, DamianSchmitt, Silveradop/bSunnyside W L T Pct PF PA y-New En gl a nd Sports, attwolaps. 9 3 0 .750 430 260 Category 2/3 — 1, EricZuber,38.03. 2, Mat- N.Y.Jets 5 7 0 .417 228 296 thew Dooley, 3816. 3, MenkoJohnson, 38:47. 4, Buttalo 5 7 0 .417 277 337 Chris Bagg,38:50. 5, Mike Foster, 38:55. 27, Erik Miami 5 7 0 .417 227 249 Hammer,41:19. 38, ShaneJohnson, 42:13. 43, Rob South Angelo, 42:39. 44, DavidTaylor, 4243. 59, Chris W L T Pct PF PA Zanger,45.07. x-Houston 11 I 0 .917 351 221 Category 4 — 1,TimothyHubner, 33:40. 2, Bil Indianapolis 8 4 0 .667 265 306 Thompson,3355 3, SamDodd, 33:57. 4, Thomas Tennesse e 4 8 0 .333 248 359 Pastor 3401. 5,AaronAdelstein, 3423.13, KyeGor- Jacksonville 2 10 0 .167 206 342 man, 35:24.23,MikeTaylor,37:47. North Masters 35+ — 1,MarkSavery, 44:41.2, Chris W L T Pct PF PA Fisher,44:51.3,ShannonSkerritt, 45.24.4, JesseRe9 3 0 .750 303 242 ints ,45.31.5,Ben Thompson,45.39.17,Tim Jones, 7 5 0 .583 254 230 48:25.19, MattWiliams, 48:46. 30,Robert Uetrecht, 7 5 0 .583 302 260 49:49 31, Sean Haidet, 49:54 32, RobertDeclerk, 4 8 0 .333 229 265 50;24.34,DavidSjogren,50:55. West Master 45+ — 1 ThomasPrice, 38:05. 2, Bart W L T Pct PF PA Bowen,38.40. 3,Jeff Beltramini, 38:48.4, TimButler, y-Denver 10 3 0 .769 375 257 38:50. 5,Normon Thibault,39:19.20,Todd Shock, San Diego 4 8 0 .333 258 257 41:35. 31,MarkReinecke,43:35 37, EricSchuster- Oakland 3 10 0 .231 248 402 man,44: 57.40,Matthew l.asala,45:34.41,DanDavis, KansasCity 2 10 0 . 167 188 322 45:44. 42,BrianSmith, 45:47. NATIONALCONFERENCE 1, RusselThorstrom,41:05. l 2,BrookWatts, 42;05. East 3, PeterWellsman,43;01. 4, DonWright, 43.02. 5, W L T Pct PF PA SteveYenne,43:38. N.Y.Giants 7 5 0 .583 321 243 Junior 17-18 1, LoganOwen, 43:57 2, Max Washington 6 6 0 .500 312 301 Chance,44;58 3, Garrett Gerchar,4503. 4, Nathaniel Dallas 6 6 0 .500 280 295 Morse,46;04.5, SpencerDowning, 46:21. 16,Javier Philadelphia 3 9 0 .250 217 320 Colton 48:35 South Junior16-16 — 1,LanceHaidet, 22:54.2, Ethan W L T Pct PF PA Reynolds,22:54. 3, Camreon Beard, 23:27. 4, Sam y-Atlanta 1 1 1 0 .917 317 229 Rosenberg,24:17. 5, EvanGeary, 23:18. 10, Will TampaBay 6 6 0 .500 333 285 Reinking,2538. 12,Mitchell Stevens,26:04. 13, lan NewOrleans 5 7 0 .417 321 327 Wilson ,26:13.19 KeenanReynolds,29:54. Carolina 3 9 0 .250 235 292 Junior 10-14 — 1, SeanMcElroy, 28:16. 2, North MatteoJorgenson,28:16.3, Scott Funston,28:37. 4, W L T Pci PF PA Donovan Birky,28:37. 5,JackAlessi, 28:37. GreenBay 8 4 0 .667 296 259 Single speed 1, J.T.Fountain,3645.2, Craig Chicago 8 4 0 .667 294 198 Etheridge,36:46 3, Cody Peterson,3821. 4, Seth Minnesota 6 6 0 .500 262 272 Patla 3845. 5,GregHeath,4000. Detroit 4 8 0 .333 300 315 Elite women — 1, KaterinaNash, LunaPro West Team,46.17.2,GeorgiaGould,LunaProTeam,46:30. W L T Pct PF PA 3, CarolineMani,RaleighClement, 47:19. 4, Kaitlin San Francisco 8 3 1 .708 289 171 Antonneau,ExergyTwenty 12, 47:52. 5, Amanda Seattle 7 5 0 .583 242 202 Miller, Optump/b Kelly Benefit Strategies, 47:56.6, St. Louis 5 6 1 .458 221 267 Elle Anderson,LadiesFirst Racing,48:04. 7, Mical Arizona 4 8 0 .333 186 234 Dyck, Stan'sNoTubes, 48:06. 8, Teal Stetson-Lee, x-clinchedplayotf spot Luna ProTeam, 48.06. 9, Meredith Miler, California y-clinched division Giant BerryFarms,48:14. 10, Nicole Duke,Alchemy, 48:18.17,SerenaBishop Gordon,Silverado p/bSunToday'sGames nysideSports,4951. ChicagoatMinnesota, 10a.m. Category 2/3 — I,MarsaDaniel,34:27. 2, Sarah BaltimoreatWashington,10 a.m. Barkley,34:47.3, StephanieUetrecht, 34:55.4 Rebec- KansasCityatCleveland, 10a.m. cah Bieri,3456.5, KimMatheson,3507.13,Michelle San DiegoatPittsburgh,10am. Mills, 37:01.26, ShellieHeggenberger, 41:25. Tennessee at Indianapolis, 10a.m. Category 4 1, Emily Elbers,34:14. 2, C.J N.Y.JetsatJacksonvile,10 a.m. Kara,34:31.3,AnnaMumford, 34:31.4,Terra Beaton, AtlantaatCarolina,10 a.m. 36:54. 5,StephanieTorres, 37:06. PhiladelphiaatTampaBay,10 a.m. Junior 10-14 — 1,Abigail Youngw erth, 22:36. St. LouisatBuffalo,10a.m. 2, Ivy Taylor,24:37. 3, CaylaCrockell, 24:50.4, Amy Dallas atCincinnati,10 a.m. Ziehnert,25:46.5,AynsleeKing, 25:53. Miami atSanFrancisco,1:05 p.m. ArizonaatSeatle,1:25 p.m. NewOrleansat NY Giants,1 25pm. RODEO Detroit atGreenBay, 5:20p.m. Monday'sGame Housto natNewEngland,5:30p.m. Professional

ON DECK

CDLTS 5 5. 5 Jets 2 3 Bears 2 .5 3 Falcons 3 .5 3 . 5 BUCCANE ERS 7 75 BILLS 3 3 BENGALS 3 3. 5 49ERS I 0.5 I I GIANTS 5 5 SEAHAW KS 10 10 PACKER S 7 7 Monday PATRIOTS 5 3. 5

Titans William 8Mary60,Radford 55 JAGUARS SOUTHWES T VIKINGS Arkansas St.73, St.Bonaventure /0 PANTHER S Houston78,TexasSouthern 75,OT Eagles NorthTexas83, JacksonSt. 65 Rams Oklahoma St.62, Missouri St.42 Cowboys SamHoustonSt.69,Houston Baptist 57 Dolphins StephenF.Austin 73, LSU-Shreveport 46 Saints TexasSt.73, Texas-PanAmerican 58 Cardinals Tulsa50,TCU49 Lions UCLA65,Texas63 UTEP 64, Idaho60 Texans FAR WEST Air Force65 Ark.-PineBluff 49 College ArizonaSt. 87 CSNorthridge 76 Saturday,Dec.16 BYU61,Utah58 New MexicoBowl Cal Poly89, Menlo43 Arizona 7.5 9 5 Rlin ois85,Gonzaga74 FamousIdaho Potato Bo Minnesota71,Southern Cal574 8 10 Montana 78, Carroll (Mont.)58 Thursday,Dec.20 Nevada 76,Washington 73 Poinsettia Bowl NewMexico65,Valparaiso 52 Byu 2.5 3 SanDiego St Oregon 87, IdahoSt.35 Friday, Dec.21 Oregon St 85, Grambling St.54 Beef DBrady's Bowl 7 8 Ball St Pacific 67,SanFrancisco59 San Diego78 Tulane72 Saturday,Dec.22 San Jose St.62, SacramentoSt.57 New OrleansBowl SantaClara77, Pacific Union42 U L-Lafayette 4. 5 55 UtahSt.86, W.Oregon57 Las VegasBowl WeberSt.65, UCIrvine 51 Boise St 65 55 Wyoming 74,Okla.PanhandleSt.55 Monday, Dec.24 Hawaii Bowl Fresno St 1 1 . 5 1 1 .5 Smu Saturday's Summaries Wednesday,Dec.26 Little CaesarsPizzaBowl W. Kentucky 6 6 C. Mi c higan Oregon 87, Idaho St. 35 Thursday,Dec.27 Military Bowl IDAHO ST. (1-6) SanJoseSt 7.5 75 Bowling Green Ezenwa0-5 1-2 I, Kusmieruk0-0 0-00, Sanchez Belk Bowl 2-6 1-2 7, Morgan4-12 2-4 11, Hansen1-8 0-0 3, I 0.5 8 Duke Mason0-30-00, Hatchett2-43-57, Walters2-40 0 Holiday Bowl Preh1-10-0 2, Kostur0-00-0 0. Totals 12-43 Baylor 4, 1(B) 1 7-13 35. Friday, Dec.28 OREGON (8-1) IndependenceBowl Kazemi 3-55-511, Singler3-50-07, Woods5-11 UL-Monroe 6 7 1-211, Artis 4-9 0-011, Dotson 5-7 0-012, Lucenti Russell Athletic Bowl 30-04, Loyd230 05, Baker0 21-21, Moore2 3 Virginia Tech 1 2 Rutgers 2 3-48, Carter1-24-46,Emory3-60-07,Kuemper2-5 MeinkeCarCareBowl 0-0 4.Totals 32-6114-17 87. TexasTech 1 3 13 Halftime —Oregon 54-16. 3-Point Goals—Idaho Saturday, Dec.29 St. 4-16(Sanchez2-4, Hansen1-4 Morgan1-6, MaArmedForcesBowl son 0-1, Ez enwa0-1), Oregon9-19 (Artis 3-7,Dotson Air Force 1 (R) 1 Rice 2-4, Singler 1-1, Loyd1-1, Moore1-1, Emory1-3, Fight HungerBowl Lucenti 0-1, Baker0-1). FouledOut—Hansen. ReArizona St N L NL bounds —IdahoSt. 19 (Ezenwa, Sanchez 6), Oregon Pinstripe Bowl 47 (Singler9). Assists—Idaho St. 6(Morgan3), OrW.Virginia 4 4 Syracuse egon 19(Artis, Singler5). TotalFouls—IdahoSt. 12, Alamo Bowl Oregon13.A—5,328. OregonSt 1 2 Buffalo Wild WingsBowl Tcu 2 25 Mic higan St Monday, Dec.31 Oregon St. 85, Grambling St. 54 Music City Bowl Vanderbilt 6 6 GRAMBLING ST. (0-6) Sun Bowl Rose7-170-0 19,Higgins 1-54-4 6, Roberson 10 1 0 Ge orgia Tech3-5 0-0 6, Hobbs4-7 2-212, Copeland1-71-2 3, Liberty Bowl Tulsa 2 .5 P K lowa St Garcia0-31-21, Cobbins0-00-0 0, Dorsett 2-30-0 5, Turner0-20-00,Wheeler1-30-02, Dandridge0-I Chick-Fil-A Bowl 0-00. Totals19-53 8-1054. Lsu 4 4 Clems on OREGON ST. (6-2) Tuesday,Jan.1 Heart of Dallas Bowl OklahomaSt 18 17 Gator Bowl Mississippi St 2 2 Nort hwestern OutbackBowl S. Carolina 4 . 5 45 Michigan Capital OneBowl Georgia 9 10 Nebraska Rose Bowl Stantord 6 6. 5 Wisconsin OrangeBowl Florida St 14 14 N. Illinois

Wednesday,Jan. 2 SugarBowl 145 145

Louisville

8 8 Cotton Bowl 3 .5 4 . 5 Saturday,Jan.6

KansasSt

Thursday,Jan.3 Fiesta Bowl TexasABM

Oklahoma

CompassBowl 2 3 Pittsb urgh Sunday,Jan. 6 Go Daddy.comBowl ArkansasSt 2 45 Monday,Jan. 7 BCSChampionship Alabama 8.5 9 NotreDam e Mississippi

BASKETBALL Men's college Saturday's Games EAST

Albany(NY)67,Colgate 61 BostonCollege72,St. Francis(NY)64 Bryant78, Binghamton 56 Buftalo77,Niagara67 DelawareSt. 73,Delaware67, OT Drexel64, Princeton57 Duquesne 88, New Orleans70

Georgetown46,Towson40 Holy Cross67,Dartmouth 56 Kansas St.65,GeorgeWashington62 LIU Brooklyn88,Hofstra 84 La Salle66,Northeastem64 Lehigh83, St.Francis(Pa.) 67 Loyola(Md.) 61,St. Peter's 55 NewHampshire 64,Yale56 Penn St78,Army70 Pittsburgh89,North Florida 47 Rutgers81, lona73 St. John's58,Fordham47

Syracuse108,Monmouth(NJ) 56 Vermont53,Quinnipiac46 Viganova 68,Penn55 WestVirginia68,VirginiaTech67

MIDWEST Ball St.62,SouthDakota51 BowlingGreen57, Samford 42 Butler 74,Northwestern65 Cent.Arkansas88 SEMissouri 85 ChicagoSt. 67,AlabamaSt. 54 Cincinnati92,Md.-EasternShore60 Dayton83 Miami(Ohio)61 Detroit102,Rochester(Mich.) 67 Drake74,IPFW64 E. Michigan47, Purdue44 Ill.-chicago64, ColoradoSt. 55 l linois St 85 WMichigan63 Indiana100,CCSU69 Kansas90,Colorado54 Marquette60,Wisconsin 50 Michigan80,Arkansas67 MichiganSt.73, LoyolaofChicago61 Missouri68,TennesseeSt. 38 MurraySt 82,Evansville 70 NotreDame84, Brown57 Ohio 78,Oakland61 OhioSt.89,LongBeachSt.55 To edo67,E.Illinois 59 W. Illinois55,SIU-Edwardsvige38 WichitaSt.80, N.Colorado54 Wright St.92,VMI59 Youngstown St. 71,Hiram44 SOUTH Arizona66,Clemson54 Bethune-Cookman 85,Webber 72 Charlotte78, Cent.Michigan66 David son63,Woff ord56 Duke90,Temple 67 E. Kentucky63,Chattanooga52 Florida A8 M109, Allen59 Gardner-Webb 61,TennesseeTech41 Georgia Southem79,Brewton-Parker56 National Finals Rodeo GeorgiaSt.86 SouthernPolySt 58 Saturday GeorgiaTech73,UNCWilmington 66 College At Thomas &Mack Center Kentucky74, Portland46 Las Vegas Lipscomb 86,UT-Martin 62 Saturday's Score Third Round Louis ianaTech65,Southem Miss.55 EAST BarebackRiding Louisville 99,UMKC47 Navy17,Army13 1. Will Lowe,Canyon,Texas, 88 points on FlyMarshall69,CoppinSt. 63 ing U Rodeo's Comanchero, $18,257. 2. Jessy Maryland61,SCState46 NCAAFootball Championship Davis, Power,Mont., 84.5, $14,429. 3(tie), Kaycee McNeese St.77,Louisiana-Lafayette72 Subdivision Playoffs Feild, Payson,Utah.J.R. Vezain, Cowley,Wyo., and Memphis 83,AustinPeay65 Quarterfinals Matt Bright,Azle,Texas,83, $7,754each. 6. Steven Mercer65,AlabamaA&M46 Friday's Game Peebles,Redmond, Ore., 81,$2,945. 7 StevenDent, MiddleTennessee65,Mississippi 62 SamHoustonState 34,MontanaState16 Mullen ,Neb., 79.5. 8.Wes Stevenson, Lubbock, Morehead St. 71,IndianaSt. 63 Saturday's Games Texas,78.5. 9(tie), BobbyMote,Stephenvile, Texas, GeorgiaSouthern49, OldDominion35 N.Iowa82,GeorgeMason77,OT and BrianBain, Culver,Ore.,78each. 11.JaredKey- NorthDakotaState14, Woford 7 NC State 80, ClevelandSt.63 lon, Uniontown,Kan.,77. 12. WinnRatliff, Leesvile, NorthCarolina78, ETSU55 E. Washington 51, lginois St. 35 La., 76.5.13. Justin McDaniel,Porum,Okla., 75. 14. Richmond83,James Madison 82, OT CalebBennett,Morgan,Utah, 73.5. 15. CaseyColRobertMorris66,Hampton54 Betting line letti, Pueblo,Colo., NS. SC-Upstate88, UTSA77 Steer Wrestling NFL SetonHall71,WakeForest 67 1. WadeSumpter, Fowler, Colo., 3.6 seconds, (Hometeamsin Caps) UAB92,South Alabama78 $18,257. 2 (tie), Billy Bugenig, FerndaleCal , if., Favorite Open Current Underdog UNCAsheville85, Montreat51 and BrayArmes,Gruver,Texas, 3.8, $12,662each. Today UtahValley86 Troy82, 20T 4 (tie), LukeBranquinho, Los Alamos, Calif., and Ravens 2.5 2. 5 REDSKINS Virginia67,MVSU39 Matt Reeves,CrossPlains,Texas,3.9,$6,184each. BROWNS 5 7 Chiefs WCaroina70,AppaachianSt. 64 6. CaseyMartin, Sulphur,La., 4.0,$2,945.7. Trevor STEELER S 7 8 Charg ers W. Kentucky77, IUPUI57

DEALS


SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

NBA ROUNDUP

azers a a The Associated Press PORTLAND — The Sacramento Kings jumped over two hurdles in their win at Portland on Saturday night. DeMarcus Cousins had 19 points and 12 rebounds, John Salmons added 1 9 p o i n ts and 11 assists, and the Kings earned their first road w i n and first three-game winning streak ofthe season by beating the Trail Blazers 99-80. "It feels good," Salmons said. "Especially coming off two home wins, to go on the road and get that third win. Hopefully, we can continue doing that." Aaron Brooks had 14 points for the Kings, who had lost their first six away from Sleep Train Arena. Francisco Garcia and Jason Thompson added 12 each. All five starters finished in double figures as the Kings overcame a dismal second quarter and steadily pulled away, outscoring Portland by 19 points in the second half. LaMarcus Aldridge had 17 points and 10 rebounds and J.J. Hickson added 14 points and 15 rebounds for the Trail Blazers. Wesley M a t thews scored 14points, but suffered

a hip injury. Matthews went to the locker room in the third quarter with what was called a left hip contusion. He returned but fell to the floor in the fourth and left the game limping. He said after the game he heard his hip flexor muscle pop when he went down and was in significant pain. Nicolas Batum played for Portland despite dealing with a back strain, but he appeared to be in pain while scoring five points in 17 largely ineffective minutes. Those injuries may leave the Blazers short-handed as they play the remainder of a fivegame homestand. Portland may be forced to recall guard Will Barton and forward Victor Claver from the D-League's Idaho Stampede, where they had been sent on Friday. Portland was back after a seven-game road trip against Eastern Conference teams. The Blazers went 2-5 on the trip, winning at Charlotte and Cleveland, both in ovettime. They lost 99-92 at Indiana on Wednesday. "This was definitely a tough night for us," said Aldridge, who was five of 14 from the floor. "We started off kind of

sluggish, especially myself. I just felt like it was one of those nights where I couldn't find

my legs." The Kings were playing on a back-to-back after a 91-82 win Friday over Orlando and were kicking off a four-game road

o m e o i n s Ore onros ast I a o State, 87-35

• The Ducks improve their to record to 8-1 By Chris Hansen The Associated Press

EUGENE — Dam yean Dot s o n scored 12 pomts as Oregon demolished Idaho State 87-35 on Saturday. Arsalan Kazemi, Dominic Artis and Tony Woods had 11 points each for the

E/lDgP

fg

Den Ryan / The Associated Press

Portland Trail Blazers forward LaMarcus Aldridge, left, points to other players as Sacramento Kings forward Jason Thompson defends during Saturday night's game in Portland. trip. The 0-6 start to the season was Sacramento's worst road start since going 0-9 on the road to begin the 2007-08 season. Sacramento dominated despite missing Tyreke Evans, itssecond-leading scorer and leader in assists, for the fourth time in five games with a sore knee. Salmons was three for four on 3-pointers and helped l ead Sacramento's ru n b y making two of the Kings' four 3s to start the second half. Four minutes into the third quarter the Kings were up 10 and Portland never challenged as Batum and Matthews left the

game for good. "They came in an d t h ey were ready to play," said Portland guard Damian Lillard, who had 12 points. "We didn't have a lot of energy and they just outplayed us and beat us.n The Kings led by 12 in the first quarter as Portland committed nine t urnovers. The tables turned in the second quarter. The Kings scored just 13 points and went through a stretch where they missed 14 of 15 field-goal attempts, allowing the Blazers to pull to 39-38. Thompson's layup broke thedry spellfor Sacramento, which led 43-41 at the break. Former Blazer Travis Outlaw had 11 points for the Kings, all in the second half. Outlaw was averaging just 3.8 points entering the game, but was a key contributor as coach Keith Smart looked down his bench seeking a spark at halftime. "I was just excited for the o pportunity," O u tlaw s a i d . "To get to go out there, showcase, do what I can and hope-

fully I can buy myself more minutes." Also on Saturday: Mavericks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 116 Rockets ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 HOUSTON — O.J. Mayo scored 40 points, including 10 in the last three minutes, to lift Dallas to a victory over Houston in coach Kevin McHale's return. James Harden had 30 points at halftime, but the Mavericks slowed him down in the second half. He scored just nine points in the second half. Heat..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 H ornets..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 0 MIAMI — D w yane Wade scored 26 p o i nts, L e Bron James finished with 24 points and seven assists, and Miami

snapped a two-game slide by topping New Orleans. Chris Bosh scored D, and Ray Allen and Shane Battier each added 11 for Miami. B ulls ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 3 K nicks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 5 CHICAGO — M arco Belinelli and Luol Deng scored 22 points apiece as Chicago snapped New Y o r k's f i v egame winning streak. Belinelli scored 15 points in the first quarter, while Deng had 10 in the fourth, giving the Bulls their first three-game winning streak of the season. H awks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 3 G rizzlies.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 3 MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Josh Smith had 24 points, Lou Williams scored 18 of his 21 in the second half, and Atlanta won for the ninth time in 10 games. Al Horford had 19 points and grabbed 14 rebounds for Atlanta, while Jeff Teague finished with 13 points and six assists.

Pistons.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 C avaliers ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 CLEVELAND — Brandon Knight scored a career-high 30 points and Detroit beat Cleveland for the second time in six days. The Pistons, who won for just the second time in 12 road games this season, took control with a run that began late in the third quarter and carried into the fourth period. C eltics..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 2 7 6ers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 9 BOSTON — Kevin Garnett scored 19 points, Jeff Green added 16, and Boston won the back end of a home-andhome with Philadelphia. Paul Pierce finished with 13 points and Rajon Rondo dished out 11 assists and collected nine rebounds.

Torontoat Portland,7p.m.

Standings ConferenceGlance All Times PST

Saturday's Games

EASTERNCONFERENCE W L Pct GB d-Newyork 14 5 .737 d-Miami I/2 t3 5 .72 2 Atlanta 12 5 .70 6 1 d-Chicago 11 8 .57 9 3 Brooklyn 11 7 .61 1 2I/2 31/2 Philadelphia t1 9 .550 Boston 1t 9 .55 0 31/2 Milwaukee 9 9 .50 0 41/2 Indiana 10 10 . 5 00 41/2 Charlotte 7 1 2 .3 6 8 7 Orlando 7 1 2 .3 6 8 7 Detroit 7 1 5 .3 1 8 8'/t Toronto 4 1 6 .2 0 0 10'/z Cleveland 4 t 7 .1 9 0 tt Washington 2 1 5 118 tt WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB d-SanAntonio t 7 4 .810 I/2 d-Oklahoma City 16 4 800 Memphis 14 4 .77 8 t'/z d-LA. Clippers t 3 6 .684 3 GoldenState 13 7 .650 31/2 Utah 11 10 . 5 24 6 Denver 10 10 . 5 00 6'/z Minnesota 9 9 .50 0 6'/z

Dallas Houston LA. Lakers Portland Sacramento Phoenix NewOrleans d-divisionleader

10 t o 9 9 8 7 7 5

10 11 t2 12 14 14

Monday'sGames

Kings 99, Blazers 80 SACRAME NTO(99) Salmons6-10 4-5 19,Thompson4-10 4-5 1Z cousins6-17/-819, Brooks6-10e014, Garcia513 0-0 12,Thomton2-9 2-2 6, Thomas2 5 0-05, Hayes0-0 0-0 0, Robirison0-2 1-2 1,Johnson0-3 e-00, Outlaw 5-70-01t. Totals 36-8618-22 99.

PORTLAND (80) Batum1-52-25, Aldridge5-147817, Hickson7-

t20-t t4, Lilard5-130-112,Matthews5-1t 2-214, Freelandt-t 0-02, Babbitt3-9 t-29, Smith0-20-00, Leonard1-22-2 4,Jeffries 0-10-00 Price0-30-0 0, Pavlovic1-2e-03. Totals 29-7514-1880.

Sacramento 30 1 3 34 22 — 99 Portland 18 23 24 15 — 80 3-Point Goal— s Sacramento 9-19 (Salmons 3-4, Brooks 2-4, Garcia2-5, Outlaw1-1, Thomast-t, CousinsO-t, Thornton0-3), Portland8-2t (Matthews 2-3, Li lard2-5, Babbitt2-5, Pat/lovic t-t, Batum1-5, Price 0-2). FouledOttt—None. Rebounds—Sacramettto 55 (cottsins 12l, portland 49(Hickson15).

Assists—Sacramento 22 (Salmons11), Portland16 (Lillard 9).TotalFouls—Sacramento t6, Portland23. A—t9,454 (19,980).

. 5 00 6t/r

.4 7 4 7 .4 5 0 71/2 .4 0 0 B'ir .3 6 8 9 .3 3 3 10 .2 6 3 tt

Saturday's Games L.A. Clippers117,Phoenix 99 SanAntonio132,Charlotte102 GoldenState101,Washington 97 Boston92,Philadelphia 79 Detroit104, Cleveland 97 Miami106,NewOrleans90 Chicago93, NewYork 85 Dallas t16,Houston109 Atlanta93, Memphis 83 Sacramento 99, Portland80 Today's Games TorontoatLA. Clippers, 12:30p.m. Milwaukee atBrooklyn, 3p.m. Indianaat OklahomaCity, 4p.m. Denverat NewYork, 4:30p.m. OrlandoatPhoenix, 5 p.m. Utah atLA.Lakers, 6:30p.m. GoldenStateat Charlotte, 4 p.m. Detroit atPhiladelphia,4p.m. Atlantaat Miami,4:30p.m. Saii AntonioatHouston, 5p.m. Sacramento atDalas, 5:30p.m.

Summaries

Mavericks 116, Rockets 109 DALLAS(116) Da.Jone s3-72-28,Wright4-60-08,Kaman9-13

Memphis

22 25 13 23 — 83

Pistons 104, Cavaliers97 DETROIT(104) prince5-114-414, Maxieli 4-72-410, Monroer-8 /-9 t 1, Knight10-205-630,Singler2-45-59, Stttckey 4-100010, Drumm ond4-61-39, Maggette2-4t-25, t/i lantteva 2-5 006. Totals 35-75 25-33 104.

CLEVELAND (97) Gee4-123-312,Thompson4-6 t-29,Varejao

713 2316, Pargo1018 23 24, Gibson 211 00 6, Zeller 6-11 1-213, Sloatt 1-6 0-0 2, Miles 5-1t

4-4 t5, casstti 0-3e-0 0,Jonese-0 0-00. Totals 39-91 13-1797. Detroit Cleveland

25 24 27 28 — 104 22 30 18 27 — 97

2-220,Fishert-5 4-4 7,Mayo 15-26 4-4 40,Col-

lison39e 612,Brand1-4002, DoJones01 000, Carter5-120-012,Crowder2-7t-56, James0-1 1-2 t, Beattbois e e 000 Totals 43-9120-25116.

HOUSTON (109) Parsons 6-175-618, Patterson6-80-0 t2, Asik2-

42-76, Liit 2-41-27, Hardeii10-17 t5-1639,Smith t-t 0-0 2, Douglas4-92-3 t3, Deltiito 3-112-210, Aldricht-t 0-2z Totals 35-7227-38109. Dallas 39 24 21 32 — 116 Houston 24 42 23 20 — 109

Hawks 93, Grizzlies 83 ATLANTA (93)

Smith10-t7 2-324,Hortord8-163-419, Pachulia 0-31-21, Teagtte6-13C-013, Harris0-23-43, Johnson 3-50-06, Williams 6-165-721 Morrowt-54-5 6, Tolliver e 0 000 Totals 34771825 93.

MEMPHIS(83) Gay 7-251-1 17, Randolph8-12 2-4 18,Gasol 6-1t e-e18, conley4-102-312, Allen 2-3 0-44, Arthttr2-7004 Ellittgton 3-40-08, Bayless t-400

Z Pottdexter0-00-0 0, Speights0-1 0-0 0. Totals 33-7711-18 83. Atlanta 21 20 32 20 — 93

Heat 106, Hornets 90 NEWORLE ANS(90) Henry 2-21-1 5, Anderson10-190-0 24, Lopez 7-10 6-6 20,Vasqttezr-e 3-4 8, Masonr-51-1 6, D.Miller t-3 0-02, Smith6-120-012, Aminu1-2 0-0 2, Thomas 0-4 0-0 0, Riversr-e1-1 5, Roberts2-9 e-0 6.Totals 35-7812-1390. MIAMI (106) James11-162-324, Haslem1-20-0 Z Bosh4115-6 t3, Chalmersr-e 0-06, Wade9-128-926, Battier 3-53-411, Anthony1-1 1-2 3,Allen4-6 0-0 11, Cole 3-70-06, M.Miler2-30-04 Totals 40-69 19-24 106. Neworleatts 32 15 2 5 18 — 90 Miami 31 33 22 20 — 106

Celtics 92, 76ers79 PHILADELPHIA (79) Turner 6-160-0 13, TYoung9-15 4-6 22, Allen r-8 0-0 4 Holiday4-13 2-211, Richardson2-7 2-2 8, Hawes3-7 0-0 6, Wright 2-5 0-0 4, Wilkirts 0-2 e-0 0, Moi/ltrie t-2 2-2 4,wayns2-4 3-4 7. Totals

(0

Clippers........ . . . . . . . ... 117 S uns.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 9 LOS ANGELES — Jamal Crawford led a fourth-quarter rally with 13 of his 21 points, and Los Angeles won its fifth in a row while sending Phoenix to a season-worst sixth straight loss.

31-7913-1679.

BOSTON (92)

CHICAGO (93)

Dettg 9 204-422, Boozer5-11 2-2 12,Noah3-7

as s ists. K a-

zemi also had eight rebounds. "They didn't lack • When: size, we just crashed Saturday, the boards," Woods Dec. 15, 1:30 Ducks (8-1), who are p.m. sard. off to their best start After recording 18 • TV: Root in t h re e s e asons or more turnovers in under coach Dana Sports each of the past five Altman. games, the Ducks Melvin Morgan scored 11 had just seven on Saturday for the Bengals, who dropped against 19 assists. "That's been one of our to 1-6 under first-year coach Bill Evans. big problems," Singler said. "Bill's a really good coach, "That's a big one for us. We but they've got a ways to go were really focusing on that as a team, so we should've this week and i t s h owed won the game," Altman said. tonight." "But I think we played really All 12 players who saw acgood today,so we made them tion scored for the Ducks, inlook bad because our energy cluding their two walk-ons, was good, our defensive in- who both played in the first tensity was better and our half. ball movement was much The Ducks blew the game better." open with a 22-1 run early Idaho State actually led 5- in the first half that featured 4 after the first three minutes five points from Woods and of the game, but E.J. Singler 3-pointers by Singler, Carlos made a 3-pointer to give the Emory and Johnathan Loyd, Ducks a 7-5 advantage, and for a 26-6 lead. Oregon o u tscored I d a ho Oregon ended the half on State 47-11 the rest of the half an 18-1 run, a stretch highto lead 54-16 at the break. lighted by dunks from KaKazemi ha d 1 1 p o i nts zemi, Singler and Woods on and six rebounds in the first consecutive possessions. half. Dotson scored all of his Dotson, who missed his points in the second half. only shot attempt in the first Oregon dominated Idaho half, scored nine points in State in e v er y s t atistical the first four minutes of the category. second half, and his 3-pointThe Ducks outshot the er with 6:10 to play gave the Bengals 52.5 percent to 27.9 Ducks their largest lead of percent and outrebounded the game at 82-28.

Bobcats.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Danny Green scored 23 points and San Antonio set a franchise record with 19 3-pointers to hand Charlotte its seventh straight loss. Green was seven of nine from 3-point range and the Spursshot 56 percentfrom behind the arc. Warriors.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 W izards ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 7 WASHINGTON — D a vid Lee had 24 points and 17 rebounds, Klay Thompson added 23 points and Golden State beat Washington for its third straight road win.

Pierce5-t 13-4 t3, Bass5 80 0 t0, Gamett 9 11 t-t t9, Rondo3-6t-3 7, Terry3-91-2 9, Wilcox4-5 BullS 93, KfliCkS 85 0-08, Lee1-30-03, Green7-t21-116,Sullinger3-8 1-1 7,Barbosa0-2 e-00. Totals 40-758-12 92. NEWYORK(85) 16 12 2 9 22 — 79 Brewer0-50-00, Thomas3-40-06, Chandler4-8 Philadelphia 24 24 22 22 — 92 6-9 14, Kidd 2-7 0-0 6, Feltott 9-30 8-9 27, Smith Boston 4-14 5-615, Wallace r-6 0-0 6, Novak1-4 4-4 7, Prigioni 0-3 0-0 0,White2-3 0-0 4. Totals 27-84 23-28 85. Warriors 101, Wizards 97

4-4 t0, Hinrich t-30-03, Belinelli 8-152-22Z Gibson1-3e-02, Robinson4-154-4t4, Butler3-32-2 8,Mohammed0-00-00,Teague0-10-00.Totals 34-78 18-1893. New York 23 18 24 20 — 85 26 17 24 26 — 93 Chicago

five

Nebraska at Oregon

Spurs....... . . . . . . . . . . . ..132

NBA SCOREBOARD National Basketball Association

46xt ~ P

t hem 47-19 — i n cluding 23-4 in the first half. Singler f i n ished with nine rebounds, s even points a n d

GOLDENSTATE(101) Barnes1-7 0-23, Lee8-16 e-8 24, Ezeli 0-00-0 0, Curry7-156-7 22,Thompson 8-142-2 23, Green 3-100-06, Jack2-e0-05, Jenkiiis3-80-06, Landry 3-5 e-812, Bazem ore 0-0 0-00. Totals 35-81 2227 101. WASHINGTON (97) Webster3-102-49 Singleton4-111-210,Okafor 1-2 0-0z Price 0-20-00, Beal6-174-617, Livingston 0-1 e-0 0,Seraphin7 12e-0 14, Crawford 8 17 2-422, Nene3-93-59, Martin 5-62-2 t4. Totals 37-8714-2397. Golden State 28 2 2 21 30 — 101 Washington 21 26 23 27 — 97

Spurs132, Bodcats102 SAN ANTONIO (132) Green8-100-023, Duncan5-91-211, Diaw2-4 0-0 4, Parker10-121-1 22, Nealr-6 0-0 5, Ginobili 4-7 0-011, Spitter 4-7 2-210, DeColo3-10 2-2 10,

Bonner392-29, Mills 5-10ee t3, Anderson2-3348, Joseph 2-32-26 Totals 50-9013-15132. CHARLOTTE (102)

Kidd-Gilchrist4-7 ee 8,Biyombo1-32-44, Diop

O-t 0-10, Walker9-18 2-3 23, Taylor 5-7 0-010, Haywood0-11-21, Henderson5 102-413, Mullens 1-5 4-4 7,Sessions4-124-412, Gordon2-32-36, Williams2-4e-0 5, Warrick1-2 4-4 6, Higgins3-6 t 27 Totals37-7922-31102. Satt Antottio 32 27 38 35 — 132 Charlotte 23 21 23 35 — 102

Clippers117, Suns99 PHOENIX (99) Dudley3-4 0-0 8,Morris 5-132-213, Gortat2-3 2-2 6, Dragic2-7 4-48, Brown6-16 5-619, O'Neal 1-3 e-0 2,Scola8-112-2 t8, Beasley7-113-4 21, Telfair 0-4 0-0 0,Johnson2-6 0-0 4.Totals 36-78 18-20 99. Ljt. CLIPPERS(117) Btttler3-80-08, Griffin10-174-1024,Jordan3-4 2-4 8, Paul5-104-416, Green2-4 0-0 5, Crawford B-19 4-4 2t, Barnes 6-11 0-013, Odom4-8 0-08, Bledsoe 590010, Tttriat t-202 Z Hollins 1-t 00 2 Totals 48-9314-24117. Phoenix 31 26 26 16 — 99 LA. Clippers 28 3 522 32 — 117

Chris Pietsch / The Register-Guard

Oregon's Arsalan Kazemi, drives against Idaho State's Chris Hansen during the first half of Saturday's game in Eugene.

Oregon State routs Grambling State • Roberto Nelson scores 26 in 85-54 win The Associated Press C ORV A L L I S — Roberto Nelson had a season-high 26 points Saturday to lead Oregon State t o a n 8 5 -54 w i n against Grambling State. A hmad S t arks a dded 1 7 po i n t s and Eric Moreland 14 points and 13 rebounds for Oregon

Moreland's 14 p oints tied a c a reer high. He now has three straight games with doubledigit rebounds. 48Xtgp O regon Stat e Oregon State at scored the game's Portland State first nine points and • When: led 18-3 less than Wednesday, six minutes into the 7:30 p.m. game. G r a mbling State, which got 12 • TV: Comcast SportsNet NW points from Derron State (5-2). Hobbs, got no closer Terry Rose had 19 than 11 points the p oints for Grambling State r est of the f irst half. The ( 0-6), which has lost all of its Beavers used a 13-1 run to g ames this season by at least l e ad 46-22 at halftime. 26 points. All f iv e o f N e lson's 3N elson, a junior guard, set p o inters came in the f irst a new career high with nine h alf, leading Oregon State f ield goals and tied another w ith 20 points at the break. w ith five 3-pointers. He was T he Beavers led by as many n ine of 13 shooting overall a s41 in the second half. and added four r ebounds Starks followed up a caand three steals. reer-high seven 3-pointers N elson said he worked in a gainst the Jayhawks with p ractice on gettinghis feet set f i v e (on seven attempts) a nd catching the ball cleanly Saturday. "It's coming in the flow of to help with his shooting. He w as a combined zero for six t he offense and I was able to f rom 3-point range the past k nock them down," Starks t wo games before going five s aid. "Just a normal shot. I o f six from beyond the arc w ant to keep that going." Saturday. Oregon State shot 29 of " For once they were start- 6 9 overall and 16 of 29 at the i ng to go in," Nelson said. "It f ree-throw line. Grambling j ust felt good to finally make S tate was 19 of 53 and eight a couple." of 10, respectively.


D4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

NFL

Illinois hands 'Zags first loss of season The Associated Press SPOKANE, Wash. — Brandon Paul scored 35 points to lead No. 13 Illinois over No. 10 Gonzaga 85-74 on Saturday in a matchup of unbeaten teams. Tracy Abrams added 14 points for Illinois (10-0) and new coach John Groce is off to the best debut for an Illinois coach in the team's modern history. Kelly Olynyk scored 16

points to lead Gonzaga (9-1). Myke Henry's basket gave Illinois its first lead of the game at 44-43 in the opening seconds of the second half, and the Illini pushed that to 54-49 by making all five of their field goals to open the half. Henry's 3-pointer gave Illinois a 59-51 lead. Two baskets by Przemek Karnowski cut Illinois' lead to 61-58. But shooting woes hurt Gonzaga in the second half, and D.J. R ichardson's 3pointer gave the Illini a 68-59 lead. Also on Saturday: No. 1 lndiana..... . . . . . . . 100 Central Conn. State....... 69 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Christian Watford scored 21 points and Cody Zeller had 19 points and a career-high 19 rebounds as the Hoosiers -

The New York Jets gave quarterback Mark Sanchez an extension in the offseason, but now there are questions about his status as the starter moving forward.

No.12 Missouri..... . . . . . . 68

Tennessee State.......... 38 COLUMBIA, Mo. — Stefan Jankovic scored all 14 of his points in the second half,

helping Missouri (8-1) overcome a sloppy start. No. 14 Minnesota.... . . . . . 71 Southern California...... . 57 LOS ANGELES — Andre Hollins scored 14 points and Minnesota defeated Southern California, giving coach Tubby Smith his 500th career victory. No.15Georgetown.... . . . 46 Towson..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 WASHINGTON Georgetown held T owson scoreless over the final 4~/~ minutes, and the Hoyas (7I) won their second home clankfest in a row, recovering from a 17-point first half. No. 18 New Mexico....... . 65

Kathy Willens / The

Associated Press

Teamss en i, ut sti oo in ort eirranc ise uarter ac By Rob Maaddi

Lost in New York

The Associated Press

Look at Sanchez and Vick. Both have regressed the past two years. Sanchez led the Jets to consecutive AFC championship games in his first two seasons. But he struggled down the stretch last year and the Jets flirted with Peyton Manning in the offseason. Fans in New York have been calling for Sanchez to be benched ever since the Jets acquired Tim Tebow from Denver. Sanchez finally got pulled last week in a 7-6 win over Arizona, but it was for Greg McElroy with Tebow injured. Still, Jets coach Rex Ryan is going back to Sanchez this week. "I believe Mark has a skillset that is pretty impressive," Ryan said. "He can make all the throws. The thing that Mark needs to do a better job of is protecting the ball and know when it's OK to take chances and know when you shouldn't. I think that Mark is going to do a better job at that." Sanchez gota three-year contract extension for $40.5 million in March. That deal calls for $20.5 million fully guaranteed, meaning the Jets are going to give him every opportunity to earn it as a starter this year and likely next. "It's my job to play the way I know how," Sanchez said. "These last couple of weeks, and certain stretches of this season, I haven't. It kind of culminated there on Sunday and hopefully that's the end of it. I think it is. That's the way I'll approach this next one."

