Bulletin Daily Paper 12-09-13

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

MONDAY December9,2013

i s or o erson oui'is

'Crossinthecold SPORTS • B1

TEE TOGREEN• BB

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Bowl games —TheBeavers will be in Hawaii, and the Ducks draw anintriguing matchup in SanAntonio. B1

Mentalist in Bend — The Amazing Kreskin garners a standing ovation at theTower Theatre.A7

• Oregon lawallowsthosewith few foreclosuresto seekexemptions By Elon Glucklich

option to avoid the worst-case

vious year to forgo the mediation process altogether. 2012 and revamped earlier this Since August, lenders have

The Bulletin

scenarioofa forced eviction.

year. Many institutions are

Oregon's foreclosure mediation law seeks to put

But smaller lending institutions are increasingly sidestepping the law, first passed by the Oregon Legislature in

taking advantage of a clause that allows smaller banks and

homeowners and lenders in

the same room, exploring any

credit unions that initiated 250

or fewerforeclosuresthepre-

Institutions like Sterling

Savings Bank, Umpqua Bank, SELCO Community Credit

Union and Oregon First Comstate to exempt a pending fore- munity Credit Union have all closure from the mediation filed exemption requests this program, according to Oregon year. Department of Justice figures. SeeMediation/A8 filed 187 requests with the

Sllow cbolr —Redmond Proficiency Academy's new class hits the right notes.A7

REDMOND

CONGRESS

Expected budget deal viewed as cease-fire

Qso Skiing roundup — Aswiss skier wins, but Lindsey Vonnis only a second back inCanada. B10

Projectsplanned for 2014anddeltond „

LgurLtl:

tt t 'It)PI~' LIti~ j

o to o

AMERICANLEGION PARK

ln Wnrld nOWS —Ukrainian protesters topple a Lenin statue.A2

And a Web exclusiveTwo celebrity chef scandals, two very different responses. bentlbuuetin.cnm/extrns

EDITOR'SCHOICE

In ailing

The undeveloped northwest corner of the park will be developed, adding a "gateway to the Dry Canyon."

I P

Lori Montgomery

r

The Washington Post

IIII

WASHINGTONHouse and Senate negotiators were puttingthe finish-

A new, handicap-accessible playground will replace the existing playground, and the walking trail will be movedto hug the western andnorthern edges of the park.

ing touches Sunday on what would be the first successful

budget accord since 2011, when the battle over a soaring national debt first para-

lyzed Washington. The deal expected tobe

CANAL TRAIL The canal trail along U.S.Highway 97 from QuinceAvenue to Veterans Way isstill on the books but has beenpushedto

sealed this r < sa

2015. •

4

components such as anatural-looking rock climbing wall, ramps and pads for handicap access and play structures for various ages will be part of the final product.

revive Detroit, commutes each week from Maryland to a cavernous old office buildinghere that seems to

Weigand Family DogPark

dare him to succeed — the

sequester, the negotiators'

primary target.

western gateway into Redmond," said Gor-

years of constant crisis, the emerging agreement

ica's cars

-

Bewlby Park

" -

; :

-

-

-

Motors. His of-

amounts to little more than

a ceasefire.Republicans and Democrats are abandoning their debt-reduction

goals, layingdown arms and, for the moment, trying

the debt is ending"with a

whimpernot abang," said Robert Bixby, executive di-

Spud Bowl

rector of thebipartisan Con-

' Sam

cord Coalition, which advocates debtreduction."That

JObnSOB Jgg'2 iH. VPB f ~

AmericanLegion Park

fice, on the

After more than two

my-damaging standoff. The campaign to control

REDMOND

Park

— General Orr

"I already consider that spot to be the

to avoid another econo-

Skate Park Kiwanis Field ~ . . :

holes or reform expensive health care and retirement programs. It would not even fullyreplace sharp spending cuts known as the

Avenue and Southwest 23rd Street.

don Wiseman, Redmond parks commissioner. The city is soliciting input from adthe recession. visory groups to develop the half-acre empty Improvements at American Legion Park lotinto ahigh-profile spot that would serve as in southwest Redmond are expected to be a gateway into the city, the Dry Canyon comamong the first projects completed, uti- plex and Legion Park. lizing a city-owned parcel adjacent to the SeeParks/A8

DETROIT — Kevyn Orr, the man who must now

not close corporate tax loop-

park's parking lot at the corner of Highland

this year, juggling a laundry list of parks projects delayed by or unthinkable during West CanyonRimPark

ANA L YSIS

Capitol Hill would not significantly reducethe debt, now $17.3 trillion and rising. It would

The Bulletin

Staff in Redmond's Community Develop-

By Monica Davey and BillVlasic

weekon

By Leslie Pugmire Hole ment Department are moving at full speed

half of Amer-

IlflI

.;„Ii»ll(IVu )

e

Images courtesy crty of Redmond

a test he O didn't seek

bankruptcy, that once sold morethan

0 4

A drawing of the future Sam Johnson Park playground. While the design is not finalized, certain

Dry Canyon

former headquarters of a company, itself recently in

s

SAM JOHNSON PARK

Detroit,

New Yorh Times News Service

=Ct:BOb s

(y.< ( ~

l t~

g u~

')

t ze'

14th floor, is

sparsely furnished, but in the stack of papers on his deskhe keeps a fewphotographs — of New York City at its financial lowin

Ifyouio

the 1970s. Gritty streets that

A designer's sketch showsone possible el-

look, he says, like some of Detroit's unlit, forgotten neighborhoods today. "Anytime somebody says itcan'thappen, Iwhip those pictures outand say,'Oh,

ement for the future perk gateway et American Legion Park in Redmond, this one a

square shade pavilion with anelectronic

-

What: JointRedmond ParksCommission/Dry CanyonAdvisory Committee meeting , Wben:6-8p.m.Dec. 18 '„...' Where:Redmond City Hall, 777

trfWt&IAt -.

IfiffcgNrt@

this canbe dedared avictory

is an indicator ofhowlow theprocess has sunk. They haven't reallydone anything except avoid another crisis." Details of the agreement remained murky Sunday as aides tothe principal negotiators, House Budget Committee Chairman

Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Senate Budget Committee

Chairman Patty Murray, D-Wash., continued to work behind closed doors. SeeBudget/A5

: ~~:=-,::, " tf '---:- %:.'.Deschutes Ave.

reader board. A final design is hoped to be

complete by theend of January.

don't youbet against it,'"

Orr saidthe other day, not long after a federal judge allowed Detroit tobecome

the nation's 1~ city ever to enterbankruptcy. "Let me

Food-tech startups aim to replace eggs with plants

showyou what canhappen." Orr, 55, who has never

run for political office, finds himself in an extraordinary

role: an unelected lawyer chiefly responsible for the reinvention of a major

American city in decay. And there's a deadline — 10 months.

The assignment is enormous, a peculiar mix of duties, some stated and others not, for a man who by all accounts had been leading a comfortable life as abankruptcy lawyer. See Detroit /A5

By Terence Chea

sites and mobile-phone apps.

Funded by prominent

The Associated Press

Its mission is to find plant re-

Silicon Valley investors and

placements for eggs.

Microsoft founder Bill Gates,

SAN FRANCISCO — The

startup is housed in a garage-like space in San Francisco's tech-heavy South of Market neighborhood, but it isn't like most of its neighbors

that develop software, web-

Inside, research chefs bake

cookies and cakes, whip up to disrupt a global egg indusbatches of flavored mayontry that backers say wastes naise and pan-fry omelets and energy, pollutes the environFrench toast — all without ment, causes disease outeggs. breaks and confines chickens

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 25, Low7

Page B10

Hampton Creek Foods seeks

to tiny spaces.

that this will be a trend that

The company, which just started selling its first product — Just Mayo mayonnaiseat Whole Foods Markets, is part of a new generation of so-

will end anytime soon," said

called food-tech ventures that

aim to change the way we eat. "There's nothing to indicate

INDEX Calendar A7 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope

C4 Local/State A 7-8 SportsMonday B1-10 A9 Movies A9 Tee to Green B8-9 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

vol. 111, No. 343, 26 pages, 3 sectIons

Anand Sanwal, CEO of CB Insights, a New York firm that

tracks venture capital investment. "Sustainability and challenges to the food supply are pretty fundamental issues." SeeEggs/A3

Q iii/e use recycled newsprint

:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII o 8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013

The Bulletin

NxTioN +

OR LD

HOW to reaCh US New YOrk train CraSh —A weekafter four people died in a New York commuter train derailment, two federal lawmakers proposed Sunday that trains nationwide beoutfitted with cameras pointed at engineers and atthe tracks. "I know you're going to hear from Metro-North that there arecosts, but the costs of theseaudio andvisual recorders is minuscule, in fact negligible, compared to the hundreds of millions of dollars that this tragic incident will cost Metro-North in the end," said Sen.Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut who joined New York Sen.Charles Schumer for a news conference at Manhattan's Grand Central Terminal.

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Syria hOStageS —Syrian Christians offered prayers Sundayfor agroupofmorethanadozennunsandorphanageworkersheld by rebels for nearly a week, fueling fears in the minority community that they are being targeted byextremists among the fighters seeking to oust President BasharAssad. Theseizure of the12 Greek Orthodox nuns and at least three other women is the latest attack to spark panic among Syria's Christians over the strength of al-Qaida-linked militants and other Islamic radicals in the nearly 3-year-old revolt against Assad's government. A priest and two bishops previously kidnapped by rebels remain missing, andextremists are accused of vandalizing churches in areasthey havecaptured.

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An anti-government protester smashes the statue of Vladimir Lenin with a sledgehammerSunday in Kiev, Ukraine. Protests Sunday in Ukraine were the largest since the Orange Revolution.

FO e efS II1

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e eAIAS 8 Ue

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Si eilaee.

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the empty base of the statRussia and those who would ue Sunday evening and was Los Angeles Times like t o s e e U k r aine m o re brandishing a Ukraine naKIEV, Ukraine — Protesters aligned with Western Europe. tional flag as a crowd of sevtoppled a monument to BolThat gave the toppling of the eral hundred young protestshevik leader Vladimir Lenin Lenin statue particular signifi- ers chanted "Way to go!" and on Sunday during the biggest cance — despite the fact that some young men crushed the march and rally in central most Lenin statues in Russia f allen communist idol w i t h Kiev since President Viktor were torn down during the sledgehammers. Yanukovich galvanized his collapse of the Soviet Union The protests Sunday were opposition by turning down a in 1991. Statues of the Soviet the largest in Ukraine since trade deal with the European leader were once ubiquitous the Orange Revolution in 2004 Union. throughout the East bloc. and 2005. Although crowd esThe Ukrainian protesters No police officers could timates varied widely — from blocked and barricaded gov- be seen anywhere in the vi- an official police estimate of ernment offices and gave Ya- cinity of Taras Shevchenko 50,000 to rally organizers' nukovich 48 hours to disband boulevard where the granite claims of up to 1 million — the his government beforethey and marble monument was turnout seemed clearly larger would march on his country brought down by a group of than for a demonstration the residence near Kiev. A govern- youngprotesters. previous Sunday that was offi"It is amazing how the au- cially calculated at 300,000. ment spokesman said Yanukovich's administration was thorities allowed Lenin to Opposition leaders in Inde"ready for negotiations." go down!" said Sergei An- pendence Square, where the In rejecting the trade deal driyenko, a 51-year-old Kiev demonstrations have been with the EU Yanukovich was businessman who applauded centered, reiterated their prieffectively asserting that Rus- the action. "Where were the mary demand that Yanukovsia remained Ukraine's key police, where were the com- ich dismiss his Cabinet, and trade partner. The country is munists who were always pro- that those responsible for the politically and geographically tecting him?" brutal dispersal of a student divided, to some extent, beA young man c l imbed rally Nov. 30 be punished.