EAST LANSING, Mich.Gary Harrisscored 20 points

Michael Vick, Matt Cassel and Kevin Kolb signed contracts totaling $225 million. They have zero playoff wins to show for all those dollars, and no assurances they'll be starters in 2013. Finding a franchise quarterback is a tough call in the NFL. The Eagles, Chiefs and Cardinals are just a few of the teams facing this problem. The Jetsaren't sure about Mark Sanchez, who was benched last week only to get another chance to play this

and the Spartans (8-2) pulled

Sunday.

Valparaiso........ . . . . ... 52 A LBUQUERQUE, N . M . — Alex Kirk scored 11 of his 12 points in the second half and New Mexico (10-0) overcame a sluggish start. No. 19 Michigan State..... 73

Loyola of Chicago........ 61

away in the second half. No. 20 North Carolina..... 78 East Tennessee State..... 55 CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (9-0) used suffocating de- Leslie McDonald scored 14 fense to win easily. points and North Carolina (7No.2Duke.... . . . . . . . . . . . 90 2) held East Tennessee State Temple.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 to 12 points in the first half. EAST R U T H ERFORD, No. 22 Notre Dame........ 84 N.J. — Seth Curry scored Brown.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 23 points, big men Mason SOUTH B E N D , Ind . Plumlee and Ryan Kelly had — Freshman Cameron Biedd ouble-doubles and D u k e scheid had a career-high 17 got the win at the Izod Cen- points to lift Notre Dame (8ter. Plumlee finished with I) tothe win. 16 points and 14 rebounds, No. 23Oklahoma State.... 62 while Kelly had 14 points Missouri State..... . . . . . . . 42 and 10 rebounds for Duke S TILLWATER , O kl a . — Markel Brown scored 15 (9-0). No.3Michigan ..... . . . . . . 80 points, Michael Cobbins and Le'Bryan Nash added 10 Arkansas.... . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 A NN A R B OR , Mi c h . apiece and the Cowboys (7-1) — Jordan Morgan scored a beat the Bears. season-high 12 points and No. 24 Wichita State ...... 80 matched a season high with Northern Colorado ...... . 54 10 rebounds to help MichiWICHITA, Kan. — Cleangan (9-0) remain undefeated. thony Early scored 16 points No. 4 Syracuse.......... 108 and Wichita State (9-0) got Monmouth (N.J.) ......... 56 off to a fast start on its way to SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Mian easy win. chael-Carter Williams had No. 25 N.C. State...... . . . . 80 15 points and a career-high Cleveland State ..... . . . . . 63 16 assists, C.J. Fair finished RALEIGH, N.C. — Richwith 14 points and 10 re- ard Howell had 17 points and bounds and Syracuse (8-0) 10 rebounds to help the Wolfrolled. pack (6-2) beat the Vikings in No. 5 Louisville..... . . . . . . 99 their annual return to ReynMissouri-Kansas City..... 47 olds Coliseum. LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Russ Nevada..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 Smith scored a career-high Washington..... . . . . . . . . . 73 31 points, powering LouisSEATTLE — Deonte Burville (8-1) to the easy victory. ton scored 29 points and No. 7Ohio State.... . . . . . . 89 had a career-high six steals Long Beach State ..... .. . 55 to help Nevada (5-4) beat COLUMBUS, Ohio — De- Washington. C .J. W i l cox shaun Thomas had 18 points, scored 15 of his 21 points in including a 3-pointer in an the second half to lead Wash11-point run in the first half, ington (4-4). and Ohio State (6-1) cruised. Arizona State ..... . . . . . . . 87 No. 8 Arizona...... . . . . . . . 66 CS Northridge..... . . . . . . . 76 Clemson..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 TEMPE, Ariz. — Jordan CLEMSON, S.C. — Mark Bachynski ha d a s c h oolLyons scored 20 points and record 12 blocked shots en Arizona used a late second- route to the first triple-douhalf run to improve to 7-0 for ble in Arizona State history. the first time in 14 years. Bachynski finished with 13 No. 9 Kansas..... . . . . . . . . 90 points and 12 rebounds for Colorado ..... . . . . . . . . . . . 54 the Sun Devils (8-1). LAWRENCE, Kan. — Ben UCLA ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 McLemore scored24 points, Texas..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Kevin Young added 16 points HOUSTON — Jordan Adand eight rebounds and Kan- ams scored 18 points and sas (7-1) routed former Big 12 UCLA (6-3) closed the game member Colorado. on a 13-2 run to defeat Texas. No.11 Cincinnati ..... . . . . 92 BYU..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Maryland-Eastern Shore .. 60 Utah..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 C INCINNATI — C a s h P ROVO, Utah — M a t t mere Wright set a c areer Carlino scored 19 points to high with six 3-pointers, and rally BYU past Utah. Jordan Sean Kilpatrick scored 19 of Loveridge scored 14 points his 23 points in the first half, for the Utes (6-3), who have keeping Cincinnati (9-0) lost 11 of the past 12 games unbeaten. in the series. -

pllkg 4

Jed Conklin/The Associated Press

Illinois' D.J. Richardson tries to break free of Gonzaga's Mike Hart (30) and David Stockton (11) in the first half of Saturdaynight's game in Spokane, Wash.

Carson Palmer's p r olific n u mbers haven't translated into wins in Oakland. The Jaguars could be undecided about Blaine Gabbert, especially if Chad Henne plays well down the stretch. It's no surprise these six teams are

struggling. The Eagles (3-9), Chiefs (210), Cardinals (4-8), Jets (5-7), Raiders (3-9) and Jaguars (2-10) are a combined 19-53 this season. But the bottom clubs aren't the only ones with questions at quarterback. The NFC West-leading San Francisco 49ers (8-3-1) benched Alex Smith for Colin Kaepernick. Th e M i n nesota V i k ings (6-6) are concerned about Christian Ponder'srecent struggles. Even the Baltimore Ravens (9-3) might have to make a difficult decision about Joe Flacco because his contract expires after this season. Of course, if the Ravens somehow let Flacco walk, there will be plenty of teams eager to land a legitimate No. I starter.

Trouble in K.C. In Kansas City, the Chiefs are in disarray at quarterback. Cassel has been benched despite his $63 million, six-year contract, and Brady Quinn is on his third team since being chosen by Cleveland in the first round in 2007. The only other quarterback on the roster is Ricky Stanzi, a fifth-round draft pick last year who has never thrown a pass in the league. Cassel is due to earn $16.5 million over the next two years, so it's unlikely the Chiefs will pay him that much to hold a clipboard. Unless Quinn really impresses in the final month, they'll be looking in the draft or free agency for a long-term solution. "I think anytime you have an opportunity to play more and get more experience, you're going to continue to grow and improve as a player," Quinn said. Not always the case.

A Philly fumble The Eagles rewarded Vick with a $100 million contract in A ugust 2011 after his incredible comeback season in 2010. However, only $35.5 million of that deal is guaranteed money and nearly all off it will be paid by the end of this year. Vick is due to make $15.5 million in 2013, but the Eagles can release him without taking a major salary-cap hit. V ick's latest i njury, a concussion, forced him to miss the last three games, and gave rookieNick Foles an opportunity to play. The third-round pick struggled in his first two starts before a strong performance last week against Dallas in Philadelphia's eighth straight loss. Coach Andy Reid made him the starter for the rest of the season, so the Eagles will be trying to figure out if he's their No. I guy

going forward.

"He's a smart kid. He works hard. He spends a lot of time in his job. He's done well up to this point," Reid said.

"You've got to keep going. As teams have an opportunity to study you and your strengths and weaknesses and present you with different looks according to what they see, you may be able to answer that. Again, it's a matter of just getting reps under his belt." Whatever Foles lacks in physical skills, he makes up for in poise. Foles has the makeup for the job. Now he has to show it on the field. "There are only 32 jobs, but you don't make it too big," he said. "You take it one day at a time. I just think of it that we have great guys in this locker room and it's a great team to be a part of with all the coaches and everyone who works here. We're all in it together. It's great to be a quarterback here ina great place like this."

Cardinal sins The situation in Arizona is tricky. The Cardinals traded a second-round pick and cornerback Dominique RodgersCromartie to the Eagles for Kolb. Then they gave him a $63.5 million, six-year contract. He's started just 14 games in two seasons, going 6-8. He also lost his starting job in the preseason to John Skelton, only to regain it because of injury and then get hurt again. Kolb helped the Cardinals to a 4-0 start, lost two games and then went down. If he doesn't return this season, that won't help his chances going into next year. The Cardinals pursued Manning last offseason and certainly will keep their options open.

49ercontroversy Jim Harbaugh hasthe same approach, but in a winning environment. The 49ers coach prefers sticking with the hot hand under center. That's why Kaepernick, a second-year pro and second-round draft pick in 2011, will make his fourth straight start today against Miami. Smith was near-perfect in his last full game before sustaining a concussion. He completed 18 of 19 passes for 232 yards and three touchdowns without an interception. But he stayed on the bench after being medicallycleared, though Harbaugh has said he is willing to go back to him. "We've got faith and trust in Colin in the way he's played," Harbaugh said. "Therefore, another start this week." At least the 49ers have that luxury. Other teams wish they had one clear-cut

guy.

Heismanvoting Voting for the 2012 Heisman Trophy, with first-, second- and third-place votes and total

points (voting on 3-2-1 basis): Player Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M Manti Te'o, Notre Dame

Collin Klein, KansasSt. Marqise Lee,Southern Cal

1st 474 321 60 19

Braxton Miller, Ohio State

Jadeveon Clowney,South Carolina Jordan Lynch, Northern lllinois Tavon Austin, West Virginia

Kenjon Barner, Oregon Jarvis Jones, Georgia

1 6 4 3

2 nd 2 52 3 09 1 97 33 29 13 8 4 12 10

3rd 103 125 320 84 77 23 27 21 15 18

Total 2,029 1,706 894 207 144 61 52 47 42 41

Heisman

A drian Peterson had come closestas a freshman, finishing second to Southern Continued from D1 California quarterback Matt Leinart in Manziel seemed incredibly calm af2004. But it took 78 years for a newbie to ter his name was announced, hardly take home the big bronze statue. Johnny resembling the guy who dashes around Football really can do it all. the football field on Saturday. He simply Peterson was a true freshman for bowed his head, and later gave the tro- Oklahoma. As a r e d shirt f r eshmen, phy a quick kiss. Manziel attended school and practiced "I wish my whole team could be up with the team last year, but did not play h ere with me," he said w it h a w i d e in any games. He's the second player from Texas smile. Te'o had 321 first-place votes and 1,706 A8 M to win the Heisman, joining John points and Klein received 60 firsts and David Crow from 1957, and did so with894 points. out the slightest hint of preseason hype. Just a few days after turning 20, Man- Manziel didn't even win the starting job ziel proved times have truly changed in until two weeks before the season. college football, and that experience can Who needs hype when you can fill up be really overrated. a highlight reel the way Manziel can'? F or years, seniors dominated t h e With daring dashes and elusive imaward named after John Heisman, the provisation, Manziel broke 2010 Heispioneering Georgia Tech coach from the man winner Cam Netwon's Southeastearly 1900s. In the 1980s, juniors started ern Conference record with 4,600 total becoming common winners. Tim Tebow yards, led the Aggies to a 10-2 record in became the first sophomore to win it in their first season in the SEC and orches2007, and two more won it in the next trated an upset at then-No. I Alabama in two seasons. November that stamped him as legit.

Henny RayAbrams/The Associated Press

Texas A&M quarterback Johnny Manziel poses with the Heisman Trophy after becoming the first freshman to win the college football award on Saturday in New York. He has thrown for 3,419 yards and 24 touchdowns and run for 1,181 yards and 19 morescores to become the firstfreshman, first SEC player and fifth player overall to throw for 3,000 yards and run for 1,000 in a season. Manziel has one more game this season, when the No. 10 Aggies play Oklahoma in the Cotton Bowl on Jan. 4. The resume alone fails to capture the Johnny Football phenomena. At 6-footI and 200 pounds, Manziel is master of the unexpected,darting here and there, turning plays seemingly doomed to failure into touchdowns.


SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

ine o se

e s an on e r oa ,

PREP ROUNDUP

Bulletin staff report ASHLAND — Playing its third road game in five days, La Pine snapped a two-game losing streak with a comeback boys basketball victory over Ashland on Saturday, 55-52. Tyler Parsons scored 15 points, grabbed four rebounds and dished out three assists, and Cameron Kraft added 14 points — 12 of which came in the second half — as the Hawks battled back from a 30-25 halftime deficit. La Pine (3-2 overall) trailed 41-39 entering the fourth quarter but outscored the Grizzlies 16-11 in the final period. "We t railed t h e w h o l e g ame," Hawk c o ach K y l e Kalmbach said. "(Late in

DS

and Kelsie Smith contributed 10 in a contest Crook County led 28-10 at halftime. "Before and 37-26 at halftime before in scoring with 11 points to the game we talked about puta second-half comeback. The go with his five rebounds and ting together four good quarStorm (2-2) play at Ashland three assists. Daniel Thomas ters, which we hadn't done on Friday. had 10 points and nine re- yet this year," Cowgirls coach Madras.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89 bounds, and Brayden Bordges David Johnson said. "We did Henley......... . . . . . . . . . .. 83 added nine points and four that today." Crook County (IK LAMATH F A L L S assists. Redmond (2-1) hosts 3 overall) is at the three-day Jhaylen Yeahquo stole an inRidgeview o n We d n esday Junction City/Cottage Grove bounds pass and converted a night. H oliday T o urnament n e x t layup with about 35 seconds B urns ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 7 week. The Cowgirls open tourremaining i n r e gulation to C rook County.... . . . . . . . . . . 5 0 ney play with Junction City on force overtime, and the White B URNS — D i l l o n D e es Thursday. Buffaloes went on to win in paced the Cowboys with 10 W illamette.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 8 double overtime.Yeahquo led points, Troy Benton added M ountain View.... . . . . . . . . . 3 8 Madras (2-2) with 25 points, nine, but Crook County came EUGENE — The Wolverand Rodney M itchell, who up short against the Hilanders ines jumped out to a 21-9 lead made six of his seven three- in the championship game of after the first period and rode point baskets in the first half, the Burns Tournament. Cow- a 23-point third quarter to exadded 21. Madras coach Allen boys coach Jeff Lowenbach tend their lead, as the Cougars the game) we played smart Hair said his team jumped to a said it simply came down to fell in the championship game defense and got some key 13-0 lead against the Hornets Burns shooting well as opof the W i l l amette Tournasteals." in the first quarter but trailed posed to Crook County strug- ment. Maddy Booster led the La Pine ended the n onby eight points in the second gling from the field, pointing Cougars with 12 points, and league matchup with 17 steals half before forcing overtime. out the C owboys' six-of-18 Emma Plattner finished with as a team. Josh Gacke led the For the game, the White Bufperformance at the free-throw 10 points while hitting a pair Hawk defense wit h s even faloes were 18 of 20 from the line as a r e ference. Crook of three-pointers. Mountain takeaways. free-throw line, and Steele County (3-1) welcomes Burns View (2-1) travels to WashingLa Pine hosts Ridgeview on Haugen hit all eight of his at- on Tuesday for a nonconfer- ton on Friday to take on Battle Tuesday. tempts in the overtime peri- ence contest. Ground. In other Saturday action: ods. Madras travels to Sisters Falls City/Kings Valley ......62 R idgeview.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 9 BOYS BASKETBALL on Tuesday for a Class 4A T rinity Lutheran ..... . . . . . . . 39 S weet Home.... . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Mountain View ..... . . . . . . . 68 nonconference game. FALLS CITY — Gabe Phillis REDMOND — Ten p layCrater... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Sweet Home ..... . . . . . . . . . 73 finished with 17 points and a ers scored as t h e R a vens CENTRAL POINT — The Ridgeview... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 game-high five three-pointers, notched their first victory in Class 5A Cougars led by just REDMOND — A f o u r t h- but the Saints of Bend found program history. Chloe Ross two points heading into the quarter rally b y R i dgeview themselves in a 20-8 hole at the had a game-high 15 points and fourth quarter, but by outscor- wiped out most of a big defi- end ofthe first quarter before Hosanna Wilder, Shae Wiling the 6A Comets 20-6 in the cit, but the host Ravens could falling to the Mountaineers in cox, and McKenzie Hidalgo fourth, including an 18-2 run get no closer than three points a nonconference contest. Ty- scored 10 points apiece for to close the game, Mountain down the stretch in the nonler Dunn chipped in with 10 Ridgeview. The Ravens outView came out with a non- conferenceloss.Sweet Home points, and Nate Carpenter re- scoredthe Huskies 20-5 in the conference win. Mitch Modin made 12 three-point baskets, corded eight points and seven second quarter to take control poured in 24 points — 13 in including nine in the first half, boards. Trinity Lutheran (1-4) of the nonconference game. the fourth quarter — and hit en route to a 46-29 lead. The visits Mitchell on Tuesday for "We were able to get a lot of nine of 12 shots from the field. Huskies were up 65-41 after a nonleague contest. turnovers off our defense and Grant Lannin finished with 14 three quarters before Jacob G ilchrist... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 3 thenturnedthat into fast-break points and a game-high nine Johnson (nine p oints) and L owell.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 9 points," Ridgeview coach Ranrebounds, and he and Erik George Mendazona (seven GILCHRIST — The Griz- di Davis said. The Ravens (1-3 Siefken earned praise from points) led a f o u r th-period zlies improved to 3-1 after overall) made 28 field goals in Mountain View coach Craig Ridgeview comeback attempt. defeating the Devils to take the win. Ridgeview hosts La Reid for playing a solid defen- Jack Bowman led the Ravens third place in the Gilchrist In- Pine on Tuesday. sive game against Crater's big for the game with 16 points, vitational. Gilchrist plays at H enley...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 8 men, who ranged from 6 feet, followed by Johnson with 15 North Lake on Friday to open M adras.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2 5 inches to 6-7. Mountain View and Mendazona, who had a up Class IA Mountain Valley KLAMATH FALLS — The (3-0) hosts Pendleton on Fri- team-high five assists, with League action against North White Buffaloes dropped to 1day for a nonleague matchup. nine points. Tanner O'Neal Lake. 3 overall, with its third straight North Medford..... . . . . . . . . 66 g rabbed 1 0 r e b ounds f o r M itchell..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2 loss coming at the hands of the Summit.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Ridgeview. S weet H o m e's C entral Christian ..... . . . . . . 16 Hornets. Madras w elcomes Marco Lucas scored the ty- Bryce Daniels led all scorers SILVER LAKE — Bryson Sisters on Tuesday. ing basket with 14 seconds with 26 points, including six Eells recorded seven points for P hoenix ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 9 left and made a clutch steal three-pointers. The Ravens (1- the Tigers, but a 14-4 second L a Pine..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 3 in the final seconds of the 3) play at La Pine on Tuesday. quarter by M itchell allowed BROOKINGS The fourth quarter to help Summit Cascade.......... . . . . . . . ..48 the Loggers to pull away and Hawks' losing streak is now force overtime, but the host R edmond..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 seal a win at the four-team at four games, with their latStorm were outscored 15-7 in R EDMOND — A n e a r l y North Lake Tournament. Cen- est loss coming at the hands the extra session and lost to lead got away from Redmond, tral Christian (1-2) opens up of the Pirates on the last day the Class 6A Black Tornado. which absorbed its first loss Class IA Big Sky League play of the four-team BrookingsLucas was filling in at point of the season. The host Pan- on Friday, when the Tigers Harbor Invitational. The deguard for regular starter Isaac thers led 16-8 after one quar- host Sherman. feat comes a day after falling Dermon, who suffered a con- ter, but by the fourth period it GIRLS BASKETBALL to Brookings-Harbor 63-21 on cussion in Summit's Friday was a back-and-forth affair. C rook County.... . . . . . . . . . . 5 3 the opening day of the tournanight loss to South Medford. "We didn't do a v ery good G rant Union..... . . . . . . . . . . . 2 7 ment. La Pine (1-4) entertains A senior, Lucas finished with job taking care of the basBURNS — Kimmer Sever- Ridgeview on Tuesday. a team-high seven assists to ketball, especially down the ance scored a game-high 17 Lowell.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 go with his four points. Cade stretch," said Redmond coach points to lead the Cowgirls to Gilchrist... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Cattell led the 5A Storm with Jon Corbett. " But it wa s a their first victory of the seaGILCHRIST Nicole a game-high 17 points, and good learning experience for son in the consolation game of Johnson scored seven points Nick Moyer added 16. Summit some of our younger guys." the Burns Tournament. Jessie a s the Grizzlies fell in t h e trailed 22-D after one quarter Trevor Genz led the Panthers Maley-Loper added 12 points championship game of their

own invitational tournament. Lowell outscored Gilchrist in every quarter and led 32-10 at halftime. The Grizzlies (2-3 overall) start Mountain Valley League play Friday at North Lake. T rinity Lutheran ..... . . . . . . . 63 Falls City/Kings Valley ......42 FALLS CITY — The Saints picked up their second straight win thanks to 25 points and six assists by Katie Murphy, who hit 10 of 11 shots from the floor. Emily Eidler posted 14 points and eight rebounds, and the Saints outscored the Mountaineers 36-15 in the second half to seal the nonleague victory. Trinity Lutheran (2-2) visits Mitchell for a nonconference matchup on Tuesday. C entral Christian ..... . . . . . . 39 M itchell..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 S ILVER L AK E — De s i Duke went for 23 points, and the Tigers picked up their first win of the season with a victory against the Loggers in the four-team North Lake Tournament. Kaylin McAfee scored eight points for Central Christian, and the Tigers outscored Mitchell 18-4 in the second quarter to separate themselves from th e L o ggers. Central Christian (1-2) hosts Sherman on Friday in its Class IA Big Sky League opener. B onanza..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 N orth Lake..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 SILVER LAKE — The Cowgirls fell in the championship game of their ow n t ournament, despite Kelli Brown's team-high 11 points. North Lake kicks off Mountain Val-

ley League play on Friday with a h ome game against Gilchrist. WRESTLING

whole tournament," Cowboys coach Jake H uffman s aid. "He scored at will and plugged through his tournament." Collbran Meeker was the runner-up at 138 pounds and

Hayden Bates (132 pounds) and Gunner Crawford (195) each placed third for Crook County. "It's very early in the season," Huffman warned, "but to go up against teams of that caliber from bigger schools, it makes us feel like we're doing the right things." Casey Gates took second at 195 pounds to lead the Panthers. Sumner Saulsbury finished third at 235 and Chance Lindquist placed fourth at 145. Crook County wrestles at Bend High on Thursday and then both the Cowboys and Redmond are at the Adrian Irwin Memorial Tournament at Ridgeview in Redmond on Friday and Saturday. Bears take first at Springfield S PRINGFIELD — Ben d High freshman Justin Vinton won the 152-pound bracket at the Springfield Tournament as the Lava Bears claimed the team title at the 17-team event. Kevin L ar a ( 10 6 p o unds), Kasey Bernstein (126), Noah H aines ( 132) a n d Mac k McHone (182) all took third in their respective weight classes. "We're young," Bend coach Luke Larwin said, "but a lot of these kids are buying into and starting to understand what it takes to be a varsity wrestler." The Bears are back on the mat Thursday when they host Crook County in an Intermountain Hybrid dual.

Cowboys second at Culver

CULVER — Crook County's junior varsity took second seventh at Coast Classic at the C ulver Tournament, NORTH BEND — C r ook trailing only champion Glide, County gave reigning Class which won the two-day event 6A state champion Roseburg a with 273 points. The Cowbit of a scare during the Army boys, who scored 199'/~ points, Strong Coast Classic before had no finalists but five wrestaking second place overall tlers placed third for Crook behind the Indians. County: Trey Shores at 106 Roseburg, which has won pounds, Aaron Sw indle at five of the past six 6A state ti- 182, Gunnar Robirts at 195, tles, took the 33-team, two-day Zach Smith at220 and Trevor tournament with 215 '/~ points. Rasmussen at 285. Culver finThe Cowboys were second ished third (165 points), Lowell with 197points, with Churchill took fourth (144) and Madras (163 points), David Douglas placed fifth (142). The host (161) and Dallas (144) round- Bulldogs boasted two chaming out the top five. Redmond pions in sophomores Tucker finished a respectable seventh Davis (132 pounds) and Josh with 127 points. Hendrix (285). Davis knocked Sophomore Trayton Libolt off teammate Jared Kasch in highlighted the t ournament the D2-pound final, 4-2. The for Crook County, going 5-0 White Buffaloesalso crowned while winning the 113-pound two champions. Samuel Flores b racket. Libolt won b y f a l l took first at 1D pounds and three times at the Coast Clas- Bryce Vincent won at 1 20. sic, including a s econd-pe- Other Central Oregon teams riod pin in the championship that competed at the tournafinal over Churchill's Jorrin ment were Ridgeview (10th), Ishihara. La Pine (llth), Sisters (20th) "He w as dominant t h e and Gilchrist (21st).

Cowboys second, Panthers

PREP SCOREBOARD Boys basketbalI Saturday's Results Nonconference NORTHMEDFORD (66) —TristenHolmes16, Browne14,Knox12, Bailey7, Gray7, Klug6, Reyes 2 Sherboume 2 Totals 2514-26 66. SUMMIT (58) — Cade Cattell 17, Moyer16, Peter s9,Lucas4,Mullen4,Ritchey3,Rasmussen3, Reeves2 Menetee Totals2113-1958. NorthMedford 22 15 5 9 1 5 — 66 Summit 13 13 11 14 7 — 58 Three-point goals North Medtord:Holmes2, Bailey;Summit Moyer2, Catell.

Totals 20 10-1452. La Pine 13 12 14 16 — 55 Ashland 18 12 11 11 — 52 Three-pointgoals— LaPine: Parsons3, Kraft2; Ashland:Kandaris, Fredrickson. TRINITY LUTHERAN (39) Gabe Phillis17, Dunn10,Carpenter8, Atnip2, l.aw2, I.. Phillis, KNger, Nihei, C.Knauss,D. Knauss,Akiyama.Totals 15 4-13 39. FALLSCITY/KINGS VALLEY CHARTER (62) — EthanMcConnell27, Yeager17, Hilebrand 12, Burgett 2, Weems2, Jinnett 2, Lorain, Simmons, Kempfer.Totals 27 2-4 62. TrinityLUtheran 8 13 9 9 — 3 9 Falls City/Kings Valley2017 15 10 — 62 Three-point goals —Trinity Lutheran:G. Philis 5; Falls City/KingsValleyCharter: McConnell 4, Hillebrand z

MADRAS(89) — JhaylenYeahquo25, Mitchell 21, Haugen2II, Pichette 15,Wolfe 8, Spino, Fine, Phillips. Totals 31 18-20 89. HENLEY(83) Jack Mitchell 26, Hilyard 21, Burns Tournament Overstreet16,Mueller 12,Seater 6, Crain 2, Grief, Campbell.Totals 3113-20 83. CROOKCOUNTY(50) — Dilon Dees10,BenMadras 2 1 1 8 12 20 4 14 — 89 ton9,Gr eaves,8,Dean6,Mahurin6,Washechek6, Henley 1 7 1 9 1 9 16 4 8 — 8 3 Suttin 5,Cooper.Totals 20 6-18 50. Three-pointgoals— Madras.Mitchell 7, Pichette BURNS(57) — Austin Feist20, Crafts14, Mar2; Henley:Overstreet5, Mitchell 2, Seater. tin 9, Garner6, Wiliams4, Patterson4, Hueckman, Sutcliffe, Houck. Totals 2011-2057. CASCADE (48) — Wright 18,Ciark12, Kruse C rookCounty 8 19 8 1 5 — 5 0 7, Delamarter 6, schirmer 3,Everetts 2, Molan, p. Burns 18 14 15 10 — 57 vetvus,Towery.Totals 17 9-1548. Three-point goals Crook County:Benton2, REDMOND(44) — Trevor Genz11, Thomas Mahurin 2;BumsMartin 3, Crafts2, Wil iams. 10, Bordges 9, Cravens5, Powell 5, Rodby4, Brown, Davies.Totals 18 2-2 44. North LakeTournament Cascade 8 11 15 14 — 48 Redmond 16 8 9 1 1 — 44 MITCHELL(32) — Brett Domenighini 21,EsThree-point goals — Cascade:Clark 2, Wright pinoza 8,Lindquist 3, Jorgensen, Morales,Lanoue, 2, Schirmer;Redmond. Bordges3, Cravens, Powell, Holt, Nicol, Fischer,Szwedowski Totals 12 5-7 Genz. 32. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN (16) — BrysonEells 7, MOUNTAIN VIEW (68) — Mitch Modiv 24, Reynolds 4,Koo3, Sibley 2, Poole,Kruse,Stewart, Lannin 14,Siefken1II, Holly 8, Logan4, Haugen3, Roberts,Davis.Totals 7 2-716. Hjelm 2,Roth2, Kurzynowski1, Heffner,Webb, Cor- Mitchell 6 14 5 7 — 3 2 rgian, Wilcox.Totals 2618-29 68. c entralchrissan 2 4 4 6 — 1 6 CRATER (52) Race Reiter13, Dismukes11, Three-point goals — Mitchell: Domenighini 2, Jaasko 6,Stewart5,Morgan4,Lane4,Marineau3, Espinoza;Central Christian: none. Orozco 2,Martin 2, Erskine2, Bennett. Totals 25 5-9 52. Mountain View 19 13 16 20 — 68 Crater 14 16 16 6 — 52 Girls basketball Three-pointgoals MountainView Modin,LanSaturday's Results nin; Crater:Jaasko2, Stewart. SWEETHOME(73) — BryceDaniels 26, Jutte 18, Ilauffman18,Porter 9 Harter 2, Adams,Dixon, Gaskey.Totals 28 5-1273. RIDGEVIEW (66) Jack Bowman16,Johnson 15, Mendazona 9, Stiles 6, O'Neal6,Aamodt 5,Alvarez 5, Stanton4, DeW olf, Mansee, Roins. Totals 23 16-27 66. S weet Home 26 2 0 19 8 — 7 3 Ridgeview 15 14 12 25 — 66 Three-pointgoals SweetHome:Daniels 6, Porter 3,Jutte2, Kaufman; Ridgeview Bowman, Avarez, Aamodt,Johnson. LA PINE (55) — Tyler Parsons15, Kraft 14, J.Ramirez7,Wieber6,Gacke4,Boen2,Syres2, Skopp.Totals 236-8 55. ASHLAND (52) — ConnorKaegi25, Stanley 11, Fredrickson11, Kandar>s 3, Layton 2, Steinberg.

10, H. Wilder10, Hidalgo10, Kenny7, Durre 4 C Simmons 4, B Simmons4, Stroup 2. Totals 28 13-24 69. SweetHome 12 5 1 0 1 5 — 42 Ridgeview 16 20 15 18 — 69

Three-pointgoals —SweetHome:Andersen 3, Kent; Ridgeview: none.

MITCHELL(15) —SarahTolton 5, Fox4, PerryZapara 2, Rogers2, Holt 2, Loerzer, Domenighini Morales,Je.Apperson.Totals 7 0-815. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN (39) — DesiDuke23, McAtee8, Stealey4, Hannay4, S.Brunoe,A. Brunoe. Totals 18 3-639. 2 4 4 5 — 15 Mitchell CenvalChrissan 6 1 8 13 2 — 39 Three-point goals — Mitchell. Tolton; Central Christian:none.

TRINITYLUTHERAN(63) —Katie Murphy25, Eidler 14,Spencer9, Cowan6, Sample 4, Clift 3, Ho z Totals 27 9-1263. FALLSCITY/KINGS VALLEY CHARTER (42) Carrie Mack19,Dixon15,Kidd4, Hae2, Varney Gilchrist Invitational 2,Caste,Davis Totals159-1242. Trinity Lutheran 1 5 12 19 17 — 63 LOWELL (64) — AriahUlrich 23, Stone11, DeF alls City/Kings Valley1512 8 7 — 42 vereax11, Blumm 8, Demarice 7, Alvarez4. Totals Three-pointgoals—Trinity Lutheran:none;Falls 27 5-8 64. City/KingsValleyCharter: Dixon3. GILCHRIST(23) — Nicole Johnson7, Ashley James7, C.James6, Smith 2, Longbotham3; Bean, willameseTournament Archer,Lowel. Totals NA. Lowell 18 14 14 18 — 64 MOUNTAINVIEW(38) — MaddyBooster 12, Gilchrist 6 4 7 6 — 23 Plattner10,Bailey5,Alexander4,Waldrup 4,Warren Three-point goals — Lowell: Blumm2, Ulrich, 3, Cant,Farnsworth, Reeves, McCarthy, McCadden. Stone,Devereax;Gilchrist: NA. Totals 12 10-1638. WILLAMETTE (68)— LexiBando 24,Glassow Wrestling 15, Josh6, Baumgartner 6, Wright 6, Osborne5, Kast 3, Munkres 3,Gam bil 1, Perry. Totals 23 11-16 Saturday's Results 68. Army StrongCoastClassic M ountainview 9 12 9 8 — 3 8 at North Bend willamese 21 12 23 12 — 68 Three-pointgoals —MountainView.Plattner 2, Team scores —Roseburg 215.5, CrookCounty Booster,Bailey;Wilamette: Bando3, Baumgartner 2, 197, Churchill 163,DavidDouglas161, Dallas144, Josh 2,Osborne,Munkres. Crater 141.5,Redmond127, Hilsboro120.5, Cleveland 90, Evergreen(Wash.i 87, Sandy 86, North Burns Tournament Medford83.5,Marshfield80,Grants Pass79, Canby 73, Century70,1 inois Valley69, Coquille 61, Hood CROOKCOUNTY (53) — Kimmer Severance RiverValley59.5, West Albany54.5, Eagle Point 53.5, 17, Maley-Loper12, Smith 10,Martin 3, Apperson Thurs ton48,Newberg39,Phoenix38 Clackamas38, 3, Malott 3,Wood2, Bannon2, Lindburg 1, Benton, West Salem 34.5,SouthEugene30,HiddenValley28, Byram, Estes.Totals1715-26 53. North Bend26, Gresham25 Wilamette22, BrookGRANTUNION(27) — TaylorSmith 9, Mos- ings-Harbor13,Woodburn4. ley 6, McConneli 4,Donahue3, Sharpe 3, Wright 2, Thompson, Stearns, HouserTotals 614-27 27. Top-three placers CrookCounty 9 19 1 5 10 — 53 106 —t DerrickTollen(chur), z Tylercampbel Grant Union 3 7 8 9 — 2 7 (Mars), 3.CodyBibler (Dallj, 4. MattPeterson(Hil), Three-pointgoals—CrookCounty. Maley-Loper, 5. BrentBannon(CC), 6. Henry Cox(NM). Apperson;GrantUnion:Smith. 113 —1 TraytonLibolt (cc), z Jorrin Ishihara (Chur), 3.JacobCytrynbaum(SE), 4. Austin Mitche North LakeTournament (NM), 5.SkylerMidcap(NBI,6. AustinBrittle(Clac).

Nonconference CASCADE (71) —AlejandraMarquez13, Louder 0, Biddington10,Trump10,sanders9, Lund7, LoukolaNi 6,Suelzle2, Gaetz3, Bartlett. Totals 30

6-1371. REDMOND(42) — Kendall Current8, Benson 8, Baker 6,Bergum5, Wiliams 4, Redden4, Dan-

0

• •

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220 —1. steelysmith (wA),z caseyGates

(Redm), 3BradHyatt (HV),4. LucasAnthony (Thur), 5 Curtis Crouch (CC),6. Jarrett Baker(Crat). 285 —1.wil Daws on(chur), z Rileysipe(Dall), 3. Sumner Saulsbury(Redm),4. DerickTurituri (Crat), 5. AaronBeadle(Cent), 6.JasonWiliams (CC).

Football Class 6A Final Saturday Sheldon13,LakeOswego 6

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SWEETHOME(42) — Andeisen 0, Kent 7, Miller 6,Davis6, Marchbanks4, Gilespie 3, Brendle 3 Bell 2, Derma tes Totals11 8-2042. RIDGEVIEW(69) — Chloe Ross15, Wilcox

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nis 4,Sappington3, Lennie, Hammack,Wilson, Watt.

Cascade 11 22 23 15 — 71 Redmond 7 7 15 13 — 42 Three-pointgoals—Cascade:Trump2, Marquez, Sanders,Biddginton; Redmond: Current.

120 — t CaseyCoulter (GP),2 MattHofenbredl (Dall), 3 Chad Jones(Rose), 4.JoeyRodriguez(Hil), 5. DakotaPeterson(Sand), 6.JoeLwin(Clev). 126 — 1.ThaddeusNelson(Mars), z Daukiwilburn (Hill), 3. ColeVanAnrooy (Rose), 4. Grayson Munn (CC),5. Ramon Ortiz (Everi, 6. TylerThomas (Crat) 132 — 1. RileyJaramillo (chur), z Jeremiah Baker(DD), 3. HaydenBates (CC), 4. MorganWalters (Crat), 5.PaytonMesa(Rose), 6. Skyler I-larvey (Mars). 138 — 1. GabeMiler (IV), z CollbranMeeker (CC), 3.NateWalters (Crat), 4. MaxThomas(Chur), 5. Cameron Mesa(Rose), 6. BradyAndersen(Dall). 145 —1. vagit Atrasov(DD), z Brody Faas (Rose), 3. Dillon Ulrey(Crat), 4. ChanceLindquist (Redm), 5.BrandonMawrey (Sand), 6. AndrewDeHart (HRV). 152 — t Reed vanAnrooy(Rose), z wyattpas santino (Dall), 3. TekwonWallace (Ever), 4. James McCoy (EP), 5. Noel Hygelund(Canb), 6. Klell Thorsen (GP). 160 — 1. Elijah Taylor(DDI, z lan Thomas (Rose), 3. Keith Nichols(Canb), 4. Kris Bjornson (WSj, 5.YadnelAyala(Clev), 6.Alex Urrea(CC) 170 — 1. KyleBateman(sand), z sye Yates (Coqu), 3.AnthonyThomas (Ever), 4. ReidShipley (NM), 5.JoeJones(Wil), 6. D.J.Istihara(Chur).

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 20'I2

SKIING: WORLD CUP

GOLF ROUNDUP

onn wins su er- , wit controvers Perry, O'Hair take • Expletive by U.S. skier marsvictory; Bend's Ross17th

o \'

Alexis Pinturault of France produced a brilliant second run under floodlights to improve from sixth and win a World Cup slalom

By Graham Dunbar The Associated Press

ST. MORITZ, Switzerland — Lindsey Vonn's rivalry with World Cup leader Tina Maze heated up and threatened to boil over Saturday, when the Slovenian's coaches accused the A m e r ican de f ending champion of hurling an insulting expletive after winning a super-G. Vonn edged Maze toremain perfect in four speed races this season, then was shocked to find herself in a fight she hadn't intended and didn't want. In venting her emotions on crossing the line, and realizing she had taken the lead from main challenger Maze, Vonn acknowledged she used a curse word as an expression of relief. Still, the Slovenian team — which targeted a three-race weekend sweep for Maze after her win in Friday's supercombined — surprised most observers by alleging Vonn deliberately aimed an insult, and filed an official protest for "unsportsmanlike behavior." "They think I s aid something very bad about her when I came to the finish and that is absolutely not true," a clearly stunned Vonn said minutes after being told of the allegation. "It definitely hurts. I w ould never say anything bad about another athlete at the finish."

NFL Continued from D1 Luck: His numbers do not look great: a 55.5 completion percentage, 17 touchdowns, 16 interceptions. But last Sunday, Luck led his fifth gamewinning drive in the fourth quarter,the second of two touchdown drives in the final three minutes as the Indianapolis Colts came back from a 12-point deficit. With eight victories and ranking fourth in yards passing, Luck is doing more with less (the 18th-

ranked running game and 2 1st-ranked d efense) t h a n Griffin or Wilson. Griffin: Th e W a shington Redskins q u a r terback i s completing 67.1 percent of his passes, with 17 touchdowns and four interceptions, and has run — quickly — for 714

yards. He is giving everyone a tutorial in the pistol offense and is already the most daz-

zling player in the game. Wilson: The most unlikely success of all, having not been drafted until the third round. With the help of one of the league's best defenses, Wilson and the Seattle Seahawks have been a revelation. He is completing 63.4 percent of his passes, for 19 touchdowns and eight interceptions. He also has 298 yards rushing.

The few races to watch There are not as many as usual, but the most intriguing will be the race in the NFC East, in which the New York Giants could be in a dogfight until the final weekend with the Redskins and the Dallas Cowboys; the NFC North, in which the Green Bay Packers and the Chicago Bears are tied, with a date in Chicago n ext Sunday; and th e t w o AFC wild cards, which the Colts, the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Cincinnati Bengals will fight for. Pertinent tidbits: • Drew Brees, who faces t he Giants today, is 4-0 i n his career against them. After playing the New Orleans Saints, the Giants face the Atlanta Falcons and the Balt imore Ravens, who ar e a combined 11-1 at home this season. • The Colts play the Houston Texans twice in the last four weeks. • The Steelers and the Bengals meet Dec. 23.

At the top of the heap They are probably going to be the playoffs' top seeds. Can Atlanta and Houston earn a little respect, too? Houston plays the New England Patriots on Monday night, and then has the upstart Colts twice in

lead at Shootout

Frenchman wins WorldCupslalom:

race on Saturday in Val D'Isere, France. The 2fyear-old held off defending

World Cup champion

Giovanni Anletta /The Associated Press

LindseyVonn, right,hugs teammate Laurenne Ross, of Bend, as she celebrates after winning a women's World Cup super-G in St. Moritz, Switzerland, Saturday. Vonn accepted that she had sworn — "and I shouldn't have done that" — but insisted it was a reaction to skiing poorly and failing to finish Friday, knowing she is still short of full fitness after a recent illness. "I'm struggling with my strength," the four-time World Cup champion said, insisting she was at her limits on Satur-

uled meeting of national team coaches. Skaardal criticized the Slovenia team's actions in originally demanding to see broadcasters' film, though without naming Andrea Massi, Maze's trainer and boyfriend. "We had officials going into the television buses which is, of course, a very critical beday. "I came down (the slope) havior and in no way acceptwith everything I have." a ble," Skaardal said at t h e Vonn's version was soon meeting, which Massi did not backed by World Cup womattend. "I ask you to behave in en'srace director Atle Skaar- a proper manner." dal, who joined United States Massi declined to discuss and Slovenia team coaches to details o f t h e af t e rnoon's study television footage of her drama with The Associated post-race reactions. Press. " We could not f i n d a n y "I made the protest, I don't abuse whatsoever and the pro- have any other comment," test was, of course, rejected," Massi said after th e t r adiSkaardal said later at a sched- tional evening p r ize-giving

Needing to stay home

NFLPlayoff Scenarios For Week f4:

AFC Clinched: Denver,AFC

The Ravens (9-3) are almost certainly going to make the playoffs. But no team may need home-field advantage more. The Ravens average twice as many points at home

West; Houston, playoff spot; New England, AFC East.

(34) as on the road (16.5).

Houston

will play four playoff con-

Clinches AFC South division with:

— Win AND Indianapolis loss or tie, or

— Tie ANDIndianapolis loss Clinches first-round bye with: — Win AND Indianapolis loss or tie AND Baltimore

loss or tie Baltimore Clinches AFC North division with: — Baltimore win AND Pittsburgh loss AND Cincinnati loss Clinches playoff spot with: — Win AND Pittsburgh

loss or tie, or — Win AND Cincinnati loss ortie, or — Tie AND Pittsburgh loss

AND Cincinnati loss NFC Clinched: Atlanta, NFC South. Atlanta Clinches first-round bye with: — Win AND Chicago loss or tie AND Green Bay loss ortie, or

— Win ANDSan Francisco loss, or — Tie AND Chicago loss AND Green Bay loss Clinches home-field advantage throughout NFC

playoffs with: — Win AND Chicago loss or tie AND Green Bay loss or tie AND San Francisco

loss San Francisco Clinches playoff spot with: — Win AND Dallas loss AND Minnesota loss AND

Tampa Bayloss AND Washington loss AND St. Louis loss or tie, or — Win AND Dallas loss AND Minnesota loss AND

Tampa Bayloss AND Washington loss AND Seattle loss or tie the final three weeks. Atlanta gets the Giants at home, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the season finale.Those are all good tests considering the Texans and the Falcons, both 11-1, have beaten teams with winning records only three times each.

The difference may notbe so stark after a brutal final month, in which the Ravens

Marcel Hirscher of Austria, who led after the first run but dropped to third behind Germany's Felix Neureuther. American Ted Ligety finished f 2th. — The Associated Press

ceremony in the town center, where Vonn and Maze hugged on the podium with no trace of tension. Vonn won in 1 minute, 2.71 seconds, 0.37 seconds faster than Maze and 1.01 ahead of Julia Mancuso of the U.S. in t h ird. B end's L aurenne Ross, finished in 17th place in 1:04.74. Vonn's 57th career World Cup win, the second most in history, was her 20th in super-G. She is the four-time d efending champion in t h e discipline. Vonn and Maze have combined to win seven of the nine World Cup events. Maze has a 163-point lead overall over 2011 champion Maria HoeflR iesch o f G e r m any, w h o placed fifth on Saturday. Vonn was third overall.

draft holds no Andrew Luck or Robert Griffin III, and can any team count on striking mid-round gold the way Seattle did with Russell Wilson'?

The free-agent pool is going to be thin, too. The race will be on for Alex Smith and Michael Vick, assuming both are released. To the loser go the spoils.

The Associated Press NAPLES, Fla. — Kenny Perry and Sean O'Hair took a two-stroke lead i n t h e Franklin Templeton Shootout on Saturday, birdieing the final six holes in betterball play for an 11-under 61. "We got pretty hot," O'Hair said. "Kenny did a great job when I wasn't in the hole ... then I did a pretty good job when Kenny wasn't in the hole." Perry and O'Hair were 19 under overall, two strokes ahead of first-round leaders Davis Love III and Brandt Snedeker at Tiburon Golf Club. Love and Snedeker had a 65. The round was delayed by heavy rain and wind for 1 hour, 50 minutes. O'Hair chipped in for birdie on No. 13 just ahead of the downpour. But the two didn't let the delay affect them. Perry birdied Nos. 14 and 15, O'Hair birdied Nos. 16 and 17, and Perry made one on the last hole. "It was a m azing," said Perry, who won the event in 2005 and 2008. "We come back right out of the hopper and birdie the last five holes." "You have to keep your momentum," O'Hair said. Love a nd Sne d e ker couldn't. A f t e r bi r d i eing three straight holes on the back and making a par, the two made two b i rdies in the last five holes after play resumed. "Finally started making some birdies and we had to stop," Love said. "We had a rough par 5 when we came b ack and d i dn't m ak e a birdie." History is on the side of O'Hair and Perry. The second-round leaders have gone on to win six out of the past 11, and four of the past five. The 12 two-man teams will play a scramble today.

tenders. Keep an eye on the road games: at Washington, which has the 23rd-ranked scoring defense, and on the final day of t h e season at C incinnati, w hich h a s t h e 14th-ranked defense in points allowed.

Also on Saturday: Feng wins Dubai D UBAI, U n i te d A r a b Emirates — China's Shanshan Feng won the Dubai Ladies Masters by five strokes, closing with a 3-under 69 for her second Ladies European Tour title. The sixth-ranked Feng finished at 21-under 267 at Emirates Golf Club. She won the LPGA Championship in June for her first major title. The Netherlands' Dewi Claire Schreefel was second after a 69. Senden in front in Sydney SYDNEY — A u stralian John Senden took a threestroke lead in the Australian Open, making an eagle and two birdies in a f o ur-hole stretch on the back nine en route to a 2-under 70. Senden, the 2006 champion, had a three-round total of 7-under 209 in tough, windy conditions at The Lakes. Englishman Justin Rose was second after a 70. Schwartzel leads in Thailand CHON BURI, T h ailand South A f r ica's C harl Schwartzel shot a 4-under 68 to extend his lead to five strokes after the third round of the Asian Tour's Thailand Gol f C h a mpionship. Schwartzel had an 18-under 198 total at Amata Spring. Sweden's Daniel C h opra was second after a 69. Masters champion Bubba Watson was tied for seventh at 7 under after a 71. South African event starts DURBAN, South A f rica — South Africa's Tim Clark a nd D e n mark's M o r t en Orum Madsen shot 5-under 60 to share the first-round lead in the rain-delayed Nelson Mandela Championship. Because of the wet conditions, the R oyal D u r ban course was cut from a par of 70 to 65. The tournament, the European Tour's seasonopening event, has been reduced to 36 holes.

I

I

Excellence by the sack This is the most competitive race for defensive player of the year in a w h ile, and it portends many more. All three contenders — J.J. Watt, Von Miller and Aldon Smith — are in their second seasons. Bill Belichick called Watt the most disruptive player in the league and said he looked like t he defensive player of t h e year to him.

P ESENTED BYTHE BULLETIN 8: PINE MOUNTAI

SPOPT

'•r

%

Win and ijsB jt fpr..

Watch Adrian Peterson run Because nobody has approached 2,000 yards rushing less than a year after blowing out his knee.

skis, TREK 8 SANTA CRUZ bikes, clothing, shoes,

sunglasses, outerwear, split boards & more!

The Kaepernick experiment Any coach who has made a cameo on "Saved By the Bell" receives a lot of leeway, and Jim Harbaugh may need it if Colin Kaepernick's play slides, as it di d l ast week. Would Harbaugh go back to Alex Smith, benched after suffering a c oncussion, despite completing 70 percent of his passes and going 6-2-1 as a starter? Kaepernick is the quarterback of San Francisco's future and Smith will be gone, but only the outcome of this season will determine if Harbaugh was correct to make the change when he dld.

One WinterWinner One SpringWinner One Summer Winner One Fall Winner Giftcard will be activated at the beginning of its season.Thewinter gift card will beactivated on January 31,2013.

Qo g P ORFJgORMATIOQ Og TO SUBSCRIBE,CALL gE BULLETIN g 5g -385-580 Additional entry forms are available n newspapers for sale throughout Central Oregon and n the lobby ot The Bulletin. Last dayto enter a noon, January18, 20t3. All tour wmrrers wtl tre drawnandannounced at noon onJanuary 31, 2013 at nne MountamSports.

The Bulletin benC bulletin.COm FOUR SEASONS OF 2013 SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY FORM. SIGN ME UPTO WIN! Ofticial newsprint entry forms only. All entries must tte droppedoff in person at PineMountain Sports. See www.bendbulletin.com/pinemtn1300 or www pinemountainsports.com for official rules and regulations. Winners will be notified by email only.

A lack at quarterback

NAME:

A fter l as t S u n day, o n e would think there could be no debate about which team has the w orst quarterback situation. By a point, the Arizona Cardinals lost (won?) the race to the bottom, losing to the New York Jets, 7-6, in as abominable a quarterback showdown a s i s p o s sible while still throwing the ball forward. But hey, there are still four more weeks to consider. After that, there will not be many great options available to th e C a rdinals, the Jets and anybody else desperate to improve at the game's most important position. (We are looking at you,

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E2 SUNDAY DECEMBER 9 2012 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

T HE N E W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D 1

LO AND BEHOLD! By Steven E. Atwood / Edited by Witl Shortz

2

3

4

5

19

5 2 Protestant

I [I t' s gone! I

denom.

53 Anthony Ed en, Earl

of

5 A pop group might have one on Facebook

55 French spouse

5 8 Rock' s

15 64 or 1,000

F i ght e r s

59 Seeks, as office

1 9 Head of a fami l y

61 Arti sti c ex p r ession on the slopes?

20 Woodcutter of legend

64 Levels

21 Rings

66 Thrust upward

2 3 Consideration i n

6 7 Causing El ect i o n

choosing a deli?

Day delays?

25 Without rhyme or reason

73 Car category

26 Baby pig, e.g.

7 7 Skin gr o w t h

27 Name part meanin g "from"

78 Negatives

2 8 Part of a b u t c h e r ' s s tand-up rou t i n e ?

80 Mideast capital short

30 Sharpness

8 2 Jungle cr i t t e r

31 French wave

8 4 Chart i n d i c a t in g t h e

32 Pallid

progression of darkness after

35 Laundry basket of j ust col ors or j u s t whites? 41

sunset? 87 Disturb

-Pei (dog breed)

42 Reqmt. for certain graduate studies 44 Get an

79 Time

81 Dallas player, for

29 Camouflage

effort

45 Actress Sommer

46 Wise lawmaker most l ikely t o be r e elected?

For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.

108 Comes by

1 13 When there mi g h t b e a two-f o r - o n e

special on ice c ream dri n k s ?

54

3 3 SeaWorld a t t r a c t i o n

59

67

1 20 Some print er s 121 Curse

3 6 Writer Fl e m i n g

77

122 Mil. awards

3 7 Writer Wal l a c e

82

18

36

37 3 8

39

40

44

45

68

22

50

51 55 5 6

61

62

65

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74 7 5

80

79

83

58

57

84

76

81

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91

92

3 8 11th-century k i n g o f

I Loan fi g s.

3 9 City on th e L i t t l e

2 Nuuanu Pali L o o k o u t locale 3 Grp. that has held summit meetings in Caracas and

Riyadh

93

40 Clear, in a way 4 2 Italian port on t h e

1 03 104 10 5

43 Attic' s purpose

50 "Wise" one

93 Power in

8 Source of no r t h e r n

1 1 Critic C l i v e

101 102

107

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97

1 09 110

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1 11

114 115

65 Ones going through channels?

7 6 Turn i n s id e o u t

94 B-baller

104 Legal scholar

80 Separate out

67 Fencing unit?

8 3 Braves' di v .

95 Small re nted f ar m s, in Britain

1 05 Quaintly a n t i q u e

5 5 Fr, ti t l e

6 8 "Viv e

84 High-performance

96 Keep out of si g ht

56 Unyielding

6 9 Kind of p e r sonal i t y

5 7 Lunat i cs ' o u t b u r s t s

70 Up to, briefl y

60 Denver-to -

71 Brian of ambient music

Albuquerque dir.

!"

13 Composer Salieri

61

1 4 1957 ¹ I

62 Quaker cereal

72 Big maker of 65 Down

63 Contents of jew el

74 Permeate

R tkB hit f o r

C huck Wil l i s

100

96

49 Grazing area

12 Quarantine

1 5 Or or nor: A b b r .

99

119

51 Patronized, as a restaurant

exposure? 10 Old minelayers

95

paddles

7 Actress Vardalos

99 Caught in

94

Tyrrhenian Sea 4 7 Sport involvi n g

9 Belarus neighbor

90

Cuyahoga

4 Paul Bunyan, e.g.

9 8 "Do n' t b e

88 8 9

87

Denmark

Down

9 2 Boy: L a t .

weapons?

60 64

35 Normandy campaign city

6 Actress Woodard

103 Paintball

43

53

91 Eve preceders

M onopoly or M r . Peanut

42

52

8 8 Sched, listi n g

1 01 Prop for M r .

35

3 2 To the same ext e n t

48 Olive

Hollywood?

34

34 Offshore bank, e.g., for tax pu r poses

119 Building support

17

31

48 4 9

1 17 Props for M r . Monopoly and Mr.

15 1 6

30

41

14

28

47

30 Counter orders

12 1 3

25

46

1 16 Beat in a p r i c e w a r

11

27

32 3 3

18 Salinger girl

10

21

29

24 Actress Lena

118 Make

9

24

6:10

22 Like superhighways

Peanut

8

26

17 Suffice

5 Used a FedEx Off i c e service

100 Thick skin

5 1 Mini a t u r e

1 6 "Le t goo d unt o all men": Galatians

1 12 Salsa specif i c a t i o n

54 Red-berried tree

12 Pouch

1 07 Volumi n ous ref .

7

20

23

Across

6

Pau lo

cases

cars

106 German quaff

97 High, in a way

85 Bond girl Adams 86 Given enough to be

109 Actress Lupino and

98 Pay for a hand

others

101 Terra

happy 88 Out around mi d d ay, say

89 Emphasize 90 Some car radio buttons

7 5 Jewelry c h ai n

Guinier

110 Undercover agent

1 02 "A r i s t o t l e

111 Bits and pieces,

C ontemplati n g of Homer"

e.g.: Abbr. 1 14 "That's i t ! "

103 Certain br a specification

115 Roofing material

PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE E3

5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday .. . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .

Starting at 3 lines "UNDER'500in total merchandise

... 5:00 pm Fri ... . Noon Mon Noon Tues .. . Noon Wed ... Noon Thurs ... 11:00 am Fri ... 3:00 pm Fri ... 5:00 pm Fri

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

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OVER'500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50

G arage Sale Spe c i a l

A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

C©X

4 lines for 4 days... . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

PLEASE NOTE; Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday.

I

245

Antiques & Collectibles

RC C6tX Ilaslgtl

Visit our HUGE home decor

consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron, Bend 541-318-1501

www.redeuxbend.com

The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

The Bulletin

Servne Central Qregon srnre lsaa

Crafts & Hobbies Rockhound Equipmentsaw, grind, sand 8 p olish. L o rtone & Highland Park Bend. Info 541 280-5574

I

Bicycles & Accessories

Women's 3-spd bike, 26" whitewalls, new chrome fenders, qel seat, basket, like new> $200 OBO. 541-549-1157

Estate Sales ESTATE SALE

pictures, kitchen items, furniture, tools, collectibles, pool table and much more. Fri. Sat. Sun. 9-4, 4 NE 13th St., Bend. Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of everything in The Bulletin's daily

garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious consumers. And if you're planning your own garage or yard sale, look to the classifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place for bargains! Call Classifieds: 541-385-5809 or email

classified@bendbulletin.com

Golt Equipment

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

260

261

Misc. Items

Medical Equipment

Fue l & Wood

Lost & Found

ACME Supreme Medical Alert for Se- Aii Year Dependable REMEMBER: If you Juicerator, good cond, niors - 24/7 monitor- Firewood: S plit, Del. have lost an animal, Ruger Bisley Vaquero ter, $75. 541-617-1225 C apt. Greg R e e l .357, excellent cond, $35. 541-383-3918 ing. FREE Equipment. Bend. Lod g epole, don't forget to check B uckaroo Gui d e $600. 503-347-7562 FREE Shipping. Na- Pine: 1 for $180 or 2 The Humane Society Black metal 3 - tiered tionwide Service says .... Ser v i ce. for $350. Cash, Check in Bend 541-382-3537 basket stand, 50" tall, $29.95/Month CALL Ruger LC9 (gmm) laser. Guns, Hunting or Credit Card OK. Redmond, THANKS TO OUR Purchased new two $25. 541-389-7968 541-923-0882 8 Fishing Medical Guardian To- 541-420-3484. FRIENDS yyHO months ago, n ever Bluetooth B B B-B42-0760.DRY JUNIPER $185/ Prineville, 421 head s et, day FISHED WITH US shot. Box of ammo. Motorola H670, 541-447-71 78; 22LR revolver, 4" bbl, (PNDC) $30. Schools 8 Training split, or $165 rounds lN 2012! $400. 541-404-2826. OR Craft Cats, S/S, Charter Arms, 541-280-3498 per cord. Delivered. 265 Gift certificates for 541-389-8420. Ruger Vaquero 44 mag, NIB, $375. A IRLINES ARE H I RCall 541-977-4500 or 2013 fishing trips Bread Maker, Zojirushi, Building Materials 541-788-6365 stainless, 7s/z" brl, new. ING - Train for hands 541-678-1590 now available. d eluxe, near n e w , $495. 541-815-4901. on Aviation Mainte.357 mag Rossi, lever $100. 541-383-3918 Call me at Bend Habitat nance Career. FAA action rifle, 20" bbl, NIB, Wanted: Collector 541-379-0362 to RESTORE Gardening Supplies approved p r ogram. $449. 541-788-6365 seeks high quality Buying Diamonds KjkEBSR reserve your dates Building Supply Resale Financial aid if qualifishing items. /Gold for Cash • & Eq u i p ment .45ACP Hi-Point pistol for spring/summer Quality at LOW fied - Housing availCall 541-678-5753, or Saxon's Fine Jewelers with laser, NIB, S229. salmon fishing! PRICES able. Call Aviation In503-351-2746 541-389-6655 Have Gravel, will Travel! 541-788-6365 HAPPY HOLIDAYS! 740 NE 1st stitute of Cinders, topsoil, fill mate541-312-6709 BUYING Maintenance. rial, etc. Excavation 8 Need to get an Lionel/American Flyer Open to the public. 1-877-804-5293. CASH!! Sporting Goods septicsystems. Abbas trains, accessories. ad in ASAP? For Guns, Ammo & (PNDC) Construction cce¹7SS4O - Misc. 266 541-408-2191. Reloading Supplies. CalB541-548-6812 You can place it ATTEND CO L LEGE Heating & Stoves 541-408-6900. Snow boots, A ltimate BUYING 4f( SE L LING online at: ONLINE 100%. For newspaper Black Hawk, sz 11, new All gold jewelry, silver Colt 44 New Service, *Medical, *Business, Bay n a tural www.bendbulletimcom delivery, call the and gold coins, bars, Heritage $1500. Marlin 44mag le- $1 30, 541-280-3493 *Criminal J us t i ce, fireplace insert, Circulation Dept. at ver rifle, $625. SLW 9 Snow boots, new Alti- rounds, wedding sets, gas *Hospitality, *Web. 4 0,000Btu/HR, e x c . 541-385-5800 541-385-5809 mm, $400. 541-647-8931 mate Escape II, sz11 class rings, sterling sil- cond., Can convert to Job placement assisver, coin collect, vinTo place an ad, call tance. Comp u ter $115. 541-280-3493 $500. 50 cal Thompson Rentage watches, dental propane, 541-385-5809 available. F i n ancial DON'TMISSTHIS egade Muzzleloader, gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-728-1123. or email Aid if qual i fied. classifiedObendbulletin.com left hand, $250. 541-382-9419. NOTICE TO Art, Jewelry Maschio 7-ft rotary tiller, SCHEV a u thorized. 541 -788-61 02 ADVERTISER 86 6 - 688-7078 DO YOU HAVE The Bulletin virtually new, less than 5 Call & Furs Sen rna Central Oregon since iaaa gmm H i-Point p i stol SOMETHING TO Since September 29, hrs. $7500 new; asking www.CenturaOnline.c w/Kershaw knife & case, 1991, advertising for om (PNDC) SELL $5000. 541-421-3222 2ct Euro-cut diamond NIB, $199. 541-788-6365 used woodstoves has Where can you find a FOR $500 OR men's ring, serious only, W anted Use d F a r m TRUCK SCHOOL been limited to modLESS? Call The Bulletin ClasBmm Kel-Tec P-11 or $12,000 obo. helping hand? Equipment & Machinwww. IITR.net Non-commercial sifieds today and have els which have been SCCY CPX2CB pis541-788-5343 ery. Looking to buy, or Redmond Campus c ertified by the O r - From contractors to advertisers may this attention getter in t ols, Nl B , $24 9 . consign of good used Student Loans/Job M ikimoto 2 2 " Pe a r l egon Department of yard care, it's all here place an ad 541-788-6365 your classified ad. quality equipment. Waiting Toll Free Necklace, $999 OBO. Environmental Qual541-385-5809. with our in The Bulletin's Deschutes Valley 1-888-387-9252 gmm Ruger LC9 w/LaCash, 503-338-9945 ity (DEQ) and the fed"QUICK CASH Equipment sermax laser, N I B, GENERATE SOME eral E n v ironmental "Call A Service SPECIAL" 476 541-548-8385 $400. 541-788-6365 EXCITEMENT Protection Ag e n cy Professional" Directory 1 week3lines 1 2 Employment TV, Stereo & Video IN YOUR (EPA) as having met Ot' Buy/Sell/Trade all fireNEIGBORHOOD. smoke emission stanPrompt Delivery Opportunities arms. Bend local pays ~ae eks 2 0 ! Hay, Grain & Feed5 D VD/CD A M /FM H T , Plan a garage sale and dards. A cer t ified Rock, Sand & Gravel cash! 541-526-061 7 Ad must Samsung Red TOC sys don't forget to adverw oodstove may b e Multiple Colors, Sizes include price of Wanted: Irrigated farm Administrative $200 541 -280-3493 tise in classified! identified by its certifi- Instant Landscaping Co. County F i re e~le te of ssoe ground under pivot ir- Klamath 54t -385-5809. 541-3B9-9663 cation label, which is or less, or multiple Speakers, Creative 6.1 riaation, i n C e n tral District No. 1 has a permanently attached Megaworks 650 700w career e m p loyment items whose total SUPER TOP SOIL OR. 541-419-2713 GET FREE OF CREDIT to the stove. The Bulopportunity fo r an does notexceed $120 541-280-3493 www.herahe aoilandbark.cocn CARD DEBT N OW! Wheat Straw: Certified & letin will no t k n ow- Screened, soil fk comAdministrative Assis$500. Cut payments by up 255 Beddinq Straw & Garden ingly accept advertis- post tant II / Lead Ambumi x ed , no to half. Stop creditors ing for the sale of Call Classifieds at Computers rocks/clods. High hu- Straw;Cgompost.546-6171 lance Billing Specialfrom calling. uncertified 541-385-5809 mus level, exc. for Wheat Straw in shed, i st. T he hour l y 866-775-962t. woodstoves. www.bendbulletin.com T HE B U LLETIN r e - (PNDC) flower beds, lawns, $2 bale. After 6 p.m. c ompensation r a t e quires computer adstraight 541-546-9821 Culver. range i s $14 . 70gardens, 267 286 vertisers with multiple Highspeed Internet EVs creened to p s o i l . $18.99 per hour with a HANDGUN ad schedules or those ERYWHERE By SatFuel & Wood Bark. Clean fill. Deg enerous bene f it Sales Northeast Bend SAFETY CLASS Horses & Equipment~ package. For a comselling multiple sys- ellite! Speeds up to liver/you haul. for concealed license. tems/ software, to dis- 12mbps! (200x faster 541-548-3949. plete job description NRA, Police Firearms. WHEN BUYING A BIT LESS close the name of the than dial-up.) Starting and application, visit ** FREE ** Instructor, Mike Kidwell. business or the term at $49.95/mo. CALL FIREWOOD... EctuineConsignment www.kcfd1.com. ApGarage Sale Kit Fri., Dec. 14 6:30 p.m. "dealer" in their ads. N OW & G O F A S T! • Los t & Found Holiday shopping for all plications due D ec. To avoid fraud, Place an ad in The $40. Call Kevin at your good quality Private party advertis- 1-888-718-2162. 14, 2012 b y 1 2 :00 The Bulletin Bulletin for your gaCent-Wise, for reservaers are defined as Found Border Collie mix gently used horse and p.m.(noon). (PNDC) recommends payrage sale and retions, 541-548-4422 rider needs at those who sell one 1-yr old (?) male on Hillment for Firewood Men's Pendleton wool FIND IT! ceive a Garage Sale top of Juniper Canyon. offerable prices. H&R pump shotgun, 12 computer. fingertip-length top coat, only upon delivery Kit FREE! 541-447-9866 Open Tues. - Fri. 10-5, BllY tr' and inspection. ga, new in box, $175. size 42. $150 new; sell 257 Windy Knolls, SELL IT! • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Found Cat, young long- Sat. 10-5. 541 -788-6365 KIT INCLUDES: $50 cash. 541-382-1867 Off Hwy 20, Musical Instruments 4' x 4' x 8' The Bulletin Classifieds haired Siamese, vi• 4 Garage Sale Signs behind LaZBoy, The Bulletin Offers • Receipts should • $2.00 Off Coupon To H8R pump shotgun, 20 cinity 1st/Greenwood, Call 425-323-3262 ga, new in box, $175. Use Toward Your Free Private Party Ads include name, 11/25. 541-389-1740 Automotive FB A Bit Less 541-788-6365 Next Ad • 3 lines - 3 days phone, price and Service & Parts FOUND gold wedding • 10 Tips For "Garage • Private Party Only kind of wood purbank in North advisor needed Sale Success!" • Total of items adver- chased. Oregon's Farmers Column • Albertson's p a rking tised must equal $200 • Firewood ads We are looking for Largest 3 Day lot. C a l l to ID or Less MUST include spe10X20 STORAGE an energetic, exPICK UP YOUR GUN 8t KN IFE 541-693-4063. Piano, Steinway Model FOR DETAILS or to cies and cost per BUILDINGS GARAGE SALE KIT at 0 Baby Grand 791t, perienced parts & SHOW PLACE AN AD, cord to better serve F ound m an' s p l a i n for protecting hay, 1777 SW Chandler gorgeous, artist qualservice advisor. Dec. 14-15-16 Call 541-3B5-5809 our customers. t-shirt on 33rd near firewood, livestock Ave., Bend, OR 97702 ity instrument w/great Versality and exPortland Expo Fax 541-3B5-5802 Umatilla, Redmond on etc. $1496 Installed. action & S t einway's cellent customer Center he No v. 28th. Bulletin t541-923-6908. 541-617-1133. The Bulletin warm, rich sound. Will Wanted- paying cash The Senrne Central Oregon vnre rsas 1-5 exit ¹306B service skills are a CCB ¹173684. adorn any living room, for Hi-fi audio & stuAdmission $9 must! church or music stu- dio equip. Mclntosh, FOUND on river trail kfjbuilders@ykwc.net Just bought a new boat? Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, The Bulletin dio perfectly. New re- J BL, Marantz, D y camera memory card. Sell your old one in the Wanted: Irrigated farm Sun.10-4 Send resume to To Subscribe call tail $69,000. Sacri- naco, Heathkit, SanI'd like to return your ground, under pivot irclassifieds! Ask about our I 1 - 800-659-3440 I PO Box 6676 541-385-5800 or go to Super Seller rates! fice at $26,000 OBO, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. memories. rigation, i n C e n tral Bend OR 97708 I CollectorsWest.com~ call 541-383-3150. Call 541-261-1808 www.bendbulletin.com 541-382-4773 OR. 541-419-2713 541-385-5809 Clubs 8 cart, Spalding 3 woods,5 irons, Titleist put-

60rj0rj

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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 E3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

JQ3~ ~[iJi'73ikf Jj)'Jj(J~

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

PSMII6Q

8 &Hxc@@

Can be found on these pages :

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - IndependentPositions

FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573- BusinessOpportunities

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

ZIK~

Purchasing Manager See www.expresspros.com for details. F o r c onfidential con s ideration, please submit resurne to karen.turneroexpresspros.com Software Test Engineer www.ex-

See

INTERFOR

526

Loans & Mortgages

Job Openings Gilchrist, OR

WARNING

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• Sawmill Superintendent • Sawmill Supervisor • Maintenance Superintendent • Kiln Supervisor

P C T S A S F A R

O A H U

O P E C

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mends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or S credit especially those asking for ad- W vance loan fees or companies from out of O state. If you have R concerns or questions, we suggest you D consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, B LO

F A O X L E I D N L R I A V F O T R I N N O G A C T A L G U E N R C H

A N C L U B L I B A B A F A C T O R R V A N E B I T E C L A S S S AT T E S O L O O N Y E W R S L A L A TA G V 0 T E R E S I N C G LO A P PT O R S C L O I E R I N N S O E D T E F L O U T T O P P S S W E

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presspros.com for Caregiver —All Shifts Marketing and Donor details. F o r c onfiZ E Mental Health View openings & avail. Apply in person. Relations Specialist dential con s iderA V apply online at Therapist Interviews this week. for Healthy Beginnings ation, please submit Apply in person at with High Desert Edu- Symmetry Care Inc. resume to www.interfor.com/careers L E 1099 NE Watt Way, cation Service District; is seeking a full time karen.turneroexEqual Opportunity Employer Healt h E R Bend. 3 0 h r s/week a n d M ental presspros.com p ro-rated bene f i t Therapist. ResponAdvertise your car! A S T inc l u de package, starting pay sibilities City of Klamath Falls Embedded Add A Picture! C A N no less than working with clients Firmware Engineer Reach thousands of readers! Journeyman w ho h av e e m o - See $14.12/hr. Call 541-385-5809 Maintenance Worker www.exB O B T N S tional or psychologiThe Bulletin Classitieds Responsibilities: Lead p resspros.com f o r HVAC Certified 1-877-877-9392. cal difficulties. ExpePrimarily r e sponsibili- organization in develdetails. F o r c onfiC A L I A T T U E A Y BANK TURNED YOU im p l e- r ience w it h d u a l dential con s ider- Security ties are to maintain, oping a n d DOWN? Private party U N D E H A T S R N diagnosis treatment See our website for our menting a s u s taintroubleshoot and reation, please submit available Security po- will loan on real es- P I E R fund - raising a plus. Will serve as resume to pair city heating and able A R A T C S sitions, along with the tate equity. Credit, no c ooling syst e ms model with measur- primary clinician for karen.turner©ex42 reasons to join our problem, good equity adults, adolescents presspros.com equipment, typically able outcomes. PUZZLE IS ON PAGE E2 is all you need. Call team! HVAC "hot", "cold" or Q ualifications: B a c h - a nd c h ildren. A www securityprosttend.com now. Oregon Land indoor air quality re- elors degree in busi- master's degree in a 573 Mortgage 388-4200. llnevaos' ports. Also required to ness Administration, b ehavioral field i s Qo as help with other main- c ommunications o r required. Licensure Ever Consider a Re- Business Opportunities Bustness Opp««n!I!es HOME INTHE BULLETIN related f i eld, s o l id or ability to receive tenance division duverse Mortgage? At Your future is just a page l icensure i s pr e - Remember.... ties. Appl i c ation c ommunication a n d least 62 years old? A Classified ad is an Looking for your Technical Ops away. Whetheryou're looking ferred. Salary range A dd your we b a d EASY W AY TO presentation sk i l ls, packets and full job Stay in your home & next employee? dress to your ad and Manager a hat or aplace to hangit, d escription can b e grant writing and re- begins at $41,000 increase cash flow! REACH over 3 million Place a Bulletin help forThe Bulletin Classified is readers on The obtained from HR by porting e x perience, a nnually an d in Safe & Effective! Call Pacific Northwestern- wanted ad today and Technical Ops Manyour best source. Bulletin' s web site ers. $5 2 5/25-word calling 541.883.5317 ability to work as part cludes an excellent Now for your FREE reach over 60,000 Cres t view DVD! pa c k age. will be able to click ager or on the City's web- of a team or indepen- benefit C a l l Now c lassified ad i n 3 0 readers each week. Every day thousandsof through automatically Cable Prineville, OR. daily newspapers for site a t w w w .ci.kla- dently, organizational Send resume and 888-785-5938. buyers andsellers of goods Your classified ad Extensive CATV HE letter of interest to 3-days. Call the Paskills, ability to work to your site. math-falls.or.us/jobs. (PNDC) and services dobusiness in will also appear on experience required, Stau f fer, cific Northwest Daily Position is open until with DonorPerfect or Cathy these pages.Theyknow bendbulletin.com supervisory experi- LOCAL MONEyrWe buy Connection Ca r e , SALES (916) filled, with the first re- comparable database S ymmetry you catt t beat The Bullettn secured trustdeeds & 2 88-6019 o r e m a i l which currently reAd a m s, Growing dealership seek- ence preferred. ReM i c rosoft 3 48 W . view of a pplications software, Classified Section for note,some hard money elizabeth Ocnpa.com ceives over 1.5 milfor eight o n D e cember 2 0 , Office and other Win- Burns, OR 9 7702. ing salespeople looking sponsible selection andconvenience loans. Call Pat Kelley lion page views crew, installs, for more info (PNDC) 2012. Salary dows-based software, Ph ¹ 541-573-8376. for a performance-based field every item isjust a phone 541-382-3099 ext.13. every month at plant mainPosition open until willingness to work a pay p l an, p o tential service, $3854.80/mo. EOE call away. no extra cost. tenance, c onstrucflexible schedule, in- filled. Advertise V A CATION commissions of up to 573 Bulletin Classifieds pur c hasing, to 3 milThe Classified Section is cluding evenings and 35% equaling $100,000 tion, Customer service Business Opportunities SPECIALS Headend, FCC reeasy to use. Every item lion P acific N o rth- Get Results! Call weekends. plus, Retirement Plan, Part-time Re d mondJust too many 385-5809 or place ports and engineeris categorized andevery Paid Vacation, and a westerners! 30 daily Bend fast-paced of- For job details, contact WARNING The Bulletin ing. Reports to GM. your ad on-line at collectibles? cartegory is indexed onthe competitive med i cal newspapers, six fice. answering Holly Remer, hollyrerecommends that you states. bendbulletin.com benefit package. Look- Competitive salary section's front page. 25-word clasphones, computer lit- mer@hdesd.org. For i nvestigate ever y sified $525 a nd b enefits. L i ing for a team player for a 3-day e rate, t aking p a y- application c o n tact Sell them in Whether youare looking for phase of investment with a positive attitude, cense/good driving or The Bulletin Classifieds d. Cal l (916) ments, good interper- www.hdesd.org opportunities, e s pe- a a home or need aservice, to operate with energy r ecord, drug a n d 88-6019 o r vis i t sonal skills. Reply to 541-593-5625 c ially t h os e fr o m 2 your future is in the pagesof Tick, Tock and to be customer serbackground check www.pnna.com/advert huntersteve52I gmail. out-of-state or offered ising pndc.cfm for the The Bulletin Classified. vice oriented. Will pro- required. Complete 541-385-5809 com by a p erson doing Pacific Tick, Tock... vide training. job description at Nort h west business out of a loBULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS PEST CONTROL Send resume' to: crestviewcable.com The Bulletin Con n ection. ...don't let time get cal motel or hotel. In- Daily bcrvhireo mail.com Search the area's most under employment. (PNDC) DO YOU NEED o f f e rings away. Hire a comprehensive listing of Send comp l ete vestment A GREAT TERMINIX must be r e gisteredExtreme Value Adverclassified advertising... resume to: a gautprofessional out EMPLOYEE with the Oregon DeService real estate to automotive, neyocrestview30 Daily newsNeed help fixing stuff? RIGHT NOW? of The Bulletin's partment of Finance. tising! merchandise to sporting cable.com or to 350 Technician papers $525/25-word Call The Bulletin Call A ServiceProfessional We suggest you con- classified, NE Dunham, Prinev"Call A Service goods. Bulletin Classifieds Competitive pay, medi3-d a ys. before 11 a.m. and find the help you need. sult your attorney or appear every day in the ille, OR 97754. cal & retirement proReach 3 million PaProfessional" get an ad in to pubwww.bendbulletin.com call CON S U MER cific print or on line. g ram. M us t h a v e : Northwesterners. lish the next day! HOTLINE, Directory today! INTERFOR Call 541-385-5809 clean driving record; For more information 541-385-5809. 1-503-378-4320, www.bendbulletin.com ability to pass drug call (916) 288-6019 or VIEW the 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. test, back g round PINE GRADERS email: Classifieds at: otas o The Bulletin check, and state Seeking Certified elizabeth@cnpa.com o" www.bendbulletin.com 5ervtngcentral oregonsince a03 Find It in chasing products or I censing exams. Will Pine Gradersfor our for the Pacific NorthDESCHUTES COUNTY train right candidate. Gilchrist Location. services from out of i The Bulletin Classifieds! west Daily ConnecDrop off resume or Please apply to i the area. Sending tion. (PNDC) Executive Director 541-385-5809 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES dettb.kraft@iotettor.com pickup application at c ash, checks, o r www.lakecountyMedical!CNA 40 SE Bridgeford Blvd, by 12/31/2012. Inter- i credit i n f o rmation c hamber.org S e n d for offers a competi- i may be subjected to Press Supervisor B EHAVIORAL HEALTH NURSE I or I I Bend. 541-382-8252 cover letter 8 resume tive salary and benThe Bulletin is seeking a night time press suFRAUD. to: chornOcoic.org (Public Health Nurse I or II) (2012-00061) efits package. We pervisor. We are part of Western CommunicaFor more informaNo phone or in person Get your appreciate the intertions, Inc., which is a small, family-owned group Adult Treatment Team, Behavioral Health tion about an adverinquiries please. salest of all applicants, i tiser, you may call consisting of seven newspapers, five in Oregon HE tLTH SYSTEM business ary DOE Division. On-call positions $20.05 — $33.77 however, only those and two in California. Our ideal candidate will Oregon State selected for an inter- I the manage a small crew of three and must be able per hour. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. Attorney General's $500 Hire v iew will b e c o na ROW I N G Office C o nsumer t to learn our equipment/processes quickly. A tacted. All applicants hands-on style is a requirement for our 3 t/s On BOnuS! BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPEGIALIST I or offered a p o s ition Protection hotline at t tower KBA press. Prior management/leaderwith an ad in must s u c cessfully I 1-877-877-9392. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH NURSE I (2012ship experience preferred. In addition to our Certified Nurses complete a pre-emThe Bulletin's 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous ttT 00070) A d ul t T r e atment P r o gram, iT he Bullet Assistant II ployment drug test. commercial print clients as well. In addition to a "Call A Service Equal Opportunity Behavioral Health D ivision. Full-time competitive wage and benefit program, we also CentralOregon Professional" St. Charles Health Employer Community College provide potential opportunity for advancement. position $3,416 — $4,675 per month for System is currently 5 Directory If you provide dependability combined with a has openings listed beGarage Sales recruiting CNA lls to a 172.67 hour work month. Deadline: positive attitude, are able to manage people and low. Go to join our exceptional schedules and are a team player, we would like https://jobs.cocc.edu Garage Sales TUESDAY, 12/11/12. Caregiver team. A to hear from you. If you seek a stable work ento view details & apGarage Sales vironment that provides a great place to live and ply online. H uman variety of CNA opBEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II Ad Services Admin raise a family, let us hear from you. Contact eiResources, Metolius portunities are availFind them a ble a t b o t h o u r The Bulletin is seekinq an individual to play a ther; Keith Foutz, Corporate Circulation 8 Op(2012-00071) Child & F a mily P rog., Hall, 2600 NW Colvital role on the Ad Services team. The Ad Sererations Director at kfoutzowescompapers.com lege Way, Bend OR Bend and Redmond in Behavioral Health Division. Half-time hospitals. vices Admin position is 32 hours per week and or anelson@wescompapers.com with y our 97701; (541)383 The Bulletin is eligible for benefits. An Ad Services Admin complete resume, references and salary position $2,028 — $2,776 per month for 7216. For works closely with others on the Ad Services St. Charles Health history/requirements. Prior press room experih earing/speech i m Classifieds an 86.34 hour work month. Deadline: team to coordinate and track ads though our ence required. No phone calls please. Drug paired, Oregon Relay System offers comproduction system. At times taking corrections test is required prior to employment. EOE petitive wages, exWEDNESDAY, 12/12/12. Services number is 541-385-5809 from customers via phone, faxing ads to cus7 -1-1. COCC is a n cellent career growth tomers, and ensuring all corrections have been opportunities and a BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST I (2012AA/EO employer. robust bene f i ts made prior to printing. In addition, this position Looking for your next 00072) Child & Family Prog., Behavioral will include training for a path to page compospackage. ITS Systems employee? ing responsibilities. The ideal candidate will be Health Division. Full-time position $3,416 Administrator Place a Bulletin help computer literate, have outstanding customer Visit our website to Sales Responsible for techniwanted ad today and — $4,675 per month for 8172.67 hour work service skills, above average grammar skills, view full job details cal support and adreach over 60,000 the ability to multi-task and a desire to work at a and apply: month. Deadline: SUNDAY, 12/09/12. ministration of email readers each week. Independent Contractor Sales successful company. www.scmc.org services, server infraYour classified ad We are seeking dynamic individuals. EEO COMMUNITY JUSTICE TECHNICIAN(2012structure, an d MS will also appear on To apply, submit a resume by Tuesday, DeWindows server operbendbulletin.com cember 11th, with qualifications, skills, experiDOES THIS SOUND LIKE YOU? 00073) Juvenile Community Justice. Onating systems. Assoc which currently ence and a past employment history to The • OUTGOING 8 COMPETITIVE call position $17.68 - $24.23 per hour. Degree + 3yr exp req. receives over 1.5 Bulletin, attention: James Baisinger, PO Box • PERSONABLE & ENTHUSIASTIC $3,781-$4,502/mo. million page views 6020, Bend,OR 97708-6020. Pre-employment • CONSISTENT & MOTIVATED Deadline: SUNDAY, 12/16i12. Call a Pro Closes Dec 31. every month at drug screening is required prior to hiring. The Whether you need a Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer. no extra cost. PAROLE 8t PROBATION OFFICER (2012Our winning team of sales 8 promotion Part-Time lnstructors Bulletin Classifieds fence fixed, hedges professionals are making an average of 00075) Adult Community Justice Division. COCC is always lookGet Results! trimmed or a house $400 - $800 per week doing special ing for talented indiCall 385-5809 Full-time position $3,927 - $5,376 per events, trade shows, retail 8 grocery built, you'll find v iduals to teac h or place month for a 172.67 hour work month. store promotions while representing part-time in a variety your ad on-line at professional help in of disciplines. Check The Bulletin's "Call a bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN newspaper Deadline SUNDAY, 12/23/1 2. our web site Associate VicePresident as an independent contractor Service Professional" https://jobs.cocc.edu. PROPERTY APPRAISER I (or II) (2012Good classified ads tell All positions pay $500 Directory Oregon State University yyE OFFER: 00074) As s essor's Of f ice. F u l l-time the essential facts in an per load unit (1 LU = 1 541-385-5809 •Solid Income Opportunlty" Cascadesin Bend, Oregon interesting Manner. Write class credit), with ad* position $3,138 — $4,879 per month for *Complete Training Program Associate Vice President ditional perks. from the readers view - not * *No Selling Door to Door a 172.67 hour work month, Deadline the seller's. Convert the *No Telemarketing Involved* Oregon State University-Cascades in Bend facts into benefits. Show TUESDAY, 01/DB/13. * 'Great Advancement Opportunity is recruiting for an Associate Vice Presi- the reader how the item will M arketingDirectory * * Full and Part Time Hours dent (AVP) for Finance and Strategic help them in someway. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRAGTITIONER Planning. This (2012-00024) Behavioral H ealth FOR THE CHANCE OF A advertising tip The Associate Vice President (AVP) for FiDivision. F u ll-time position $6,303 LIFETIME, brought to youby nance and Strategic Planning provides and bendbroadband' Call Adam Johnson $8,626 per month for a 172.67 hour work we're the locat dog. we better be good. The Bulletin analyzes information to guide the expan541-410-5521, TODAY! SerwngCent ai Orego s ce f9l8 month. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. sion of the campus from an upper division Business to Business Marketing Director campus with 750 students to a 4-year camPUBLIC HEALTH NURSE II (2012-00066) Independent Contractor pus with3,000 to 5,000 students by 2025. Propel B2B to a New Level The AVP is entrepreneurial in seeking di— Public Health Division. On-call position of Marketing Success versified funding sources, developing stra$24.68 - $33.77 per hour. Deadline: OPEN t egic partnerships, and e n suring t h e UNTIL FILLED. We are seeking an experienced marketing campus' short and long-term financial viprofessional for our newly created position ability. Aspects of strategic planning inTRIAL ASSISTANT II (2012-00069) of Business to Business Marketing Director. clude real estate, facilities, staffing, and BendBroadband is a progressive, forwardforecasts of revenue and costs. The AVP — District Attorney's Office. F u ll-time thinking company b ringing t echnology reports directly to the Vice President for position $2,879 - $3,945 per month for solutions to businesses in the region. We OSU-Cascades (CEO of the campus). provide an array of emerging business a 172.67 hour work month. Deadline: solutions including video c onferencing, Minimum requirements include a Masters or ++++++++++++++++++ SUNDAY, 12/09/1 2. fiber to the door, advanced phone solutions terminal degree and relevant experience in and cloud services. Our carbon neutral, higher education or equivalent experience UTILIZATION REVIEW SPECIALIST (2012state-of-the-art data center was recently within the discipline. Progressive finance 00049) — Health Services. Full-time featured in The Economist magazine. and strategic planning responsibility and experience in a c o m plex organization. position $4,627 — $6,216 per month for a The ideal candidate will have a strong track Minimum of 5 years senior management 172.67 hour work month. Deadline: OPEN record of accomplishments in B2B and experience. Demonstrated ability to comUNTIL FILLED. product marketing. Your candidacy will leap plete quantitative and qualitative analysis to the top if you have a strong technology and financial models. A d e m onstrable We are looking for independent contractors to TO APPLY ONLINEFOR THE ABOVE LISTED marketing background, especially in the commitment to promoting and enhancing service home delivery routes in: voice, d at a a n d /o r h o sted s o l utions diversity. POSITIONS, PLEASE VISITOUR WEBSITE products market. AT www.deschutes.orgljobsDeschutes For a complete position description view http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and use postCounty Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Apply online at ing number 0010018 to apply on-line. The www.bendbroadband.com/careers. Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) closing date is 01/11/2013. Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours. 388-6553. BendBroadband offers a collaborative work Must have reliable, insured vehicle. For information regarding this position environment, training and development opDeschutes County provides reasonable please contact: Shawn Taylor, portunities, competitive pay and excellent Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 Executive Assistant to the a ccommodations f o r pe r s ons w i t h benefits that include a 401k plan with genduring business hours Vice President, OSU-Cascades at erous company matchand free broadband disabilities. This material will be furnished Shawn.Tayloroosucascades.edu or apply via email at onljneobendbulletjn.com services. in alternative format if needed. For hearing Johannah Goodwin, Human Resources, OSU-Cascades at As an equal opportunity employer, we impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711. Johannah.GoodwinOosucascades.edu. encourage minorities, women, and people with disabilities to apply. OSU is an AA/EOE. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER

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The Bulletin

The Bulletin

*Supplement Your Income* Operate Your Own Business

Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor

® Call Today © * Prineville *

The Bulletin


E4 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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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

f • •

Studios 8 Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & l inens. New owners.$145-$165/wk 541-382-1885

00~0~

634

605

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Roommate Wanted

2210 NE Holliday,3bdrm,

2 bath, gas heat, frplc, Sharecozy mobile home quiet; smkg. $760/mo; in Terrebonne, $275+ '/~ $300 no off 1st month. Avail utils. 503-679-7496 12/17. 541-317-0867

8 GREAT WINTER 8

DEAL!

Furnished, quiet room near downtown. No smoking or drugs. $350 incl. util. + $100 dep. 541-815-9938

2 bdrm, 1 bath, $530 8 $540 w/lease.

Carports included!

FOX HOLLOW APTS.

(541) 383-3152

Cascade Rental Management. Co.

Take care of your investments with the help from Gambling Too Much? Free, confidential help The Bulletin's is available statewide. "Call A Service Call 1-877-MY-LIMIT to talk to a certified Professional" Directory counselor 24/7 or visit 1877mylimit.org to Call for Specials! chat live with a coun- Limited numbers avail. selor. We are not here 1,28 3bdrms to judge. We are here w/d hookups, to help. You can get patios or decks. your life back. Mountain Glen 541-383-9313 • • t t Professionally managed by I

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Norris 8 Stevens, Inc.

74 year old widow would like to meet widower b e tween the ages of 60 and 7 0. I en j o y t h e nudist lifestyle and live in Sacramento.

648

Rooms for Rent

Rooms for Rent

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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 630

630

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

636

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend

RIVER FALLS APTS. LIVE ON THE RIVER WALK DOWNTOWN

1 bdrm. apt. fully furnished in fine 50s style. 1546 NW 1st St., $800+ $700 dep. Nice pets Meet singles right now! welcomed. No paid o p erators, 541-382-0117 just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange mes- Small studio close to lisages and c o nnect brary, all util. pd. $550, $525 dep. No pets/ live. Try it free. Call smoking. 541-330now: 8 7 7 -955-5505. 9769 or 541-480-7870 (PNDC) 916-822-4630.

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Houses for Rent General PUBLISHER'S

NOTICE: Oregon state law req u ires anyone who co n t racts for construction work to be licensed with the C onstruction Con tractors Board (CCB). A n active lice n se means the contractor i s bonded an d i n s ured. Ver if y t h e contractor's CCB c ense through t h e CCB Cons u m er Website www.hirealicensedcontractor. com

or call 503-378-4621. The Bulletin recommends checking with the CCB prior to contracting with anyone.

Handyman

I DO THAT!

Handyman/Remodeling Residential/Commercial $>nanjohs lo Enrire Roo>n Remodeis Garage orgunizarion Hr>me lnspecrion Repairs giialily, Honexr work

Dennis 541 317.9768 rcan u svr Bi>ldeChlvsared

Construction

Will Haul Away

" FREE f For Salvage v Any Location ,,„'„Removal

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Also Cleanups

28 yrs experience /n Central Oregon!

Quality 8 Honesty From carpentry & handyman jobs, to expert wall covering installations/removal. • Senior Discounts • Licensed, Bonded, Insured • CCB¹47120

541-389-1413 or 541-410-2422

d8 Cteanouts' ~

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Han d yman

ERIC REEVE HANDY k SERVICES ~ Au Home & Commercial Repairs Carpentry-Painting Honey Do's. Small or large jobs, no problem. Senior Discount Au work guaranteed.

541-389-3361 541-771-4463 Bonded - Insured CCB¹149468

Houses for Rent NE Bend

Open Houses

Q

Open 12-3 61407 Sunbrook Dr. Great Location in SW Bend Carol Donohoe, Broker 541-410-1773

oQ00

People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through TheBulletin Classifieds

CO H S T R U C T I O H

CCB¹ 198284

EXPERIENCE IN CENTRAL OREGON • Quality custom home improvement specialists • Expert carpentry, installs, demos • No iob too bn or small • vet a senior Discounts • Licensed-Bonded-Insured

668

Houses for Rent Redmond Newer 2326 sq.ft. deluxe home, 3/3, gas fireplace, 7500' lot, fenced yard, 1655 SW Sarasoda Ct. $ 1 195/mo. 541-350-2206

ga'r"rier.

Arctic Cat (2) 2005 F7 Firecats: EFI Snowpro & EFI EXT, exlnt cond, $3700 ea; $7000 both. 541-410-2186

www.thegarnergroup.com

659

Houses for Rent Sunriver

745

Homes for Sale

Snowmobile trailer 2002, 25-ft Interstate & 3 sleds, $10,900.

VILLAGE PROPERTIES BANK OWNED HOMES! FREE List w/Pics! Sunriver, Three Rivers, www. BendRepos.com La Pine. Great 541-480-8009 bend and beyond real estate Selection. Prices range 20967 yeoman, bend or $425 - $2000/mo. Snowmobile trailer fits View our full NOTICE: wo s leds o r tw o inventory online at All real estate adver- t4-wheelers, has new Vfllage-Properties.com tised here in is sub- bearings, tires, hitch, 1-866-931-1061 ject to t h e F e deral and complete re-wire. F air H o using A c t , $800. 541-382-3409 687 which makes it illegal to advertise any pref- YAMAHA 500 VMAX, Commercial for 2043 mi, 1~/~" track, erence, limitation or Rent/Lease discrimination based $1500. 541-419-2268 on race, color, reli860 Spectrum professional gion, sex, handicap, building, 3 5 0 ' -500', familial status or na- Motorcycles & Accessories $1.00 per ft. total. No tional origin, or intenN NN. C a l l An d y , tion to make any such A erostich Kane t s u 541-385-6732. preferences, l i m ita- e lectric vest, n e w , $200. 541-280-3493 tions or discrimination. We will not knowingly CRAMPED FOR

NOTICE All real estate adveraccept any advertisCASH? tising in this newspaing for r ea l e state Use classified to sell per is subject to the which is in violation of those items you no F air H o using A c t this law. All persons longer need. which makes it illegal are hereby informed Call 541-385-5809 to a d v ertise "any that all dwellings adpreference, limitation vertised are available or disc r imination on an equal opportubased on race, color, nity basis. The Bulle- Harley Davidson Softreligion, sex, handitin Classified Tail Deluxe 2 0 07, 732 cap, familial status, white/cobalt, w / pasmarital status or na- Commercial/Investment What are you senger kit, Vance 8 tional origin, or an inProperties for Sale Hines muffler system tention to make any looking for? & kit, 1045 mi., exc. such pre f erence,Large home w/36x40 You'll find it in cond, $19,9 9 9, limitation or discrimi- shop currently rented 541-389-9188. nation." Familial sta@$1000 mo., + 2 ad- The Bulletin Classifieds Harley Heritage tus includes children jacent lots for develSoftail, 2003 under the age of 18 opment in fast-grow$5,000+ in extras, living with parents or ing Boardman, OR, 541-385-5809 $2000 paint job, legal cust o dians, duplex app r oved, 30K mi. 1 owner, pregnant women, and s ystem d ev . f e e s 750 For more information $1 9 9 ,500. Redmond Homes people securing cus- waived. please call tody of children under 1-541-379-0362 541-385-8090 18. This newspaper .21 Acre lot w/pond. or 209-605-5537 will not knowingly ac744 1758 sq.ft. home, HD Screaming Eagle cept any advertising Open Houses 3 car garage, for real estate which is Electra Glide 2005, Northwest Redmond. 103" motor, two tone in violation of the law. $199,900. Call O ur r e aders a r e Open 12-3 candy teal, new tires, Virginia at RE/MAX 23K miles, CD player, hereby informed that 19159 Park 541-350-3418 all dwellings adverhydraulic clutch, exCommons Dr. cellent condition. tised in this newspa773 Shevlin Pines per are available on Highest offer takes it. Master on main Acreages 541-480-8080. an equal opportunity Phyllis Mageau, basis. To complain of Broker BY OWNER 20.6 acres Nelson-Riggs TRI-1000 discrimination cal l 541-948-0447 on river in Redmond, Triple tank bag, $130. HUD t o l l-free at on 83rd St. owner will 541-280-3493 1-800-877-0246. The finance. $595,000. toll f re e t e l ephone 541-421-3222. number for the hearSoftail Deluxe ing im p aired is 775 2010, 805 miles, 1-800-927-9275. Black Chameleon. Manufactured/ $17,000 Rented your propMobile Homes CallDon @ erty? The Bulletin Classifieds 541-410-3823 FACTORY SPECIAL has an "After Hours" New Home, 3 bdrm, www.thegarnergroup.com Line. Call $46,900 finished V-Strom front f ender 541-383-2371 24 on you site,541.548.5511 $25 www.JandMHomes.com Xtender, hours to 541-280-3493 d. Open 12-3 NEIN HOME BUILT V-Strom r e placement 2343 NW Frazer $87,450! halogen h e adlights, Say "goodbuy" Ln. Includes, garage, founNorthWest Crossing $20. 541-280-3493 dation, a p p liances, to that unused Big & Beautiful central heating, heat Just bought a new boat? Shelley Griffin, item by placing it in pump ready. call to- Sell your old one in the Broker day to schedule your classifieds! Ask about our The Bulletin Classifieds 541-280-3804 Super Seller rates! personal appointment. 541-385-5809 541-548-5511, 5 41 -385-580 9 541-350-1782 V-Strom ste e l-braid www.JandMHomes.com brake lines, Fr & rear, Own your own home for $140. 541-280-3493 less t ha n r e n ting. 870 Centrally located in Boats & Accessories Madras. In- h ouse f inancing opti o ns available. Call now at 13' Smokercraft '85,

X'D~II

The Bulletin

gat'rier.

I

garrier.

www.thegarnergroup.com

541-475-2291

good cond., 15HP gas Evinrude +

Rent /Own Minnkota 44 elec. 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Find exactly what motor, fish finder, 2 $2500 down, $750 mo. Landscaping/Yard Care extra seats, trailer, you are looking for in the OAC. 541-548-5511, extra equip. $2900. 541-350-1782 N OTICE: ORE G O N CLASSIFIEDS Landscape Contracwww.jandmhomes.com 541 -388-9270 tors Law (ORS 671) r equires a l l bu s i • g • nesses that advertise t o p e r form L a n dscape C o n struction which includes: p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, The Bulletin's w ater-features, a n d installation, repair of Service Directory irrigation systems to reaches over be licensed with the Landscape Contrac60,000 people t ors B o a rd . Th i s each day, 4-digit number is to be for a fraction of included in all advertisements which indithe COSt Of cate the business has advertising jn the a bond,insurance and workers c ompensaYellow Pages, tion for their employ-

ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to

Call 541.385-5809

check license status before co n t racting with t h e bu s iness. Persons doing landscape m aintenance do not require a LCB license.

BKLeg a l Notices

LEGAL NOTICE ADOPT-Abundance of love to offer a child in stable, secure 8 nu r t uring home. Contact Jen (800) 571-4136. LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C U IT C OURT FO R T H E STATE OF OREGON I N AND FO R T H E C OUNTY OF D E S C HUTES. DEU T SCHE BANK TRUST COMPANY A M E R ICAS AS T R USTEE R ALI 2006QA7, i t s

successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. HEIDI JUENGER; J A M ES JUENGER; A M ERIC AN EXPR E S S CENTURION BANK; AND O C C UPANTS OF THE PREMISES,

Defendants. Case No. 12CV0607. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. TO THE DEF ENDANTS: H E I D I JUENGER; J A M ES JUENGER; AND OCC UPANTS OF T H E P REMISES: I n t h e name of the State of

Legal Notices

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

quests approval of a C onditional Use t o establish a new wireless c o mmunication facility consisting of a 54-foot "monopine" tower with antennas and ground-mounted equipment s h e lter. The subject property

Boulevard, Redmond, and is identified on Deschutes Co u n ty Assessor's Map 15-12 as Tax L ots 5 000,

Area (WA) Combini ng zone. APP L ICANT: New Cingular W ireless PCS L L C (AT&T). APPLICANT'S AGENT: Kevin Martin, Velocitel Inc. PROP-

and evidence submitted by or on behalf of the applicant and applicable criteria are available for inspection at the Planning D ivision at n o c o st a nd can b e p u r chased for 25 cents a page. The staff report should b e made available 7 days prior to the date set for the hearing. Documents are also available online a t www . deschutes.org. LEGAL NOTICE The Crooked River Ranch Rural F i re Protection D i strict currently ha s an immediate opening on its Board of Directors. This position will be filled by appointment at the December 20, 2012 b oard meeting. I f you are interested p lease s ubmit a letter of interest or resume to the Fire Chief no later than Friday, D e cember

Specialist!

541-300-0042

ii186147 LLC

543 -81 5-2888

STAFF C O NTACT: Kevin Harrison (541)

is within th e R u ral 385-1401. Copies of Residential (RR10) the staff report, applizone and the Wildlife cation, all documents

ERTY OWNER:Dierk

P eters, HB P L L C . LOCATION: The subj ect property is l o -

cated on Assessor's Tax Map 14-10-24C, Tax Lot 100. STAFF CONTACT: Cynthia.Smidt@des-

chutes.org or ( 541) 317-3150. Copies of the staff report, application, all documents and evidence s ubmitted by or on behalf above-entitled C ourt of the applicant and and cause on or beapplicable criteria are fore the expiration of available for inspec30 days from the date tion at the Planning of the first publication D ivision at n o c o st of this summons. The a nd can b e p u r date of first publica- chased for 25 cents a tion in this matter is page. The staff reDecember 2, 2012. If port should be made you fail timely to apavailable 7 days prior pear an d a n swer, to the date set for the Plaintiff will apply to hearing. Documents the abo v e -entitled are also available oncourt for t h e r e lief line a t www . desprayed for in its com- chutes.org. plaint. This is a judiLEGAL NOTICE cial foreclosure of a NOTICE OF deed of trust in which PUBLIC HEARING the Plaintiff requests that the Plaintiff be Desc h u tes allowed to foreclose The County B o ar d of y our interest in t he C ommissioners will following d e s cribed real property: LOT 17, hold a Public Hearing B LOCK 4 , FIF T H on Monday, January 7, 2013 at 10:00 a.m. ADDITION TO WEST HILLS, DESCHUTES in the B arnes and COUNTY, OREGON. S awyer Rooms a t Commonly known as: 1300 NW Wall Street, 1985 Northwest Rim- Bend, to take testirock Road, Bend, Or- mony on the following egon 97701. NOTICE item: FILE NUMBER: TO D E F ENDANTS: PA-12-5. SUBJECT: R EAD THESE P A - Central Oregon Large Lot Industrial Project. PERS CAREFULLY! Initiated b y Des A lawsuit has been started against you in chutes County, t he the abo v e -entitled proposal amends Decourt b y D e utsche schutes County ComPlan , Bank Trust Company p rehensive Ur b a n Americas as Trustee C hapter 4 , R ALI 2006Q A 7 , Growth Management Plaintiff. Pla i n tiff's to formally adopt a Central Oregon Land claims are stated in Lot Industrial L a nd the written complaint, a copy of which was Need Analysis and f iled with the several regional inabove-entitled Court. dustrial land policies. You must "appear" in Copies of the staff report, application, all this case or the other side will win automati- documents and evic ally. T o "appear" dence submitted by or on behalf of the appliyou must file with the court a legal paper cant and applicable criteria are available called a "motion" or "answer." The "mo- for inspection at the tion" or "answer" must Planning Division at be given to the court no cost and can be 25 clerk or administrator purchased fo r c ents a page. T h e within 30 days of the date of first publica- staff report should be tion specified herein made availableseven a long with t h e r e - days prior to the date q uired filing fee. I t set for the hearing. must be i n p r o per Documents are also a vailable online a t : form and have proof o f service o n t h e www.deschutes.org/c dd. P l ease contact Plaintiff's attorney or if the Plaintiff does not Peter Gutowsky, Prinhave a n at t o rney, cipal Planner, (541) proof of service on the 385-1709 if you have questions. Deschutes Plaintiff. If you have County e n courages any questions, you persons with disabilishould see an attorties to participate in all n ey immediately. I f y ou need h el p i n programs and activifinding an a t torney, ties. This event/location is accessible to you may contact the people with disabiliOregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Ser- ties. If you need acv ice onl i n e at commodations, please call Peter Guwww.oregonstatebar. (541) org or by calling (503) towsky 684-3763 ( in t h e 3 85-1709 o r em a i l Portland metropolitan peter.gutowskyg@dearea) or toll-free else- schutes.org. where in Oregon at LEGAL NOTICE (800) 452-7636. This NOTICE OF summons is issued PUBLIC HEARING pursuant to ORCP 7. ROUTH CRABTREE The Desc h u tes OLSEN, P . C. , B y County Hearings OfChris Fowler, OSB ¹ ficer will hold a Public 052544, Attorneys for Hearing on Tuesday, Plaintiff, 511 SW 10th January 8, 2013, at Ave., Ste. 400, Port6:30p.m. in the Barland, OR 97205, (503) nes a n d Sa w y er 459-0140; Fax Rooms of the Des425-974-1 649, chutes Serv i c es cfowler@rcolegal.com Center, 1300 NW Wall St., Bend, to consider LEGAL NOTICE the following request: NOTICE OF F ILE NUMB E R : PUBLIC HEARING

14, 2012. LEGAL NOTICE

The regular meeting of the Board of Directors of the Deschutes County Rural Fire Protection District ¹2 will be held on Tuesday, December 1 1, 2012 a t

1 1 :30

a m. at th e c onfere nce room o f t h e North Fire S t ation, 63377 Jamison St., Bend, OR. Items on the agenda include: the fire d epartment report, th e P r o ject Wildfire report, an update of the status of an annexation feasibility study, an annex p etition f ro m R e y nolds/Boyd, a g rant request for confined space prop, a resolution correcting Resol ution ¹73, an d t h e p resentation of t h e 2011/2012 audit. The m eeting location i s

accessible to persons with disabilities. A request for interpreter for the hearing im-

paired or for other accommodations for person with disabilities should be made at least 48 hrs. before the meeting to: Tom Fay 54 1 - 318-0459. TTY 800-735-2900. PUBLIC NOTICE

An FCC licensed facility is proposed for modification at 100 NW Kearney Bend, O R 97701. The FCC i s see k ing public comment on

the proposed project as part of the review process by the Washington Department of Archeology and Historic Preservation. Please res p ond within 30 days of this publication to:

Adapt Engineering Inc., 1 0 72 5 SW Barbur Blvd., Suite 200, Portland, OR 97219 Attn: 0R12-17849-073.

PUBLIC NOTICE PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87

Notice is hereby given

that the following vehicle will be sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 12/18/2012. The sale will be held at 10:00

a.m. b y

B U T CH'S

PLACE, 1 5 1 5 N. HWY. 9 7, REDM OND, OR . 2 0 0 6

Jeep

C o mmander.

VIN 1 J8HG58266C122931

Amount due on lien $25,327.00. Reputed

owner(s) Herbert & C hristine H i ll , D y namic Auto Trends, State Farm Ctlu.

SUBJECT: Appeal of an administrative apbought a new boat? proval of a n e xten- Just Sell your old one in the sion of the concep- classifieds! Ask about our t ual m a ster pl a n Super Seller rates! (CU-05-20) for Thorn541-385-5809 burgh Destination Re-

An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate fo make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility to citizens who want to know more about government activities.

European Professional

Oregon License

7 7 00, 7 8 0 1, 80 00 .

I M P O R TA N T

MARTIN JAMES Repaint

5 001, 5 0 02 , 7701, 7 800, 7 900 a nd

A RE P U S LnC NOTICES

Painting/Wall Covering

Painter

Legal Notices

sort. A P P E LLANT: Paul Dewey, Attorney for Annunziata Gould. OWNER:Loyal Land, F ILE NUMB E R : LLC. LOCATION: The CU-12-18. SUBJECT: subject property is at T he a p plicant r e - 11800 Eagle C r est

Oregon, yo u ar e h ereby required t o appear and answer the complaint f iled a gainst you i n t h e

The Desch u tes County Hearings Officer will hold a Public Hearing on January 8, 2013, at 6:30 p.m. in the Barnes and Sawyer Rooms of the De-

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

schutes Ser v i ces Center, 1300 NW Wall St., Bend, to consider the following request

A-12-3/E-11-56.

Please call

or email sutumnridgeconstructioo@ yahoo.com

850

Snowmobiles

Some other t rades Home Improvement also req u ire additional licenses a nd Kelly KerfoOt certifications. Debris Removal

744

3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, new carpet/vinyl/deck 8 fixtures, beautifully landscaped. Dishwasher & W/D incl; water pd. No smoking, no dogs. $900/mo. $1100 deposit. 541-617-1101

Call 54I 3855809 iopromoteyaur service Advertisefor 28 daysstarting at 'If(I ITlrisspecu pockageisnotovaiiabvonourwebueI

/Building/Contracting

660

I ' A I v ' I ' I~S M E '

• rv sup

Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go to www.bendbullefin.com and click on "Classified Ads"

The Bulletin


THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 870

IBoats & Accessories 17' 1984 Chris Craft - Scorpion, 140 HP inboard/outboard, 2 depth finders, troll-

ing motor, full cover, EZ - L oad t railer, $3500 OBO. 541-382-3728.

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Ads published in oWa- Gulfstream S cen i c tercraft" include: Kay- Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, ks, rafts and motor- Cummins 330 hp dieIzed personal sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 with ou r spe c i a l For in. kitchen slide out, rates for selling your I • watercrafts. " boats" please s e e new tires, under cover, I boat or watercraft! Class 870. hwy. miles only,4 door f ridge/freezer ice I Place an ad in The • 541-385-5809 maker, W/D combo, B ulletin w i t h ou r Interbath tub & I 3-month package shower, 50 amp pro-

FLOAT 1 I YOURBOAT ... I

I which includes:

I *5 lines of text and a photo or up to 10 I lines with no photo. 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 I bendbulletin.com Volvo Penta, 270HP, *Free pick up into low hrs., must see, I The Central Oregon $15,000, 541-330-3939

I I

I Nickel ads.

exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini 8 custom trailer, $19,500. 541-389-1413

OOO

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Classiheds Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please see Class 875. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin o • 0

882

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

I Rates start at $46. I Call for details! 541-365-5809

gThe Bulleting Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

pane gen & $55,000.

•J~

COACHMAN 1979 23' trailer

Fully equipped. $2000. 541-312-8879 or 541-350-4622.

I I The Bulletin

*Free online ad at

20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow,

881

Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satel-

541-480-3923

541-948-2310

CHECK YOUR AD Pioneer Spirit 1 8CK, 2007, used only 4x, AC, electric tongue j ack, (jj EQ I Hunter's Delight! Pack- $8995. 541-389-7669 I age deal! 1988 Winnebago Super Chief, Please check your ad 3 8K m i l es , gr e a t Fifth Wheels on the first day it runs Country Coach Intrigue shape; 1988 Bronco II to make sure it is cor2002, 40' Tag axle. 4 x4 t o t o w , 1 3 0 K rect. Sometimes in400hp Cummins Diemostly towed miles, structions over the sel. two slide-outs. nice rig! $15,000 both. ',u phone are mis41,000 miles, new 541-382-3964, leave Springdale 2005 27', 4' and an error tires & batteries. Most msg. slide in dining/living area, understood occur in your ad. options.$95,000 OBO sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 Ifcan this happens to your Pilgrim 541-678-5712 obo. 541-408-3811 e rnational ad, please contact us 2005, 36' Int 5th Wheel, 4 the first day your ad ~ OO Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 appears and we will Fall price $ 2 1,865. MorePixatBeodboletic.com be happy to fix it 541-312-4466 as soon as we can. Jayco Seneca 2 007, Check out the If we can assist you, 17K mi., 35ft., Chevy classifieds online please call us: o 5 500 d i e sel, to y 541 -385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com Springdale 29' 2 0 07, The Bulletin hauler $130 , 000. Classified 0D Updated daily slide,Bunkhouse style, 541-389-2636. sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $ 1 6 ,900,

' 0 lj

541-390-2504

The Bulletin

Serrrog Central Oregon since t903

Used out-drive parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435 875

Watercraft 2007 SeaDoo 2004 Waverunner, excellent condition, LOW hours. Double trailer, lots of extras.

$10,000 541-719-8444

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads T he Bu l l e t i n

8572 or 541-749-0037

Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray i nterior, u se d 3X , L $24,999. 541-389-9188 Southwind 35.5' Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Looking for your Bought new at next employee? $132,913; Place a Bulletin help asking $93,500. wanted ad today and Call 541-419-4212 reach over 60,000 Call The Bulletin At readers each week. Your classified ad 541-385-5809 will also appear on Place Your Ad Or E-Mail bendbulletin.com At: www.bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get ReWinnebago Suncruiser34' sults! Call 385-5809 or place your ad 2004, only 34K, loaded, on-line at too much to list, ext'd bendbulletin.com warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243

BUY TWO WEEKS AND GET TWO WEEKSFREE!

SNOW MOBILES

Ql('8~~

8 ANS ON YL !

I'jI) Lfj

Call the Bulletin ClassifiedDept.

541-385-5809or541-382-1811 forratestoday!

ClBssifieds

OW

8

I

Utility Trailers

So~ dwr/ I ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP SHARE LEFT!

Trucks 8

1997 Toyota Tacoma owner's manual, $15.

%%KK!

kIIr!<-..-~

541-350-8629

541-948-2126

OUt'

o Ll t '

U

ll

For an adctifional s15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks * ('Special private party ratesapply to merchandise ancI automotive categories,)

The Bulletin v is i t

1 994 H o nd a Ci v i c owner's manual, $15. 541-280-3493

Diamond Reo Dump (4) used Open Country Truck 1 9 74, 1 2-14tires, 3 3x12.50R-18LT, yard box, runs good, $200. 541-647-9051 $6900, 541-548-6812 1/3 interest in ColumNEED HOLIDAY $$$o bia 400, located at We pay CASH for G K E A T Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. Junk Cars & Trucksi Also buying batteries 8 Call 541-647-3718 catalytic converters. Hysfer H25E, runs Serving all of C.O.! I well, 2982 Hours, Call 541-408-1090 ~ nB a s a $3500, call 541-749-0724 Pickup bed protector, Ford/Mazda, new $70 541-280-3493. 1/3 interest i n w e l lLook at: equipped IFR Beech BoBendhomes.com Sliding glass window for MONTANA 3585 2008, nanza A36, new 10-550/ Toyota pickup, new, exc. cond., 3 slides, prop, located KBDN. for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale $130 541-280-3493 king bed, Irg LR, Arc- $65,000. 541-419-9510 tic insulation, all opThe Bulletin tions $37,500. To Subscribe call Need to get an ad 541-420-3250 541-385-5800 or go to in ASAP? NuWa 297LK H i t chwww.bendbulletin.com Hiker 2007, 3 slides, 32' touring coach, left Fax it to 541-322-7253 Toyota Camry owner's Int. 1981 Model DT466 kitchen, rear lounge, manual case, n ew, many extras, beautiful The Bulletin Classifieds dump truck and heavy $15. 541-280-3493 cond. inside & o u t, duty trailer, 5 yd box, $32,900 OBO, Pnneve verything wor k s , ille. 541-447-5502 days Executive Hangar $8000. 541-421-3222. Antique & 8 541-447-1641 eves. at Bend Airport Classic Autos (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bi-fold door. Natural gas heat, office, bath1921 Model T room. Parking for 6 Peterbilt 359 p o table Delivery Truck Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th c ars. A d jacent t o water t ruck, 1 9 90, Restored 8 Runs wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Frontage Rd; g reat 3200 gal. tank, 5hp $9000. TV,full awning, excel- visibility for a viation pump, 4-3" h oses, lent shape, $23,900. bus. 1jetjockOq.com camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-389-8963 541-820-3724

Full Color Photos

a d ,

GVW, all steel, $1400.

541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024.

4 Studded tires on S10 whls, good cond., $200 obo. 541-408-1389

GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, We are QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! MOdern FORD F150XL2005. ThiStrUCkcai) haulit three adorable, loving puppies looking for a amenities ai)d all the quiet you will need. all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine Caring home. PleaSeCall right away. $500. R OOm to grOw in yOur owli little ParadiSe! Wi l l get the job dane oi) the ranCh!

y o u r

7'x16', 7000 lb.

541-280-3493

Aircraft, Parts & Service

• Lg .

p la c e

Big Tex Landscapingl ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed,

Economical flying in your ow n C e s sna 172/180 HP for only $ 10 000! Based a t BDN. Call Gabe a t Automotive Parts, Professional Airl Service & Accessories ~5 41 - 388-0019•

In The BLjlletin's print and online Classifieds.

To

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

Heavy Equipment Fleetwood Wilderness 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, rear bdrm, fireplace, AC, W/D hkup beautiful u n it! $30,500.

Econoline RV 19 8 9, Immaculate! fully loaded, exc. cond, Beaver Coach Marquis 35K m i. , R e d uced40' 1987. New cover, $17,950. 541-546-6133 new paint (2004), new 541-815-2380 inverter (2007). Onan 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, CAN'T BEAT THIS! parked covered $35,000 L ook before y o u obo. 541-419-9859 or buy, below market 541-280-2014 value! Size 8 mileSprinter 272RLS, 2009 age DOES matter! 29', weatherized, like Class A 32' Hurrin ew, f u rnished & K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 cane by Four Winds, ready to go, incl Wine- slide, AC, TV, awning. 2007. 12,500 mi, all ard S a t ellite dish, NEW: tires, converter, amenities, Ford V10, 26,995. 541-420-9964 batteries. Hardly used. Ithr, cherry, slides, $15,500. 541-923-2595 like new! New low Monaco Dynasty 2004, price, $54,900. loaded, 3 slides, die541-548-5216 +i II sel, Reduced - now jt Il $119,000, 5 4 1-923-

t . w g'R ~M

BOATS & RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent

lite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000.

m ore!

w w w . b e n d b u l le t i n .c o m

o r

c a ll

3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9

Hours: Monday -Friday 7:30am to 5:00pm •Telephone Hours: Monday - Friday 7:30am - 5:00pm • Saturday 10:00am - 12:30pm 24 Hour Message Line: 383-2371: Place, cancel, or extend an ad after hours. 1777 S.W. ChandlerAve. Bend, OregOn 97702


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

E6 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9 2012 • THE BULLETIN 932