EaStel'h U.S. StOIm —Snowand freezing rain hit the EastCoast on Sunday,causing flight cancellations anddangerous roadconditions, and making for afew slippery NFLfootball games. Morethan 3 inches of snow fell in someareas of Pennsylvaniaand NewJersey on Sunday, with more snowandfreezing rain forecast from Ohio to Maineearly today. OnSunday, therewere hundreds of flight delays andcancellations at airports in Washington, Philadelphia andNewYork. On the Pennsylvania Turnpike, adeadly crashSundayafternoon set off a series of accidents involving more than 50 vehicles, officials said. SOuth KOrea air defenSe —Defying both Chinaand Japan,South Korea announced onSunday that it was expanding its air patrol zone for the first time in 62years to include airspace over the East ChinaSea that is also claimed byBeijing andTokyo. With the expansion, the air defense zones ofall three countries now overlap over asubmerged reef called leodo in SouthKoreaand Suyan Rock inChina.Thereef is controlled by South Korea,but Chinaalso claims it. The seabed around the reef is believed to berich in natural gas andmineral deposits.

tween those who favor ties to

In Sowetoand beyond,Mandela still servesas a beaconof hope By John Eligon and Nicholas Kulish

/

r!I

I

New York Times News Service

SOWETO, South AfricaThe walls of the Regina Mundi

f'

Catholic Church here are rid-

BOmbingS in Iraq —A series of attacks Sunday in largely Shiite neighborhoods of Baghdadkilled at least 45 people andwounded dozens more, the police andmedical officials said. Iraq is experiencing a protracted wave ofsectarian violence that has increased since the U.S. military withdrawal in 2011, alevel of strife not seen since 2006 and 2007. Morethan 8,000 Iraqis have been killed this year, according to the United Nations. Therewas no immediate claim of responsibility for Sunday's violence, but insurgents, many of them with links to al-Qaida, have frequently attacked civilians in an effort to undermine the Shiite-led government. Tllli pl'OtSStS —Facing volatile street protests and the mass resignation from Parliament of the main opposition party, Thailand's prime minister early today called for fresh elections, the latest in a series of attempts to defuse angeragainst her political party and her powerful family. "Let the people decide the direction of the country and who the governing majority will be," the prime minister, Yingluck Shinawatra, said in atelevised statement this morning. Afghan abuSe —Despiteyears of intensiveeffort byAfghan andinternational rights advocates,progress inobtaining justice for abusedwomen in Afghanistanappearedto havestalled, according to areport released Sunday bythe United Nations.Thereport, onthe implementation of the 2009 Elimination ofViolenceAgainst Womenlaw, found thatalthough the number of official reports thisyear bythe police andprosecutors on violenceagainst womenrose by28 percent from the previous year,actual prosecutions didnot remotely keeppace, rising byjust 2 percent. Kim JOllg Ull'S unCle —North Korea announced early today that it has purged leader KimJong Un's uncle, considered the country's second most powerful official, accusing him of corruption, drug use, gambling, womanizing andgenerally leading a "dissolute and depraved life." Theyoung North Koreanleader will now rule without the relative long seen ashis mentor as heconsolidated power after the death of his father, Kim Jong II, two years ago. — From wire reports

Weekly Arts 8 Entertainment In

I

• • TheBulletin

dled with bullet holes from the

days when it was a center of the struggle against apartheid. But on Sunday, parishioners

insteadfocused on thetracesof Nelson Mandela. Mandela's image is etched in a stained-glass window at the back of the church. A page from a guest book with his sigDaniel Berehurak/New York Times News Service nature hangs in the office. And A service for former South African President Nelson Mandela older worshipers still recall takes place Sunday at Regina Mundi Catholic Church in Soweto, his visits to the church, not far

from his former home in the township. "I thought of the old man,

la's family and his former wife,

saidaftera three-hour Mass on

values that Madiba stood for

Sunday. "I rememberedhim, and I prayed for him," Nakene said, "wherever he is." South Africans across the country began a week of commemorations of Mandela's life Sunday with what officials calledadayofprayerandrefl ection. People gathered in houses of worship, private homes and even open fields to pay homage to the man who embodied the struggle against apartheid.

and sacrificed his life for,"

For the country's politicians, of Mandela at 95 on Thursday,

and national and provincial officials, induding President Jacob Zuma, appeared at church-

es and other places of worship across the country. In Bryanston, near Johan-

nesburg, Zuma attended a Methodist service, sitting alongside members of Mande-

Zuma said, referring to Mande-

labyhis clanname, as heurged South Africans to be guided by Mandela's example as an opponent of oppression, a fighter for freedom and a model of forgiveness. For others, the eulogies were freighted with concern about the future,adding a sharper edge to their prayers for peace in the post-Mandela era. In the

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peoplealso congregated to remember Mandela, whose long

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incarcerationand subsequent election as South Africa's first

black president inspired a following far beyond the frontiers of his land. At a service in London, the Most Rev. Justin

Welby, the archbishop of Canterbury, called Mandela South

Africa's "saving grace."

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pn 0prcrarr cv

r 1 acaderny

At another church, this one

in New York, Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio promised to bring the spirit of Mandela to his mayoralty. At the Christian Cultural

Center in Brooklyn, de Blasio told about 3,000 people: "To-

morrow, we start living out the loot, north of central Johan- lessons of Nelson Mandela." On 'Iltesday, tens of thounesburg, where thousands of South Africans and immi- sands of South Africans and grants live in tin shacks with many foreign dignitaries are no plumbing and often no elec- expected to gather for a nationtricity, people gathered in tin- al memorial in a World Cup walled churches, under trees soccer stadium just outside and in fields to offer prayers for Soweto. Mandela's body will Mandela. then lie in state for three days "Thank you, Madiba," a in Pretoria at the Union Buildgroup of women from Zimba- ings — once the emblem of the bwe sangplaintively in a mead- white establishment he helped owof wildflowers. to overthrow. vast squatter camp of Dieps-

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South Africa.

whenhe usedto say, 'Weblacks Winnie M adikizela-Mandela. will go and will fight for our Mandela received his early edfreedom,'" Tom Nakene, 55, a ucation in Methodist schools. "We should not forget the lifelong member of the parish,

Sunday was a day to urge unity and continuity after the death

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MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day

It's Monday, Dec. 9, the343rd day of 2013. Thereare 22days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS U.S. Senate — Atwo-week session begins, with a vote scheduled on theconfirmation of Patricia Millett, an experienced SupremeCourt advocate, to the D.C.Circuit Court of Appeals. BFLISSelS —Finance ministers from the17 eurozone countries try to agree onsetting up a fund to payfor bank rescues in Europe.

HISTORY Highlight:In1987, the first

Palestinian intefadeh, or uprising, began asriots broke out in Gaza andspread to theWest Bank, triggering astrong Israeli response. In1608, English poet JohnMilton was born in London. In1854, Alfred, LordTennyson's famous poem,"The Charge of the Light Brigade," was published inEngland. In1911, anexplosion inside the Cross Mountain coal minenear Briceville, Tenn., killed 84workers. (Five wererescued.) In1912, longtime House Speaker Thomas"Tip" O'Neill was born in Cambridge, Mass. In1940, British troops opened their first major offensive in North Africa during WorldWar II.

In1942, the AramKhachaturian ballet "Gayane," featuring the surging "SabreDance,"was first performed byRussia's Kirov Ballet. In1958, the anti-communist John Birch Society wasformed in Indianapolis.

ar -wire i erences in mae, ralns

Continued from A1 Venture capital f i rms, which invest heavily in early-stage technology companies, poured nearly $350 million into food-related startaccording to the firm. Plant-based alternatives to

For men, a study found greater strength in links between perception and action, while women had stronger left-to-right links between reasoning and intuition. By Geoffrey Mohan Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — A map

of the human brain may in fact be a two-volume edition, di-

vided by gender, according to a new study that found significant differences between how

the male and female brains are hard-wired. Males tended to have stron-

ger front-to-back circuits and links b etween p erception and action, while women had

stronger left-to-right links between reasoning and intuition, according to University

of Pennsylvania Perelman Schoolof Medicine researchers who imaged the brains of 949 adolescents and young adults. Their maps of the brain's so-

called connectome, published online last week in the journal

Proceedings of the National Academy ofSciences,m atched observed behavioraldifferences between the sexes. Women did better at tests of attention,

word and face memory and cognition. Men did better on

spatial processing, motor skills and sensorimotor speed. The results lend weight to

— From wire reports

their m olecular s t ructure,

looking for plants that can fulfill the culinary functions of eggs. So far, the company has analyzed some 1,500 types of plants from more

eggs, poultry and other meat could be good for the environment because it could reduce consumption of meat, which requires large amounts of land, water and crops to produce, backers say.