Antique & Classic Autos

933

Antique & Classic Autos

• S p ort Utility Vehicles

Pickups

935

940

Sport Utility Vehicles

Vans

Au t o mobiles

Automobiles •

Automo b iles

Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 Jeep Wrangler X 2008, Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 PORSCHE 914 1974, 4x4. 120K mi, Power unlimited, 4 dr., run- 7 -pass. v a n wit h Roller (no engine), '55 Chevy 2 dr. w gn seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd ning boards, premium p ower c h a i r lif t , Ford Ranchero lowered, full roll cage, PROJECT car, 350 Ford F250 XLT 4x4 row seating, e xtra wheels, hard top, very $1500; 1989 Dodge 5-pt harnesses, racsmall block w/Weiand 1979 L ariat, 1990, r e d, tires, CD, privacy tint- clean. Vin ¹ 5 72535. Turbo Va n 7 - pass. ing seats, 911 dash & with 351 Cleveland dual quad tunnel rim 80K original miles, ing, upgraded rims. Was $25,999. Now has new motor and instruments, d e cent with 450 Holleys. T-10 modified engine. 4" lift with 39's, well Fantastic cond. $7995 Chrysler Sebring 2006 M $22,999. t rans., $1500. I f i n shape, v e r y c o ol! 4-speed, 12 volt posi, Body is in My Little Red Corvette" maintained, $4000 Contact Timm at Fully loaded, exc.cond, terested c a l l Ja y $1699. 541-678-3249 Weld Prostar whls, ex excellent condition, 1996 coupe. 132K, obo. 541-419-5495 541-408-2393 for info S UBA R U . very low miles (38k), 503-269-1057. tra rolling chassis + $2500 obo. 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. or to view vehicle. always garaged, People Lookfor Information extras. $6000 for all. 541-420-4677 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend transferable warranty $12,500 541-923-1781 About Products and 541-389-7669. 975 877-266-3821 incl. $8100 obo Ford Explorer 4x4, The Bulletin's Services Every Daythrough Dlr ¹0354 Automobiles 1991 - 154K miles, 541-848-9180 "Call A Service The Bulletin Clessifieds rare 5-speed tranny Mercedes Benz C230 Professional" Directory Ford T-Bird 1966 & manual hubs, DON'T MI S S THI S 2005, Auto, l e ather, is all about meeting 390 engine, power clean, straight, evToyota Camryst tinted windows, RWD, everything, new paint, Ford F350 2008 Crew eryday driver. Bring yourneeds. 1984, $1200 obo; Vin ¹656660. Call for Ford Crown V i ctoria 54K original miles, Cab, diesel, 55K miles, 2200 dollar bills! 1985 SOLD; Price. Was $16,999, 1995, LX sedan, 4 dr., Chevy C-20 Pickup runs great, excellent fully loaded, $32,000. Call on one of the Bob, 541-318-9999 Now $13,999. V8, o r ig . ow n e r, professionals today! 1986 parts car, 1969, all orig. Turbo 44 cond. in & out. Asking 541-480-0027 BMW Z4 Roadster 70,300 mi., studs on, $500. auto 4-spd, 396, model $8,500. 541-480-3179 S UB A R U . 2005, 62K miles, exreat condition. CST /all options, orig. FORD RANGER XLT Call for details, cellent cond. $14,000. 3000. 541-549-0058. owner, $22,000, 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend 541-548-6592 541-604-9064 541-923-6049 Vehicle? speed, with car alarm, 877-266-3821 H onda A ccord E X Call The Bulletin CD player, extra tires Dlr ¹0354 Buick Lucerne CXL 2009 2.4 l i tre e ng., and place an ad to- Toyota Corolla 2004, on rims. Runs good. 2009, $12,500, low loaded, 52k, $13,000. auto., loaded, 2 04k day! Clean. 92,000 miles GMC Envoy 2002 4WD Nissan Armada S E low miles; 2000 Buick 541-408-3114. miles. orig. owner, non Ask about our 2007, 4 WD , au t o , Century $2900. You'll GMC Vston 1971, Only on m o tor. $ 2 6 00 $6,450. Loaded, smoker, exc. c ond. "Whee/ Deal"! OBO. 541-771-6511. l eather, D VD , C D . $19,700! Original low Leather, Heated not find nicer Buicks $6500 Prin e ville for private party Vin¹700432. Was Honda Civic LX mile, exceptional, 3rd GMC 1978 4x4 Heavy seats, Bose sound One look's worth a 503-358-8241 advertisers $16, 99 9 . Now 2008, like new, Ext. roof rack thousand words. Call Chevy Wagon 1957, owner. 951-699-7171 Duty Camper Special system. $14,788. always garaged, 4-dr., complete, (218) 478-4469 Bob, 541-318-9999. VW Beetle, 2002 2500, 3 5 0 e n gine, loaded. 27k mi., for an appt. and take a 5-spd, silver-gray, black $7,000 OBO, trades, S UBA R U . GMC Yukon Denali auto., 40k miles on drive in a 30 mpg car! one owner. leather, moonroof, CD, please call new eng., brakes & 2003, leather, moon- 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend $13,500. loaded, 115K miles, 541-389-6998 tires good. $2995 firm. roof, premium wheels, 877-266-3821 541-550-0994. well-maintained 541-504-3833 3rd row. Very nice. Find It in Dlr ¹0354 (have records) Chrysler 300 C o upe Vin ¹128449. extremely clean, 1967, 44 0 e n g ine,Plymouth The Bulletin Classifieds! B a r racuda Advertise your car! Was $15,999. Hyundai Elantra 2012 $4850 obo. auto. trans, ps, air, 541-385-5809 Add A Picture! original car! 300 Now $13,799. GLS 4 1 0 0 mi., 541-546-6920 frame on rebuild, re- 1966, 360 V8, center- Reach thousands of readers~ ¹398918. $17,988 painted original blue, hp, Call 541-385-5809 4j@SUBARU. lines, (Original 273 WHEN YOU SEE THIS Nissan Sentra, 2012original blue interior, eng & wheels incl.) The Bulletin Classifieds 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend CHECK YOUR AD 12,610 mi, full warranty, original hub caps, exc. 541-593-2597 877-266-3821 ~OO Please check your ad PS, PB, AC, & more! Oregon chrome, asking $9000 Porsche Cayenne 2004, on the first day it runs Dlr ¹0354 Autogource $16,000. 541-788-0427 or make offer. PROJECT CARS: Chevy 86k, immac, dealer make sure it is cor541-385-9350 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & 541-598-3750 On a classified ad GMC Yukon XL 1500 maint'd, loaded, now to International Fla t rect. Sometimes in- aaaoregonautosource.com Chevy Coupe 1950 2007, l eat h e r, 4 go to $17000. 503-459-1580 s tructions over t h e Bed Pickup 1963, 1 rolling chassis's $1750 www.bendbulletin.com bucket seats, 3rd row phone are misunderea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, ton dually, 4 s pd. Hyundai Sonata 2012, to view additional seat, moonroof. stood and a n e r ror Sedan, 4 d r., auto, complete car, $ 1949; trans., great MPG, photos of the item. Vin ¹305958. Chrysler SD 4-Door Cadillac Series 61 1950, could be exc. wood can occurin your ad. CD, bluetooth, pw, pl, Was $29,999. 1930, CD S R oyal 2 dr. hard top, complete hauler, runs great, If this happens to your crus, tilt, low mi. Must Now $26,888. 911 1974, low BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Standard, 8-cylinder, w/spare f r on t cl i p ., new brakes, $1950. ad, please contact us See! Vi n ¹ 3 2 2715.Porsche PkiB mi., complete motor/ Search the area's most ~ © S U B A R U . body is good, needs $3950, 541-382-7391 the first day your ad 541-419-5480. Was $19,999. Now trans. rebuild, tuned comprehensive listing of some r e s toration, appears and we will $17,988. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Toyota 4-Runner Limited, suspension, int. & ext. classified advertising... FIND IT! runs, taking bids, 877-266-3821 2011, V6, shoreline blue, be happy to fix it as refurb., oi l c o o ling, real estate to automotive, gUV t1 I 541-383-3888, s oon as w e c a n . S UB A R U . Dlr ¹0354 excellent cond., never Deadlines are: Weekshows new in & out, merchandise to sporting 541-81 5-331 8 SELL IT! off-road, very low miles, 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend p erf. m e ch. c o n d.goods. Bulletin Classifieds Honda CRY 2005, The Bulletin Classifieds fully loaded! $36,900. days 12:00 noon for Much more! 877-266-3821 appear every day in the 4WD, moonroof, alloy Gloria, 541-610-7277 next day, Sat. 11:00 $28,000 541-420-2715 Dlr ¹0354 print or on line. wheels, very clean. a.m. for Sunday; Sat. DON'IIISS THIS Just bought a new boat? Call 541-385-5809 Vin ¹027942. 12:00 for Monday. If Mitsubishi 3 00 0 940 RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L G T Sell your old one in the www.bendbulletin.com Was $12,799. we can assist you, VW Karman Ghia hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, 1999, auto., p e arl classifieds! Ask about our Vans Now $10,988 please call us: w hite, very low m i . 1970, good cond., am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 PPPPlDRCentral 0 PPDDPMCP1903 new upholstery and 541-420-3634 /390-1285 /I $9500. 541-788-8218. 541-385-5809 S UB A R U . The Bulletin Classified FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, BUBARUOPBBND COM convertible top. door panels w/flowers $10,000. 935 l 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend ~ j e) & hummingbirds, Chrysler PT C r uiser 877-266-3821 541-389-2636 Sport Utility Vehicles white soft top & hard 2006, au to, pw, pl, Dlr ¹0354 top. Just reduced to crus, tilt, tinted winI II I i I Jeep Li b erty 20 0 7 , Chevrolet G20 Sports- dows, Vin ¹ 2 24778. $3,750. 541-317-9319 Nav., 4x4, l e ather, or 541-647-8483 s ;B M'L man, 1993, exlnt cond, W as $ 7,999. N o w loaded. Moonroof. $4750. 541-362-5559 or $5,999. Vin ¹646827. 541-663-6046 Was $16,999. ) SU B A R U . Now $13,488. VW Thing 1974, good Buick Enclave 2008 CXL 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Chevy Astro cond. Extremely Rare! AWD, V-6, black, clean, S UB A R U . 877-266-3821 Cargo Van 2001, stand out and y sound, 82k Only built in 1973 & mechanicall Dlr ¹0354 miles. $20,995. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend pw, pdl, great cond., 1974. $8,000. Ford Galaxie 500 1963, business car, well Qet QPSIItSP Chfhuah Call 541-815-1216 877-266-3821 541-389-2636 Cat)II!ac CYS29k,' uahua/Lhasa 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, maint'd, regular oil Dlr ¹0354 Have an item to Apso p dan 2o0 I'eSpnIISel 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & changes, $4500. contfppies! Chevy Suburban LTZ 933 radio (orig),541-419-4989 Jeep Liberty, AWD 2005, sell quick? eady forthe H Please call 2007, 4x 4 , l e a ther, Pickups 63 508 miles a s k ing Ioade . 541-633-5149 daysf F moonroof, ba c k up If it's under d tion .hots Need help fixing stuff? sensors, 3rd row seat, $10,750. 541-389-1135 -/ 900 OBO $250/e<.' OOO-0 '500 you can place it in Call A Service Professional OPrunning boards, low pppp Want to impress the Chev 1994 G20 c us000 000-0000. find the help you need. The Bulletin mi., V in ¹ 22 8 9 19 tomized van, 1 2 8k, relatives? Remodel www.bendbulletin.com Was $30,999. Now 3 50 motor, HD t o w Classifieds for: $28,788. your home with the e quipped, seats 7 , Ford Mustang Coupe help of a professional sleeps 2. comfort, utilS UB A R U . MwAp.tpenpttpulletin.com '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 1966, original owner, Ford 250 XLT 1990, ity road ready, nice from The Bulletin's 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend '16 3 lines, 14 days V8, automatic, great 6 yd. dump bed, cond. $4000?Trade for Call TheBulletin ClaSSifiefI DeParlmenIat "Call A Service shape, $9000 OBO. 877-266-3821 mini van. Call Bob, (Private Party ads only) 139k, Auto, $5500. Professional" Directory 541-385-5809or541-382-1811for rates today! 530-515-8199 Dlr ¹0354 541-318-9999 541-410-9997

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Editorials, F2

Commentary, F3 Books, F4-6

© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

JOHN COSTA

Changes at The Bulletin s I wrote a few weeks ago, the twin realities of a continuingly weak economy and an instantaneous end to a key advertising componentare forcing Western Communications to reduce costs. It is a process that has been going on at all of the company's newspapers for well over a year. With Tuesday's newspaper, we will unveil a Bulletin redesigned to save newsprint while maintaining key elements of the news report. The most noticeable change will come with the newspaper of Monday, Dec. 17. We are reducingthe number of sections from four to two, but each section, focused on news and sports, will be larger than the sections now published on Mondays. Historically, Mondays have been the weakest publication days for news.

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Many newspapers have dropped Monday editions altogether, but we are committed to a seven-daya-week publication for readers and advertisers alike. The changes over the rest of the week are more modest. There are some eliminations, but there are also new features, the reduction of duplicated items, and the repositioning of some of our offerings. The daily prime-time TV grid, which is duplicated in Saturday's TV magazine, will be eliminated, but we will revive Best Bets, Cover Story, Q&A and add other television features in the daily Bulletin. The Business section will consist of two pages daily, starting on the back ofthe Sports section.The stock report will be reduced slightly but redesigned with new focus and points of analysis. We now publish two feature sections on Tuesday and Thursday. In the new design, we will publish one each day and daily comics will move to the Classified section. The Sunday newspaper will remain as it is today. And, as I have written before, we are creatinga new Outdoors section, which will appear on Wednesday, and All Ages section on Friday, adding boomer-oriented news to the existing family coverage. Those are the broad strokes, which cover hundreds of details. Starting with the Tuesday newspaper, we will publish indexes explain-

ing the changes each day.

W e understand and regretthe disruption that this may create for you. But there was no alternative. These changes save 30-plus pages, which may seem a small number out of the 270-plus we routinely publish each week,but with processing costs, the savings add up to hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. The alternative was to lay off more employees, which would diminish The Bulletin to a far greater extent now and in the future. At the end of the day, The Bulletin will still publish hundreds of pages a week and have a news operation second to none in Central Oregon in size and scope. Some of you will observe that we have reduced pages in the newspaper at the same time we have increased the price. That is true. But it comes aftera decade of embellishing The Bulletin's news while not increasing subscription prices, with the exception of adding online delivery for 50 cents a month 4/t

Stew Milne /New York Times News Service file photo

Gina Raimnond, left, Rhode Island's general treasurer,listens to Ernest Gibbons, a retired employee of the University of Rhode Island, after a meeting on pension reform last year in Newport, R.l. Rhode Island was the site of a sweeping pension overhaul in 2011.

• A state judge's impartiality is called into question in a Rhode Island public pension case Editors note:Several of the issues in this article have come up in Oregon when judges ruleon state pension reforms. By Mary Williams Walsh New York Times News Service

an a judge rule impartially on pension cuts when her mother, her son, her uncle and even she herself all have a stake in preserving the status quo? Rhode Island, the site of a sweeping pension overhaul last year, has brought in a prominent New York lawyer to litigate the question: David Boies,perhaps best known for representing Al Gore in the fight over the 2000 presidential election and for waging an antitrust battle against Microsoft on behalf of the government in the 1990s. Rhode Island's dispute may not reach quite those dramatic heights, but it is being closely watched as a first major test of whether, and how, financially strained states and cities can cut the benefits of their

workers and retirees. Several public employee unions have sued Gov. Lincoln Chafee and other Rhode Island officials, accusing them of acting illegally when they pushed through a package of money-saving pension cuts last year, including suspending annual cost-of-livingincreases for most retirees. The unions want the richer benefits restored. Their five pension lawsuits were assigned to Judge Sarah Taft-Carterof the state Superior Court, who has handled public pension cases before and handed a big victory to the unions in onerecent case.Boies,who at $50 an hour is working for a small fraction of his ordinary fee, is seeking a less conflicted judge, and could even ask to move the case into federal court. The case has raised questions and strong feelings about the overhaul in Rhode Island, a state so small that it seems as if nearly everybody has friends or family in the pension system. Could the judge see beyond the harsh effects on her own family? When the subject came up in a hearing in

October in Rhode Island, Taft-Carter acknowledged thather son, a state trooper,was earning a pension, and her mother, the widow of a mayor, was already receiving one. (The uncle's pension came to light only later) She said she had researched the matter, sought advice from a judicial ethics board and concluded that her relatives' interests "will not reasonably impact my ability to be impartial." Her son joined the state patrol just three years ago, she said, so calculating his pension "requiresa large degree of speculation and assumption." Her mother's pension was too small to be a factor, she said. (Court papers put it at

about $22,000 a year) And while the overhaul means the judge's pension will be smaller despite having to contribute more, she said that was true of all judges in the state: "If my financial interest should require disqualification, then all other state judges would be similarly required to recuse themselves." SeePension/F6

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Gretchen Ertl /New York Times News Service file photo

years ago.

A FIGHT ABOUT CUTBACKS

The approach we reluctantly took was made necessary by the ongoing mess that the banks and the Legislature have made of the mortgage foreclosure process — a mess that this year created a multimillion-dollar loss in revenue for The Bulletin. To absorb this loss in costs alone would have created a newspaper that few readers would purchase at any subscription price. Compared with that approach, we believe sustaining a very good newspaper, even at a higher price, is preferable forour readers,advertisers and, frankly, us.

Lincoln Chaffee, left, governor of Rhode Island,is working with the lawyer David Boies to push for pension cuts for public workers and retirees in the state. Those same cutbacks forced Denise Lamoureux, above, acting director of the Central Falls Free Library, to close the library's doors. Lawsuits stemming from the pension cuts have been assigned to a state Superior Court judge who receives those same pensions. The conflict of interest has Boies considering a move to federal court.

— John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcostaC<bendbulletin.com

Ryan T. Cenaty/ New York Times News Serwce file photo

BOOKS INSIDE ANARCHY:Professor gives praise to resistance,F4

FAILURE:Howto find happiness in mistakes,F4

SCIENCE: A detective story on'the God particle,'F5

MANKIND:Author tells of world culture,F5


F2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

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o pay for a new teacher training program, Gov. John

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Kitzhaber's budget proposes taking money away

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from the state's Education Services Districts. There's no plan yet, though, for how $120 million can be wrung from the ESDs without damaging the critical work they do providing local school districts with services in technology, legal matters and special education, among others. Ben Cannon, the governor's education policy adviser, said the state is committed to investing in the preparation and development of Oregon teachers, and wants to form four to six regional centers to guide teachers in the development of their craft. No decisions have been made about where the centers would be located, he said, but the intent is to train a corps of teachers who would then take the instruction back to their schools and districts. The centers would also provide a forum for the most successful schools to share their methods. So far, so good. Having welltrained teachers is clearly a worthwhile goal with the potential to benefit students and raise achievement. But where's the money? Why turn to the ESDs? Cannon said ESDs vary across

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the state, partly influenced by the different needs of rural versus urban school districts. Some function better and accomplish more than others, he said. Deputy Superintendent of Public Instruction Rob Saxton has a work group meeting to discuss ways to cut ESD budgets, said Cannon, and they expect to have a better-defined proposal by February. The answers might not be the same across the state, according to Cannon. It's good public policy to re-examine how government spends money and how it might do so more effectively. In fact, the common failure to do so allows government to get bloated and wasteful. What's troubling here is the state's commitment to something new before it knows the savings in ESD budgets are realistic. For the High Desert ESD that serves Deschutes and Crook counties, for example, the cut could be as much as 29 percent of its general fund. If that proves too severe a loss, it will be hard for the state to step back from so public a declaration of intent.

M Nickel's Worth It's a Christmas tree

Good comesfrom an unfortunate beginning huck Arnold, who runs the Downtown Bend Association, isn't your average guy, we suspect. That's clear in his response to being assaulted while working in late September. It was early in the morning of Sept. 23 when Arnold, busy cleaning up after an Oktoberfest celebration, was allegedly assaulted by Jeffrey Andrew Sherman, a young veteran who did two stints in Iraq during a five-year tour in the U.S. Army. Sherman shoved Arnold, who had tried to break up a dispute between him and a woman. Arnold suffered a gash to the head that required nine staples as a result of that shove. Sherman apologized when he saw the damage he had done. Arnold didn't simply file a police report and bow out of the situation, however. Rather, he argued to the district attorney that misdemeanor assault charges against Sherman should be dropped. A plea hearing on the matter has been set forMonday, and Sherman likely will be allowed to take part in a diversion program that will allow charges to be dropped if he completes it successfully.

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It should be noted here that there's nothing automatic about Sherman's diversion, no matter what he and Arnold want. As District Attorney Patrick Flaherty told reporter Sheila Miller, his office represents the state, not the victim, in criminal cases. The decision to pursue the matter in court depends upon what his office feels is best for the state. Meanwhile, Arnold and Sherman agreeabout one thing.American veterans returning from duty in places like Iraq and Afghanistan can have real problems adjusting to life back home, and they may have problems connecting to the services that could make the transition easier. The two are working to spread the word about those services. It's clear from all this that Arnold is a man of compassion who is able to see the good in someone who has harmed him. It's a toorarecharacteristicthese days,and under the circumstances Sherman is lucky to have met him. In the end, their unfortunate encounter is likely to turn out well — not only for Sherman, but for other newly home vets in the area.

outlined junk heap." I don't know who commissioned this piece, who paid for its installation, or who will pay for the electricity to keep it lit, but I certainly hope none of my tax dollars are diverted to it.

program, putting people to work rebuilding our infrastructure'? EcoOn the front page of The Bullenomic models that predicted austertin on Dec. 1, you refer to the Bend ity would succeed, a model at odds Christmas tree as a holiday tree. with accepted economic theory, More PC run amok! have all proven horribly wrong. Shame on The Bulletin for taking Lee Tomiinson Not so much for bankers and Christmas out of Christmas. Redmond bond traders of course, just for the John Gapp other people that are working class Redmond Government austerity victims of this shock therapy. Mike Linkof Contractionary fiscal policy will Bend A steel monstrosity lead to a contractionary spiral in the Don't promote Portland I watched in anticipation as the greater economy. foundation for something went in This per N obel l aureate Paul at the intersection of Southwest Krugman, describing how the reShame on you, John Gottberg AnHighland Avenue and the bypass duction i n o v e r al l g o v ernment derson! And shame on The Bulletin in Redmond. What sort of construc- spending on projects translates di- for publishing three pages of free tion required a recently completed rectly into greater losses in the over- advertising for Portland businesses landscaping project to be torn up? all economy. Simply, more workers ("A Portland treasure hunt," Dec. 2)! My question was answered a few with cash equals more spending Where are the three-page spreads weeks ago when the most atrocious on the stuff other businesses make. on unique, local, handcrafted stores monstrosity of brushed steel was There isa call for "American Ausand galleries in Sisters, Bend and placed on the pedestal. It has moving terity" from elected officials and no- Redmond'? How do you think your parts, too! And the moving parts had table news outlets. small, retail advertisers feel about some sort of mysterious message on Austerity that calls for reduced your g l o w in g r e c ommendation the paddles of the whirligig that can government spending at all levels to head to Portland for Christmas only be read if one walks around the (except war spending), the reduc- shopping? thing when there is no wind. Stand- tion of food and housing benefits I have been upset with The Bulleing still will allow three of four of the and spending on d i saster relief. tin at various times over the past 35 disconnected words to be seen, and The actual results of this "Austerity years, but I don't think I have ever when the wind blows they become a Bomb" are visible in Europe where been as disheartened as I was when blur. elimination of government services, I started to read this article. KnowI know that one person's junk is reduced wages and pilferedsafety ing firsthand the desperate attempts another person's art, but this is be- nets, led to economic collapse and our local retailers are making to yond that — it is unexplainable, and now social unrest. survive, it seems totally irresponunfitting for a small, conservative Our local paper of record and the sible for this newspaper to intentioncity like Redmond. local television outlets could make ally undercut their efforts. I hope To add insult to this heap, it is this story visible and allow for rea- you will think twice in the future outlined in white neon! This huge sonable debate on the pros and before publishing fluff pieces with copy of an old Pontiachood or- cons of this issue. Should we bring such damaging potential. this "bomb" into our house, to blow nament is now a beacon for all Shop local! who need directions as they enter off the roof and blast the walls? Or Barbara Secrest Redmond: "Turn right at the neon should we attempt a modern WPA Sisters

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Thoughts on what needs to be done in Washington, D.C. By Steve and Cynde Magidson pen letter to our legislators,

Sen. Jeff Merkley (D), Sen. Ron Wyden (D), Rep. Greg Walden (R):

"limbo" state that we live in. Many of the small business folks we know are reluctant to hire new employees due to the state of flux. They have not known what their taxes or health care costs will be going forward, and they still don't know. We are getting totally fed up with both sides of the aisle. This

As residents of Bend and two of your constituents, we are writing to you three. We are registered Republicans, but vote for the candidates we like — not along Q EW week the President "offered" party lines. Over the years Republicans a detailed plan we have supported all three for averting the "cliff" that of you! And we respect the work you callsfor new taxes and increased are doing on our behalf. That said ... spending but lacks any concessions Attributed to Albert Einstein: "The to Republicans! What part of comdefinition of insanity is doing the promise don't Obama and the Demosame thingover and over and expect- crats understand? ing it to come out different." Here are some thoughts, in no parWe do think our Congress and ticular order: the White House need to take heed. We are living in insane times. It's Does anyone care that taxing "Groundhog Day" here in the USA. • capital gains at a high rate will We believe that much of the lack of discourage investment in our econorecovery ofour economy is due to the my? Investment money is money al-

1

Please — be a part of

solving this mess — work together!

income taxes, but with a high enough exemption (e.g. the first $250,000, or more) this should affect a minimal number of them. We are in dire need of income tax reform. How about limiting the home mortgage deduction to ONE residence (one's main residence) and lowering the cap on the amount of interest one gets to deduct on that mortgage. No deductions for second and subsequent homes. Business/rental property would continue to be a deduction as there is income associated with those properties, of course.

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any current recipients of social security, Medicare, etc. Raise the retirement age — but have it take effect 10 or more years out. Ditto Medicare. Work on it NOW!

Cut the bloated federal budget — the government is not responsible to ensure everyone can have everything he/she wants! What incentive is there to work when one is handed everything? Our programs should be asafety net,not a career choice. There is so much more — but I' ve gone on long enough. Please — be a part of solving this mess — work t ogether! Have a n other l oo k a t We must address the entitle- Simpson-Bowles. Please. "The problem with socialism is that Yes, we are going to have to • ment p r o g r ams! C o n g ress • raise taxes on some of us. Re- keeps kicking this one down the you eventually run out of other peopublicans should not dig in and re- road. The current structure of these ple'smoney." — Margaret Thatcher fuse to budge on this one. Yes, many programs is not sustainable. This — Steve and Cynde Magidson small businesses file under individual can be done without any impact on live in Bend. ready taxed, not newly earned money. And it is completely at risk for loss to the investor. This is different from Warren Buffet'ssecretary "paying more in taxes" on her weekly salary. Investment money is what keeps oureconomy growing. Many of our local Bend businesses have gone out of business due to the banks refusing to loan them money! How sad is that?

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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OMMENTARY

e in e are still borrowing more than $1 t r i llion a y e a r. Barack Obama has added more than $5 trillion to the national debt in just his first term alone. Such massive borrowing is unsustainable. Someone somehow at some time has to pay it back. Obama would agree. He once alleged that George W. Bush's much smaller deficits were "irresponsible" and "unpatriotic." Obama himself vowed to cut the budget deficit in half by the end of his first term. Instead, Obama's annual deficits have never gone below $1 trillion. Three ways to establish a longterm trajectory toward a balanced budget were under discussion. One was to adopt the proposals of the nonpartisan Simpson-Bowles Commission appointed by Obama. The commission offered a balanced mix of taxreform and greater revenues, along with cuts in federal spending. But the president was not interested. The commission's findings n ow seem stale just two years after they were issued. Another way would have been to adopt the Bill Clinton-Newt Gingrich compromise formula of the 1990s that balanced the budget through a seriesof across-the-board tax hikes and spending cuts. But while the administration talked grandly of a return to higher "Clinton-era tax rates," it never mentioned the necessary second half of the old equation — "Clinton-era spending cuts." That

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o m o a i r ness, so o unemployment insurance, disability insurance or food stamps, and despite massive loans to green industries, the unemployment rate and GDP growth are about where they were four years and $5 trillion ago. balanced solution is dead, too. Now the p resident wants anFinally, we might have just enacted other $50 billion in new borrowing. the income-tax rates of the Clinton But why would borrowing another era now and work on the spending $50 billion jump-start the sluggish cuts later. But the administration did economy when 100 times that figure not wish to take that third approach in deficit spending so far has not? "Pay your fair share" was a wineither. Instead, it prefers returning to Clinton-era rates only for those who ning Obama campaigntheme — givmake more than $250,000 a year, en that nearly half of all Americans while leaving the lower Bush-era in- do not pay any federal income tax come-tax rates — once soundly ridi- and receivesome sort of federal or culed — on all other Americans. state entitlement. Yet if the targeted The problem is that such a soak- 5 percent of American taxpayers althe-rich move would only give the ready pays almost 60 percent of all treasury about $80 billion a year in federal income tax revenues, what new revenue — about 7 percent to would the president consider their 8 percent ofthe money needed to proper "fair share" — 70 percent, 80 make up for the massive annual bor- percent, 90 percent or 100 percent? rowing. Even with proposed accomWe are now entering a rare, revopanying tax hikes on capital gains lutionary period in American hisand larger estates, we still would fall tory. The present administration is hundreds of billions of dollars short. not just re-examining the traditional There simply are not enough affluent physics of taxing and spending, but sheep who make more than $250,000 the very basis by which Americans to shear. are compensated in the workplace. Spending is the real problem but For Obama, it is inherently unfair goes largely unaddressed. Obama's that a few — a surgeon, a small-busifirst-term borrowing of $5 trillion ness woman, an investor or a lotto was, in part, designed to stimulate winner — should make so much. the dormant economy while expand- Thus it is the government's obligaing entitlements to those suffering tion, along with state and local govfrom the recession. But despite the ernments, to take much of it away addition of millions of Americans to from the suspect few and redistribthose who already were receiving ute it to far more deserving others.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON

All the old criteria that decide in a free-market economy how much we are able to make — education levels, hard work, p ersonal responsibility, particular tastes and values, skill sets, self-discipline, or even sheer luck, accidents, relative health or inheritance — now matter far less. Instead, Obama's all-knowing, all-powerful f ederal g overnment, through higher taxes, more spending and greater deficits, will set right what the unfair marketplace has so skewed. At last, we learn what Obama really meant when, in unguarded moments, he sermonized about "redistributive change," the need to "spread the wealth," knowing the proper time not to profit, and at some point making too much money. Do we need any longer to heed the ancient advice — scrimp to leave something behind for y our k i ds; try to get a promotion; make sure your savings account is larger than what you owe — if some inequality results'? There is now only one commandment in the new Kingdom of Fairness: Make less than $250,000, and the government will ensure that you, the deserving,get your fair share. Make more than that, and the government will demand that you, the undeserving, pay your fair share. That is all ye need to know. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover 1nstitution,

Stanford University.

A good deal will raise taxes, fix entitlements By Peter Orszag Bloomberg News

lthough it isn't yet time to panic about the fiscal cliff, negotiations so far aren't exactly going well. The Republicans are committing themselves to an unsustainable principle of no marginal tax-rate increases whatsoever. And the Democrats are failing to seize the moment to make progressivereforms to Medicare and Social Security. There's still time to come to an agreement to prevent the more than $600 billion in federal spending cuts and taxincreases scheduled to take effect in January while also raising the debt limit, but both sides will need to get out of the boxes they have put themselves in. Let's start with the Republicans. Their adamant opposition to an increasein marginal tax rates for anyone, anywhere, has two problems. First, raising huge amounts of revenue by reducing tax expenditures gets harder to do as the details become clear. The only practical way to hit a reasonable revenue target is to have some increase in marginal rates. The second problem is that hardand-fast principles can look increasingly ridiculous when taken, by opponents, to their logical extremes. Imagine some clever but Machiavellian Democrat (Sen. Charles Schumer of New York comes to mind) proposing that the top marginal tax rate be increased to35.5 percent, from 35 percent, for people with income above $5 million. Would the Republicans really blow up a deal over an almost undetectable increase on a tiny

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number of extremely high-income taxpayers? That would be political suicide. On the other hand, if the Republicans accept this increase, then they don't have a principle anymore. On this issue, Republicans are losing the support of even leading chief executives and K Street lobbyists. Randall Stephenson, the CEO of ATRT, for one, recently stated that a deal "will require a compromise involving an increase in both tax rates and revenue in return for real and significant steps to reform entitlements and rein in federal spending." Note that Stephenson's statement s pecifically mentions higher t ax rates. On the other hand, it also reminds us that the negotiations are about more than taxes. There is also the debt limit, which, according to the best guesses of both the Congressional Budget Office and the Bipartisan Policy Center, will be reached in the first quarter of 2013. So the question for the Democrats is: Even if you win higher marginal tax rates, how do you plan to get the debt limit increased? The Republicans, after all, could cave on raising taxes but still be unwilling to include a debt-limit increase in the agreement, absent any changes to entitlements. In this case, the fiscal-cliff victory would be Pyrrhic, with another crisis arriving in February or March. In any case, Democrats should affirmatively want entitlement reform that is progressive and puts the crucial programs on a sounder footing. On Social Security, the Democrats, while they still control the White House and the Senate, should want to lock in the victory they have already

levels as a share ofthe economy. The administration claims that it is committed to reforming Social Security — just not right now. But why w ould reform be easier in,say,2014, when nothing is forcing action, than it is today? (And if the problem is that Republicans are reluctant to vote for additional revenue as part of Social Securityreform, how exactly does that change overthe next year or

two?) To date, Barack Obama's administration has basically just repeated its previous budget proposals for Medicare, which are perfectly fine and desirable as far as they go. To go further, the Center for American won over the idea of keeping private Progress recently convened a group accounts out of Social Security. Plus, of health policy experts (including as Peter Diamond and I have laid out, me), which put forward a dozen proit's possible to restore the program's posals to slow the growth of health long-term solvency while also mak- costsover the coming decades. Aling it fairer — including by having though these changes don't generate it reflect the growing gap in life ex- significant "scoreable" savings bepectancy byincome and education. cause their effects are too uncertain Finally, and perhaps most important, for the Congressional Budget Office SocialSecurity reform can be phased to fully evaluate, they may well have in gradually, thereby minimizing the a larger impact on our long-term fisdamage to the labor market from too cal future than anything else that much austerity too soon. could possibly be contained in the I'm not pretending that Social Se- budget deal. curity reform is easy. It must, though, The optimistic view is that, so be compared with the alternatives. far, the two sides are just positionProgressive Social Security reform ing. After all, if a deal were reached not only would be affirmatively de- weeks ahead of the deadline, both sirable but also could partially dis- sides would worry that they gave too place other, more troubling proposals much. But this week and next are — which would take effect too quick- when both Republicansand Demoly, and thereby raise the unemploy- crats need to show more flexibility. ment rate, or be problematic on their — Peter Orszag is vice chairman of own terms. It would be difficult, for corporate and investment banking at instance, to make further cuts in disCitigroup Inc. and aformer director of cretionary spending, as it is already the Office of Management and Budget in scheduled to reach unreasonably low the Obama administration.

What is the Fed's debt-debate role? By Charles Lane The Washington Post

udging by the latest signs and portents, President Obama and congressional Republicans appear to be at an impasse over taxes and spending, and t h e c o untry might indeed be headed over the "fiscal cliff." Next year's economic sluggishness and partisan recriminations could make today's look like a picnic. The two parties and their allied pundits blame each other; each side has its points. But while everyone's pointing fingers, let me at least wave in the direction of the Federal Reserve and its chairman, Ben Bernanke. There'sa case to be made that Bernanke's low interest-rate policies are part of the problem, too. How so? What could the politically independent central bank's pursuit of its mission possibly have to do with Congress' handling of its tax-and-spend business'? The answer is: nothing directly or intentionally, but everything indirectly and unintentionally. With the U.S. economy still reeling from the Great Recession, the

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Fed has been trying to stimulate economic growth by holding down interest rates, and it has pledged to keep doing so through mid-2015. It

does this in large part by buying up government debt. Partly as a result, the United States was able to issue $4 trillion in new debt from 2009 through 2011, while keeping net interest costs at or below 1.5 percent of grossdomesticproduct. It's perfectly consistent with the Fed's mandate. And it sounds like a great deal for the government, too. According to more than a few economists, pundits and politicians, Congress shouldseize the opportunity to borrow and spend on growthe nhancing i nvestments such a s infrastructure. However, in a properly function-

ing economy, rising government borrowing costs can play a useful role: Specifically, they are the market's way of warning government that its debts are unsustainable. Muffle that signal, as the Fed's policy is doing now, and politicians are less able to guess right about how much time they really have to fix fiscal policy.

According to the 2012 annual report of the global "central bank for central banks," the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), "near zero policy interest rates, combined with abundant and nearly unconditional liquidity support, weaken incentives for ... fiscal authorities to limit their borrowing requirements." In short, the Fed is making it easier for Congress not to do its job. The Fed alone is not responsible for today's low rates. To some extent, they reflect investors' flight to safe government bonds due to the lack of high-yielding alternatives in the sluggish private markets. Also, the central banks of China and Ja-

pan are doing their part by holding $1.1 trillion of Treasury debt each to offset their cumulative trade surpluses with us. Bernanke has specifically and firmly denied responsibility for the politicians' fiscal dithering. In an Oct. 1 speech, he rejected the notion that the Fed should use monetary policy "to try to influence the political debate on the budget." Bernanke was correct. But he was also pummeling a straw man. No

one is saying that he is enabling the fiscal impasse on purpose — at least I'm not. Nor is anyone suggesting that heshould reverse course on interestrates for the express purpose of disciplining the politicians. The real point, as the BIS put it, is that "central banks are being cornered into prolonging monetary stimulus as governments drag their feet and adjustment is delayed." Bernanke can't raise rates without blowing up the economic recovery.The recovery, in turn,buys time for Congress and the White House to address fiscal issues under benign conditions. Yet without the spur of higher rates, politicians are more likely to waste that time — and, consequently, blow up th e economic recovery. It's anyone's guess how much longer this game can go on, before markets finally do deliver an interest rate shock so powerful that even the Fed can't counteract it. But I am pretty sure that whenever that shock comes, it will be sooner than we'd like. — Charles Laneis a member of The Washington Post's editorial board.

THOMAS FRIEDMAN

Iron fists, iron domes TEL AVIV, Israelwent to synagogue Saturday not far from the Syrian border in Antakya, Turkey. It's been on my mind ever since. Antakya is home to a tiny Jewish community, which still gathers for holidays at the little Sephardic synagogue. It is also famous for its mosaic of mosques and Orthodox, Catholic, Armenian and Protestant churches. How could it be that I could go to

t

synagogue in Turkey on Saturday while on Friday, just across the Orontes River in Syria, I had visited with Sunni Free Syrian Army rebels embroiled in a civil war in which Syrian Alawites and Sunnis are killing each other on the basis of their ID cards, Kurds arecreating theirown enclave, Christians are hiding and the Jews

are long gone? For me, it raises the question of whether there are just three governing options in the Middle East today: Iron Empires, Iron Fists or Iron Domes? The reason that majorities and minorities co-existed relatively harmoniously for some 400 years when the Arab world was ruled by the Turkish Ottomans from Istanbul was because the Sunni Ottomans, with their Iron Empire, monopolized politics. While there were exceptions, generally speaking the Ottomans and their local representatives were in charge in cities like Damascus, Antakya and Baghdad. Minorities, like Alawites, Shiites, Christians and Jews, though second-class citizens, did not have to worry that they'd be harmed if they did not rule. The Ottomans had a live-and-let-live mentality toward their subjects. When Britain and France carved up the Ottoman Empire in the Arab East,theyforgedthevariousOttoman provinces into states — with names like Iraq, Jordan and Syria — that did not correspond to the ethnographic map. So Sunnis, Shiites, Alawites, Christians, Druze, Turkmen, Kurds and Jews found themselves trapped together inside national boundaries that were drawn to suit the interests of the British and French. Those colonial powers kept everyone in check. But once they withdrew, and these countries became independent, the contests for power began, and minorities were exposed. Finally, in the late 1960s and 1970s, we saw the emergence ofa class ofA rab dictators and monarchs who perfectedIron Fists

(and multiple intelligence agencies) to decisively seize power for their sect or tribe. In Syria, under the Assad family's iron fist, the Alawite minority came to rule over a Sunni majority, and in Iraq, under Saddam's iron fist, a Sunni minority came to rule over a Shiite majority. But these countries never tried to build real "citizens" who could share and peacefully rotate in power. So what you are seeing today in the Arab awakening countries — Syria, Iraq, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and Yemen — is what happens when there is no Iron Empire and the people rise up against the iron fists. Israelis have responded to the collapse of Arab iron fists around them — including the rise of militias with missiles in Lebanon and Gaza — with a third model. It is the wall Israel built around itself to seal off the West Bank coupled with its I ron Dome antimissile system. The wall plus the dome are enabling Israel's leaders to abdicate their responsibility for thinking creatively about a resolution of their own majority-minority problem with the Palestinians. I am stunned at what I see here politically. On the right, in the Likud Party, the old leadership that was at least connected with the world is being swept aside in the latest primary by a rising group of far-right settleractivists who are convinced that Palestinians are no threat anymore and that no one can roll back the 350,000 Jews living in the West Bank. The farright group running Israel today is so arrogant, and so indifferent to U.S. concerns, that it announced plans to build a huge block of settlements in the heart of the West Bank — in retaliation for the U.N. vote giving Palestinians observer status — even though the U.S. did everything possible to block that vote and the settlements would sever any possibility of a contiguous Palestinian state. I am glad that the wall and the Iron Dome are sheltering Israelis from enemies who wish to do them ill, but I fear the wall and the Iron Dome are also blinding them from truths they still badly need to face. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


F4 © www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

'Cold Creeg' holiday tale is a perfect romance

'The Antidote' says to embracefailures

'Two cHEERs FQR ANARcHlsM' i

"The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can't Stand Positive Thinking" by Oliver Burkeman

"A Cold Creek Noel" by RaeAnne Thayne (Har-

(Faber R Faber,$25)

lequin, $5.25)

HAep i l V trSS

By Hector Tobar

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roll

Los Angeles Times

By Lezli e Patterson McClatchy-Tribune News Service

This is a great Christmas romance. Fans who haven't spent time in RaeAnne Thayne's Cold Creek during Christmas will definitely want to take the trip this year — and chances are extremely good that once you go, you'll be looking to find earlier books in this addicting series. Thayne is one of those authors who lures a reader to investin her characters and settings. She does a masterful job of blending romance and Christmas, offering holiday spirit and the sweet satisfaction of a t ouching love story. Fans of the series are familiar with the tragedy that struck the Bowman family m ore than a decade earlier. Previous books allowed police chief Trace and fire chief Taft to heal some of the emotional wounds when they found (or re-found, in Taft's case) their true loves. A bonus in "A Cold Creek Noel" is visiting the twin brothers and their family. This time, though, the focus is on Caidy, the youngest sibling, the only sister and the only one with their beloved parents when they were murdered. Since the Bowman parents were murdered during the holiday season, Christmas isn't Caidy's favorite time of year. But the sunnyn atured, nurturing a u nt makes the season festive for her adored niece, who she has helped raise with her brother Ridge. Despite a negative first impression, the soft-hearted Caidy offers the new vet in town use of a cabin on her ranch for him and his children. Ben is a widower who has moved his two children to Cold Creek to get them away fromhis nasty in-laws. He doesn't want to start a new relationship. Of course, he does.

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1. "Killing Kennedy" by Bill O'Reilly (Henry Holt) 2."Barefoot ContessaFoolproof" by lna Garten (Clarkson Potter) 3. "Thomas Jefferson" by Jon Meacham (RandomHouse) 4. "Guinness World Records" by GuinnessWorld Records (Guinness World Records) 5. "No EasyDay" by Mark Owen (Dutton) 6. "The Virgin Diet" by J. J. Virgin (Harlequin) 7. "The 4-Hour Chef" by Timothy Ferriss (NewHarvest) 8. "America Again" by Stephen Colbert (GrandCentral) 9."The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook" by DebPerelman (Knopf) 9."I Declare" by Joel Osteen (FaithWords) — McClatchy-TribuneNewsService

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AndrewHendersoni New York Times News Serwce

James C. Scott, a political scientist at Yale University,works on his farm in Durham, Conn., recently. Scott is regarded as an unofficial founder of the field of "resistance studies" and has a new book, "Two Cheers for Anarchism."

ro eSSor in S ru 0 revo u ion, anarC going back to Max Weber, to has come undone because marry the insights of social of its fetishization of utopian DURHAM, Conn. The science tothe broad sweep of principle at the expense of real-world politics). He says Yale political scientist J ames history,even as he cautions C. Scott may share his 46-acre a g a inst putting too much faith he admires the movement's "spontaneity," but not everyfarm in this picturesque hami n t heory. "He marches to his own let with a flock of laying hens, one in its ranks is returning a pair of Highland cattl e and d r u m c o mpletely," said Ian the love. an active honeybee c olony. S h apiro, a longtime colleague The left-wing writer MalBut don't mistake him for your o f S cott's in the Yale political colm Harris, in The Los Antypical Connecticut science department. geles Review of Books, blasted country squire. While m ost s o cial Scott as a closet liberal in "anFor Scott, the scientists pick apart archish" clothing, espousing f arm, a bout 2 0 problems i n p r e v i- a vision that's "one part Bush 'ownership miles no r t heast ous research, "Jim Administration of N e w Ha v en, always starts w i th society,' one part Apple 'think is both a place to problems in the real different.'" Fortune.com, on oh. blow off steam and world," Shapiro said. the other hand, praised him "That's why his work an embodiment of for offeringlessons in power the kind of handslaunches ships." and subversion useful to "leadI "Two on, ground-up, loCheers," ers or managers" bent on "crecal knowledge that published by Princative destruction." he has championed eton Uni v e rsity Scott, who calls himself a "crude Marxist" but defends during a career spanPress, is a skiff of a ning five decades and a string b o o k by Scott's usual dread- family business and other of highly influential and idion o u ght standards, weighing in "small property" as important syncratic books. at a mere 149 pages, footnotes buffers against state power, "I'm as proud of kn owing in c l uded. It is both a departure laughed heartily at the notion how to shear a sheep as Iamof a n da summing up, reprising of hitting the managementanything," Scott, who t urned t h e themes of his earlier books guru circuit .A doctor's son ed76 on Sunday, said durI'ng a in a series of 29 playful, often ucated at Quaker schools outrecent interview in the living hi g h l y personal "fragments," side Philadelphia, he said he room of his rustic 1826 farmma k i ng a case for what he calls began scholarly life as a fairly "the anarchist squint." house, seated across fr om a standard"left-wing professor." pair of rocking chairs draped As a newly minted Ph.D. 'A matter of taming' with skins of home-butchered teaching at the University of Montadales. "I've been a better To most Americans the term Wisconsin in the early 1970s, scholar partly because I've had anarchism probably invokes he was active in the anti-war this other activity." bomb-throwing radicals. But movement but s o o n r e a lized — "if I do say so, more Scott'sprofessional accomseen through Scott's squint, plishments are certainly conanarchist principles are in ac- q uickly than some o f m y siderable, even if the biograph- tion all around us, whether friends," he notes — that wars ical note in his new book, "Two in jaywalking, the anti-SAT of national liberation often Cheers for Anarchism," cites movement or a ssembly-line led tomuch more oppressive his status as a "mediocre" bee- slowdowns — all examples, governments. "I began to think that if revkeeperalongside his memberhe contends, of everyday reship in the American Academy sistance to the rule of techno- olution doesn't work for peasof Arts and Sciences. He is the cratic elites. ants, maybe there's not that "Unlike the anarchists, I official founder of Yale's agrarmuch to say for it," he said. don't believe the state will ever ian studies program, as well Scott has no idea what his as an unofficial founder of the be abolished," he said in the academiccolleagueswillmake field of "resistance studies," in interview. "It's a matter of tam- of his quirky new book. But ing it" — through the kind of which his book "Weapons of he said he'd always been less the Weak" (1985), a study of lawbreaking and disruption, concerned with " d efending peasant resistance based on he argues, that have always turf," as he puts it, than with fieldwork in a Malaysian vilbeen crucial to democratic po- moving on to wherever curilage, is a kind of Bible. litical change. osity leads him. For now, that And his influence stretches The guarantees of equality includes learning Burmese, far beyond the academic left, in the Declaration of the Rights t eaching a seminar on t h e thanks to "Seeing Like a State: of Man or the Civil Rights Act, politics and ecology of rivers, How Certain Schemes to Imhe continued, are "achieve- and researching a new book prove the Human Condition ments of the state, but they are on the "deep history" of plant Have Failed" (1998), a magiste- the achievements of the state and animal domestication. "I just love raising animals," rial critique of top-down social with a pistol at its temple." planning that has been cited, Scott's book arrives at a mo- he said before inviting a deand debated,by the free-marment when the Occupy move- parting visitor to pluck a dozket libertarians of the Cato Inment has brought anarchist en freshly laid eggs from his stitute (which recently dedicat- thought closer to the Ameriramshackle chicken coop. "It's ed an issue of its online journal can political mainstream than good to have something that to the b o ok), development it has been in decades (and, requires your body and leaves economists and partisans of some on the left have argued, your mind alone." Occupy Wall Street alike. "He's one of the people who has really demonstrated all the unintended bad consequences of people who think they can plan a city o r economy or "Quality Painting Inside and Out" whole society, but he's not ideJ Painting in Central Oregon for over 18 years ological about it," the conservative political theorist Francis Fukuyama said. He's also the kind of big thinker (and stylish writer), colleagues say, who has all but Insured Bonded andLicensed ¹156152 Phone: 54b383-2927 disappeared in his field: the 18633 Riverwoods Drive EmaiL heartlandllc®msn.com Bend,OR 97702 last of a breed of wide-angled Inquire about trading goods for services. 20th-century social theorists, By jennifer Schuessler

New York Times News Serv -

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Oliver Burkeman's book "The Antidote" begins with thousands of people trying to think p ositive thoughts together. A British journalist, Burkeman attends a "Get Motivated!" session in a Texas baseball stadium. In exchange for a pricey admission fee, he getstohear President George W. Bush deliver a talk on the power of optimism. And he listens as Robert H. Schuller, the self-help guru and founder of the Crystal Cathedral, confidently reveals the secret of success. "Here's the word that will change your life," Schuller tells his audience. After a dramatic pause he yells out, "Cut! ... Cut the word 'impossible' from your life.... Cut it out forever!" A few months later Schuller, the ringmaster of this failure-is-not-an-option lovefest, declares his Crystal Cathedral bankrupt. This d e liciously i r o n ic opening is one of several amusing and instructive passages in "The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can't Stand Positive T h inking," which takes every self-help book you've ever read and turns it inside out. Burkeman, a c o l umnist for th e G u ardian, begins with a skillful and entirely persuasive dissection of the arguments that have sent millions of books about success and happiness flying off the shelves. Examine those books closely and you'll find nothing more t han b anal messages, Burkeman writes. Scientific research shows that they rarely help anyone. Having established that the ideas in self-help books are superficial and often selfdefeating, Burkeman heads off in search of what he calls a "negative path to happiness" where a " backwards law" prevails. Accept the idea that you will inevitably die. Learn to celebrate your failures. See the wisdom in your pessimistic thoughts. Burkeman writes that "the effort to try and feel happy is often precisely the thing that makes us miserable." He argues that "it is our constant efforts to eliminate the negative — insecurity, uncertainty, failure, or Self Referrals Welcome

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sadness — that is what causes us tofeelso insecure,anxious, uncertain, or unhappy." In search of the "negative path" to happiness, Burkeman's book takes us to a slum in Kenya, to a Massachusetts meditation retreat, and to the deathbed ofa man who dedicated his life to writing eloquently about death. Some of th e people he meets — like the modern-day stoics of Britain — are kooky individualists who've found their own, unique paths to happiness by latching on to some old ideas. They're not the kind of people you'd want to emulate, but their insights into modern definitions of happiness are instructive. More persuasive are the findings of th e a cademics who have conducted scientific studies of the self-help movement, and Burkeman's own insights into the motivational stories that are supposed to teach us how to be successful. Using the example of the disasters that have befallen many who have tried to climb Mt. Everest — the ultimate t ype-A p e r sonality g o a l — Burkeman shows persuasively that "goal setting" as a path to success is a fallacy. Instead of thinking about success so much, Burkeman writes, consider the nirvana one reaches in failure. In failure our ambitions are stripped away, and we see who we really are. We learn that failing miserably usually isn't the disaster we imagine it to be. "I was set free, because my greatest fear had been realized, and I was still alive," J.K. Rowling says of the moment she hit bottom, as a divorced single mom. Failure, Rowling says, gave her "an inner security" that remains as valuable to her as any success. B urkeman's tour o f t h e "negative path" to happiness makes for a deeply insightful and entertaining book. This insecure, anxious and sometimes unhappy reader found it quite helpfuL YEAR END INVENTORYCLEARANCE ALL MATTRESS SETS 8[ FURNITURE

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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'World ' an in ' ocuseson P sicistma es Enough' is o o wor cu ure searc a scienti ic should be • Author discusses humans' restlesshunt for domination, innovation SBvored 'THE GOD PARTICLE'

"Mankind: The Story of Us All" by Pamela D. Toler

born Temujin, is an example of survival of the fittest in hu(Running Press,$30) man form — one exceptional person tr iumphing a gainst By Tish Wells hostile nature an d h u m an McClatchy-Tribune News Service forces to move mankind into Human history is the story a new age. The earth has beof restlesspeople always on come hotter. Khan responds the move. by taking his people and liveIn "Mankind: The Story of stock into greener pastures to Us All," Pamela D. Toler introthe east. Soon his realm — the duces us to the connections, Mongol Empire — includes over time, that led to our domievery acre and person from nation of the planet. It's a vast China to the Mediterranean task that she does well. Sea. It is the largest empire A companion book to the ever conquered by a single man." History Channel's television rect familial connections." series "Mankind," this book The first chapter, "Seeds of However, there's more to "Mankind" than just chapters stands on its own. It provides Change," covers early man, enough depth to give readers the creation of tools and the on war and power struggles. enough information to under- development of hunting. The I nnovations, such as t h e stand what is being said but Neanderthals disappear from printing press, change the balnot to be bored. Europe while Homo sapiens ance ofpower in countries as Too many history books are take over. The Ice Age arrives now books can be read by all. dominated by Western cul- and humanity retreats into C hristopher Colu m b us ture. "Mankind" covers world caves to survive — and to re- lands on the Caribbean island, culture. cord its existence. Hispaniola, in the search for a And, from the start, Toler Toler writes, "Paintings and passage to China and inadveradmits that even scientists are carvings created by Ice Age tently leaves behind a deadly still in conflict about some ba- human give us our only clues disease, smallpox, which will sic facts. about how these ancestors of kill more than a third of the "There may have been up ours thought. They are also native population. to one hundred hominid spe- the first examples we have of S cience flourished in t h e cies that coexisted in Africa humans t h i nking s y mboli- 9th century where "scholars between Lucy's time (3.5 mil- cally. Symbolism is the basis in Baghdad could measure lion years) and the a r rival of language and every other the earth using astronomical of modern humans around form of culture." readings with a degree of ac150,000 BCE. We don't know In many cases, humanity's curacy unsurpassed untilthe how they relate to each other, movement is bound up with 20th century." or which species we can call nature. The weather changes, Trade allows the plague to our direct ancestors, but after the icerecedes. People move come from China along the much controversy, anthro- on, pushing up against other trade routes and kill millions pologists are in generational groups who a lso s urvived. in Europe, changing the powagreement about two groups Kingdoms rise, conflicts ener structure of the medieval of proto-humans with whom sue, slaughter happens. period. "The life of Genghis Khan, they think we have more diEverything is connected.

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Author tracesChristmastree's

history rom its Germanroots "Inventing the Christmas Tree" tion is Germanic." by Bernd Brunner, translated by Benjamin A. Smith (Yale University Press,$18)

The book's many p eriod illustrations include a 19thcentury engraving of Martin Luther and his family sitting by a Christmas tree, proof of the power of images to make myth. Luther died in 1546; the first confirmed Christmas tree in his hometown, Wittenberg, didn't appear until the 18th century, and family celebrations around a tree didn't become common until the end of that century. But Luther had e ncouraged the celebration o f Christmas; for a long time, Christmas trees i n Ger m any, sometimes called Lutherbaum, were considered a Protestant thing. "The attraction of all things green, colorful, and glittering in the cold season is elemental," Bernd writes. While some people have used deciduous trees, coniferswon outbecause of their year-round greenery. Fir trees, Bernd notes, "have traditionally b ee n c r e dited with extraordinary strength and perseverance." While some church leaders initially saw the trees as hedonistic symbols, their embrace by German nobility and bourgeoisie helped transform them into Christian icons. Changes in home architecture that led to sitting rooms and parlors also

By Jim Higgins Milwauhee Journal Sentinel

If you've just returned from a tree lot and plan to pull out boxes of decorations this afternoon, you may find it hard to imagine that Christmas trees took well into the 19th century to be widely accepted in the United States. "In a s e nse," w rites scho l a r Bernd Brunner in his compact cultural history of the holiday icon, "the Americanization of the 'German' Christmas tree runs parallel to the Americanization of German immigrants." Brunner unpacks the history of the Christmas tree as calmly and carefully as someone might unwrap keepsake ornaments. While there are many conjectures about the origin of Christmas trees, the firsttree Brunner can document was in the Strasbourg Cathedral in 1539. Summing up the roots of this holiday icon, he quotes German historian Alexander Demandt: "The meaning is Christian, the origins are ancient, and the form of the Christmas celebra-

provided a convenient place for Christmas trees. T ree d e c orations h a v e evolved over the centuries, too. Until the 19th century, nuts, sweets, baked goods and other edibleswere the chief decor. Christian symbols became increasingly common in the 19th century. Tinsel, he contends, was inspired by the silver- and gold-plated copper wire left over from metal work. Some trees sported Dresdens, threedimensional paper ornaments named after the city. Glass ornaments grew out of the glassblowing craft of G ermany's central region. The tradition of placing an angel or another fancy object on the top of the three also grew in the 19th century, when fewer trees were hung from rafters or joists. C andles wer e t h e f i r s t Christmas tree lights. They could be dangerous, and people and houses were burned. Striving for safer illumination, one inventor made a gaslit cast-iron Christmas tree in the 1870s. That didn't catch on in this universe, but electric lights did. Brunner even addresses the history of the humble but necessary Christmas tree stand, without dwelling on the fingers that get caught in them. In times of adversity, he said, people were known to cut a rutabaga in half, and drill a hole in it to hold the tree.

"The Particle at the End of the Universe: How the Hunt for the Edge of a New World" by Sean Carroll

(Dutton, $27.95) By David L Ulin Los Angeles Times

On July 4, 2012, at the CERN laboratory in Geneva — home to the massive part icle accelerator known as the Large Hadron Collider, or LHC — two groups of physicists announced the discovery of a new elementary particle, the Higgs boson. Widely known as "the God particle," the Higgs is important, on the most basic level, for givingother subatomic particles mass. "The Higgs particle arises

from a field pervading space, known as the Higgs field," explains Caltech physicist Sean Carroll in "The Particle at the End of the Universe: How the Hunt for the Higgs Boson Leads Us to the Edge of a New World." "Everything in the known universe, as it travels through space, moves through the Higgs field; it's always there lurking invisibly in the background." As to why t his matters, Carroll points out that "without the Higgs, electrons and quarks would be massless, just like photons, the particles of light. They would move at the speed of light themselves, and it would be impossible to form atoms and molecules much less life as we know it. ... Without it, the world would be an utterly different place." "The Particle at the End of the Universe" is a scientific detective story, the saga of the searchforthe Higgs. Like all such stories, it's driven by a fundamental, yet elusive, mystery: What is the nature of the universe? That, Carroll believes, is both a matter of philosophy and curiosity, going back to Aristotle on the one hand, and on the other, to our ongoing fascination with how reality works. "Passion for science," he writes late in the book, "derives from an aesthetic sensibility, not a practical one. We discoversomethingnewabout the world, and that lets us better appreciate its beauty." This is a key idea, for it suggests a way of thinking about theoretical physics — even for the non-scientifically minded — as the search for "an elegant mechanism ... like being able to read poetry in the original language, instead of being stuck with mediocre translation." To elaborate, Carroll gives a lot of context: facts and figures, yes, but also passion, c haracters, history. He i n troduces physicists such as

curately, the Higgs field) represents a subatomic spark. For Carroll, that's important because it brings us closer to understanding the universe in which we live.

hanPublishing, $22.95) By james Rosen McClatchy-Tribune News Service

A f ine C h ristmas gift would be one that beckons you to incorporate the gentler holiday spirit into the rest of the year. Christian McEwen's remarkable "World Enough 8c Time: On Creativity and Slowing Down" demands to be read slowly, savored and then allowed to simmer quietly in the soul. Having acquired a small army of loyalists, both in the United States and abroad, it has just gone into its third printing. The w onder of this book lies not in its new truths, but rather in its eclectic and quirky re-invention of timeless truths. While McEwen ties her central focus — "hurry sickness" — to texting, email, the Internet and other digitaldiseases of our age, her book shows that creative men and women have been rebelling against h y peraccelerated lives for centuries. The most concise summary of "World Enough" comes from Socrates,the ancient philosopher who McEwen notes approvingly warned his fellow Greeks: "Beware the barrenness of a

busy life." L auding n a t ur e a n d "childhood's golden hours," McEwen often echoes the anti-technological notes of American transcendentalists Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. But what elevates her book, beyond its rich thought and lush writing, is her emphasis that you don't need to become a hermit fleeing to a cabin on a pond in order to find a more meaningful life. With her gift for making connections over time across literary, religious and cultural traditions, McEwen insists that pursuing seemingly impractical interests such as reading or walking, daydreaming or gazing, can produce important practical gains. "Wordsworth was read by Thoreau who was read by John Muir who in turn was readby Theodore Roosevelt, leading him to write the bills that inaugurated the National Park system," she writes. 5

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Peter Higgs, from whom the Higgs boson gets its name, as well as Franqois Englert, Robert Brout, Carl Richard Hagen, Gerald Guralnik and Tom Kibble, all of whom did groundbreaking work in the early 1960s positing the existence of such a particle — postulations that took nearly half a century to bear out The book alsotracesthe politics and the economics of the LHC, built with international money an d pa r t icipation. "Over and over again," Carroll writes, "physicists I talked to while writing this book spoke ... about how CERN could serveas amodel forlarge-scale international c o llaboration." One tells him, "What's amazing to me is that we have people from 70 countries around the world working — together. Palestinians and Israelis working side-by-side, Iranians and Iraqi scientists work together — such collaboration in the pursuit ofbig science shouldn't be overlooked." At the same time, Carroll grounds "The Particle at the End of the Universe" in the personal, using his childhood interest in dinosaurs to frame what he calls "the quest for awesome — that literal awe that you feel when you understand something profound for the first time." For Carroll, the point is to make his material accessible, to open subatomic physics to an audience that might be daunted otherwise. In that sense, I may be his ideal reader, interested in the concepts but intimidated by the calculations and the math. And yet, it's Carroll's status as a physicist — an insider, as it were — that gives "The Particle at the End of the Universe" its necessary heft. Were he a journalist or a science writer, he might tend toward the metaphorical in explaining the Higgs project. But even though he's not averse to framing comparisons, he doesn't want to oversimplify. Without the Higgs, there'd be no friction, no essential tension, nothing for t h ose quarks, neutrinos and electrons to push against. In that sense, perhaps, it maybe most accurate to call the Higgs boson an animating force, one that disrupts, or breaks, certain symmetries between particles and helps create a differentiated world. Now I'm the one oversimplifying. But the idea is that the Higgs boson (or more ac-

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F6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

In Amisbiography,struggle isscarce, scandal isabundant "Martin Amis: The Biography" by Richard Bradford (Pegasus

leopard, using only its front hooves. Books, 449 pages, $29.95) The problem, in part, is with Bradford's prose. You're only a By Dwight Garner few pages into "Martin Amis: New Yorft Times News Service The Biography" before you beBecoming a grandfather, gin confronting sentences like Martin Amis has said, "is like this one, in which words come getting atelegram from the mor- together as if to commit ritual tuary." Having a biographer on mass suicide: "Becoming a fullyour tail must be a similarly dire time novelist has no predictable sort of bulletin. The attention is effect upon one's psyche but it flattering. But the suggestion is is not too absurd to contend that that you are, to paraphrase the since we elect to spend much novelist Jim Harrison, rounding of our conscious existence third base, and home plate is a filtering perception and realhole in the ground. ity through an oblique variant Amis is only 63. His prose upon language, a good deal of has lost none of its Frankenstein what we routinely apprehend voltage, its crumpled moral feel- and recollect is touched by our ing or its scorpion's sting. But stock in trade of conceits and he's begun to brood. "Novelists distortions." tend to go off at 70," he has said, The flaws, like the veins in "and I'm in a funk about it, I've a chunk of Stilton cheese, are got myself into a real paranoid pervasive.Bradford strains to funk about it, how the talent make sometimes far-fetched dies before the body." links between Amis' life and It can't help Amis' mood that fiction. He quotes Amis poorly, his biographer, Richard Brad- quite a hard thing to do. He ford, with whom he cooperated makes declarativesentences of (though did not formally autho- the sort you consistently quarrize), has delivered a book that rel with in your head. is mortifying in its dullness and Speaking of A m is' p olitilack of instinctive feeling for its cal essays in the wake of Sept. subject. Reading "Martin Amis: 11, for example, he declares: The Biography" is like watch- "Not since Orwell has a litering a moose try to describe a ary writermade his presence

felt so forcefully in the adjacent realms of politics, history and serious journalism." I scribbled in the margins: "Naipaul? Vidal? Didion? Mailer?" Even the photo selection in "Martin Amis: The Biography" is drab. Bradford is correct, however, to identify Amis and his friends — Christopher Hitchens, James Fenton, Ian McEwan, Salman Rushdie, Clive James and Julian Barnes among them — as "the most fashionable literary set since the war." They, and Amis himself, are rarely dull to read about. This fact shores this book's ruins. T he particulars of A m i s' childhood, i n a lite r a rybohemian household busy with (thanks to his father, the novelist Kingsley Amis) parties and extracurricular sexual activity,

have been hashed over countless times. Amis himself, as a teenager,is described by a relative as "sanguine beyond his years"and "tired ofeverything before he knew anything." The detail that sticks with you about Amis as a young man is that, until he was 18, he showed little interest in reading or high culture. He crammed to get into Exeter College, Oxford, and, once there, never slowed down. "It is astonishing that within four years of his having first properly encountered literature per se," the author writes, "Martin would be writing pieces for The TLS, The New Statesman and Observer that caused great trepidation among the most established writers with books out for review."

Once he left Oxford, we are told, Amis gave himself a year to write a novel. If that didn't pan out, he thought, he might go intoacademia. The novel he produced, "The Rachel Papers" (1973), put him on the map. His early novels did not make him wealthy, though, and he worked at places like The Times Literary Supplement and The New Statesman, where he became literary editor. Still, no one thought he had it rough. In a game to come up with the most unlikely book title, the winner around this period was said to be: "Martin

Amis: My Struggle." Amis' charm, talent, lineage and good looks attracted women, tabloid gossip columnists and vindictive envy in almost equal proportion. Brad-

ford neatly chronicles Amis' multiple (and sometimes over-

lapping) girlfriends, many of whom are described with comments like "the most captivating female of her generation." Even here Bradford's prose seems canned, like the voiceover in a 1950s-era industrial film. This is his introduction to Amis' legendary wild years: Amis' personal magnetism is best described by others. One friend nailed him this way: "He'd stand there on the lawn, croquet mallet swung over his shoulder, rolled fag in mouth and very large drink in hand. He was small and ridiculously handsome. The rest of us would be keeling over with laughter at everything he said. God, he held court and everyone relished it."

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Gretchen Ertl /New York Times News Service file photo

James Meunier, a retired Central Falls police officer,speaks at a meeting where retired police officers and firefighters were asked to accept large pension reductions last year in Central Falls, R.l.

Pension Continued from F1 Boies is expected to appear in court on Friday and cite the state's judicial code of conduct, which requires judges to recusethemselves when their spouses, parents or children have an economic stake in the litigation before them. The state'sSupreme Court justices, who have been asked for a review, are also members of the state pension system. In an interview, Boies said that challenging Taft-Carter's impartiality was just "the first step,"and the bigger issue was whether any judges in Rhode Island could handle the case, given their personal stakes. C ompanies r outinely h a v e their pension disputes decided by federal courts, which grant more leeway in changing pension plans. "The plaintiffs brought this case the way they did to try to avoid federal jurisdiction," Boies said. Whatever the outcome of the hearing, Boies said he would continue torepresent Rhode Island until all of the lawsuits and appeals were decided. Boies, whose standard fee is $1,250 an hour, said $50 an hour was "the same fee that I charged the United States when I represented the Department of Justice in the Microsoft case." Boies b ecame i n v olved, he said, because he was convinced that R hode Island's pension troubles were just the tip of a $5 trillion iceberg of unsecured retirement promises to the nation's millions of public workers. "This is something that can cripple state and m unicipal governments at a time when the federalgovernment is,m ore and more, cutting back on the services it provides," he said. Public employee unions, in Rhode Island and elsewhere, argue that people like Boies are exaggerating the size of America's total public pension shortfall. The fundamental question in the l awsuits is w h ether Rhode Island can renege on promises to public workers. The unions say it cannot, citing language in the state constitution forbidding the abrogation of contracts. The state argues that its pension system was created by statute, not by c ontract, and statutes can lawfully be amended. In a previous suit,

"There's no contract. Even if there was a contract, the state, pursuing the public interest, has the right to modify contracts." — David Boies, lawyer for Rhode lsland

Taft-Carter agreed with the unions that the pension system was an implied contract b etween the state an d i t s workers. Boies disagrees. "There's no contract," he said. "Even if there was a contract, the state, pursuing the public interest, has the right to modify contracts." Cities, states and their lawyers around the country are following the case avidly, said Amy Monahan, a law professor at the University of Minnesota who has written extensively on legal aspects of employee benefits. Many are wondering whether their own pension systems are sustainable, she said, and if not, how to make them so. Rhode Island enacted its pension overhaul at the urging of its state treasurer, Gina Raimondo, a Democrat. She and Chafee, a Republican turned independent, persuaded lawmakers to approve a package that included increases in the official retirement age, a sharp decrease in the "defined benefit" portion of the plan, and the suspension of the typical 3 percent cost-of-living allowances for retirees. Taft-Carter's mother's situation shows what's at stake. Her retirement benefit consists of a $900-a-month base pension, plus an extra $984.39 a month, from the compounded 3 percent annual adjustments. The pension overhaul does not roll back the clock to the $900-a-month benefit; rather, it f r eezes each retiree's pension at the current level — $1,884.39 in this case — for a recovery periodthat could take as long as 20 years. Rhode Island's effort is "the clearest example of f u ndamental pension reform that we have right now," Raimondo said. "Even though whatever Rhode Island decides doesn't serve as actual precedent for other states, other states and cities still want to know if it can work."

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

• More bars, restaurants, convenience stores in Central Oregonfill the 64-ounce containers

As short-sale tax breakexpires, pressuremounts on homeowners

By Rachael Rees

By Kimberly Miller

The Bulletin

Palm Beach Post

tanding at the counter inside the Shell gas station on Bend's east side, Jim Mathiesen contemplated the nearly 30 beers available on tap, trying to decide which one should fill his 64ounce growler. Mathiesen, 49, said he's been filling up his growler at The Growler Guys since the beer started flowing. And

The race is on to finalize short sales and seal the deal on mortgage reductions as the Dec. 31 expiration of a massive tax break for struggling homeowners looms. Since 2007, homeowners whose banks have forgiven unpaid mortgage debt after a short sale, principal reduction or foreclosure have not been required to count that money as income on their tax returns. But the sunset of the federal Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act means borrowers, who have been spared tens of thousands of dollars depending on the amount forgiven and their tax bracket, may be faced with whopping IRS bills after losing their home. Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi is leading a group of attorneys general from around the country in lobbying for an extension of the act. In a Nov. 20 letter to lawmakers, Bondi and Connecticut Attorney General George Jepsen said allowing the tax break to expire would dilute the $25 billion mortgage settlement made with the nation's five largest banks in March. SeeTax/G2

\

now, filling his growler between two and five times a week has become a ritual. It's a cost-effective way to enjoy a variety of craft beers,he said, as he sampled one of the brews. Mathiesen isn't the only one. On average, The Growler Guys fill nearly 900 growlers per week. Add in those filled by the 15 breweries that provide the service in Central Oregon, and you get nearly 2,700 growlers filled each week. From an increasing number of growler fills and businesses offering the to-go bottles, to an emerging retail sector for growler accessories, the growler craze is bubbling up in Central

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To meet the growing growler demand, The Growler Guys owners, Kizer and Kent Couch, plan to branch out beyond the Shell station/convenience store at Northeast 27th Street and U.S. Highway 20 and open a second location on the north side of Bend by February. The expansion won't stop there, they said. SeeGrowler /G3

New Yorh Times News Service

"The amount of growlers this town

Barbies are for girls and construction sets are for boys. Or are they? For the first time in Barbie's more than 50year history, Mattel is introducing a Barbie construction set that underscores a huge shift in the marketplace. Fathers are doing more of the

family shopping just as girls are being encouraged to play with toys (as boys already do) that develop math and science skills early on. See Toys/G3 '

With more dads doing the shopping, Lego has responded with the introduction of its Friends line.

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is astounding. Bend's a beer town, and that's the vehicle of choice to put your stuff in." — Jamie Danek, co-founder of Kombucha Mama in Bend

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Kizer Couch, co-owner of The Growler Guys,fills a growler with one of about 30 beers on tap at the growlerfill station located in the Stop and Go Mini Mart in east Bend.

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PUYALLUP, Wash. — A sevenfoot evergreen willbear 350,000 needles, more or less. And if Gary Chastagner has his way this holiday season, precious few of them will end up on the parlor floor. As a plant pathologist at Washington State University, Chastagner, 64, heads one of the nation's halfdozen Christmastreeresearch labs. Recent months have found Chastagner frittering away his time on a multistate, $1.3 million RNAsequencing trial. By sampling trees hehas tested for needle . lb.~ s retention, Chastagner and his colleagues hope to discover the genes associated with shedding. You may have noticed that Christmas sales seem to pop up at the mall just a few days after the Fourth of July. SeeTrees /G5

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THE BULLETIN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

1f you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Ashley Brothers at 541-383-0323,email businessIbendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Please allow at least 10days before the desired date of publication.

MARI<ETPLACE

NEWS OF RECORD

DEEDS Deschutes County Suzanne F. Clarke to Andrea L WestfaH, OeschutesRiverW oods, Lots16and17, $197000 Wells Fargo BankN.A. aka Wachovia Mortgage fka Wachovia Mortgage FSB fka World Savings Bank FSB toMichael and Kalina Moore,Township 20, Range10, Section 24, $505,500 L. KeHstromConstruction Inc. to RoHand E. andCarolyn Shults, Diamond Bar Ranch, Phase 3, Lot 94, $157,500 Robert D. andGeraldine E. Petersen to Jack W. andPatricia G. Homeyer trustees for Homeyer Living Trust,Sage Meadow, Lot 7, Block 8, $340,000 Rajinder Kaur to Richard L. and Heidi N. Brannin,Stonegate P.U.O., Phase1, Lot 37, $360,350 Kingsley LLC to K 8 K Properties to Shevlin Center,Phase 2, Lot 3, $860,000 Kevin and Julie Gibbs toJohnM. Weinsheim,Aspen Rim, Lot142, $360,000 Jeffrey G. Jackson to DawnW. Yamada trustee for DawnW. YamadaTrust,ShevlinCom mons P.U.O., Phases 1-3, Lot 23, $235,000 Pilar Ash to Mark B. Born,South Oeerfield Park, Lot19, $155,000 Diana Swensonwhoacquired title as Diana U. Bostrustee for Diana U. Bos Trust andJames L. Bos and Diana U. Bos1992 Trust to Paul D. and Margaret J. Waldram, Mountain Village East Four, Lot 6,

Block 20, $339,000 Bill Wecks Holdings Inc. to Lawrence G. Tagala,Cambria P.U.O., Lot 6, $326,000 Jeremia and Beverly J. Joubert to James C. andAllison A. Wiggins, Terrango Glen, Phase1, Lot 22, $190,000 Daniel L. Collins trustee for Mary Ann Collins Living Trust to Charles S. and Jennifer L. Lockwood, Northwest Townsite COSSecond Addition to Bend, Lot14, Block 24, $260,000 Daniel J. and Sharon A. McCarthy to Melvin L. McDougal,Village at Oaktree, Phase 2, Lot12, $175,000 Karl E. and Patsy R. Farr to Rodney W. Dines andKathy H. Schon, Crossroads, Lot18, $305,000 Tami L Warren to Directors Mortgage Inc. and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems Inc., Neal Addition, Lot 2, Block1, $198,000 HaydenHomes LLCto MaryEllen Kelly and JosephRay, Merrick Subdivision, Phases1 and 2, Lot 23, $155,277 Robert D. and Peggy L.Phillips to Richard P. andLisa K. Bock, Oeschutes River Recreation Homesites, Lots44 and 45,Block 20, $325,000 James A. andDnnaS. Stewart to W hitney S.Blackman and Jessica F. Keating,Westside Meadows, Lot 59, $239,000 Fidelity National Title Insurance Company to Wells FargoBank N.A.,Canal View, Phases 2 and 3, Lot18, $223,344 Pahlisch HomesInc. to Paul

M. and Keala H. Smith,McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 37, $229,000 Pahlisch HomesInc. to Gharles T. and Rosemary G.Schmidt trustees for Charles T. andRosemary G. Schmidt Trust,Bridges at Shadow Glen, Phase1, Lot30, $352,800 John Mahoney toSentinel Investments Inc.,Township 17, Range12, Section 26, $175,000 Federal HomeLoanMortgage Corporation to Dana L. andNancy L. Bratton,Tamarack Park East, Phase 4, Lot17, Block 6, $165,000 Timothy andLori Hewitt to Marga Maor,Views at Oaktree, Phase 2, Lot 3, $202,000 Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation to PNC Bank N.A. successor bymerger to National City Bank successor bymerger to Commonwealth United Mortgage Company,Shadow Glen Estates, Phase 1, Lot 2, $253,240.27 Gregory andJudy Hall to Suzanne K. Mojonnier,Ponderosa Pines East, Lot11, $155,000 Karin M. Hilgersomand Matthew R. Helmick to Scott A. Kaufman, Edgecliff, Lot15, Block1, $370,000 Recontrust GompanyN.A. to Michael J. Kotulich,Porter James, Lot 17, $165,000 Lincoln Trust Company toEugene R. Eaton,Homestead, Lot14, Block 1, $185,000 Christopher and Elizabeth A. Clark trustees for Christopher and Elizabeth Clark Revocable Trust to Curt Horowitz and Linda A. KalykHorowitz,Shevlin Ridge, Phase 4, Lot 51, $713,000 Quality Loan Services Corporation

of Washington to Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, Township 17, Range 13, Section 20, $250,000 Richard N. andDebra D. Johnsto Loren and Margaret A. Kellogg, Partition Plat 2006-37, Parcel 1, $599,000 Stephen R. Lange to Vanderbilt Mortgage and Finance Inc., Aspen Creek Manufactured Home Subdivision, Lot 33, $157,814.61 Marilyn A. Hinckley to Judith A. Hurlburt,Wiestoria Addition to Bend, Lot 8, Block19, $150,000 Susan M. Steinfeld-McKennon trustee for Susan M. SteinfeldMcKennonTrust to Alexander B. Buchanan,Oregon Water Wonderland, Unit 2, Lot13, Block 13, $160,350 Caleb J. and Kathryn M. Colt to lowellS.and KellyA.Von Ruden, Old Mill Terrace, Lot 8, $292,500 Carol A. Schlemowitz and Ruth A. Alonso to John C.Hedreen and ZuHy T.Criado-Hedreen trustees for John C.Hedreen 20D9 RevocableTrust,EastMeadow Homesite Section, First Addition, Lot 49, $406,666.66 Clara L. White trustee for Vern R. and Clara L. White Trust to Tyler D. Ecklund, Tanglewood,Lot27,Block 10, $185,000 Steven S. Parnell aka Steve S. Parnell to Rebecca L. Seim, Wishing Well, Phase 6, Lot 2, $185,000 Michael L. and Lauren D. Morris to Michael L. and AnnSt. Clair White trustees for Michael and Ann White Family Trust,Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 29, Lot 7,

Tax Continued from G1 "Unless Congress acts, all of the remaining debt relief to be provided in 2013 under the National Mortgage Settlement will likely be considered taxable income," the letter said. Settlement monitor Joseph Smith, who ov e rsees bank Shaio innBrink tell:ucgrg @ !3 compliance with th e agreem ent, is staying out of t h e fray. He said the extension is "under the purview of elected officials." At the same time, the Congressional Budget Office estimates extending the relief could cost $1.3 billion in lost revenue tothe federal government during a period when it is "desperate for money," said Anthony Sanders, a George Richard Graulich /Palm Beach Post Mason University real estate Realtor Shannon Brink stands infront of a short-sale home in West Palm Beach, Fla. Brink is finance professor who is in fa- rushing to complete a short sale on this 4,000-square-foot home before Dec. 31 when the Mortvor of an extension. gage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007 will expire. "Peopleare already suffer-

OYt $

ing enough who go through default and foreclosure, and to suddenly give them a tax bill is incredibly cold-hearted," Sanders said. "The government was a major contributor to the housing bubble and burst, so it's only fair that it extend the act to help households that have b een ab s olutely crushed by the market." In August, language that would extend the mortgage debt relief act was rolled into the Family and Business Tax Cut Certainty Ac t o f 2 0 12

(S.3521). The act i ncludes about 50 t ax-cutting provisions and was approved by the Senate Finance Committee in August. An aide to finance committee Chairman Max Baucus, DMont., said the act is awaiting a vote by the full Senate but has not been given a calendar date. While m any e c onomists, Realtors and accountants believe the mortgage debt relief will be extended, they can't say how or when. Sanders said it's caught up in party politics and a debate that now includes whether to amend th e m o r tgage-interest deduction tax break, a decades-old law that annually costs the government about $100 billion. Even if an extension to the debt relief act isn't approved by Dec. 31, it could be voted on in 2013 and made retroactive, Sanders said. Accountant Karyi Neal of the firm Moore, Ellrich & Neal La Palm Beach Gardens,Fla., said settling mortgage debt relief is important but may be lessof a priority for lawmakers than averting the fiscal cliff.

DebtreliefactQ8A

Q•• What's happening?

A

• The Mortgage For• giveness Debt Relief Act of 2007 is scheduled to expire Dec. 31.

Q•• Who's affected? If no extension is A•• granted, homeowners will have to pay taxes

on any unpaid balance forgiven by a lenderafter a short sale, modification or

foreclosure. TheMortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act excludes that income from being taxed through

Dec. 31.

Q•• What's happening?

A

• Congress is consid• ering extending the

act, but it could cost the

federal government $1.3 billion in lost revenue. • What's • next? A bill called the Fam• ily and Business Tax Cut Certainty Act of 2012

A•

has been approved bythe U.S. Senate Finance Committee and is slated for a vote in the full Senate.

If they don't, they face an estimated $340,000 in forgiven debt on which they will have to pay taxes, said Shannon Brink, their Realtor. "We're scrambling like maniacs to get it closed," Brink said. "I have some anxiety, but I've pulled off m i r acles before." Jeff Shingledecker l isted his Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., home as a short sale in April. He considered a loan modification that would increase the term of his mortgage to 40 years but decided to do a short sale after learning about the debt relief act. After several offers, he said he was "fortunate enough" to close the deal in October and expects to have about $108,000 of debt forgiven. Considering S h ingiedecker's tax bracket, he would have owed about $27,000 in taxes. "If the act expires, you will

be asking people to pay cash on an income they never received and with c ash they don't have," said John DIBiase, communications director for the National Association of Realtors' government affairs office. "I think that is well-understood, especially by members of the Florida delegation." Not everyone can benefit from the debt relief act. It covers only forgiven debt on principalresidences and amounts

up to $2 million, or $1 million Tell that to the owners of the home at 8 Sunningdale Circle in West Palm Bcach's President Country Club, who are tryingto finish a short sale before the debt relief act expires.

if married but filing separately. The act also does not apply to second mortgages where the money was used for nonhousehold expenses. Joanne Epstein, a S outh

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet I II

' •

i • I:lassifreds

Florida Realtor, has 18 short sales scheduled to close by Dec. 31 and she's "breathing down the banks' necks" to get them finalized. "They say, 'We have a stack of files. We're very busy. We'll get back to you,'" Epstein said. "Well, I'm sorry — that doesn't work. These people need to get this over with so they can move on with their lives."

$699,000 Sharon L. Kinmark to Richard N. and Debra D. Johns,Cliffs, Lot 20, $240,000

StevenM. andShelley R.Hood to Brandon J. andCarly D. Edeline, Fourth Addition to Three Rivers Recreation Area, Lot 2, Block11, $245,000 Crook County Joseph A. andJanice K. McDonald Ronald S. Tibbsand JamesP. to R. B. Pamplin Corporation, McGuire to David D. andTerri L. Partition Plat1997-10, Parcel1, McBride,Township 16, Range 14, Township 9, Range15, Section 4 Section15, $161,000 and 34, $1,100,000 Robert L. Owen to FrankDurham Lyle E. Miller and Bethanne R. III and DenbyDurham, Old West Kronick to Barbara L McGrath, Subdivision, Lot 2, $272,500 Township13, Range 9, Section16, Jim Thill to Gorilla Capital Co. 2 $220,000 LLC,Partition Plat2003-16, Parcel Timothy A. andAthena I. Will to 1, $180,000 Darrell Dirks,Crooked River Ranch No. 14, Lot 9, $154,200 David E. Petersen to Graves Investments LLC,Partition Plat James E. andDebra E. Marshall 1996-03, Parcel 3, Township trustees for the Jamesand Debra I5, Range 15, Section 12 Marshall Revocable Living Trust $1,835,758.54 to Sean N. andHollie M. Vibbert, Township 9, Range14, Section 29, Melissa A. Pearson andThadA. Buchanan to Brian D. andDeborah $359,900 A. Tom,Partition Plat1997-12, Richard D. andBarbara A. Gross Parcel 1, $300,000 to BenjaminD.andSarah Adams, Round Butte Recreation Area Unit 2, Madeline R. Hartley trustee for the Madeline R. Hartley Revocable Block6, Lot10, $150,000 Living Trust to Diane H. andDonald Todd M. and Renee K.Growsonto F. Paumier,Brasada Ranch 5, Lot Cheryl Persinger,Fourth Addition 538, $358,500 to Three Rivers Recreation Area, Lot 3, Block11, $155,000 Jefferson County Walter A. Yungen toBurton and FloydD.and Shelley R.Johnsonto Bart Grabhorn,Township 10, Range Matthew C. Foster,Township 11, 13 Section2 $250000 Range13, Section 6, $199,000 Jim Adkins to Columbia State Stephen R. andKaren A. Erbto Leslie B. Hall,Crooked River Ranch Bank,Oak Terrance Estates, Lots 2-8, 10-17 and 19, $163,000 No. 3, Lot 367, $189,900 Karen V. Potampa fka Karen Beth Bonnie V. Dsbon toSteven J. and Vibbert as trustee for the Potampa Nancy K. Geigle,Crooked River Ranch No. 3, Lot172, $160,000 Gontinuing Trust to Sean N. and H. Megan Vibbert,Vibbert's First Jefferson CountySheriff to Wells Addition to Gateway, Lots1-8, Block Fargo Bank N.A.,Madras Ranchos 6, Township 9, Range13-14, Section Subdivision No. 3, Lot 4, Block4, 8,20,17,18,19and 25, $240,070 $153,000

30-year mortgage rate ticksup to 3.34 percent By Marcy Gordon

dent in the market and are responding by starting conWASHINGTON — Avstruction on more homes. erage U.S. rates on fixed Home prices have also inmortgages ticked Up this creased. A report issued Tuesweek just slightly above day by Core Logic showed that their record lows, keep- a measure of U.S. home prices i ng h ome-buying a n d rose 6.3 percent in October refinancing attractive t o compared witha year earlier. consumers. That was the largest yearly Mortgage buyer Freddie gain since July 2006. Mac said Thursday that the Rising pri c e s enc o uraverage rate on the 30-year age more people to sell their loan ticked up to 3.34 per- homes. And they lead to more cent, above last week's rate buying, in part because some of 3.32 percent. Two weeks start to worry p r ices could ago, the rate dipped to 3.31 eventually rise further. percent, the lowest on reLower mortgage rates also cords dating to 1971. have persuaded morepeople to The average on the 15- refinance. That typically leads year fixed mortgage rose to lower monthly mortgage to 2.67 percentfrom 2.64 payments and more spending. percent last week. The rate Consumer spending d r ives declined to 2.63 percent nearly 70 percent of economic two weeks ago, also a re- activity. cord low. Still, the housing market has M ortgage r a tes h a v e a long way to a full recovery. been near record lows all year. That hashelped fuel a modest housing recovery. Sales of newly built and previously occupied homes are up from a year ago. 4' b m C To talCare Builders are more confiBend Memorial Clinic i~ The Associated Press

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541-382-4900


SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN G 3

Growler Continued from G1 Kizer Couch, Kent's son, said he hopes to have six, total, in Central Oregon and would like to see The Growler Guys also expand into other parts of the state and even into Boise, Idaho, through franchise and licensing agreements. In March, The Growler Guys opened a 12-tap growler-fill station within a small portion of the Stop and Go Mini Mart to test out the market, Kizer Couch said. Four months and $65,000 later, The G rowler Guys have a 30-tap — soon to be 34 — fill station, an assortment of different sizes and styles of bottles, growler accessorieslike koozies and carriers, as well as other Growler Guys and brewery swag such as T-shirts and hats. "There was a definite demand for fresh craft to-go," he said. "Craft beer is really

The Growler Guys, located on Northeast 27th Street and U.S. Highway 20 in Bend, is a one-stop shop for growlers with more than 30 taps to choose from, and other swag like growler bottles and carriers.