in 11 "hits " said Josh Tetrick,

the company's CEO. "Our approach is to use plants that are much more sustainable — less greenhouse gas emissions,less water, no animal involved and a whole lot more afford-

able — to create a better food system," said the former lineple's health, especially in backer on West Virginia Uniheavy meat-eating countries versity's football team. like the U.S., and reduce outThe company's first prodbreaks of diseases such as uct — the mayonnaise — is avian flu, they say. sold for roughly the same "The biggest challenge is price as the traditional varithat people who consume a ety. It soon hopes to start selllot of meat really like meat, ing cookie dough and a batter and to convince them to try that scrambles like eggs when something different may fried in a pan. "The egg is a miracle, so be extremely difficult," said Claire Kremen, faculty co-di- one ofthe hardest partsofrerector of the Berkeley Food placing it is all the functions Institute at the University of that it can do," said Chris California, Berkeley. Jones, the company's culiThe American Egg Board, nary director of innovations which represents U.S. produc- and a former contestant on ers, saideggs can'tbereplaced. Bravo TV's Top Chef. "Our customershave said While H a mpton C r eek they're not interested in egg takes aim at the egg, another substitutes. They want real, Gates-backed company is tarnatural eggs with their famil- getingthe chicken itself. iar ingredients," Mitch Kanter, Beyond Meat, located in e xecutive director of t h e Southern California, sells board-funded Egg Nutrition "chicken-free strips," which Center, said in a statement. have the taste and stringy texThe industry has reduced ture of poultry but are made its water use and greenhouse from plant protein. It is sold gas emissions, and hens are at Whole Foods and natural living longer due to better food stores. It's also working health and nutrition, he said. on aproduct thatmimicsbeef. Hampton Creek's quest to Inside its test kitchen in El replace the ubiquitous chick- Segundo, Caitlin Grady, the en egg is also backed by Pay- company's culinary ambasPal co-founder Peter Thiel sador, stir-fried the strips with and Khosla Ventures, a ven- broccoli, onion, peppers and ture capital fund started by sesame oil. "I cooked it just Sun Microsystems co-found- like a regular stir-fry, but I don't have to worry about the er Vinod Khosla. In its food lab, biochem- meatbeing raw," Grady said. It could also benefit peo-

in Arizonawas designated a national park. In1971,Nobel Peacelaureate Ralph Bunchedied in NewYork. In1984,the five-day-old hijacking of aKuwaiti jetliner that claimed the lives of two Americans endedas Iranian security men seizedcontrol of the plane, whichwas parkedat Tehran airport. In1992, Britain's Prince Charles andPrincess Dianaannounced their separation. (The couple's divorce became final Aug. 28, 1996.) Ten years ago: Theowners of a Rhode Island nightclub andthe tour managerfor the rock band Great White wereindicted on charges related to afire the previous February that killed100 people. A suicide bomberkilled five victims outside anexclusive Moscow hotel. FormerVice President Al Goreendorsed Howard Deanfor the Democratic presidential nomination. Five years age: lllinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich wasarrested after prosecutors said hewas caught on wiretaps scheming to sell BarackObama'svacant Senate seat for cash or aplum job for himself in the newadministration.(Blagojevich was convicted of wide-ranging corruption in 2011and sentenced to14 years in prison.) One year age: U.S.special forces rescued anAmerican doctor captured bythe Taliban in Afghanistan. ANavy SEAL, Petty Officer1st ClassNicolas D. Checqueof Monroeville, Pa., was killed during therescue of Dr. Dilip Joseph ofColorado Springs, Colo.Same-sex couples inWashington state began exchangingvowsjust after midnight under anew state law allowing gaymarriage. Mexican-American singerJenni Rivera andsix otherswerekilled in a planecrash in northern Mexico.

Today's Birthdays:Actor Kirk Douglas is 97.Actress Dame Judi Dench is79. Football Hallof-Famer DickButkus is 71. Actor Michael Dorn is61. Actor John Malkovich is 60.Singer Donny Osmond is56. Actress Felicity Huffman is51. Crown Princess Masako ofJapanis 50. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., is 47.Songwriter and former "American Idol" judge Kara DioGuardi is 43.Actress Reiko Aylesworth is 41.Olympic gold and silver medalgymnast McKayla Maroney is18.

ists grind up beans and peer through microscopes to study

ups last year, compared with than 60 countries. less than $50 million in 2008, The research has resulted

In1962, the Petrified Forest

BIRTHDAYS

Eggs

STUDY

growing evidence that humans Thinkstock have formed strong adaptive A recent study about differences in the human brain depending complementarity, suggesting on gender is likely to fuel debate about the roles of nature versus that biological evolution pre- nurture. disposes the species to divide

gender roles. That implication is sure to fuel debate over the roles of nature versus nurture

In the upper parts of the brain, the men had greater

and the interplay of function

c onnectivity

and structure within the human brain. But they also could

spheres, while women had greaterconnection between

inform treatment of neurological disorders known to vary by age and sex, such as autism and schizophrenia. "There is biology to some of the behavior we see among men and women," said Ragini

sides, the study found. Women

Verma, a University of Penn-

w i t h i n he m i -

also tended to have more connections among smaller-scale " modules," while me n h a d

stronger connections within those subregions. I n the lower part o f t h e

brain, the cerebellum, men had

sylvania biomedical imaging strongerconnections between analyst and lead author of the hemispheres, giving them a study. possible edge at translating "In the population, men perception to m o tor s k i lls. have stronger front-back con- Women had more interconnecnectivity, and w omen have tions across the frontal lobes, inter-hemispheric or left-right c onnectivity more than t h e men. It's not that one or the

the study found. The di fferences i n

th e

connectome have come to

other gender lacks the connec- be called the hunter versus tivity altogether, it's just that gatherer divide by two of the one is stronger than the other," study's main authors, the husband-wife team o f R a quel Verma said. That means men may be and Ruben Gur. And the data quicker on the perception-ac- jibe with findings from a 2011 tion path, while women better

University of California, Los

integrate the analytic side of the brain with the intuitive and

Angeles, study of twins that found women had stronger in-

social side.

ter-hemispheric connections in

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"So, if there was a task that severalsubregions ofthe froninvolved logical and intuitive tal cortex. "They confirm a couple of thinking, the study says that women are predisposed, or our findings, which is very exhave stronger connectivity as citing," said Neda Jahanshad, a population, so they should be lead author of the UCLA study, better at it," Verma said. who is now working at the "For men, it says they are

very heavily connected in the cerebellum, which is an area that controls the motor skills.

And theyare connected front

University of Southern California's Keck School of Med-

icine. "This is interesting on a variety of levels because there have been sex differences not-

ed among those with autism, brain is the area by which you for example." perceive things, and the front Men outnumber women by a 4-1 proportion among those part of the brain interprets it and makes you perform an diagnosed with autism specaction. So if you had a task like trum disorder. skiing or learning a new sport, Although such sex differif you had stronger front-back e nces are important to t h e connectivity and a very strong study, the Philadelphia cohort, cerebellum connectivity, you funded by the National Into back. The back side of the

would be better at it."

Researchers used diffusion tensor imaging, a tool that can indirectly outline the path of

myelinated axons, the "wire" section of neurons that facil-

itate long-range conduction of electrochemical signals

stitute of Mental Health, was

aimed predominantly at studying how brain maturation affects psychiatric disease.

By age, differences between male and female brains become sharp around adoles-

and are part of th e brain's

cence butabated somewhat in young adulthood, the study

white matter. They looked

found.

at the brains of 428 men and 521 women, ages 8 to 22, who

Researchers cautioned that the imagery is an indirect

arepartofa larger,long-term measure of axons, not a cellstudy known as the Philadel- by-cell census and map. And phia NeurodevelopmentalCo- the results are strictly statishort, conducted with the Chil- tical averages, although in a dren's Hospital of Philadelphia. very large sample.

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MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Budget

Detroit

Continued from A1 Ryan and Murray chair a 29-member conference committee tasked with approving a plan to fund federal agencies through fiscal 2014, which began Oct. 1, and avoid another

Continued from A1 His new job'? Urban plan-

government shutdown when

est critics call him a "dictator"

a temporary funding measure expires in January.

(his authority trumps that of the city's elected leaders); an "Uncle Tom" (he is black and

With lawmakers due back

in town Tuesday, aides said Ryan and Murray are likely to bypass the committee and take

the deal, if finalized, straight to the full House and Senate. Congressional leaders hope to finish work quickly and leave town for the holidays as soon as Friday. Senior aides familiar with the talks say the emerging agreement aims to partially repealthe sequester and raise agency spending to roughly

"She said, 'Kevyn, do you

said, "There won'tbe pensions

spokesman, negotiator, politician, good cop, bad cop. The jobcould not be more politically fraught. Orr's harsh-

for the 30-, 40- and 50-yearolds. Is that fair?"

tor helped talk him into taking

the Detroit job, seems unfazed by the storm around him — he

is full of smiles and quips, coolly pressing on. "If we don't do something to

billion in alternative policies,

including cuts to federal worker pensions and higher secu-

have to walk home in the dark — don't they deserve better

rity fees for the nation's airline

services?" Orr said."There has to be some balance here. This

Souring on a 'grandbargain' In that sense, the talks have

is our chance." This year, with

D etroit's

financial troubles becoming desperately apparent, Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican, called on Orr, who had worked on Chrysler's bankruptcy and at the Resolution Trust Corp., to be sent as an emergency manager with sweeping powers.

Reluctant manager

followed the game plan Ryan

At first, Orr said, he resisted.

sketched in October after Re-

The salary, $275,000 a year, from the state, would be a pay cut. His wife, who is a physician, would be caring for their two children, 6 and 7, at home in Chevy Chase when he was

publicans agreed to reopen the government following a 16-day shutdown. Despite his own ambitious blueprint for shrinking spending, Ryan said he would not attempt a big deal, because it would require a "grand bargain" in w hich Democrats agree to cut safety-net spending in exchange for Republican concessions on taxes.

determination. But the trial also shed light

partner at the law firm Jones Day until his wife and a men-

skinny, dorky kids like I was, who got beaten up every day at thebus stopbythetoughs, who

deal would do nothing to trim the debt, which is now larger, as apercentage of the economy, than at anypoint in U.S. history except for during World War II.

courtrooms, he spent days testifying to Detroit's dismal conditions, providing a pivotal basis for the judge's

retirees). But Orr, who was a

that we have, the 700,000 residents — some of them schoolchildren, some of them sort of

over the next decade. But the

tomed to asking questions in

ly-black city by a white governor); and a "pension killer" (he has said the city can no longer afford the pensions it promised

2015. That would bring agency budgets up to the target already in place for fiscal 2016. To cover the cost, Ryan and Murray are haggling over roughly $65

Republicanleaders are also

Orr has cleared one of his biggest hurdles — getting approval for b a n kruptcy. Though he is more accus-

was sent to run t his most-

address the unfunded liability

seeking additional savings to knock a small dent in deficits projected to exceed $6 trillion

in the next 10 or 12 years," Orr

ner, numbers cruncher, city

$1.015 trillion in fiscal 2014 and

passengers.