Courtesy Sara Bella Upcycled

Photos by Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

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the brewery's keg, to our keg,

apply to the agency, and now three Bend businesses have T he consumer ca n a l s o licenses, and four more applibring home brews that aren't cations in Central Oregon are b eing bottled yet, such a s pending, Scott said. Boneyard's brews or t h o se Initially, she said, it took the from small-batch breweries. OLCC some time to determine And, costs are lower because licensing requirements for a consumers aren't paying for growler-fill-station. "This is a different kind of packaging. But opening a growler-fill business model than w e're station isn't an easy task. used to," she said. "This takes a lot of space, a For consumers to be in comlot of energy and money to set pliance with the law, growlers up," Kizer Couch said, noting must be out of reach of the he had about $10,000 worth driver and passengers when of growler bottles in the east- b eing transported in a v e Bend store. hicle, said Sgt. Don Manning Beyond the cost to open it, of Deschutes County Sheriff's he said obtaining an additional Office. liquor license from the Oregon Jay C h e rry , d i s t r ibutor Liquor Control Commission for Western Beverage, said for the growler-fill station was the Growler Guys are at the a challenge. forefront. "The OLCC didn't know if "They have the biggest volthey wanted to allow this," he ume accountfora convenience said. "We kicked the doors store in the area," he said. open for other people." Cherry said he thinks the Christie Scott, OLCC pubregion's growing number of lic affairs specialist, said The craftbreweries has fueled the Growler Guys were the first to growler popularity.

growing in popularity. People to the tap," he said. are getting interested in different tastes and styles of beer." About half the taps feature local breweries, such as Silver Moon Brewing, Boneyard Beer and GoodLife Brewing Co., Kizer Couch said. There's other beverages besides beer, including hard cider, sangria from Volcano Vineyards, and six additional taps dedicated to kombucha tea. Depending on th e b everage, Kizer Couch said, filling a growlercan range from about $7 tomore than $20,but averages $9 at The Growler Guys.

"We are going through so

much kegbeer, we are able to rotate our styles and breweries all the time," he said. "Every time you come in here, you are going to see a new beer you didn't see the day or week before." C ouch said th e b eer h e serves is as fresh as a beer connoisseur can get. "Keg beer is the best kind of beer becauseit's coming from

Sara Wiener, owner of Sara Bella Upcycfed, is tapping into the growing popularity of growlers, creating local brewery-branded growler tote bags. On Dec. 1 she dropped off her first order of personalized totes to Crux Fermentation Project in Bend. The growler trend goes beyond Central Oregon, according to Paul Gatza, director for the Boulder-based Brewers Association. "It feels like the tip of an iceberg to me," he wrote in an email. "It is popping up, but will b ecome a g r eater trend, now that non-brewery companies are setting up fill stations." Sunoco, a Ph i l adelphiabased oil company, tested a growler-fill program in a retail store in the East and plans to expand, he said. In Central Oregon, bars, restaurants and convenience stores have either started filling growlers or plan to in the near future. On Friday, Empire Car Wash on Bend's north side opened a 29-tap growler fill station, said co-owner Rick Lane. Andy Polancheck, co-owner of the Broken Top Bottle Shop in Bend, said he hopes to have a three-tap growler-fill station open this week.

"Everyone is doing it," he said. "We are having a bunch of people that are coming in wanting it." He turns away three or four people each day who w ant growler fills, he said. " We weren't going to d o growlers atfirst because we have our bottle shop and we like to have people buy bottles instead of growlers to go. But, the demand forgrowlers is so large, we decided to give it a try." Jared Smith,bar manager at Crows Feet Commons, said the new downtown Bend cycling shop located next to Riverfront Plaza opened with the ability to fill growlers. People hip to the idea of growlers expect to be able to fill, he said, and those who aren't aware need to know about the option. "I think being able to experience, and bring home a draft beer isa different experience than it is out of a bottle or can," Smith said.

Players Bar 8r Grill and Cascade West Grub & Alehouse, both on Bend's west side, started offering growler fills in the last month. Raganelli's Pizza in Tumalo also began selling growlers and offering fills two months ago. Beer isn't the only popular beverage getting poured into growlers. Jamie Danek, co-founder of Bendtea maker Kombucha Mama said 23 locations in Central Oregon fill about 700 growlers per week with Kombucha Mama. "The amount of g r owlers this town goes through is astounding,"she said,referring t o Kombucha M am a f i l l s. "Bend's a beer town, and that's the vehicle of choice to put your stuff in." Sara Wiener, owner of Sara Bella Upcycled, has tapped into the craze, making growler tote bags out of sustainable material. This h oliday season, she said, people are telling Wiener they plan to give growlers in a tote bag as gifts instead of giving wine in a gift

bag. People aren't into growlers just for taste of the beer, she said, it's also because they're reusable. Wiener currently sells generic growler bags, along with brand-specific totes for Crux F ermentation P r oject, a n d she's working on prototypes for Boneyard Beer and Kombucha Mama. "I feel like we're on the cutting edge," she said. "What better place to be than Bend, Oregon, to be on the cutting edge of growler accessories." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreesNbendbtdletin.com

3 NQRTHWEsT CROSSING

Atuard-tuinning

neighborhood

Toys

quences beyondtoys. Consumer products have traditionally Continued from G1 been marketed to appeal to It's a combination that not women, and stores have been only has Barbie building luxu- designed for women's sensiry mansions — they are pink, bilities. Now, some brands and of course — but Lego promot- stores are catering directly to ing a line of pastel construc- male decision-makers. Sears tion toys called Friends that is is reorganizing stores to put an early Christmas season hit. tools next to work wear, for inThe Mega Bloks Barbie Build stance, based on men's prefer'n Style line, available next ences. And Target and Procter week, has both girls — and & Gamble this year expanded their fathers — in mind. aisles for m e n's g r ooming "Once it's in the home, dads products, a nod to the fact that would very much be able to join women are no longer choosing in this play that otherwise they shampoos or shaving creams might feel is not their territory," for their husbands. The Barbie said Dr. Maureen O'Brien, a set, a joint effort of Mattel and psychologist who consulted on the toy company Mega Bloks, the new Barbie set. is also meant to pique fathers' Consumer surveys show that interest, while developing spamen are increasingly making tial reasoning and coordinathe buying decisions for fami- tion among girls. "Dad is a bigger influencer in lies, reflecting the growth in two-income households and terms of toy purchases overall, those in which the women work and this sets up well for that, beand the men stayhome. One- cause the construction category fifth of fathers with preschool- is something Dad grew up with age children and working wives and definitely has strong feelsaid they were the primary ings and emotions about," said caretaker in 2010, according to Vic Bertrand, chief innovation the latest Census Bureau data. officer of Mega Brands, Mega And 37.6 percent of working Bloks'parent company. wives earned more than their Construction sets for girls husbands in 2011, up from 30.7 are a speedy growth category, percent 10 years earlier. thanks to Lego's introduction "Kids are going to grow up of its Friends line in January. with dads that give them baths Despite criticism that those and drive them to soccer and sets were sexist — t h emes are cutting up o r anges for include a beauty shop and a team snacks," said Liz Ross, fashion studio — Lego's chief president for North America executive said in August that of BPN, part of the IPG Me- the company sold twice as diabrands holding company, many of the sets in the first which recently completed a half of the year as it had exstudy on m a l e c onsumers. pected, and retailers like Am"What will g o a w ay, albeit azon and Target have named slowly, is the image or the per- them hot holiday toys. ception of the befuddled dad." Anne Marie Kehoe, vice presThe change is having conse- ident of toys for Wal-Mart U.S.,

said that, with the Barbie addition, construction toys aimed at girls will represent about 20 percent of the toy construction category by the end of this year, while last year there were just a handful of products. O'Brien, the consultant on the new Barbie set, said adults had traditionally been "the limiting factor" in why girls have not played with those toys as often. Recently, she said, there has been a shift in attitudes, as parents study research on development and spatial play. "For this particular product, one of the advantages is you can appeal to both moms and dads,"she said ofthe construction set. During her r ese a rch, O'Brien said, she watched a g randfather jump i n t o e x plain building principles to his granddaughter, who was playing with the Barbie. Still, the construction set is not exactly dump trucks and dirt. It remains "unapologetically all girl," said Stephanie Cota, senior vice president of global

down and see them crash and what have you," said Cota. "Girls are somewhat meticulous and take a lot of time to create something."

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marketing for Barbie, girls' brands and games at Mattel. The Mega Bloks building pieces are pink (Pantone 219, the signature Barbie color), and the construction choices are sceneslike a fashion boutique, a mansion and an ice cream cart. Each set comes with a small Barbie figure that can be snapped into the scene. Girls "don't necessarily care about, 'That's a boy toy; that's not for me,'" said Cota of Mattel. "Now, more so than ever, girls are looking at what's fun, what they like." "Boys like to t ear t hings

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

Mutual funds 1yr 3yr 1 yr 3 yr 1yr 3yr 1 yr 3 yr 1yr 3yr 1 yr 3 yr 1yr 3yr 1 yr 3 yr Name N AV Chg %ll %ll Name NA V Chg %rt %rl Name NAV Chg%II %II Name NAV Chg%rt %fl Name N AV Chg %ll %fl Name N AV Chg %rl %rt Name N AV Chg %II %ll Name N AV Chg %fl %rt AOR Funds: Calamos Funds: Nwlnsghts p 22.29 -.I6i12 6 i34.7 Intlldx Inst 34.26 i.27 i12.2 NS IntlEqGS4 12.79 i.11 i9.6 i6.5 OverseasTr 33.09 i.73-5.3 -15.0 MCapGrl n 35.22 i.19 i3.3 i35.3 TRlln 11 .16 i.OIi91 i21.2 DivArb I n 11.17 NA NA GlbGr&lncl 11 22 +.01 +4.9 +22.0 SmlCapT p 21 57 +05+33 +187 Intllndxlnv 3422 +27 +l21 +81 Harbor Funds: PerkMCV alT 2196 +l5 +78 +245 MCapGrPp 3390 +18+30 +344 TRllln 10 2 3 +Ol +107 +236 MgdFutStIn 959 +05 NA NS Gr5lncCt 3288 -01 i3.8 i19.7 StrlnT 12.85 +.06+10.6 +26.7 TotMkldxF r 41.48 +.08+14.9 +39.0 Bond l 3 lO + 01 NA NA ResearchTn 32.21 -.15+12.2 +36.0 SmlCoGrl n 14.15 +.20+8.9 +31.2 PIMCO FundsA: Grth&lncA p 32 78-01 +4.5 +22.4 Fidelity Freedom: TotMktlndlnv4147 +09 +l48 +388 CpApplnv p 41.33 -.41+100 +29.7 ShTmBdT 311 +36 +84 Munder Funds A: Alger Funds A: AIIAstAutht 1135 +08 NA NA I 11.95 +.01 +5.1 NS CapApplnstn 42.01 -.41+10.4 +31.1 Twenty T 61.50 -.66+17.3 +21.2 12.58 +.02+6.1+17.5 USBond 14.36 i.Q2i9.4 i23.4 Fidelity Sparl Adv: H>YBdlnstr 1131 +08 +123 +33 2 Jensen Funds: 1316 t02 +95 +237 ExtMktAdv r 4041 +09 +143 +481 Intllnvt 6 1 .01 +.46 +14.0 +15.2 QualGrowth I 29.68 i.25+12.1 +27.1 12.01 +.02+9.6 +23.7 500ldxAdv 50.48 +.10+15.0 +36.8 IntlAdmin p 61.23 +.46+14.1 +15.6 Qual>tyGrthJ 2966 +25+II 8 +259 +150 NS 12.I7 i.Q2 i9.3 i23.7 500lndexI 5048 +l0 Intlnr 6176 + 47+144 +165 John Hancock A: 13 23 t03 +97 +240 IntlAdvr 34.24 +.26+12.2 +8.3 Harding Loevner: BondAp 1646 +.03+11.8 +32.1 14.54 +.03+10.5 +25.1 Intlldx Inst 34.26 i.26 i12.2 NS EmgMkts r 5016 i.57 NA NA IncomeAp 6.74 i.03i11.2 i31.5 1268 i.Q3i10 1 i25.4 TotlMlnAdv r 41.47 +.08+14.8 +389 IntlEqty 15.77 +.17 NA NA John Hancock Cl 1: 13 66 +03+10 6 +255 USBond I 11.95 +.01 +5.1 NS Hartford Fds A: LSAggress 1283 +05+122 +258 12.12 +.03+11.5 +26.0 First Eagle BailncoAp 12.I7 i.Q4 i142 i37.9 LSBalance 13.60 +.04+12.0 +27.0 12.23 +.04+11.2 +26.5 GlobaIA 4980 +28 +88 +285 CapAppA p 33 72 +26 +13 9 +144 LS Conserv 13.58 i.04i10.3 i25.7 13 81 +03+115 +263 O verseas A 22.60 +.17 +8.0 +23.3 ChksKBal p 10.03 +.05+11.7+22.3 LSGrowth 13.54 +.05+12.3 +26.7 14.43 +.04+11 8 +26.1 SoGen Goldp 2744 -70 15 7 +78 D>vGthA p 2065 +15 +132 +282 LS Moder 13.43 +.04+11.3 +27.7 13.96 +.03+11.9 +26.5 US llaluA t 18.29 +.01 +9.6 +31.4 Eqtylnct 14.70 +.07 +151 +39.2 John Hancock Instl: 11 94 +03+123 +25 6 US Val I r 1853 +98 +323 FltRateA px 8.94 +.02 +9.3 +24.7 D<spValMCI 1306 +12+149 +468 +120 +26.4 12.07 +.03 First Investors A M>dCapAp l941 +10 +165 +376 Keeley Funds: 14.04 +.03+12.4 +26.0 GrolncA p 16.64 +.03+15.6 +37.3 Hartford Fds C: SmCpValp A27.80 +.14 +17.4 +45.9 AcornlntlAtx 4010 -24 t155 +248 FF2040n 833 +02+123 +25 5 Forum Fun EIS: CapAppCt 2972 +22 +13 0 +120 LSVValEqn 15.41 +.22+18.1 +32.7 BldModAgg p 11.18 t.04 t11.4 +27.9 FF2040K 1408 +.03+125 +26.2 AbsolStratl r 11.17 i.OI i1 7 i8.1 FltRateC tx 8.93 +.02 +8.4 +21.9 Laudus Funds: D>vEqlnc A 10 60 t09 t134 +273 FF2045n 9.86 +.02+12.5 +25.7 Frank/Tem p FrnkA: Hartford Fds I: IntlMsterSrx 1926 -27 +165 +268 D ivrBd 5 . 0 6 t8.2 +22.4 FF2045K l4 23 +03+128 +262 AchUS p 885 -02 +1 6 +46 DivGthl n 20.59 +.16+13.5 +29.3 USLgCa pG r rx 14.26 -.39 +13.8 +40.5 DivilncoA 14 BB t06 t125 +348 FF2050n 971 +02+127 +25 3 AZ TFA p 11.69 +11.2 +23.4 Hartford Fds Y: Lazard Instl: Div0pptyA 8.77 t.06 t13.8 +41.3 FF2050K 14.25 +.03+12.9 +25.8 Ballnup 4411 +37 +l24 +31 7 CapAppY n 3676 + 28i144 +159 EmgMktl 19.59 +.41+12.0 +19.2 x 1184 i.U1 i6.2 i17.4 CAHYBd H>YldBond 2 97 +03 +164 +400 FreelncK p 10.81 +17.0 +38.4 CapAppln 33.81 +.26+14 2 +15.4 Lazard Open: Inc0ppty p 10.04+.08 +14.9 +38.5 IncomeFdnx 11 82 +01+61 +172 CallnsAp 1323 +l22 +263 DivGrowthYn20.97 i.16 +13.7 +29.9 EmgMkt0pp 2000 +42+11 7 +180 LgCapGrA n 2663 -23 +162 +376 Fidelity Invest: CalTFrApx 7.66 -.01 +13.3 +26.5 FltRateI x 8 95 + 02 +95 +255 Legg Mason A: LgCorQA p 6.54 -.01 +15.5 +42.2 AIISectEq 13.03 +15 4 +34.4 EqlncAp 1807 +04 +107 i314 TotRet6dY nx 11 00 +8.0 +22.4 CBEq6ldrA 1478 +03tl51 i366 P6ModA p 11 38 +03 +106 +269 AMgr50 n 16.41 +.03+9.9 +25.9 Fedlnterm p 12.77 -.01 +8.3 +22.1 Hartford HLS IA: CBAggGrp 129.35 +1.89 t16.6 +55.2 SelLgCpGrt 13.50-.02 +8.9 +40.0 AMgr70nr 1743 +03+116 +275 FedTxFrA px 12.98 -.03ill.9 i25.3 43.04 +.30+13.1 t22.3 CBApprp 1593 +02t156 +334 S trtlncA 6 4 7 +04 +120 +298 AMgr20nr 13 40 +01+66 +195 FlexCapGrA 48.15 -.13 +54 +25.0 CapApp D>vKGrwth 21 87 +17 +138 +30I CBFdAIICVA 14.38 +.11t13.1 i24.9 TxExA p 14.54 -.01 +11.9 +26.1 Balanc 20.21 +.02+12.5 +31.6 FIRtDAp 9.12 i.OI i78 i194 Balanced 21 32 +118 t276 WAlntTmMu 6.93 i10.1 i21.6 SelComm A 43 34 +2I +32 +205 BalancedK 2021 +02+12 6 +32I FLTFAp 1220 +02 +95 +220 Stock +15.0 t31.4 WAMgMuAp 1758 +01tl34 +271 4 5 .64 +.24 Columbia ClassZ: BlueCh> pGr 4956 -38 +138 +405 FoundF AIp 11.16 +.10t14,7 +26.3 Intl0pp 1 2 32 + 09 +143 +15I Legg Mason C: -1.65 t13.0 +42.9 BluChpGrF n 49.67 -.38 +14.0 +41.4 3041 -118 -248 -76 Acorn 1 x 29.62 GoldPrMAx M>dCap 28.11 +.15 +171 t39.2 WAlntTMuC 6.94 +9.5 +19.5 rK 4962 -.38i139 +41.2 GrowlhA AcornlntlZx 4014 -35 t159 +261 BluChpG px 49.96 -.22+11.2 +32.7 lCo 19.12 -.15 t9.2 t39.7 WAMgMuC 1760 +02+129 +251 +108 +258 HYTFAp 1117 +Ol +l44 +31 3 Smal AcomUSxA28.48 -2.49 t12.8 +41.1 CAMunne 1315 TotalRetBd 11 96 + 01+80 +231 CMilalTrp 4228 +.25+12.4 +19.0 6ond 949 -01 +67 +204 Canada nx 52.68 -1.08+4.6 +15.2 HilncoAx 2.07 +15.8 +37.7 Hartford HLS IB: Legg Mason I: Divilncomet 14.89+.06 +12.7 +35.8 CapAppnx 28.97 -.83i180 +45.2 IncoSerA px 221 +132 +328 IntmBdZn 948 +82 +237 CapApprKx 2900 -87+182 +459 InsTFA p 12.82 -.01+10.4 +22.4 CapApprecp 4260 +30 +129 +21 4 CBAggGrl t 138.69 +2.04+17.1 +57.1 Hearlland Fds: Litman Gregory Fds: IntmTEBd n 1U6 +7.9 +19.9 CapDevelO 11.83 -.12+13.8 +36.5 MichTFA p 1251 +Ol +78 +183 1452 + 2 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MidCpldxZ 12.08 +.03 +14.3 +48.5 ContraK 77.77 -.53+13.5 +38.9 NCTFAp 13.15 -.02 +9.8 +22.3 Intl0ppAp 2068 +27 +11 6 +3 8 Intln SmCap 2842 i13 MdCpVal p 14 59 +10 +146 +408 CnuSec 25 25 +09+120 +291 Oh<olTFA p 1336 -01 +100 +202 Hotchkis & Wiley: SelLgCa pGr 13.66 -.02 +9.2 +41.1 D>sEq n 24.38 +.10+143 +22.1 ORTFA p 12.83 +.01 +9.8 +22.3 M>dCpVal 2824 + 58+290 +609 Laomis Sayles: STlnco2 10 00 +28 +79 DiscEqF 24.33 +.09+14.4 +22.8 PATFAp 1115 +l05 +236 Hussman Funds: GlbBdRt 1720 +.02 STMunZ 10.56 +1.7 +4.9 D>verlnnx tl 2937 -41 +136 +106 RisDivA px 37.79 -.27 +11.1 +40.6 StrTotRet r 12.10 -.07 LSBondl 15.18 +.10 SmlCapldxZ n 1781 +129 +498 DiverslntKrx 29.32 -.46+13 8 +11.2 SMCpG StrGrowlh 11.05 rA 3670 +03 +51 +382 LSGlblBdl 1737 +02 SCValullZ 14.79 +.09 +11.3 +39.6 DivStkO o 17.44 +.10+17.3 +44.1 Stratlnc p 10.73 +.04+11 8 +28.3 ICMSmlCo 2930 +13 Strlnc C 15.51 +.10 Stratlnco 6 38 +03 +121 +306 DlllGIOWK 2995 -08+14 7 +335 TotlRtnA p 1055 +Ol +86 +251 ING Funds Cl A: LS8ondR 1511 +09 llalRestr n 49.54 -.05 +9.2 +23.0 CRAQllnnp u 11 28 +4 4 +151

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Allianz FdsInstl: NFJDivVal 12.70 +.02+13.7 +34.9 SmCpVI n 31 72 +89 +434 Allianz FundsA: NFJDivVal t 12.60 i.02 i133 i33.4 SmCpVA 30.13 +.01+8.5 +41.7

Alpine Funds: Tax0ptlnco 1005 +09 +41 AmanaGrthn 26.62 +.05+8.5 +27.3 Amanalncon 34I9 +06 +87 +256

Amer Beacon Insti:

LgCaplnst 21.82 +.29+17.0 +32.5 SmCaplnst 21 40 +05+128 +41 0

Amer Beacon Inv: LgCaplnv 2066 i.28 i166 i31.1

Ameri Century1st: Growth 28.09 -.14+11.7+35.8 InflAd~Bde 1353 -04 +83 +285

Amer Century Adv:

EqtylncA pe 7.85 -.04 +12.4 +30.3 HerrtageAp 21 77 -13+108 +447

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American FundsA:

AmcapFA p 21 43 + 03 AmMutlAp 2840 i.06 BalA p 2 0.36 i.06 BondFdA p 12 98 CaplnBldpA53.29 +.06 CapWG rAp 3689 +14 CapWldpA21.61 +.02 EupacA p 41 06 +27 FundlnvA p 40.61 +.16 GlblBalA 2672 +03 GovtA p 14.59 GwthFdA p 34.16 >.02 HITrstAp 1133 +07 HilncMuniA 15.63 +.03 IncoFdAp 18I6 +04 IntBdA p 13.78 -.01

CG Cap Mkt Fds: CoreFxlnco e 8.59 LgGrwx 1646 LgVal nx 9.41

Credit Suisse Co CommRett 817

Cullen Funds: HiDivEqlnr 13.98

DFA Funds:

Glb6040lns 13 51 IntlCoreEq n 10.36 USCoreE q1n 1227 USCoreEqn2 12.16 DWS Invest A: EqtyD> vdA 34 48 H ilncA 4 . 96 MgdMun< pe 9 75 StrGovSecA 8.84

DWS Invest Inst Eqty500IL 161 70

DWS InvestS: CoreEqtyS 18.25 GNMA S 1546 HiYldTx n 13.37 MgdMun< Se 9 76

Davis Funds A: NYilen A 35.98

IntlGrlncAp 31 02 +09

Davis Funds C:

InvCoAA p 30.64 +.01 LtdTEBdA p 16 51 NwEconA p 28.79 -.04 NewPerA p 31.10 +.14 NewWorldA 5373 +52 STBFA p 10.08 SmCpWAp 3937 +09 TaxExA p 13.38 +.01 TxExCAA p 17 96 WshMuN p 31.33 >.11

NYilen C 3449

American Funds B: BalanB p 20.28 +.06 CaplnBldBp 5329 +06 CapWG rBt 36.67 +.14 GrowthBt 3293 +01

IncomeB p 18.01 +.03

Arbitrage Funds: Arbitrageln 1290 -01 ArbitrageRp 1265 -.01

Ariel Investments: Apprec 4 0.57 +.45 Aneln 5 0 6 3 +18

Artio Global Funds: GIbHilnco t 10.36 +.06 GlbHilncl r 990 +06 TotRetl 14.06 +.03

Artisan Funds: Intl 2434 +09 Intllnstl 2 4.51 i.09 IntlValu r 30.22 +.35 IntlVallnstl 3031 +35 MidCap 38.54 MidCapilal 21 65 +12 SmCapVal 15.28 +.11

Aston Funds:

FairM>d CpN 34.07 +.47 FairptMidC I 34.59 i.48 M8CGroN 2587 -.01

BBH Funds: BdMktN 1 044 +01

CoreSelN 17.68 +.01

BNY Mellon Funds:

6ondFund 13 73 EmgMkts 9.98 +.23 IntmBdFd 13.27 LrgCapStk 9.31 i,04 MidCapMltStx1098 -.92 NatllntMun> 14 l9 -01 NtlShTrmMu13.01

Baird Funds: AggBOlnst 11IO CoreBdlnst 11.33 IntMuBdlnst 1215 ShtTBdlnst 9 78

Baron Fds Instl: Growth 53.96 -.06 SmallCap 2570 -IB

Baron Funds: Asset n 48.05 -.15 Growth 53 41 -07 SmallCap 25.47 -.17

Bernstein Fds: IntDur 1 4 26 -.01 Ca Mu 15.01 -.01 DivMun 15.01 NYMun 14 74 TxMgdlntl 13.86 +.09 IntlPort 1 3 76 +09 EmgMkts 27.56 +.51

Berwyn Funds:

Income 13 44 +.05

BlackRock A: BasilalApx 25 l2 -1 88 CapAppr px 23.59 -.21 EqtyD< v>d 1997 +11 GlbAIA r 19.61 +.07 HlthSo0pp 3365 +13 HiYdlnvA 8.06 +.06 InflProBdA 1224 +06 NatMuniA 11.33 -.01 TotRetA 11 83 i.01

Davis Funds Y: IlYVenY 3644

Delaware Inves

TAWex USCrn 8.82 TAUSCo rEq2 989 TM USSm 25.1 7 USVectrEqn 1181

USLg Van 22.66 USLgVa3n 1735 US Micro n 14.95 US TgdVal 17 60 US Small n 23.38 US SmVal 2711 IntlSmCo n 15.58 GlbEqlnst 1393

EmgMktSpCn21.13 EmgMkt n 26 92 Fixd n 1 0 .35 ST Govt n 10 90

IntGvFxln n 13.21 I ntlREst 5 7 5

EquityD>v 20.05 +.11 GlblAllocr 1894 +07

Brandywine Fds: Brandywine 23.52 -.23 Brown Advisory Fds: GroEqlnst 1458 +06

BrownSm Colns49.81 -.23

Buffalo Funds: SmallCap 2863 -.18

CGM Funds: FocusFd n 27 93 + 17 Realty n 28,60 +,14 CRM Funds: M>dC apVall 30 62 + 24

Russell LfePts C: BalStrat 10.80 +.03

SEI Portfolios: CoreFxlnAn II 66 EmMktDbtn 12.25 +.08 H>Yld n 7 7 0 + 06 IntMuniA 11.99 +.01 IntlEqA n 843 + 07 LgCGroA n 25.09 -.14 LgCValAn I800 +14 S8P500E n 39.19 +.08 TaxMgdLCn l377 +05

SSgA Funds: EmgMkt 2008 +42

SP500n 22 97 -.08

Schwab Funds: CoreEqtyx 1880 -.11 DivEqtySel x I4 60 -.03 FunUSLlnstr 10.89 +09 IntlSS r I 6.85 i 14 1000lnv r 40.61 + 09 SBPSeln 2253 +Q5 SmCapSel 21.39 + 02 TotBond 9.73 -.Ol TSMSelr 2604 +05 Intl 32.88 +.22 M>dCapr 1371 -01

Selected Funds: Sentinel Group: ComStkAp 35.03 +.19 Sequoian 16524 -l7

Sit Funds: USGovn 11.39 +.01

Sound Shore: SoundShoren3440 +40

StFarmAssoc: Balan n 56.92 +.27 Gwthn 5 6 17 +46

Sun Capital Adv: GSShDurltl 10.28 -.01 IbbotsBalSvp l205 IbbotsModSv p11.72 +.01 TARGET: SmCapV aln 21 75 + 06

TCW Funds: EmMktlnc 9.43 +. 05 TotlRetBdl l03I + 02

TCW Funds N: TotRt6dN p 10.65 + 02

TFS Funds: MktNeutralr l554 -.05

IntVa n 16.08

TIAA-CREFFunds:

IntVa3 n 15 03

6dldxlnst 11.06 + 01 Bondlnst l0.7I -.28 EnLCGlnst rx 924 -.55 EnLCVlnst rx 8.34 -.32 Eqldxlnstx 1066 -26

InflProSecs 13.14 Glb5Fxlnc 11 33

LrgCaplntn 18.83 TM USTgtV 23 38

TMlntlValue 13.20 TMMktwdeV 1702 TMMtVa2 16.39 TMUSEq 1531 2YGIFxd n 10.14 DFARIEst n 2614

Dodge&Cox: Balanced n 77.46 GblStock 9 05 IncomeFd 13.95 I ntl Stk 3 4 12 Stock 1 20.46

Gr8lnclnstx 10.00 -.51 H>ghYldlnst 1040 + 07

InfLkdBdlnst x 12.62 -.05 IntlEqllnstx 1574 -36 IntlEqlnstx 936 -.10 LgCGrllnstx 1275 -51 LgCGrlnst x 11.59 -.46 LgCVI Inst x 14 05 - l5 MidCVallnstx 18.23 -.48 MdCVIRetx 18I6 -43 MP500llnstx1579 -.35

Templeton Class k

DoubleLine Fun

TGII)TRA l380 +04

CoreFxdlnIce 1139 TRBG I 11.38 TRBdNp 1137

Templeton Instit ForEqS 19.53 +.17

Dreyfus:

IntlVallnstr l644 +17 REVallnst r 27.05 +.25 Valuelnst 4975 +57

Aprec 4 4 .21 BasicS&P 2914 BondMktlnp v 11.08 CalAMTMuZ 1585 Dreyfus 9.80 DreyM>d r 29 80 Drey500lnt 39.42 IntmTlncA 14 27

Interm nr 14.52 IntlStkl 1 4 39 MunBd r 12.1 2 NYTaxnr 1583

OppMC ValA 31.02 SmlCpStk r 2217 DreihsAclnc 10.58 Dupree Mutual: KYTF 8 20 EVPTxM Eml 47.73

Eaton Vance A:

NatlMunlnc 1055

NatlMun> 11 33 S&P500 1764 i.04

BalStrat p I0 90 + 03

AmerShsD 43.93 +.21 AmShsS p 43 83 + 21

BlackRock Fds Blrk:

BlackRock R:

Russell LfePts A:

Dimensional Fd

EquityD>vC l952 +11 GlobAICt 18.21 +.06

CapApprpx 2446 -35 BlackRock Instl: InfIProtBd 12.39 i.06 US Opps 36.72 BasVall x 25,27 -1 96 CoreBond 9.80 EquhyD>v 20 02 + 12 GlbAlloc r 19.72 +.07 CapApprpx 24 43 -32 HiYldBond 8.06 +.06

SAMGrAp l4.88 + Q4t118 i29.3 NJLTAdn 1257 +10.3 +212 NYLTAd m 12 03 +100 +21 8 H>YldA p 5 7 0 + 04 +145 +388 PrmCap r 73 23 +45 +130 +292 M>dCp GrA 31.71 -.02 +12.2 +43.8 PaatAdml 64 62 +62 +79 +107 MdCpCGrt 31.57 +.06+12.6 +45.9 All Asset p 12.78 +.08 NA NA NatResA 4445 +30 -98 +37 PALTAdm n 11.93 +9.7 +21.9 CommodRRp6.75 -.Q3 NA NA STCorpBdA 11.58 -.01+5.4 +13.0 REITAdml r 92.39+1.41 +19.5+67.7 Munder Funds Y: H iYldA 96 6 + 0 7 +144 +367 Smal l C oAp 21 88 -08 +82 +41 3 STsryAdml 10.79 +0.7 +5.1 MdCpC GrYn 32.37 +.07 +12.9+47.0 i 22 i 8 6 LowDurA 10.66 +.01 +5.9 +12.1 TotRetBdA 14.81 +.02+9.6 +29.7 STBdAdmln 1Q67 Mutual Series: 2020FocA 1644 -06 +80 +189 SMTrmAdm 15 94 +1 3 +39 p 12.79 +.08 NA NA BeaconZ 13.35 +.11+15.4+27.7 RealRetA p 991 NA NA UtilityA 1 1.87 +.02+14.0 +42.8 STFedAdm 10 90+ 01 +1 7 +7 2 EuropZ 21 67 +28+161 +162 ShortTrmA STIGrAdm 10 88 +4.8 +122 GblDiscovA 29.97 +.27+12 6 +21.8 TotRtA 1 1.64 >.02+11.0 +22.9 Prudential Fds Z&l: GrowthZ 21 46 -21 +10 5 +313 SmlCapA dml n38.34 +.05 +14.1 +48.5 GlbDiscC 29.56 +.27+11.8 +19.3 PIMCO Funds C: rth 30.71 -.06 +13.0 NS GlbD> scZ 3042 + 28 +130 i22 9 AIIAstAut t 11.22 +.07 NA NA MidCapGrZ 32.96 -.02+12.5 +45.0 SmCapG Val 31 10 i.13 +15.2 NS QuestZ 1 780 +13 +12 0 +220 AIIAssetC t 12.62 +.08 NA NA SmallCoZ 2286 -09 +85 +423 SmCap TxMCap r 71 95 +18 +149 +378 SharesZ 22.56 +.14+14.7 +27.5 LwDurCnt 1066 +Ol +5 6 +111 Putnam FundsA: TxMGrlnc r 63 89+13 +149 +36 6 RealRetC p 12.79 +.08 NA NA AAGthA p 13.53 +.03 NA NA Nationwide Instl: +51 +185 Intldx I n 7.13 +.06+11.6 +7.6 TotRtC t 11.64 +.02+10.2 +20.2 C ATxAp 8 5 I + 01+124 +276 TtlBdAdmln 1119 TotStkAdm n 35.56 +.08 +14.9 +38.9 DvrlnA p 7.71 +.04+11.6 +23.7 NwBdldxln l187 -Ol +47 +177 PIMCO Funds D: n 22.92 +.24 +15.0+32.7 S8,P500lnstln1188 +.02+149 +36.3 AIIAssetD t 12.80 i.08 NA NA EqlnAp l 7 4 2 +17 +174 +350 ValueAdml CommodRRp 677 -03 NA NA GeoBalA 13.27 +.07+12.3 +28.3 WellslAdmn 59.76+.16 +11.8 +33.7 Nationwide Serr. IDModAgg 971 +03 +11.2 +24.9 LowDurat p 10.66 +.01 +6.0 +12.3 GrlnAp l 4 6 8 +15 NA NA WelltnAdmn 5953i.29 +12.9 +296 RealRtn p 12.79 +.08 NA NA HiYdAp 7 .93 +.06+15.8 +36.1 W>ndsorAdmn5071 +53 +182 +339 NeubergerSBerm Fd S: l 4 4 6 - 12 +15 0 +339 WdsrllAdm 5245 +51 +161 +329 EqlncA 1 1.75 +.04t9.9 t38.9 TotlRtn p 1164 +02 +1I1 +234 InuApx MultiCpGr x 55.04 -.44+12.2 +33.9 TaxMngdlntlm1104 +.09 +12.0 +81 Eqlnclnst l1 80 i.Q5i1Q4 +40.6 PIMCO Funds P: NYTxA p 912 +227 TaxMgdSC r 30.65 +.02 +12.8 +50.2 Genesisn 3605 -10 +75 +43I AIIAsset 1289 i09 NA NA TxExA p 9.23 +.01+101 +25.3 Vanguard Fds: Geneslnstl 50.69 -.14 +7.6 +43.9 AstAIIAuthP 11.41 <.08 NA NA TFHYA l 2 96 +02 +11.4 +15 5 +34I HilncBdlnst 9.59 +.10+15.4 +39.2 CommdtyRR 6.88 -.03 NA NA USGvAp 13.54 -.03 NA NA DivrEq n 2313 +07 +148 +364 CAIT n 11.92 +9.2 +21.8 LgCapVlnvn 2766 +25+99 +184 EmgLocalP 1101 +II +1I 3 +294 VoyA px 21 54 -36 +59 +l46 CapOppn 34.42 +.13 +15.8 +26.1 IncomeP 12.45 +.08+22.2 +55.4 Neuberger&Berm Tr: RS Funds: Convt n 12.99 +.04 +12.2 +29.5 LowDurP 10.66 +.01 i6.2 +13.0 Genesisn 5249 -15 +74 +428 RealRtnP 1279 +08 NA NA CoreEqVIP 39.47 +.17+14.1 +26.2 DivApplnv n 2403 i.11 +11.8 +360 Nicholas Group TotRtnP 11.64 +.02 +11.3 +24.1 RSNatResnp 3614 -02 -06 +262 D>v< d e n d G ro 1683 +09 +114 +343 N>cholasn 4958 -l3 +163 +489 RSPartners 34.52 +.12t15.9 A5.4 Energy 59 96 +44 -11 +172 Parnassus Funds: Northern Funds: Rainier Inv Mgt Eqlnc n 24 34 +.14 +15.7 +452 6ondldx 11.11 + 01 NA Nll Eqtylnco n 2946 +.07+15.5 +30.4 SmMCap0r 3584 +11+104 +42I Explorern 79.97 -.04 +10.3 +45.5 Pax World: EmgMEqldx 11.68 +.20NA NA SmMCpl n st 36.90 +.12 t10.7 A3.2 GNMA n 11.02 +.01 +2.5 +16.6 F>xlnn l0 8 9 +02NA NA Balanced 23.65 -.04 +8.6 +22.0 RidgeWorth Funds: GloDEq n 18 68 i.20 +15.0 +249 GlbREldxr 912 +09 NA NA Paydentunds: 7.36 +.06+15.1 +35.3 GScUltShBdl l0.17 -.Ol i1.4 4 7 Grolncn 3047 +06 +164 +384 HiYFxlnc n 7.52 +.04 NA NA Hilnc H>ghYl d l 10.12 + 08 t154 t37.7 HYCorp n 610 +04 +152 +39 7 IntTaxEx n l1.I4 -.Ol NA NA Perm Port Funds: l0.65 i3.9 i14.9 H>DvdYld n 19 80+10 +155 +424 x 48.53 -.65 +3.3 +28.3 IntmBondl IntlEqldxr 1028 +08 NA NA Permanent InvGrTEBln 13.02 -.01 +8.1 +20.4 HlthCare n 148 92+1 27+18.1 +391 MMEmMktr 18.66 i.37 NA NA Pioneer Funds A: LgCpValEql l4.17 i12 i152 i35.9 IntlaPro n 15.11 +.09 +8.2 +28.6 MMGlbREr l869 i15 NA NA HighYldA p 10.30 i.03 i14.5 i34.2 MdCValEql 11.51 +15+174 +43.4 IntlExplr n 14.72+.13 +10.6 +12.2 MMlntlEq r 950 + 08 NA NA PionFdAp 3244 +II +82 +227 SmCpVall l3.90 i10 i122 +442 I AIIG( 1 902 i.12 +12.3 +155 ShlntTaxFr 10.66 NA NA QratlncA p 11.30 +.02+11.2 +28.1 TotRetBdI 11 09 +5.6 +21.8 IntlVal n 31 00 +43 +125 +56 SmlCapV aln 16.53 +.03 NA NA ValueA p 11.96 +.06+11.1 +19.5 RiverNorlh Fds: +103 +289 ITI Grade 10 50 Stockldxn l762 -02 NA NA Pioneer Funds C: RNDLlncol l1.36 i G3 ITTsry n 11 84 +3.7 +190 TxExptn 11.51 NA Nll StratlncC t 11.Q6 i.02 Royce Funds: LIFECon n 17.34 +.03 +8.6 +22.8 Nuveen Cl A: Pioneer Fds Y: LIFEGro n 23.65 +.08 +12.0+27.7 LowP5kSvc rx13 42 -1 10 HYldMuBdpx 17.46 +.04 StratlncYp 1130 +Ol LIFElnc n 14.80 +.02 +6.8 +20.0 PennMulrnx 11.17 -.73 AAMuB px 11.94 Price Funds Adv: LIFEMod n 21 05 +06 +104 +261 Prem> erlnrx 1886 -1 48 LtdMBA p l1 32 BICh> pGrn 4508 -48 SpeclEqlnvrx 20.71 -1.51 LTlnGrade n 11 05 +153 +449 Nuveen Cl C: Eqtylnc n 26.25 +.18 TotRetlrx 1339 -75 LTTsry n 13 54 -02 +85 +439 HYMunBOtx l744 +04 Grovrth pn 36.91 -.38 ValPlusSvc 13.31 -.07 MidCapGro 2127 - 09 +10.4 +480 Nuveen Cl I: H iYldn 693 + 0 4 MATaxEx 11.1 2-.01 +9.3 +20.7 Russell Funds S: EmerMkts 1840 +33 Morgan n 19.92 -.10 +11.2+35.7 GlobEq 9 .00 +.06 MuHY n 1148 i.01 +12.2 +265 IntlDevMkt 306I + 24 Mulnt n 14 59 +82 +194 RESec 39.71 +.55 MuLtd n 11 20 +25 +78 StratBdx l154 -Ol MuLong n 12 02 +11.0 +236 Russell Instl I: MuShrt n 15.94 +1.2 +3.7 StratBd x 11.40 -.01 OHLTTxE n 12.96 +10.2+21.7