have to do this'?' " "If we don't do something

in Detroit. And the circum-

stances were certain to be volatile in a city that was hardly

asking for an outsider to step in. Ultimately, Orr said, he became convinced that it was a

on his tactics in filing for bankruptcy. Judge Steven Rhodes found that Orr and New York Times News Service file photo his team had not bargained in To revive Detroit, Kevyn Orr says, will take uncompromising action, e stance that at times has good faith before heading to caused critics to bristle. court (though the judge also found that bargaining would have been impracticable given call to action. running a city. er voted for a Republican and the city's 100,000 creditors). "Kevyn has tried to take on that Snyder was a "fleeting In one testy exchange, the In the nearly nine months since, Orr hasbeen continually way too much," Bing said in acquaintance" in law school. judge confronted Orr about a on the move — meeting with an interview, adding that he And however his life may ap- statement he made at a towncommunity groups, issuing doubted speculation that in- pear to others — the classic hall-style meeting in June that reports, filing for bankruptcy, coming Mayor, Mike Duggan suits and the state police secu- pensions were "sacrosanct." "What would you say to firing and hiringpeople at City might get some larger role. rity detail — Orr says simply "Whoever the mayor is andthe that he sees himself as apart of that retiree now?" the judge Hall. His supporters say he is as- City Council are, they won't Detroit. In the city's churches, asked. "I would say his rights are tute and charming, but also have a say in how to run the he says, he smells the Florida unflappableand direct. "The city." church his grandfather led, subject to t h e s u p remacy thing is, his stock is as high toSome critics bristle at the the old Bibles and the organs. clause in the U.S. Constituday as it was when he walked suggestion that Orr — rather Both his grandmothers had tion," Orr said. "That's a little bit different in the door," said Sandy Baru- than Snyder and the white, Re- studied to the eighth grade and ah, president of the Detroit Re- publican majority in the state worked as maids. than sacrosanct, isn't it?" "When I say 'I'm them,'" Orr gional Chamber. capital, Lansing — is running B y next October — t h e But he has also been a tar- this city, where tensions over said of Detroiters, "I want peo- point at which, under state get during protests. Detroiters race and class have long sim- ple to understand, don't look law, Detroit's elected leaders groaned at the attitude they mered. Both Orr and Snyder at who Iam now. Ihave by no can remove Orr — he hopes perceived in a comment he attended the University of means forgotten." the city will have emerged made to The Wall Street Jour- Michigan Law School in overfrom court with eased debts nal — "For a long time the city lapping years. The two meet Standing firm and reinvestment in services, was dumb, lazy, happy and and talk regularly, the goverOn the most contentious is- from streetlights to garbage rich." Orr has said that it was nor's spokeswoman said. Orr sues, Orr has held hard lines. pickup. in no way meant as an insult stays in a condominium at the He refuses to promise that It is a tall order. He expects a~ c ontemporary Detroi- Westin Book Cadillac that has works from the Detroit Insti- a new agency to put thouters, but an observation about been paid for by a tax-exempt tute of Arts will go untouched sands of working streetlights c ircumstances nearly 1 0 0 fund the governor created. in bankruptcy. He says city on key roads and near bus "They pull the levers and pensions for retirees are un- stops. He wants a remade Poyears ago. And Detroit's mayor, Dave he reads the script at the press affordableas they are now, lice Department — he has alBing, who is leaving office at conferences," said the Rev. despite state constitutional ready hired a new chief — to the end of the year, has said Charles Williams II, of the Na- protections. drive down crime. He wants ort to Orr arrived in the municipal tional Action Network. "In our Not long ago, Orr's mother, a "supercharged" eff building(where Orr hasa sec- community, we call that win- a retired school administrator remove tens of thousands of ond office, not far from Bing's) dow dressmg." from Florida who receives a abandoned buildings. "In three years, hopefully with a slew of outside consulOrr has heard it all before; pension, met a Detroit retiree tants and personnel changes, mainly he dismisses it. He says at a conference. "They were the blight is gone," Orr said. but precious little expertise in he is a Democrat and has nev- crying together," Orr said. "Thatwould bemy dream."

A grand bargain has been the Holy Grail in half a dozen rounds of negotiations, includ-

ing talks between President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio,

in summer 2011. "I saw those earlier episodes, •

these grand-bargain pursuits, as ultimately destined for fail-

• •

ure becauseitrequired one of

the parties in power to compromise core principles, and I just didn't see that happening," Ryan said in October. "That's why it's more appropriate to the

~

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es they've used, except the

Take pensions for federal workers. In his most recent budget blueprint, Ryan called for federalworkers to pay an additional 5.5 percent toward their retirement, saving taxpay-

ers $130 billion over 10 years. Even Obama proposed a 1.2 percentincrease aimed atsaving $20billion. But aides said Ryan and

Murray were headed toward a smaller number — less than $17 billion. Republicans will

Committee Chairman Barbara

Mikulski, all Maryland Democrats with large constituencies of federal workers — are hav-

ing an outsize influence.

lysts are already worried that

an auction set for early next year could fall tens ofbillions of

g

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Meanwhile, Ryan and Mur-

ray were looking to squeeze billions more from the sale of broadcastspectrum. But ana-

Democratic votes to push a Washington area lawmakers — induding House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, House budget negotiator Chris Van Hollen and Senate Appropriations

I

8

need a substantial number of deal through the House, and

• •

strategy of avoiding any hard choices." Budget analysts say it is difficult to work up much enthusiasm for any of the small-bore moves under discussion.

I

moment we have to focus on

common ground.. .togetsom e minimal accomplishments." In essence, Ryan was saying, "'If we agree not to do anything, we can get something done.'And he was right," Bixby said. "There's no budgetary or fiscal strategy in the choic-

~

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becausesmallernetworks are lobbying to limit participation by wireless giants AT&T and Verizon. A Senate hearing on the matter is set for 'Ibesday. Whatever

the underlying math, revenue from spectrum sales may be "an easy thing to throw into a budget negotiation," said Urban Institute budget expert Gene Steuerle. "But it seems like a

gimmick."

• II

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MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

A7

LOCAL Ee TATE BRIEFING

BEND WATER PROJECT

ea swor ue o awsui

2 La Pine fires erupt despite cold Two residenceswere damaged in LaPine Saturday in twoseparate structure fires, according to a newsreleasefrom Mike Supkis with the La Pine Rural FireProtection District.

The first fire was reported at 7:15p.m. at 15886 WoodlandDrive. Firefighters arrived to find an attachedgarage fully engulfed in flames with the fire traveling into the home. The occupants were home at thetime and were able toexit without injury, Supkis said. The cause of the fire hasnot been determined,and firefighters returned to the sceneseveral times throughout the night to extinguish hot spots. A second fire wasreported at4:50 a.m.Sunday morning at ahomeat 16040 WoodlandDrive. The fire started in ashed sharing a commonroof with an attachedmobile home. Firefighters were able to contain thefire to the shedandprevent any damage tothe mobile home. The occupants were able to exit with no injury. The fire is believedto have started in awall heater unit.

Bulletin staff report The city of Bend has agreed

Service's approval of a spe-

by U.S. District Judge Ann

project forthe same period of

cial-use permit that would al-

Aiken last week, the city of

time.

to delay until at least Jan. 20

low for planned improvements to the intake and pipeline that brings Bridge Creek water to Bend. The Deschutes National

Bend agrees to not get under-

The city of Bend and the

way with any construction activities at the site, including

ForestService must respond

Forest granted the permit on

til either Jan. 20 or "until such

and asked the court for a temporary restraining order and

Nov. 4, allowing the city to go forward with the $24 million project, which would replace

injunction to prevent the proj-

two old pipes with one new

ect getting underway. The lawsuit challenges for

one and improve the water

time as the Court has resolved plaintiffs' pending motion for preliminary injunction." The Forest Service agrees not to restrict public access to

intake area.

the project site for any reasons

ment and will rule on the issue

related to implementing the

before Jan. 20.

any work on its surface water project. The agreement comes after Central Oregon LandWatch filed a lawsuit in November

a second time the U.S. Forest

In a stipulated order signed

staging or site preparation, un-

enin u

to Central Oregon LandWatch's motion for temporary restraining order and injunction by Dec. 16, and the conservation nonprofit will reply by Jan. 3. After that, the court will

hear both sides of the argu-

o m u sic

The Amazing Kreskin ovation Sunday at the Tower Theatre. The mentalist, in a twohour show, involved sever-

al audience members in his performance, wowing attendees by reading people's minds, guessing correctly random cards chosen by

pe

audience participants from

a regular deck of cards and ultimately being able to find a piece of paper hidden inan audience member's stocking hat. The piece of paper represented his fee for putting on the show, and he promised the crowd that if he was unable

to locate it, he would forfeit the whole thing and do the

show for free. "It's good to have this back," he said after finding the paper. "I'm going to tell you something folks: This

Deschutes County Commission-

is a hell of a way to make a

living." He said that out of more Photos hy Roh Kerr/The Bulletin

Redmond Proficiency Academy choir director Marianne Thomas, lower right, adjusts the sound from the back of a float in the Veterans Day parade last month.

• Redmond Proficiency Academyaddsmore vocal options, including a popular showchoir

Schools —The

By Leslie Pugmire Hole

schoolboard convenes for a meeting at 6 p.m. at the district's administration building, 520

The Bulletin

EVENT

CALENDAR TODAY KEITHGREENINGER: The folk singer performs; SOLD OUT; 6:30 p.m.; The Glen atNewport Hills, 1019 N.W.Stannium Drive, Bend; 541-480-8830, houseconcertsintheglen© bendbroadband.com or www.keithgreeninger.com. THE BLACKBERRY BUSHES: The Seattle altfolk band performs, with Pitchfork Revolution; $5; 7 p.m., doors open at 6p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. TUESDAY CASCADEBRASS HOLIDAYCONCERT:The brass quintet performs its 13th annual holiday concert; free; 6 p.m.; First United Methodist Church, 680 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-389-2579. "AMERICANWINTER": A screening of the 2013 documentary film that follows personal stories

forming the act where he must locate his check, he's failed only nine times. Kreskin was born George Kresge. He has been performing since his teens, had a television appeared with Johnny Carson88times during his career. He's energetic and enthusiastic, with a

REDMOND — Molly Williams has a

dream. She's on a stage in front of a large audience. She's walking through purple smoke. That's it. Oh, she's probably singing as well. "I'm really looking forward to next semester, to all of us getting out of our com- Redmond Proficiency Academy choir director Marianne Thomas, left, records stufort zone and trying new things — really dents performing from the back of a float in the Veterans Dayparade last month. putting ourselves in the spotlight," said the high school junior about her most recent performing arts dass: show choir. singing look cool and by introducing vocals, Thomas said. After the kids reRedmond Profici ency Academy, a teens to music from past eras. turn from the holiday break she wants "Unless they were introduced to it public charter school that started five to raise the ante with more complicated years ago with no performing arts class- from their parents, kids today might not vocals and choreography. "I want to get them off the bleaches, now offers music, choir and drama. know Carole King or Fleetwood Mac, or This year, its newest high school level vo- some of the great '80s bands. It's all great ers and moving, but other things had to cal class has proven to be its most popu- music," she said. come first," she said. lar, a nontraditional theatrical choir class During a recent class, the group of 17 The rehearsalcontained a song that familiar to watchers of the TV hit "Glee." "I thought it was natural for RPA.

than 6,000 times of per-

show in the 1970s and

Bend-La Pine

Centect:541-383-0354, newsObendbulletin.cem. In emeile, please write "Civic CalendaP in the subject line. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication ie noon Thursday.

Mentalist wows the audience earned himself a standing

TUESDAY

On the agendais an update onthe district's digital conversion. The school district is in the midstofa pilot program that is designed toprovide students with more digital literacy. It hasdistributed iPads tostudents in several schoolsaround Bend andRedmond.

Tower Theatre in Bend.

The Bulletin

CIVIC CALENDAR

N.W. Wall St.

Kreskin reacts after correctly guessing an audience member's card during his performance Sunday at the

By Shelby R. King

More briefing, A8

County commissioners are expected to hold a joint meeting with the Redmond City Council from 5:30 to 7 p.m.at Redmond City Hall, 716 S.W. EvergreenAve. During themeeting, commissi onersandcouncilors areexpectedto discussthetransient room taxand theDeschutes County Fair &ExpoCenter, aswell astheefforts to relocatethe Redmond Rod & GunClub.