Scout Funds:

EmMkCrEgn 1970 EmgMktVal 29 3Q GlbRESe cn 944 IntSmVa n 15 62 LargeCo 11 24 STExtQual n 10 97 STMun>B dn 10 28

Eaton Vance C:

Eatan Vance I: AtlCapSMID 18.25 FltgRt

9 11

GblMacAbR 9.83 I ncBost 5 99 LgCapVal 1950 NatlMunilnc 1055 ParStEmMkt 1463 EdgwdGlnstn 1372

FMI Funds: CommonStk 2367

LargeCap p 17 G7 FPA Funds: Cap>t 4 4 37 Newlnco n 1064 FPACres n 2897 Fairholme 30 77

Federated A: KaufmA pe 4 87 MuniUltshA 10 06 StrValDpe iv 5 04 TtlRtBd p 1164

Federated Fund TtlRtn6dSvc 11 65

Federated Instl: HighYldBd re 10.18 KautmanR e 4 88 MunULA p 10.06 TotRetBond 11 65 UltShortBd 9.23 StailalDivlS e 5 05

Fidelity Advisor FltRateA re 9.92 FF2030A p 1281 FF2040A p 12.89 LevCoStA p 38 27 MidCpllA p 18.05 Nwlnsghts p 22 64

SmallCapAp 22.49 StrlnA

1 2 86

Fidelity Advisor Nwlnsghtstn 21.32 StratlncC nt 12 83

Fidelity Advisor Emg Mktll n 15.1 8 EqGrln 6 5 12 FltRatel ne 9.90 Grolncl 19 85 LgCapln 2UO M>dCpll I n 18 35 NewlnsigMI 22.97 SmallCapl 23 78 Strlnl 13 . 01

Fidelity Advisor EqGrTp 6070 Gr0ppT 41.14

1 yr 3 yr N AV Chg %rl %rl

Prudential Fds A:

Diver Inc p 946 LtdTrmDurA 8 89 Diamond Hill F LongShorlln 1837

AtlCapSMID p 1703 FltgRtAdvp 11.09 GblMacAbRp 983 FloatRate 9.42 IncBosA 599 LgCpVal 19.44 NatlMunlnc 10 55 Strat Income ClA8.18

BlackBock B&C:

1yr 3yr Name N AV Chg % rl %rl Hame

Third Avenue Fds:

Thompson IM Fds: Bond

11 . 96 +.01

Thornburg Fds C: IntValuCt 253I +24

Thornburg Fds: IntlilaIA p 27.00 +.26 IncBuildAt I872 +05 IncBuildC p 18.72 +.05 IntlValue I 2762 + 27 LtdMunA p 14.77 LtdTlncA l375 +01 LtdTmlncl 13.75 LtTMunil l4.78

Thrivent Fds A: LgCapStock 23.78 M uniBd l 2 1 2 i 0 1

Tocpueville Fds:

Delafield 3 097 + 29

Gold t

6 4 .74 -1.89

Touchstone Family:

SandsCp GYn 1269 -l1 SandsC apGrl e17.01 -.79 SelGrowth 1244 -11

Transamerica A: AsAIModGrp 12.50 +.05

PrecMtlsMirn 15.88 -.19 -25.9 -10.3 PrmCpC orern 1531 +08 +126 +32 0 Prmcpr 7054 +44 +129 +289

SelValu r 21 32 +04 +145 +402 STAR n 20 92 +.09 +11.9 +276 STIGrade 10.88 +4.7 +11.8 STFed n 10.90 +.01 +1.6 +6.8 i0.6 i4 7 STTsry n 16 79 StratEq n 21 35 +08 +154 +486 TgtRetlnc 12 31 +04 +8I +241 TgtRet2010 24 60+.07 +9.5 +265 TgtRet2015 13.60+.04 +10.2 +27.0 TgtRet2020 24.14+.07 +10.8 +27.3 TgtRet2025 13.75+.04 +11.4 +28.0 TgRet2030 23 61+08 +120 +28 6 TgtRet2035 14 21+05 +126 +291 TgtRe2040 2335 +09 +128 +292 TgtRet2050 n 23 25 +.09 +12.8 +292 TgtRe2045 n 14.66 +.05 +12.8 +29.2 TxMBal n 22.46 +.03 +11.5 +28.9 USGro n 21 14 -13 +15.0 +329 Wellsly n 24 67 +07 +118 +335 Welltn n 34 47 +17 +128 +293 Wndsrn 15 03 +16 +180 +335 Wndsll n 29.55 +.29 +16.0 +32.6

VanguardIdx Fd S: DevMklnPI nr 10135 t84 +123 NS EmMklnPI nr 90 58 +1 75 t9.6 NS ExtMkt I n 112.18t.25 +14.5 NS FTAIIWIPI nr 92.83 +.97 +11.2 NS MidCplstPIn 11Q58 i.62 i12.9 NS STBdlnstPls 1067 +22 NS SmCaplnPIn11071 +15 +141 NS TotlntAdmnr 2461 t23 +110 NS Totlntllnstnr 98.45t.94 +11.1 NS TotlntllP nr 98.47 t.94 +11.1 NS TotlntSig nr 29.53 +.29 +11.0 NS 500n 1 3 136 i.27 i14.9 i364 Balanced n 23 79+04 +109 +313 DeuMkt n 9 80 +09 +122 +84 EMkt n 2 7 23 +.52 +9.4 +113 Extend n 45.38 +.10 +14.3 +47.3 Growth n 36.62 -.21 +14.7+41.7 ITBond n 12 23 -01 i8.3 i279 LTBond n 14 67 -01 +125 +453 M>dCap 22 34 +13 +127 +453 REIT r 2 1 65 +33 +194 +67 0 SmCap n 38.28 +.06 +13.9 +47.9 SmlCpG row 24.53 -.04 +12.9 +53.5 SmlCap Val 17.33 +.08 +15.1 +42.2 STBond n 1Q 67 i 2.I i 8 3 TotBond n 1119 +50 +181 Totllntl n 14 71 +14 +109 +81 TotStk n 35 54 +07 +14.8 +384 Value n 22.91 +.23 +14.8 +32.1

VanguardInstlFds:

Ballnst n 23 80 +04 +111 +32 0 DevMktlnst n 9.73 +.08 +12.3 NS EmMktlnstn 27.23+.53 +9.6 +11.9 Extln n 45.45 +.10 +14.5 +48.1 FTAIIWldl r 87 65 i.91 i11.1 i98 Growthlnstl 36 62-22 +149 +424 InfProtlnstn 1209 +07 +83 +293 Instldx n 130 52 +.27 +15.0 +369 InsPI n 130.53 +.27 +15.0 +37.0 InstTStldx n 32.18+.06 +15.0 +39.0 InstTStPlus 32 19i.07 i15.0 i391 ITBdlnst n 12 23 -01 +85 i284 LTBdlnst n 14 67 -01 +126 +459 M>dCaplnstl n 2242+13 +129 +46 0 REITlnst r 14.30 +.22 +19.6 +67.9 STBondldxn 10.67 +2.2 NS STIGrlnst 10.88 +4.8 +12.3

SmCpln n 38 35i.06 i14.1 +486 SmlCapG rln 2460 -04 +130 +542 TBlst n 1 1 19 +51 +186 TSlnst n 35 56 +.07 +14.9 +389 Valuelnstl n 22.92+.24 +15.0 +32.8 Vanguard Signa I: BalancSgl n 23 54 +03 +110 +319 ExtMktSgl n 39.05+.09 +14.5 +48.0 500Sgln 108.53 +.22 +15.0 +36.9 GroSig n 33.91 -.20 +14.8 +42.3 ITBdSig n 12 23 -01 i8.4 i283 M>dC pladxn 32 02 +18 +128 +458 REITS> g r 24 M +37 +195 +67 7 STBdldx n 10 67 +2.2 +8 6 SmCapSing34.55 +.05 +14.1 +48.5 TotalBdSgln 11.19 +5.1 +18.5 TotStkSgnl n 3432 i.08 i14.9 i389 ValueS> gn 23 85 +25 +150 +32 7

Vantagepoint Fd S: Aggr0pp n 10.49+.02 +11.2 +24.8 DivrStrat 1ll 37 i .02 i3.6 i8 4 Eqtylnc n 9 37 +09 +130 +311 Growth n 948 -05 +116 +269 GrowKlnc n 10 92+.01 +14.2 +329 I ntl n 9.6 3+.06 +12.7 +13.1 MPLgTmG r n 22.68 +.06 +10.6 +24.4 MPTradGrth n 2372 i.06 i9.6 i225

Victory Funds: DvsStkA 16.50 Virlus Funds A: MulSStA p 4 95

Virlus Funds C: MulSStC p 5 01

Transamerica C:

Virlus Funds I:

AsAIModGrt 1241 +05

WM Blair Fds In

TA IDEX C: AsAIMod t 12.30 +.04

Tweedy Browne: Gblilalue 25 65 + 21

USAA Group: CornstStrn 23.36 +.07 Gr&lncn l615 +06 HYldlnco n 8.72 +.05 IncStkn l 3 6 I + 05 Income n 13.60 +.02 IntTerBdn l106 +02 Intl n 25 . 56 +.32 PrecMM 2672 -1 31 S8Pldxn 21.26 -.02 S&PRewrd 21 27 -02 ShtTBnd n 9.29 TxEIT n l 3 92 TxELT n 14.17 +.01 TxEShn l0 86 VALIC: MidCapldx 21.53 +.05 Stocklndex 26 79 + 05

Van Eck Funds:

GIHardA 4334 -.03

Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml n 23.7 9 +Q3 CAITAdm n 11.92 CALTAdm l2.24 Cp0pAdln 79.54 +31 DevMktsAd 28.2I + 24 EMAdmnr 35.79 +69 Energyn 1I2.6I +81 EqlncAdml 51.03 + 29 EuropAdml 59,40 i 44 ExplAdml 7450 -03 ExntdAdm n 45.45 +.10 FTAIIWxUS 2765 +28

500Admln 131.39 +.27 GNMAAdmn1102 +01 GrolncAdm 49.77 +.11 GrwthAdmln 3663 -21 HlthCare n 62.86 +.54 H>YldCpn 610 +04 InflProAd n 29.68 +.17 IT6ondAdml 1223 -01 ITsryAdml n 11.84 IntlGrAdml 6056 + 39

ITAdml n 14.59 ITCoAdmrl 1050 LtdTrmAdm 11.20 LTGrAdml l1 05 LTsryAdml 13.54 -.02 LTAdmln l202 MCpAdmln 101.47 +.57 MorgAdm 61 82 -30 MuHYA dmln 11.48 +.01

Emg Mktl 10 22

IntlGrwlh 15.04 WM Blair Mtl Fd IntlGrowthl r 23.16 Waddell & Reed Accumultiv 815 AssetS p 9.76 B ond 6. 6 8 CorelnvA 6.67 H>ghln c 7 52 MuniBondA 785 NwCcptA p 1011 ScTechA 1109 VanguardA 9.05

Wasatch: IncEqty 1 4 32 Long/Short 13.78 SmCapG rth 43.22

Weitz Funds: Shtlntmlcol 12.64

Wells Fargo Adv AstAIIA p 12 98 EmgMlnpA20 93 PremLgCG A 10.62

Wells Fargo Adv AssetAII 13 08

Wells Fargo Adv AstAIIC t 12 45

Wells Fargo Adv Growlhlnv n 391Q Opptntylnun 3875 STMunlnv n 10 02 SCapilalnvp 31 75 Wells Fargo Ad CoreBond 1290 DJTar20201 14 69 DJTar20301 15.12 Growth 42.34

IntlBondl 11.73 ShDurGvBdl 1Q3Q UIStMulnc 4 83

Wells Fargo Ad Growlh 4 1 17

Wells Fargo Ins UltSTMuA 4.83

Westcore: PlusBd 1 1.30

Western Asset: CrPlus6dF1 p 11 69 CorePlus I 11 70 Core I 1 2 .40

William Blair N: IntlGthN 22 60 Wmtergreent 15.09


SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Trees

Tips:shoppingfor afir

Continued from G1 Partly as a result of t h i s calendar shift, a third of this year's Christmas tree p urchases will come from a species called "artificial," according to market research from the American Christmas Tree Association. The corresponding riddle for Christmas tree farmers is how to cultivate a tree that will last from Thanksgiving until after New Year's. This is where Chastagner's latest research comes in. "It's probably the largest singlefunded Christmas tree project in U.S. history," he said, sitting in his cluttered office. "Some people in the public would ask, 'Why would we spend money on this?' Well, the Christmas tree industry is a $1 billion industry." The tree trade group estimates that some 15,000 farms and plantations will sell more than 20 million trees this year. Perhaps a quarter of t hese will come from 10- or 15-acre farms that use basic management techniques and primitive equipment, said Dennis Tompkins, an arborist who edited the American Christmas Tree Journal for almost two decades. The largest and most sophisticated operations will harvest almost a million trees a year from a n 8 , 500-acre plantation and remove them by helicopter. For 32 years, Chastagner h as conducted much of t h e most important research into Christmas-tree cultivation. He has examined Phytophthora root rot and the Swiss needle cast — both pernicious conifer scourges. And he has carefully analyzed the optimal shape and volume of a C h ristmas tree stand. The locus ofthese important efforts, it turns out, is a concrete-block o u t b uilding, half-bunkered into a hillock. Chastagner calls it the Dungeon. "We're standing in an old cistern that was not being used," he said. "One of us talked about putting a racquetball court in here." Inside the Dungeon stood tables stacked with wire-andwood racks. Each rackheld hundreds of cutconiferbranchesperhaps 5,000 in all — sticking up from their cells like quills in a dry inkwell. The whole open chamber was redolent with the stench of Christmas (or the fra-

grance, if you prefer). This week's samples of Fraser fir had arrived by express mail from John Frampton, a forestry geneticist at N orth Carolina State University. The broader project involved evaluating the mother trees for growth rate and habit, date of bud break, disease resistance and consumer preference. Today's experiment, however, was so particular as to seem monomaniacal. A solitary technician, Kathy Riley, was counting the needles that fell offeach and every branch in the giant room. Riley plucked an 8 - inchlong sample from the r ack and rubbed her bare fingers up and down the stems from the last two years' worth of growth. Her palms were coated in resin. Then, like a bingo caller, she intoned a pair of n umbers: a percentage estimate of the needles that had ended up on the floor, based on a scale from one to seven. A data entry assistant plugged these numbers into a spreadsheet that appeared awesome in its size and breathtaking in it s tedium. Chastagner pointed to a few

Costco Crafterew

FLIRsys HewlettP

Hmredlo Intel

Keycorp Kroger Lattice LaPac MDURes

Mentorer Microsoft

19.96 -.06 -20.4 1a94 +.11 -45.9 11.38 +.20 +9.4 20.16 -.01 -1 6.9 8.10 +J8 +5.4 26.81 -.09 +10.7 a89 +JO -34.5

1z24 +a 4 +113.6

Photos by Randy Harris/ New York Times News Serwce

Gordon Bell, In the driver's seat, is seenwith his family at their Christmas tree farm in Accord, N.Y. Bell, and his wife, Paula, run the "U-cut" farm with their son and daughter-in-law, Brian and Lori Bell.

The longevity of a Christmas tree is a function of its

of weeks. And a noble fir may not shed even when it's drier

moisture content. No surprise

than a slug crossing the Bonn-

there. But the actual science of how to extend the lifespan

eville Salt Flats.

Here, then, is abroad synopsis of 25 years of post-harvest cut-conifer research: Most of the true firs should keep their

looks nicely if you store them continuously in water. Chastagner would like to emphasize the

below a threshold level. Yet

"continuous" part. "If the water

unless you shopwith a personal pressure chamber,that probably won't beapparent in

level falls below the base of the tree for a sufficient length of

a church parking lot. Often, a desiccated tree still has dark

the stand, it's not going to take up water," he said.

time, and youput water back in

green needles,Chastagner said. stunted lower branches. The managed Christmas tree plantations of the 1950s and '60s weren't necessarily raising showpieces, either. A 1964 Cornell University survey found that more than half the plantation-grown t r ees were unsalable. Many trees and seed cones were leftovers from t i mber stands. There, lumber compa-

nies preferred fastgrowing

1'gg $$$ ~ I I I I Gary Chastagner is head of a Christmas tree lab at Washington State University in Pullman, Wash. Chastagner hopes to improve trees' needle retention. of the almost naked branches, which had porcupined their needles. "You see some pretty poor needle retention," he said. "Also some w i nners, some with almost no needle loss." Both t y pe s o f sa m p les were useful. What the RNA detectives hoped to find was the single nucleotide polymorphism, or the variation, that controlled needle drop. One plant would have it and another wouldn't. Scientists could employ this information to develop a genomic field test. Then cone collectors in wild forests or m a naged stands might quickly screen a tree before harvestingseed stock to sell to Christmas tree growers. Ultimately, breeders could try to nurture a whole seed orchard o f s u p erior t r ees. But those maturing p lants wouldn't form cones and set seed for 30 years, Chastagner said. As if the run-up to Christmas weren't l on g e n ough already.

Leftovers turned tradition Until the 1970s, the Christmas tree found its way into the American household in a haphazard fashion, Tompkins said. "Wild culture," he added, was the rule. Enterprising loggers would trek into the forests and haul to market whatever they found. On the Olympic Peninsula i n Wa s h ington, this usually meant a roughand-ready Douglas fir. T he Catskills or Nova Scotia might yield spruce or balsam fir. Yet the newly cleared woods did not grow back the same way. In the Pacific Northwest, Chastagner said, previously shaded u n derstory p l a n ts like salal an d h u ckleberry celebrated their C h r i stmas

good fortune by "going crazy," and evergreens that made it through the tangle developed

trunks with few of the lateral branches that produce knots in boards. Where to hang all the Christmas balls remained a mystery beyond the scope of science. A fine place to witness how the Christmas tree has evolved is Ken and JoAnn Scholz's Snowshoe Evergreen. The 350acre operation is just down the road from Chastagner'soffice, and he drove over in a university-issue Chevy Blazer. When the couple started in the business 40 years ago, Ken Scholz, 67, said: "You bought seed from whoever the hell would sell it to you. It was all in wild collections." The couple continues to operate a choose-and-cut lot and sells other trees to retailers. But Scholz does most of his volume as a contract seedling grower. Nowadays, Christmas tree farmers typically choose seed from a specialist, who ships it directly to a forestry corporation like Weyerhaeuser. Here, the conifers will germinate into inch-tall plants called plugs. Scholz and his team of 18 workers then transplant the finger-high conifers on their farm. A few years later, Snowshoe will deliver them to a distant plantation, where they will reach maturity. The whole rotation, from seed to Christmas tree stand, may take eight to 12 years. The volume is incredible. "Each of these beds has 17,000 or 18,000 plants," Scholz said — nothing special, he insisted. He pointed to the fields he stocked a month ago, in rows that stretch a q u arter-mile. "Let's put it this way: we just put in 1.7 million." Up close, the grid of little green twigs had the immaculatelyordered appearance of needlepoint. One advanced North Carolina grower ("I'd rather not tell you who," Scholz

said) had supplied him with a special selection of Fraser fir. Check out the tops, he said, and you'll see a whorl of five buds instead of the typicalthree or four. In a year, he might lift the entire planting, bed by bed, sort and gradethe seedlings, and re-transplant them with a more generous spacing. Before then, he'll fumigate the ground with a mix of meth-

YTD Div PE Last chg%chg

Nkee Nordstrm NwstNG OfficeMax Paccar PlanarSy

plumcrk Preccastpt Safeway Schnitzer Sherwin Stancrprn Starbucks Tricuint umpqua us Bancrp Washred Wellsrargo

1.68f 21 1.08 16 1.827 19 .08 2 .80a 13 1.68 38 .12 20 .70 9 .75 29 1.56 27 .93f 11 .84f 30 .36 14 .78 11 .32 13 .88 10 .20 13 .687 47

98.59 +.17 +z3 5z80 -.17 +6.2 4a44 +.27 -9.4 9.70 -.05 +0 3.7

4a84 +.55 +17.0 1.19 -.07 -37.7 4a20 +.63 +18.2 18a55 +.60 +0.4 1z94 +.06 -14.7 28.96 +.54 -3t5 148.94 -z28 +66.8 34.68 +.11 -5.6 5a64 -.06 +16.6 4.95 -.05 +1.5 0 .77 ... -5.0

3z02 +.21 +18.4 16.18 +.08 +15.7

3a23 +.09 +20.6 21.76 -.02 +39.5

2z21 +J8 +45.7

Price (troy oz.) $1703.00 $1704.00 $33.053

NYSE

Amex

Pvs Day

52-Week High Low

Net

N ame

Last

13,661.72 11,735.19 Dow Jones Industrials

5,390.u 4,750.12 DowJonesTransportation 499.82 435.57 DowJonesUtilities 8,515.60 7,129.84 NYSE Composite 2,509.57 2,I64.87 AmexIndex 3J96.93 2,518.01 Nasdaq Composite 1,474.51 1,20z37 S&P 500 15,43z54 12,61 8.0 Wilshire5000 868.50 705.78 Russell2000

World markets

Groupon 4.69 +.88 +23.0 Optibase rs 5.88 +.88 +17.6 ChiMobe n 3.70 +.42 +12.8 PAM 10 . 20 +1.09 +1z0 Here is how key internationalstock markets Sangeio 5 .93 +.52 +9.6 performed yesterday.

Losers (S2ormore) Name L ast chg %chg Name L ast chg %chg Name L ast chg %chg AmRepro z29 -.20 -8.0 Medgenwt 3.00 -.20 -6.3 Amarim Semerpwt 1z97 -1.13 -8.0 Immunocll z03 -.13 -6.0 IntegElec

9.69 -z26 -18.9 4.01 -.39 -8.9

z55 -.22 -7.9 MidsthBcp 14.30 -.89 -5.9 SmithWes 9.92 -.93 -8.6 6 41 -.51 -7.4 vicon 248 -a4 -53 Spreadtrm 15.95 -1.42 -8 2

csvLgNG s 27.20 -z15 -7.3 TellnstEI 3.42 -a 8 -5.0 Sareptars 25.32 -z16 -7.9 Diary Diary Diary

$1699.00 $1700.30 $33.039

Indexes Nasdag

Jinkosolar 4.68 +.56 +13.6 Longweipl z63 +a6 +6.5 GCSaba 7.20 +.80 +1z5 SDgo pfH 30.25 +1.74 +6.1 FordM wt z5 3 +.27 +u.9 Aurizon g 3.73 +a9 +5.4 Trimasolar 3.10 +.28 +9.9 TriangPet 6.33 +.30 +5.0 BofASP9-13 13.89 +1.22 +9.6 saratogaRs 4.00 +a8 +4.7 LOSerS (S2ormore) Losers (S2or more)

1,650 Advanced 1,351 Declined 152 Unchanged 3J53 Total issues 76 New Highs 19 New Lows

Am~ erida

GainerS (S2ormore) GelneIs (S2 or more) Gainers <S2ormore) Name L ast chg %chg Name L a st Chg %chg Name L ast chg %chg

Advanced Declined Unchanged Totalissues NewHighs NewLows

ggg~ •

BkofAm 1839730 10.64 +.18 CheniereEn 60902 u.59 -.41 SiriusXM 727964 2.76 -.04 SB P500ETF 917985 14241 t.44 NovaGldg 31007 452 +.16 Facebook n 507951 2749 +.52 Nokiacp 679896 a85 +.10 vringo 1 9 559 a08 -.07 Groupon 504713 4.69 +88 -a4 FMCG 4 34713 31.70 +.89 GoldRsv g 17389 z70 -.02 Cisco 48 6551 19.33 Citigroup 431119 3z64 +.62 Bentech 15602 z90 +.01 Microsoft 453155 26.46 -.27

Ctrysckg

abouta quartfor each inch of stem diameter. Try to find a

yl bromide and chloropicrin to needles. Pluck adozenand control weeds and stave off bend them betweenyour fincapacious stand. (This is one pathogens. Tens ofthousands gers. They should snap "like place in American life where of plants could be spoiled by a a fresh carrot stick," he said, tall and slender is not the ideal: handful of infected seedlings. not "feel rubbery like acelery picture the volume ofwater "It's almost a must in this busistick that has become limp on that the trunk will displace.) ness," Scholz said. "There's so your kitchen counter." The test A freshly cut stem is useful, much I can't control, like the works best with so-called true but don't bother sawing at an weather. If someone is entrustfirs, like nobles, grands and angle. It's the outer rings of ing me to grow plants for them, Nordmanns. It's harder to get sapwood that absorb the most I've got to use best practices." a handle on short-needled firs fluid, and youwant them comThe American Christmas like Frasers, balsams, and their pletely submerged. Tree Association likes to tout If it's going to take four love child, the Fralsam. And the environmental benefits of don't bother with pines. hours of domestic combat to buying "real," carbon-based What the trees won't tell settle on a tree topper (Virgin trees instead o f p o l y vinyl you, the sales floor can reveal. Mary or Yoda?), stow the tree chloride replicants. Be that as A sprinkling of brown needles in a bucket of water. Andmay it may, a Christmas tree planmay be normal old growth the force be with you. tation is decidedly not an or— Michael Toltoreiio from the tree's inner branches ganic farm. Chastagner has conducted some preliminary research least a dozen other varieties, proof. "You look out there, and into organic growing practic- some traditional, others ex- 9 out of every 10 are perfect," es, experimenting with a vari- otic imports. The top of the she said. ety ofnatural weed blockers. Korean fir grows crookedly if Brian Bell likes the scent of you fertilize the plant. And the a Canaan fir, he said. But, in Beyond science handsome Turkish fir seemed truth, the Bells can't afford to How big, then, is the organic to be participating in a work be sentimental about a conical Christmas tree market'? slowdown. shrub. It's the customer who "There are so many small looks at a well-groomed coniHe answered without hesitation: "It doesn't even register." things that people would never ferand sees a Christmas tree. When customers imagine think of that make a big differA seedling costs 80 cents, a Christmas tree grower, they ence," Gordon Bell said. "How Brian Bell e x plained. And are probably picturing some- they're trimmed, the spac- every U-cut tree on the lot, place like Bell's Christmas ing, the origin of the seed, the whatever the size, sells for $43. Tree Farm, at the foot of the amount of time, the upkeep to His concern is making sure Catskills, a dozen miles west get them to be a salable tree." that nothing goes wrong in of New Paltz, N.Y. Lori Bell, 38, has some af- between. Gordon Bell and his wife, fectionfor the blue spruces, If you really want to know Paula, live in a 1700s farman old regional favorite. The how a Christmas tree farmer house at one end of the proper- needles will perform violence picks his own tree, Gordon ty, and their son and daughter- on her hands while she's prun- Bell is happy to share. "Whatever we have that's in-law, Brian and Lori Bell, re- ing, but the sturdy branches cently built a home across the can supporteven the heaviest in the way of the mower," he way. There is still a red milk(and tackiest) of ornaments. said. "That's what goes into ing barn and stone walls that A nd t h ey're v i rt ually c a t- the house." crisscrossthe land, remnants of a t hree-generation dairy. The "U-cut" season starts the day after Thanksgiving and closes around noon on Christmas Eve. Santa Claus typically drops by each season to address his public. The tree farm started almost as a lark, said Brian Bell, 38. Gordon Bell, 66, agreed: " We didn't k now t h e f i r st thing when we started this. Smart peopletake classes and learn what to do. We put trees in the ground and then started learning." On a cool morning not long Win a V i s a e a r d ago that was either the end of summer or the beginning of l o a de d w i t h $ 4 , 0 0 0 fall, the Bell family piled into t ha t y o u c a n u s e a green John Deere Gator utility vehicle and headed up Blita ny t i m e , a n y wh e r e zen Boulevard to look at some a nd f o r a n y t h i n g trees. In Gordon Bell's estimation, their Fraser and balsam firs have shown "exceptional needle retention." Yet extreme weather (which Brian Bell said could also be called routine weather) is hard on the Frasers. "They need to be on great drainage," his father said. "But mew . pulsepo l l. com they need water. Figure out that one." The Bells have been trying to master the quirks of at

Most Actlve (Scormore) Most Actfve (ss or more) Most Actfve (st or more) Name vol (00) Last chg Name vol (00) Last chg Name vol (00) Last chg

XuedaEd

Every day, a treewill guzzle

One test is to examine the

Market reeap

Precious metals NY HSBC BankUS NY Merc Gold NY Merc Silver

Douglas fir will stop sipping from the stand after a couple

water content from dropping

.69f 32 20.76 -.01 -3.3 wstcstecp 13 15.97 —.04 +17.7 Weyerhsr .92 14 26.46 —.27 +1.9

Metal

Valentine's Day?

The key is to keep the tree's

10 1.16 16 .04 28 .52f 31 1.76 13 1.40 14 .88 20 1.10a 25 48 .28 14 .53 .24a 57 .90 9 .20 9 .60f 22 14

The firs can befickle. They follow their own nature. A

Washington State University.

AlaskAisr Avista BkofAm Barrette Boeing

74.64 +.66 +1.8 5.00 -.06 +14.2 64.95 +.04 +37.7 56.50 —.50 +21.4 98.56 +.09 +18.3 6.26 +.06 +4.0

the tree. Is there a mister or a hose to wet down the stock?

Chastagner and his lab at

YTD

10.64 +J8 +91.3

of ice, and then wait a month to slurp it down? So what

of a dying conifer has soaked up years of research byGary

Div PE Last chg%chg Name

34.41 +.27 +7z4

— not necessarily worrisome. Butgreenneedles belong on

a Christmas tree standing in the living room through

Name

4z50 -.02 +13.2 2a96 +J1 -7.0

Would you pluck anoyster from the bay, park it on platter makes you think you cankeep

Northwest stoeks

cascdeecp cascdecp Colsprtw

GS

187 Advanced 240 Declined 42 Unchanged 469 Totalissues 6 New Highs 9 New Lows

1,134 1,289 146 2,569 50 29

Market

Close

% Change

Amsterdam Brussels Paris London Frankfurt HongKong Mexico Milan NewZealand Tokyo Seoul Singapore Sydney Zurich

34z61

+.39 s +.29 s +.11 s +.22 s -.22 t -.26 t +.49 s -.86 t +.45 s -J9 +.40 s +.94 s +.89 s +.19 s

2,424.09 3,605.61 5,914.40 7,517.80

22,191 a7 42,796.90 15,699.22 4,041.53 9,527.39

1,95z45

3dozu

4,555.85 6,370.83

YTD 52-wk

chg %chg %chg %chg

13,155.13 5,128.06 453.64

+81.09

2,398.42 2,978.04 1,418.07

-z73 -u.23

+1z49

+a7

8,314.29 +3a36

14,85z44 82z27

+.62 +z67 +.24 +z16 +.04 -z38 +.40 +1t20 -. l1 +5.27 -.38 +14.31

+4J3 +41.22 +.48

+7.97 +3.45 +1.50 +10.81 +4.65

+.29 +1 z76 +.28 +1 z64

+1 z51 +1z98 +1z67

+.06 +1 0.98

+1 0.31

Currencies Key currency exchangerates Friday compared with late Thursday inNewYork.

Dollarvs: AustraliaDollar BritainPound CanadaDollar ChilePeso ChinaYuan EuroEuro HongKongDollar

Japan Yen MexicoPeso RussiaRuble So. KoreaWon SwedenKrona SwitzerlndFranc TaiwanDollar

E x changeRate Pvsoay 1.0486 1.6036 1.0102 .002096 .1606 1.2926 .1290 .012136 .077884 .0325 .000924

1.0473 1.6048 1.0085 .002089 .1605 1.2964 .1290 .012142 .077542 .0324 .000923

a499

a506

1.0699 .0344

1.0718 .0344


G6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2012

UNDAY DRIVER

Key fob troublesmay

2013 DODGE DART

Compact ma es impressive return be from door faults By Larry Printz The Virginian-Pilot

By Paul Brand

Dodge Dart. For those over 40 y ears old, the name is a f amiliar one. From 1960 through 1976, Dodge sold more than 3 million Darts, from bare-bones commuter cars and convertibles to the fire-breathing Dart S winger, w i t h

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

REQ(EI/

have a 2 004 Ford a •• IExpedition with a 5.4liter engine. In the past few months, my remote key fob will i n termittently u n lock only the driver's door and not all the doors. If I open the door and push the unlock button, they will all unlock. A new battery in the fob did not

i t s powerful V-8 engine.

The name returns for 2013 on a new compact sedan, Dodge's first since the Neon's demise seven years ago — and its importance can't be overstated. The compact car segment is the largest one in the United States, with 15 percent of new car registrations in 2011. Their sales jumped 16 percent that year in an industry that was up 11 percent. More importantly, the 2013 Dodge Dart is the first vehicle collaboration between Chrysler and Fiat — w h ich now owns 58 percent of Chrysler and has assumed management control. If the Dart is any indication of what's to come, then this is one merger that will work out well indeed. Quite simply, the 2013 is a compelling compact sedan and among the top in a field of interesting compacts. It starts w it h t h e D a r t 's genetics. The car rides a platform adapted from the Alfa Romeo Giulietta. For the Dart, engineers tailored the car by letting out the seams a few inchesforcorn-fed Americans. They lengthened the platform by 12 inches and widened it almost two inches, which makes the Dart one of the larger compacts in its class, with bountiful interior space front and rear, along with a commodious trunk. The extra size doesn't hurt the styling either, which is a conservative take on the nor-

mally aggressive Dodge look. The front end is as adventurous as it gets, with the rest of the car seeming to be a modest update of the Neon. Out back, an optional full-width tail lamp with 152 LEDs dist inctively accents the d u al exhausts mounted in the rear fascia. With the lighting option, there's no mistaking this car for anything other than the Charger's kid brother. But the good news continues inside. The interior has satisfyingly soft materials in most places you're likely to touch. The test car, dressed in Limited trim, featured soft leather trim on the seats, which were not only s urprisingly comfortable and supportive, but featured seat h eaters. Leg room was morethan sufficient throughout the cabin. Thoughtful touches abound. The glove box is large enough to hold an iPad. The center console features auxiliary jacks for

help. Normally, when the engine is shut off and the key removed, the radio and other accessories willturn off when the door is opened. Now, when I open the driver's door from the inside, the accessories will not turn off. It has gotten progressively worse in the past few months. The passenger door always turns things off. Could the remote locking and the accessories issues be related? Is there a switch or connector inside the driver side door that could be causing the issue? • I'm glad you included • the fact that the passenger door "always turns things off." That's a key piece of information. The VSM (vehicle security module) located in the passenger footwell individually controls the driver and passenger door lock/unlock relay. This module or its connections may be at fault. The other possible source of trouble is the driver door switch and/or the driver door ajar switch, both l o cated inside the driver's door. I'd suggest an initial scan test looking for possible B-series

Dodge BrandMedia via The Associated Press

The 2013 Dodge Dart is based on the Alfa Romeo Giulietta, which Chrysler-owner Fiat sells outside the United States. When left to its own devices, this driveline shifted smoothly, just like an automatic transBase price: $19,995 mission. But slip the lever into As tested: $25,870 manual shift mode, and the Type:Front-engine, frontcar becomes positively lively. wheel-drive compact sport You will have to deal with nosedan ticeable turbo lag — a delay in response while waiting for the Engine: Turbocharged 1.4turbocharger to engage. You liter four-cylinder do learn to work around it, Mileage: 25 mpg city, however. Overall, it's impres36 mpg highway (manual); sive how well engineers were 24 mpgcity,34 m pg able to give this driveline a highway (automatic); 27 refined feel, just like the rest of mpg city, 39 highway the car. (turbo mill); 27 mpg city, Interestingly, the turbo en37 mpg highway (dualgine not only returns superior clutch) performance than the base engine, it also is more fuel efficient. How's that for choice? The base engine is rated But th e m os t i m p ortant by the EPA at 25 mpg city, choice is w hat l ies behind 36 highway with the manual Dodge's signature cross-hair transmission. That drops to grille. SE, SXT, Rallye and 24 and 34 with the six-speed Limited models have a new automatic. Opt for the turbo 160-horsepower 2.0-1iter engine. A 160-horsepower turbocharged an d i n t ercooled 1.4-liter MultiAir Turbo fourcylinder engine is a $ 1,300 option on SXT, Rallye and L imited models. While t h e two engines sharethe same horsepower rating, they differ intorque. The base four has 145 foot-pounds of torque, while the optional turbo has 184 foot-pounds. Come summer 2013, Dodge will offer an R/T model, with a new 184 horsepower 2.4-liter four-cylinderengine. These engines canbe paired with one of three transmissions: a s i x-speed manual, a six-speed automatic o r , when the 1.4-liter turbo is ordered, asix-speed dual-clutch transmission. Four-wheel anti-lock disc brakes with traction control are standard on all models. A long list of optional safety options is offered, including blind-spot monitoring, a rarity in

mill and that jumps to 27 and 39 with the manual, 27 and 37 with the dual-clutch. But the turbo mill requires premium fuel, while the base engine uses regular, so fuel costs are the same. Careful driving returned 37 mpg on the highway, while overall mileage was 30.6 as I couldn't help but indulge in this engine's well of power. It was made better by the sexy-sounding exhaust note. It will easily seduce you, as will its appealing price. If you're looking for a compact, be it in the price range or severalthousand dollars more, you owe it to yourself to test drive the Dart before deciding on something else. Why? Because when itcomes to building an impressive compact car, Dodge has scored a bulls-eye with the Dart. It's that good.

2013 DodgeDart

electronic devic- If yOu're/Ooklng es, and side pock- fo l- 8 CompBCt,

r»g be it in the priCe mobile phones, or other bits of life's rBnge 0I' SeVerBI clutter. thousand dO//Brs

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(body control module) fault codes. I have a 1996 CadilQ•• lac Deville with 81,200 miles on it. I have a constant problem with the theft deterrent system disabling the

starting of the car. Failure to start after the "three minute program" is common, and it can be several hours or even several days before the car will start. I have been left stalled in a parking lot and I had to have the vehicle towed once — only to have it start almost immediately after being towed to my driveway. I have contactedseveral dealers and their suggestions range from replacing the key cylinder, replacing the key — I seriously doubt the chip is the problem — and even installing a new vehicle computer. My question: Is there a code toresetthe computer so that the vehicle will start after being disabled by the theft deterrent system'? Is there a code to delete the theft deterrent system from the vehicle? Is there some other way to correct this system? There's no reset code • and no way to delete the anti-theft system from the vehicle. But there is a very strong possibility of a DTC fault code stored in the vehicle's powertrain control mod-

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ule (PCM) or body control module (BCM). If you haven't had the dealer perform a scan of these modules, that should be your first step. A 2700-series instrument panel DTC fault code could point to the specific problem — which may well be a faulty chip on the ignition key. Do you have a spare? — Brand is an automotive troubleshooter andformer race car driver. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. Include a daytime phone number.

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now, this is one car whose interior is w e l l -thought While the Dart out, with an amcan be o r dered bience that is at with t r aditional It to y o u I'Self to once h i g h -tech gauges and con teSt driVe tfie and inviting. It oftrols, the options DB rt b e fers many of the fore list offers some options once rehigh-tech alterna- de Cidingon served for larger tives, including a Sornetf)jng e/Se cars. My personal 7-inch customizfavorite: a heated able gauge clussteering wheel. ter, which uses a But i t ' s the thin film t r ansistor displays driving demeanor of this little similar to those used on full- Dart that seals the deal. That's sized luxury cars. Next to it is when the Alfa Romeo genetics an 8.4-inch touch screen that shine through. controls the audio, phone, cliThe Dart is responsive and mate and navigation systems, fun to drive. The steering is as well as the rear back-up quick and returns some feel. camera. All of this is framed Body lean is minimal in corby a tube of LED lighting. ners except when the Dart is There are five Dart trim lev- pushed hard. Given the Dart's els: SE, SXT, Rallye, Limited truly a t h l etic p e r sonality, and R/T. Unlike some compet- you'll welcome its ride-hanitors, who have dramatically dling compromise. This car is cut down their option choices, positively posh over the rough the Dart is available in 12 ex- stuff. Better yet, you'll be hardterior colors, 14 interior color pressed tonotice any engine and trim combinations, along vibration at idle. with seven w heel o ptions, The test car was fitted with three engine options and three the turbocharged engine and transmissions. dual-clutch transmission.

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