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Nina Walz, of Sisters, left, watches as The Amazing

show choir members rehearsed for an

upcoming concert that indudes both holThere's so much talent in this school, and iday tunes and pop music from 1941 to a lot of them are pretty advanced," said the present day. They segue seamlessly Marianne Thomas, the show choir direc- from a three-part round in Latin to the tor. Thomas also teaches amiddle school '70s classic "Landslide," where they exchoirclass and a standard choir class for periment with subtle choreography. "I've taken choir since middle school, high schoolers. A singer and performer herself, Thomas also teaches private and I love how Ms. Thomas lets us have voice and piano. a say in what music we sing and how we "I love the energy of working with perform it," said junior Aubrey Sorensen. groups, and choir is so vital. It creates "And I'm really looking forward to doing great energy," she said. more performances, not just singing." "Glee" has been a boon to school This first semester has been more choirs, Thomas said, both by making about working together and refining the

warm smile and a strong handshake. At 79, he still jogs for an hour each night, he said. Sunday's performance in Bend followed a Sat-

urday show in Klamath Falls. He was supposed to perform there two nights

but missed the Friday show due to the weather. "It took us 10 hours to

get from Salem to Klamath Falls," said Mario Mongelli, Kreskin's road manager. "It was a crazy trip. We were white-knuckling it the whole time."

Kreskin said he's performed in Oregon several times during his career but hadn't been in Bend since the 1970s.

"My life has been like

moves the choir in that direction, when

the group's only males formed a quartet to perform a showy version of Misty Mountains" fromthe movie"Theo," complete with percussive tableware, stomping and a plaintive violin solo by guest musician Madelyn Stacy, an eighth-grader. The girls watched raptly then erupted

an adventure, and I love to perform," he said. "I've

traveled all over the world. It's been very exciting." In addition to perform-

ing, Kreskin has worked

into cheers and applause when it was

with law enforcement to help witnesses remember

over. "This class has given me so much

details of crimes they've seen.

more confidence,"Sorensen said."I'm

finally opening up with my voice." — Reporter: 541-548-2186, lpugmire@bendbulletin.com

"I've worked on 84 crime

cases and have been helpful with about a third of them," he said.

SeeMentalist/A8

of families struggling in an economic crisis; $5; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. HIGHDESERT MUSEUM NATURALHISTORYPUB: Neson Ting presents "Monkeys on the Brink: The Struggle to SaveOur Closest Relatives"; free; 7 p.m., doors openat 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

TAKE6:Thegospel, R&B, pop and jazz acappela group performs a holiday concert; $35-$45 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. WEDNESDAY LUNCHANDLECTURE: PenelopeScambly Schott reads from hercollection of poems; bring asack lunch; included inthe price of admission; $12adults, $10ages65and older,$7 ages 5-12, freeages4and

younger; noon-1p.m.; High Desert Museum,59800 S. U.S. Highway97,Bend; 541-382-4754 orwww. hlghdesertmuseum.org. CHOCOLATE,WINE AND ALLTHATJAZZ: Featuring a silent auction, Willamette pies for sale, live music and awine wall; proceeds benefit Summit High School's alcohol and drug-free grad party; free; 5-9 p.m.; CafeSintra, 1024 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-390-2793 or www. summitstormboosters. com/grad party. "A MOVEMENTOF

MOVEMENT":A screening of the 2013 documentary film about the philosophy, lifestyle, movement and world of Pilates; $5; 7 p.m., doors open at 6p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. "PRIVATELIVES":A screening ofLondon's West End playplus behind-thescenesexperiencewith cast and crew;$15; 7p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 &IMAX, 680 S.W.PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-2901. HANZARAKI 5 CARY

NOVOTNY: The duo performs traditional Irish music; free;7-10 p.m.; McMenaminsOld St. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174 orwww. mcmenamins.com. THE WORLDFAMOUS POPOVICHCOMEDY PET THEATER: Gregory Popovich performs with his pets who wereoncestrays; $25-$35 plus fees; 7p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre. Olg.

"EVIL DEADTHE

MUSICAL(DEAD FORTHE HELLIDAYS)":Join Ash andhis friendsforatripto a cabin in thewoodswhere they accidentally unleash an evil force; $22for adults, $19 for students and seniors, $25 for thesplatter zone; 8 p.m.;2ndStreet Theater, 220 N.E Lafayette Ave., Bend;541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com.

Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-330-5728 or www. cascadehorizonband.org. HISTORYPUB:The Jefferson County Historical Society presentsthree short silentfilms depicting Western ranching and railroading beforeWorld War I; free; 5:30p.m.; Great Earth Natural Foods, 46 S.W. DSt., Madras; 54 I-475-1813.

THURSDAY

Contact:54t -383-0351, communitylife@hendhulletin.com or "Submit en Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.

CHRISTMASCONCERT: The CascadeHorizon Band performs Christmas music; free; 1:30 p.m.;


AS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013

LOCAL BRIEFING

BITS

JeffersonCoung school canceled There is no school today

tures, caused school officials to cancel school for all Jeffer-

son County School District 509-J schools. The website

Christopher Hollen

for Jefferson County stu-

Aug. 30, 1963 — Dec. 7, 2013 After a brave battle with

dents, according to the dis- would reopen on a regular trictwebsite. schedule Tuesday.

Myotonic Dystrophy, Christopher Hollern succumbed to complications from the disease

in multiple buildings, coupled with freezing tempera-

School is closed today.

Mentalist

names of two family mem-

Heating and water issues

did not say whether school Also, 'Ilrmalo Community — Bulletin staff

on Saturday, December 7. He

was surrounded by people who adore him, who talked, laughed, wept and massaged himuntil the end.

Chris was born to Mike and Sue Hollern on August 30th, 1963 in Palo Alto, California

and grew up in Bend. He graduated from Bend High School in 1980 and from Lewis and Clark College in 1984. He was a devoted and enthu-

siastic member of the Camp Nor'Wester family, starting as a camper at age 10 and working his way to counselor and Program Director. He remained in touch with many

of thecampers whose lives he helped shape for the rest of his life and many remained dose friends. While working with kids at Camp Nor'Wester Chris realized that he was meant to be an educator. He taught English at

Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts for six years while pursuing a Masters of Education at Harvard. He was

persuaded to leave Andover by the Pulitzer Prize winning professor, Dr. Robert Coles, who insisted he become his right hand man and the head sec-

tion leader of Harvard's most popular course, The Literature of Social Reflection. Students

begged,bribed,lied and cried to get a coveted spot in one of C hris's sections and it w a s

worth it, they all agreed. A western guy at heart, Chris returned to his beloved

Portland with dreams of opening a restaurant, which he and his good friend, Margot Leonard, did with a bang. Bima quickly became a Portland hotspot; a vibrant, beautiful,

d elicious restaurant in t h e heart of the newly developing Pearl District. Following

Bima's success they opened Holdens, right around the cor-

ner and it quickly became just as popular. Chris was known for his razor sharp wit and intellect, but

he wore his heart on his sleeve and could just as easily cry at a Raymond Carver short sto-

ry as he could an AT%T ad on TV. His booming laugh could be heard for blocks, whether he was being amused by one of beloved nieces and nephews or

simply agreeing (as usual) with Jon Stewart. In fact Jon Stew-

art is the onlyperson he agreed with regularly. Everybody and everything else was up for debate and, boy, could he debate.

No one was ever more sure of his own opinion! Chris was the best friend to

so many people, from so many different parts ofhis life and he will be desperately missed by all. Chris is survived by his parents, Mike and Sue Hollern;

his sister Leslie (Gene Lynch) nephews Conor and Dylan and nieces Kerry and Mallory; his sister Erica (Jeremy Kelly) and nephews Jack and Ben. Chris was predeceased by his brother Scott and sister Sheila. A small service for family and dose friends is planned. Donations in Chris's memory would be gratefully accepted by the Myotonic Dystrophy Foundation, P. O. Box 29543, San Francisco, CA 94129, or at

myotonic.org.

bers, her dog and even what type of pie she was contem"I need witnesses or poten- plating making from scratch tial witnesses to help them fo- — apple. "I knew he was going to be, cus their thoughts and piece together what they've seen," as his name says, amazing, he added. but I didn't realize how astonAs part ofhis performance, ishing he really was," said Ray

• y L st m

Continued fromA7

Kreskin asked the audience to

I•

Solley, the executive director

write several items of impor- of the Tower Theatre. "I sat in tance to them on slips of pa- the balcony for the show and per. He then was able to, with- couldhear audience members out seeing the papers, begin involuntarily squealing or naming the items they'd writ- gasping. That's when I realten down. For one woman, ized I was seeing something who was sitting close to the special." front of the theater, Kreskin was able to determine the

— Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin.com

Parks

gion visitors to park and walk in for large events. Continued fromA1 During a meeting Friday The site is landlocked, with to discuss gateway design opno vehicularaccess possible tions with Kat Langenderfer from its street frontage. and David Olsen, consultants Expanding the existing with H a rper H ou f P eterparking lot into the open son Righellis Inc., city staff space is not a good option be- learned the gateway's modest cause of the site's grade and budget was unlikely to covaccessibility, according to er the desired key elements, Community Development Di- and a phased approach or rector Heather Richards, but community partners would it has not been ruled out. be needed. Olsen and LanAccording to Public Works genderfer said they would reDirector Bill Duerden, a plan fine the concepts, with costs to modestly landscape the lot,

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attached, and bring it to a

whichhad become a mainte- joint meeting of the Redmond nance nuisance of weeds and Parks Commission and Dry blown-in litter, was expanded

with the availability of parks development funds and addi-

Canyon Advisory Committee later this month. The end goal

is a design out to bid by the end of January. Now the city is considering A major upgrade of the spending $50,000, discussing playground at Sam Johnson a variety of options induding Park and realignment of its a paved path from the inter- paved walking trail is also section's corner across the lot slated for 2014. and into the park as well as According to R ichards, other amenities such as signs about $450,000 has been or an electronic reader board, raised for the play structure, public art, benches or an in- with another $150,000 left to formation kiosk. go. Redmond Kiwanis Club "We're just starting to move has led the fundraising effort into an improvement mode for the large, multi-age, accesfrom a maintenance mode," sible playground.

V EAR E hl D S A L E I I

tional city tax revenues.

Duerden said. "We need to start thinking about where to

tatingpublic art mural.

An additional pedestrian access is in the works for Legion Park, which often overflows its parking during events. Currently a gravel path, the new paved path would cut across a cityowned lot on Southwest Canyon Drive and down into the

park. Previously the city had discussed a second vehicular

accessfrom the lot,Richards said, but the high cost and safety challenges — it crosses the bike/pedestrian Dry Canyon Trail — delayed any action.

of the park to its northwestern edge and cost an estimated

$90,000. Easement agreements are in the works, and

the new path is expected to be complete this spring. A paved trail along the irrigation canal that parallels U.S. Highway 97 has been pushed back a year, Richards

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has 143 sessions scheduled for

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December and 88 for January.

''We're happy with the numbers," Kron said.

munity banks, with far smaller

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541-389-3381

anyway. Addingthe state requirement

. ShanelleVega,

to their own policies would only

— Reporter: 541-617-7820, egluci'zlich@bendbulletin.com

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we're trying to pay as we go," she said. Grant funds were received for a trail from Quince to Maple avenues already, Richards said. Parks and ur-

keep bad loans on their books for longer. "Every kind of mortgage lenderhas theirown program, often ones that have been in place for years for working with ences remains low. distressed homeowners," CosSince the program was re- grove said.

reasons for setting the (exemp- launched in August, 20 sessions tion) levelwhere it is," Kron said. have concluded, with seven re-

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Negotiating agreements ban renewal funds will be to share parking lots at Red- used to extend the trail from mond High School and a Maple Avenue to Veterans commercial d e velopmentWay, probably in 2015. along Canyon Drive would, — Reporter: 541-548-2186, the city hopes, encourage Lelpugmire@bendbulletin.com

The mediation program"wants to capture lenders who have Continued fromA1 more experience doing a higher Bank of the Cascades ap- volume of these foredosures." plied for an exemption in 2012. Set up in July 2012, the first "Regarding the number of version of the mediation proexemption daims, we're not sur- gram applied only to pending prised," Department of Justice foredosuresstarted outside of spokesman Michael Kmn said. local courts, called nonjudicial After all, he said, the media- foredosures. tion law was implemented folLenders responded by shiftlowing a wave of foreclosures ed all their pending cases to spearheaded mainly by the local circuit courts to avoid country's five largest banksparticipating. Bank of America, Wells Fargo, The shift bzought active foreJPMorgan Chase, Citibank dosure cases to a halt across and Ally Bank. They hold up Oregon. State housing officials, to 70 percent of the nation's hoping to see hundreds of medimortgages. ation cases, were disappointed Each has initiated far more after just 21 mediation sessions than 250 foreclosures around weve scheduled in the program's Oregon throughout the hous- firstyear. ing crisis. In Bend alone, the By almost any measure, the five banks initiated nearly 1,400 program has made strides since foredosures b etween 2 0 08 then, although the number of and 2011, according to DOJ conciuded mediation confer-

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MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

A9

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

ive oseeano er a i seems

WI TV SPOTLIGHT By Jay Bobbin

In fact, the radio "Gunsmoke" his creative wings, since he'll would continue until 1961, also make his directing debut on featuring another notable who the show before its current

Zap2it

didn't make the transition to

Q

•Are there any plans to run •the series "24," perhaps on

cable?

— Cheryl Lykowski, Palatine, Ill.

E~Rl XPRI • .:

ber Floyd on "The Andy Griffith rerun? Show." (Milburn Stone was Doc — Jerry Strong, Buffalo, NY. in the TV series.) • Probably, if you thought • you did. Before his starWhen is "Community" dom really took hold, the actor • coming back'? appeared in the 1981 episode — Karen Ford, "Blood Brothers," playing a Columbus, Ohio soldier prevented from donat• Almost as soon as the ing blood because of his own • new year begins. The medical condition. InterestNBC comedy will launch its ingly, Harry Morgan — the

• that, since A&E Network

ing to one season (or "day") of the series — while it still was on Fox. Though it's been absentfrom regulartelecasts for a while but available on some subscription services, the original show could have a renaissance toward spring. Fox will

A

present the new limited-series

Courtesy Newscom

sequel "24: Live Another Day," Kiefer Sutherland, the star of the hit TV show "24," msy be back in with Kiefer Sutherland back the spotlight for "24: Live Another Day" on Fox. The limited-series as Jack Bauer, and that could sequel is expected sometime in the spring. inspire another outlet (the network's cable cousin FX, per-

Q •• wife" had been renewed I read that "Call the Mid-

Q•

What happened to "Hell • on Wheels"? It returned

s tarred i n

" Cannon" a n d

"Jakeand theFatman," played for three (?) episodes and then Matt Dillon on "Gunsmoke" was gone. before James Arness did. Is — Barbara Sellers,

for a Season 3. When is it

Antioch, Calif.

scheduled to air? — Kirsten Newland, Brighton, Mich. • As of this writing, PBS

A gust and October, the AMC

A • was only saying, "Spring 2014." In the meantime, a spe-

A

Q•

24-hour marathons, amount-

the earlier rounds of the series.

id I see Pat r i c k Q •• DSwayze in a "M*A*S*H"

Howard McNear, who would gain home-sctteen fame as bar-

• The show actually had A gave it repeats — sometimes in

haps?) to revisit at least some of

Season 4 is over.

TV with it: Doc was played by

• No, itreturned for more • than three. Between Au-

series played out all 10 scheduled episodes of its third season. The show has been picked

cial holiday episode of the se- up for a Season 4, with 13 new ries — involving such matters stories slated to begin running as the discovery of a huge ex- next summer. plosive and a polio outbreakis slated to be broadcast SunSomeone told me that day, Dec. 29. • William C onrad, who

Q•

that true'? — Frank Scott, Daytona Beach, Fla. Yes ... but on radio. Con-

fifth season with two back-to-

show's CoL Sherman Potter-

back episodes Jan. 2 ... and with creator and executive pro-

directed that episode.

ducer Dan Harmon back run-

Q

• I h eard on t h e C M A

ning the show after a season • Awards that Dolly Paraway. ton had been hurt in a car accident, so I was surprised to

Donnie Wahlberg al- see her in a new Christmas • ways seems to be gri- movie on Lifetime a few days macing on "Blue Bloods." Is he later. Can you explain'? happy being on the show'? — Evelyn Wallace,

Q•

— Ted Donnelly, Milwaukee • We normally wouldn't

Grand Junction, Colo. • Sure. Movies are film ed

A • purport to s peak for A• months before they're someone, but we have to seen -

even TV m o v ies such as Lifetime's "A Coun-

think he's pretty pleased with his situation on the CBS po-

try Christmas Story," the one you're referring to — so Parin that medium during its so- top-rated show on the broad- ton likely completed that long called "golden age," with his cast networks on Fridays, before the mishap from which deep voice heard on various guaranteeing Wahlberg a she was recuperating at the programs. The audio version steady paycheck ... something time of last month's CMAs. of "Gunsmoke" began in 1952 he had for only a short time on — Send questions of general and kept running after the tele- some of his past shows, such interestviaemail totvpipeline@ vision edition, with Arness as as "Big Apple," "Boomtown" tribune.com. Writers must include Marshal Dillon, premiered in and "Runaway." Also, "Blue their names, cities and states. 1955. Bloods" is letting him spread Personal replies cannot be sent.

A •• rad had quite a career

lice drama. It's typically the

amin eaves wi e on si eines

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • irtovie times are subject to change after press time. t

Dear Abby:I was laid off from work, but my husband, "Keith," works full time in a factory. We live with his parents. By the time

Keith gets home from work and gets cleaned up, it's time to eat dinner. Immediately afterward,

we always follow the same routine: We go in our bedroom and he goes on the computer to play video games, while I sit

DFP,R

Aggy

a nd watch TV a n d

play on my phone. We love each other and rare-

may just want to sit down and relax. But that doesn't mean you

so it's not like we do nothing at all. But I don't know how to improve our situation. — Calling for Help in Kokomo,Ind.

Dear Calling For Help:After a hard day's work, your husband

with some of y our

femalefriends. I agree that it's important for you and your husband not to get into a rut. That's why you need to budget so you CAN get out and

life. Because of her instability, I

torn between impulsiveness and careful planning. A mixture of both might deliver the results you seek. If you are single, refuse to tossyourself into a relationship just to have some company. You might not like spending time alone, but don't compromise yourself. If you stay available, you are likely Stars showthe kind to meet someone of day you'll have qu i te interesting ** * * * D ynamic this year. If you are ** * * Positive attached, the two ** * Average of you might spend ** So-so more time together * Difficult than you typically do. Make sure you choose activities you both enjoy. PISCES can make you uptight.

ARIES (March21-April19) ** * You will handle the back and forth of a situation well, though you would prefer clarity. Schedule some time with

a boss or someone you careabout. Dis-

— Is this Normal? in Arizona

Dear Normal: It is important that you determine exactly who y ou are, whether it i s a w a l k -

ing-wounded heterosexual, bisexual or homosexual. A licensed psychotherapist can help you with this, and do it in confidence. Regardlessof your sexual orientation, you should realize that

when breakups happen between couples — and that includes male/ male, female/female and hetero-

sexual — there is usually heartbreak involved. However, without risk there can be no reward, and

was granted custody of our son. celibacy is not the answer. If it Since the divorce I have devel- turns out that you are, indeed, gay, oped an attraction to men. Is this

then you should consider relocat-

normal after a nasty divorce'? I never thought of myself as gay or

ing to a more gay-friendly area.

bi until about a year afterward.

— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

You will gain a boss's respect as a result. Tonight: Till the wee hours.

Go with your gut feeling, especially regarding a creative project. You will know what to do. Expenses could be over the top. You might not immediately react to your financial situation, but later you could. Tonight: Enjoy time with a loved one.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, DEC. 9, 2013:Thisyearyou will feel

to experience the pain I went through.

couldn't schedule some activity together on a weekend — hiking, I have been celibate now for alskating, kayaking, going to an art most four years, and I'm trying show or seeing what's scheduled my best to set a good example for at the convention center. You could my son. I miss having someone to also make a date hold and share life with, but in the with other young area where I live, having a gay remarried couples, or lationship would cause me to lose occasionally sched- m y son. Any advice you can offer ule a girls' night out would be appreciated.

ly disagree about things, but this isn't fun for me. I have told Keith I feel ignored and I'd love to do h ave some fun t ogether a f ew something WITH him. He says be- times a month. cause our town is smallish, there's Dear Abby:Several years ago I not a lot to do that doesn't cost met "Holly," the love of my life. money. We married and had a child. Keith is into the video games, so Soon after our son's birth, I found much so that when we first met, out Holly had a boyfriend on the he'd sit in his bedroom and play side. Our divorce was one of the for hours on end. We're planning most traumatic experiences of my a vacation in the next month or so,

I know that I never again want

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * I n order to achieve a long-term goal, you must stop reacting to a difficult situation. Given time, you might understand where others are coming from. Choose the right path for you. Nobody canwalkinyourshoes.Tonight:Makea couple phone calls before you decide.

LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * Your instincts will guide you in the right direction. Use your creativity to loosen up a partner. You will see this person go from stern to easygoing as a result. Good feelings exist between you, which makes nearly anything possible. Tonight: Pretend it is Friday night.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sspt. 22)

** * * You might feel as if you can handle everything. Listen to news more openly from a partner; this information couldbe nothing less than good news.

Honoryour feelings, even if theyseema bit extravagant. Do not get irritated with a friend. Tonight: Your inner voice speaks.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * Keep communication flowing, and refuse to be closed off. Establish your boundaries. You and others will be more comfortable if you do. Many people clearly like being around you. Know that you don't have to settle. Tonight: Be carefulyou could overindulge!

You might question someone's AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fsb.18)

** * * ** * Approach a matter differently, authority, but the right thing to do is to with more openness than in the past. You follow this person's instructions. Inside, seem to want to move forward. Do not question whatever you want, yet remain TAURUS (April 20-May20) let a difficult friend or stern associate sap ** * * L ook at the many facets involved realistic about the chain of command. A your strength. This person appears vestfamily situation could distract you. Toin a decision. You might feel as if it is night: Say "yes" to an offer. ed in keepingyouon thesame levelas he more complicated than it is. In some way, or she is. Tonight: Relax. this situation reflects one of your inner LIBRA (Sspt. 23-Oct. 22) ** * You are easygoing, yet know exPISCES (Feb.19-Msrch20) issues. You would love to be impulsive, actlywhatyou want. You will need to be ** * * A llow your creativity to flourish but on the other hand you seevalue in planning. Tonight: Catch up on news. more verbal so that others understand when speaking to others or when working your chosen direction. Screen calls if you through problems. You will be amazed by GEMINI (May 21-June 20) the results. Be careful with forthcoming ** * You could feel pressured by others' have a strict schedule; otherwise, you news; you are only hearing half the story. expectations. Focusing on what is import- might find yourself distracted. Tonight: Squeeze in a visit to the gym. Get more facts and trust your instincts. ant might be difficult right now. You also Tonight: Whatever feels right. might be overly concerned with a partner SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) or loved one. Pull back a bit and prioritize. ** * * Let go of any mental interference. © King Features Syndicate cussions evolve. Together you might be involved in a new project. Tonight: Vanish with care; try not to leave tracks!

I

I

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 12 YEARSASLAVE(R) 12:50 • THEBOOKTHIEF (PG-13)1235,340,645,9:55 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 1:50, 4:55, 8 • THE CHRISTMAS CANDLE(PG) 2:20, 4:40 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 1:35, 4:20, 7:10, 10:05 • DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 1:05, 4:10,7, 9:35 • FROZEN(PG) t, 3:35, 4:35, 6:20, 9, 10 • FROZEN3-D(PG) I: I5,7: I5 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13)3:55, 7:30, 9:50 • HOMEFRONT (R) 1:25, 4:05, 6:50, 9:20 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)12:30, 2:30, 3:45, 6:15, 7:45, 9:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE IMAX (PG-13) 2, 6:30, 9:45 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 12:40, 3:25, 6:35, 9:10 • LEE DANIELS'THEBUTLER(PG-13) 6:55, 10 • OUT OFTHEFURNACE(R) I:40, 4:25, 7:20, 10:10 • PHILOMENA(PG-13) 12:45, 3:15, 7:50, 10:15 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)2:10,4:50,7:35, 10:15 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • Oue to Monday Night Football, no movies will be screened today. • After 7 p.m., showsare2f and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by alegal guardian.

5:25p.m. on ESPN, "NFL Football" — A clash of potential NFC playoff opponents is on tap tonight at Soldier Field in Chicago, where Jay Cutler and the Bears hope to use the home field to their advantage against Tony Romo and the Dallas Cowboys. Cutler should have little trouble finding receivers Brandon Marshall and Alshon Jeffery against a Cowboys pass defense that ranks dead last in the NFL. As for the Cowboys, they're hoping to exploit a Bears run defense that's ranked among the league's worst. 8 p.m. on 2 9, "Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town" — A lanky mailman with the voice of Fred Astaire explains Santa's origins in this1970 animated special, which sidesteps the St. Nicholas part. In this version, the future jolly old elf is a foundling adopted by the Kringles, a family of toymakers. He grows up with toys in his blood, so to speak, and feels called to give them away to the local youngsters, but mean old Burgermeister Meisterburger will have none of that. 8 p.m. on 6, "How I MetYour Mother" — Robin and Barney (Cobie Smulders, Neil Patrick Harris) make a startling discovery about a family matter as they head to Long Island for their wedding. Marshall's (Jason Segel) trip back east changes course, thanks to something he sees on the Internet. Lily (Alyson Hannigan) confronts Ted (Josh Radnor) about his feelings for Robin in "The Locket." 8 p.m. on BRAVO,"The Real Housewives ofBeverly Hills" — During a bonding trip to Palm Springs, Carlton confronts Kyle about a series of issues. Later, Brandi reveals that she andCarlton made out, and Carlton admits to being a practicing Wiccan. Joyce gets her back up when Brandi repeatedly calls her by the wrongname inthe new episode "Palm Springs Breakers." 9p.m. on29, "The Great Christmas Light Fight" —In each episode of this holiday decorating competition, airing over three Mondays, four families have 21 days to give their homes an extreme transformation in hopes of winning big money. Two people who know the E word — Michael Moloney and Sabrina Soto of "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" — judge their efforts. © Zap2it

Food, Home 8 Garden s • TheBulletin

' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com

•r

I

Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • MR. NOBODY(R)8: I5 • MUSCLESHOALS(PG) 3:30 • SIIORTTERM12(R) 6 I

I

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 4:15, 6:30 • FROZEN(PG) 4:15, 6:45 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)3:45, 7:15 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)4,6:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • ALL IS LOST (PG-13) 6:30 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 6:15 • FROZEN(PG) 6 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)6 Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 4:45, 7:10 • FROZEN(PG) 4:50, 7:20 • HOMEFRONT(R)5:IO,7:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)3:30, 6:30 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)4: 40,7 •

TV TODAY

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E„L,E VAT,„I O,N

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

• Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at bentlbulletiLcom/movies

Elevation Capital Strategies 775 sw Bonnetway suite 120 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapital.biz


A10

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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Scoreboard, B2 NHL, B2

Community Sports, B7 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

The week ahea

A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:

Today

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

SaturdayandSunday

NBA basketball, Portland at Utah, 6 p.m. PST(Comcast SportsNet): Despite a last-second loss to Dallas onSaturday night, the Blazers havethe best record in the Western Conference.Tonight, they face aJazz teamthat they drubbed 130-98 in Portland on Friday night. The Blazers are home toface the Houston Rockets on Thursday before embarking on a four-game road trip.

NFL football, SanDiegoat Denver, 5:25 p.m. PST (NFLNetwork): Peyton Manning andtheBroncosownthebest record in the conferenceand are looking to pull away in theAFCWest as they take on their division rivals from SanDiego. The Chargers are trying to stay alive in the AFCwild-card race.

High schoolgirls basketball in Bend, 7 p.m.:All three teams in the city of Bend are hosting nonconference games,all set to tip off at the sametime. Bend High entertains North Medford, Summit takes on South Medford, and Mountain View faces Battle Ground from Washington.

Club cross-country natlonals inBend, 9a.m.:Elite-level distance runners from around the U.S.will be among the hundreds expected to compete in the 2013 USATrack & Field National ClubCross Country Championships. Theevent will take place at River's EdgeGolf Course and starts with a 4-kilometer community race that is open to the public. Info: visitbend.com/crosscountry.

Seventh annualDlrksenDerbyat Mt. Bachelor skl area, noonboth lays: This two-day snowboard rally race event benefits Tyler Eklund, a Bendresident who was paralyzed during a snowboard competition in Truckee,Calif., in 2007. The Dirksen Derby includes nine different divisions, featuring elite men's and women's categories. Registration info: www.mtbachelor.com.

oi a i

MEN'SCOLLEGE

u in ui e : easonnew

BASKETBALL

itemS that ShOpperS CanpurChaSefOrthe zachlohnsonralliestowinthe Golf World Challenge, B8

iNgiDE QN g8 9 golferintheir lives,88 DUCKS, BEAVS HEADED TO BOWL GAMES

OSij gameppd. indefinitely CORVALLIS — Or-

egon State's men's basketball gameagainst Arkansas-Pine Bluff, onginally scheduled for Saturday andthen rescheduled for Sunday, has been postponed indefinitely. According to OSU officials, the Golden Eagles from Arkansas were not able to get out of Dallas en route to Oregonbecause of inclement weather. Administrators from both schools are working on a makeup date for later this season. The Beavers return to action on Sunday,Dec. 15, against Maryland Eastern Shore in anonconference gameset to start at 3 p.m. atOSU's Gill Coliseum.

COMMUNITY SPORTS

Oregon misses BCS bid, draws Texas in Alamo The Associated Press SAN ANTONIO — While No. 10 Oregon

did not land an at-large BCS bid, it did earn a date against Texas in one of the more in-

triguing matchups of the upcoming college football bowl season. The Ducks will square off against the Longhorns in their first Valero Alamo Bowl. The 2lst annual game is

— From wire, staff reports

set for Monday, Dec. 30;

kickoff at the Alamodome in San Antonio is sched-

Ducks holdoff Rebels in OT

uled for 3:45 p.m. PST. The

NeXtuP

game will be televised by

A road trip to Mississippi for No. 13Oregon results in a115-105 victory,B5

Es P N.

Oregon (10-2) won its first eight games this season and was in the national title discussion before los-

ing at Pac-12 Conference

NBA

foe Stanford on Nov. 7. The Ducks also got blown out

Raptors spoil Kobe's return

at Arizona before rallying to beat rival Oregon State 36-35.

"We had a tough kind of four-game

stretch there at the end of the season, kind of stubbed our toe a little bit," said first-year Oregon head coach Mark Helfrich. "But

we'll be hungry to get back out there." Unranked Texas (8-4) will play in San Antonio for the second straight year, having

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Troy Wells, from Durango, Colo., competing in the elite men's category, sports a frosty beard while taking part in the Deechutee Cup cyclocroae race on Saturday in the Old Mill District in Bend.

Bryantscores 9 points in his return to the Los Angeles Lakers, but it's Toronto that pulls off the106-94 victory on Sunday night, B4

beaten Oregon State 31-27 in the 2012 Alamo Bowl.

SeeOregon/B7

Inside • Auburn, Florida State set to battle for BCS title in Pasadena,B7 • A complete list of bowl games,B2

NFL

• Arctic temperaturesdo not deter cyclists in the final day ofcyclocross Cameron Beard, a 15-year-old freshman at Bend's Summit High, owes his start in cyclocross to one of the

The Associated Press HONOLULU — The Oregon State Bea-

vers will not be home for Christmas — or for Christmas Eve, anyway. Oregon State will play Boise State in the

sport's biggest names. "We hosted (cyclist) Tim Johnson during the Cascade (Cycling) Classic maybe 10 or 12 years ago," Beard said Sunday after finishing in the middle of the pack in the men's Category A race at the Cross Crusade's season fi-

nalein Bend."Then a coupleyearsago we watched him down here (at the Deschutes Brewery cyclocross course near the Old Mill District) at the 'cross national champi-

NeXt uP HawaiiBowl, vs.BoiseState

Bowl has a g reat tradi-

tion and we are excited to bring our team, which

time cyclocross national champion, won Saturday's UCI

Deschutes Brewery Cup in Bend before riding Sunday Joe Kline i The Bulletin — again, in frigid below-freezing temperatures — in the Scott Chapin, of Santa Cruz, Calif., takes part in the elite Cross Crusade's 2013 series finale on the same course.

SeeCyclocross/B7

men's category event on Saturday in the Old Mill District in Bend.

NATIONAL FINALSRODEO

Terrebonne'sFossfirst in bareback average

The Tuesday night game at Aloha Stadium will kick off at 5 p.m. PST. The game

Bulletin staff report points, respectively. Mote, a former Culver resident, enLAS VEGAS — Austin Foss continues to impress at tered the 2013 NFR first on the bareback money list but the NFR. now sits in second place behind Kaycee Feild. Competing in his first National Finals Rodeo, Foss, Team roper Brandon Beers, of Powell Butte, just the 21-year-old cowboy from Terrebonne, is alone in missed placing in the fourth round, as he and partner first in the bareback average through four rounds of Jim Ross Cooper, of Monument, N.M., registered a time competition at the Thomas & Mack Center. Foss tied of 6.3 seconds Sunday night, less than half a second for fifth Sunday, his third check in three days, posting out of sixth place. Prineville's Charly Crawford and his

will be televised by ESPN.

a bareback ride of81pointsto earn a $3,906.25 check.

partner, Ryan Motes, of Weatherford, Texas, did not re-

Central Oregon's otherbareback ridersdid nothave as muchsuccess Sunday. Bobby Mote and Steven Pee-

cord a time in Sunday's fourth round.

bles finished out of the money with rides of 77 and 75.5

round, begins today at 7 p.m.

featuresseveral natives of

the great state of Hawaii, to represent the Pac-12 Conference."

The Beavers (6-6) have been bowl eligible since their win at California on Oct. 19. SeeOSU /B7

Packers Falcons

21 2

Browns

2 26

ets Raiders

3 27

Eag es Lions

3 20

Dolphins Steelers

3 28

Buccaneers Bills

onships, which he won. After that, I started racing." Johnson, who lives in Topsfield, Mass., and is a six-

Hawaii Bowl on Dec. 24. "I am thrilled that our

football team has an opportunity to play another game at an exciting d estination against an outstanding opponent in Boise State," said Beavers head coach Mike Riley.

4 28

Patriots

By Beau Eastes The Buuetin

OSU will meet Boise St. in Hawaii on ChristmasEve

Bengals Colts

The halfway mark of the 10-day rodeo, the fifth

Chiefs Redskins

4 10

Ravens Vikings

2 26

Broncos Titans

51 28

Cardlna s

Rams

3 10

Chargers Giants

3 14

9ers Seahawks

1 17

Saints Panthers

31 13

Seattle falls to San Francisco The 49ers deny the Seahawks achance to clinch the division,B3


B2

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

MONDAY BASKETBALL

Time

Men's college, GothamClassic, Bryant at Notre Dame Men's college, Manchester at Butler

TV/Radio

4 p.m. ESPNU 5 p.m. Fox Sports 1

FOOTBALL

NFL, Dallas at Chicago HOCKEY NHL, Columbus at Pittsburgh SOCCER English Premier League, Swansea City AFC vs Hull City AFC

4:30 p.m.

N B CSN

noon

NBCSN

Beysbasketball:Marist at MountainView,6 p.m.; Cleve landatRedmond,6p.m.

7 p.m. Great American Country

Thursday Wreslling: MadrasatSummit, 7p.mr Swimming:Ridgeview,Redmond, Sisters at Cascade SwimCenter, 4p.m.

Time Men's college, Kansas atFlorida 4 p.m. Men's college, Oakland at Indiana 4 p.m. Men's college, Evansville at Xavier 4 p.m. Men's college, South Dakota at KansasState 5 p.m. Men's college, Boise State at Kentucky 6 p.m. Men's college, Gonzagaat West Virginia 6 p.m. Men's college, Idaho State at Utah 6 p.m. Men's college, NJIT atSeton Hall 6 p.m. Men's college, Nevadaat California 8 p.m.

TV/Radie

BASKETBALL

ESPN ESPN2

Fox Sports1 Root ESPN ESPN2

Pac-12 Fox Sports1 Pac-12

HOCKEY

4:30 p.m.

N B CSN

1 1:30 a.m.

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11:30a.m. Fox Sports1 11:30 a.m. Fox Sports 2 7 p.m. Fox Sports 2 7 p.m. Great American Country

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SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL RSPtOFS tf8dO G8$'tO KlllgS —The Sacramento Kings are making another major moveunder newowner Vivek Ranadive in hopes of turning around the franchise's struggles. TheKings have reached anagreement to acquire forward Rudy Gayfrom Toronto in a multiplayer trade, aperson familiar with the deal said Sunday night. The person, who spoke oncondition of anonymity because the trade is still pending NBA approval, said the deal is expected to be official today after players pass physicals. TheRaptors will receive Greivis Vasquez, PatrickPatterson,JohnSalmonsandChuckHayes.The Kings also will acquire Aaron Grayand Quincy Acy.

SOCCER UCLAwinsNCAAwomen's soccer title in overtime

— Kodi Lavrusky gaveUCLAits first NCAA women's soccer title Sunday, scoring in the 97th minute to lift the Bruins past Florida State 1-0 in overtime in cold and rainy conditions in Cary, N.C.Making a run from the back, MeganOyster brought the ball down the left side of the field before crossing over to the middle. Sheslipped a pass in front of the goal to Lavrusky, who left-footed the ball into the bottom right corner of the net past diving goalkeeper KelseyWys. It was the first title game decided in overtime since 2002.

OLYMPICS JeSSe OWenS OlymPiC gold medal SellS fOr$1.4M — An Olympic gold medal won byJesse Owensat the1936 Berlin Games has sold for a record $1.4 million in an online auction. SCP Auctions says an anonymous bidder paid $1,466,574, the highest price for a piece of Olympic memorabilia. Theonline auction endedSunday. Owens won gold in the100- and 200-meters, 400 relay andlong jump at the gamesattended by Adolph Hitler, who used the Olympics to showcasehisideasofAryansupremacy. — From wire reports

Capitals pick up4-1 victory over Rangers The Associated Press NEW YORK

NHL ROUNDUP

— J a s on

Chimera, Steve Oleksy and

and Chicago scored a sea-

Mikhail Grabovski scored

son-high three times on the

second-period goals to pow- power play in a win over er the Washington Capitals Florida. to a 4-1 win over the New

York Rangers on Sunday night. Washington defenseman Nate Schmidt added a goal in the third for the Capitals, who beat Nashville at home

on Saturday. Schmidt, a 22-year-old rookie, scored his first NHL goal in that

game. Grabovski's goal came on a penalty shot.

IN THE BLEACHERS In the Bleachers O2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

~ggN 5Sc+g

Sl'ECN TE/eS

Wednesday

Friday Boys basketball: Bendat NorthMedford, 7 p.m.; Summit atSouthMedford, 7 p.m.; Dallas at Redmond, 6p.mcRidgeviewat North Marion, 7 p.m.; CascadeatMadras,7p.m.; CrookCountyat GladstoneTournam ent, 7:30p.mcLaPine at Douglas Tourname nt, 4p.mcTaft atSisters, 7 p.m.; Culver at Dufur,TBD;Central Christianat Wigamette Valley Charter, 8 p.m. Girls baskelbag: NorthMedfordat Bend, 7 p.m.; SouthMedfordat Summit, 7 p.m.; BattleGround (Wash.) atMountainView,7 p.m.; CrookCounty at GladstoneTournament, 7:30p.m.; Ridgeviewat North Marion,7 p,mcCascade atMadras,5:30 p.m.; La Pineat Douglas Tournament, 4 p.m.;Culver at Dufur,TBD;Central Christianat Wigamette ValleyCharter,7;30p.m.; Lowell at Gilchrist, 3;30

f

I j

W ild 3, S harks 1: S T . PAUL, Minn. — Josh Hard-

ing made 37 saves in another strong home outing, and Minnesota beat San Jose despite recording only 13 shots. Bruins 5, Maple Leafs 2:

p.ml

TORONTO — Carl Soder-

berg and Torey Krug scored second-period power-play goals, and Boston defeated Toronto. The Leafs controlled the play early on and

In his fourth NHL game, led 1-0 after the first on a Philipp Grubauer made 30 goal by Peter Holland. saves for Washington (16Canucks 3, Avalanche 1: 12-2) to earn his first career VANCOUVER, British Cowin. The Capitals have won lumbia — Mike Santorelli four of five. scored two goals and addNew York (15-15-1), beaten ed an assist in Vancouver's at home in overtime by New victory over Colorado. The Jersey on Saturday, has lost Canucks (17-10-5) earned three of five. their fifth win in sixth games Also on Sunday: and moved within a point of Blackhawks 6, Panthers 2: the Avalanche (20-8) in the CHICAGO — Patrick Sharp tight Western Conference had a goal and two assists, standings.

College Bowl Glance

AU TimesPST

Saturday, Oec.21 New MexicoBowl At Albuquerque WashingtonState(6-6) vs. ColoradoState (7-6), 11 a.m.(ES PN) Las VegasBowl FresnoState(11-1) vs. SouthernCal (9-4), 12:30 p.m.(ABC ) FamousIdaho Potato Bowl At Boise, Idaho Buffalo(8-4)vs. SanDiegoState (7-5), 2:30p.m. (ESPN) New OrleansBowl Tulane(7-5) vs. Louisiana-Lafayette (8-4), 6 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Oec.23 Beef 'O' Brady'sBowl AI St. Petersburg,Fla. Ohio (7-5)vs.East Carolina(9-3),11 a.m.(ESPN) Tuesday,Oec.24 Hawaii Bowl At Honolulu OregonState(6-6) vs. BoiseState (8-4), 5 p.m. (ESPN) Thursday, Oec.26 Little Caesars PizzaBowl At Detroit BowlingGreen(10-3) vs. Pittsburgh(6-6), 3 p.m. (ESPN)

No. 13 Oregon115, Mississipqi 105 (OT) Moser8-135-624,Austin0-00-00, Young7-13 1-219, Loyd 4-714-16 23,Dotson6-13 0-013, Calliste 3-65-613,Amardi4-51-29, Abdul-Bassit 0-0 0-0 0, Cook6-8 2-314. Totals 38-66 28-36 115.

Women's College

NFR

FOOTBALL

Sunday'sSummary

MISSISSIPPI(6-2) Jones3-50-06, Cox4-6 2-410, Newby0-0 0-1 0, Miginghaus3-7 8-1215, Summers4-12 2-212, White 4-8 5-5 15,Saiz2-2 0-0 4,Perez 0-3 4-44, Henderson11-27 7-10 39. Totals 31-70 28-38 105. Halftime —Mississippi 38-37. End Of Regulation — Tied 89. 3-Point Goals—Oregon11-18(Young 4-4, Moser3-5, Cagiste2-3, Loyd1-2, Dotson1-4), Mississippi15-35(Henderson10-23, Summers 2-3, White 2-4, Miginghaus 1-2, Jones0-1, Perez0-2). FouledOut—Millinghaus, Perez,Young.ReboundsOregon34 (Moser10), Mississippi 36 (Jones9). Assists—Oregon25 (Loyd15), Mississippi17 (Summers,White4). Total Fouls—Oregon27, Mississippi 28. Technical —Amardi. A—8,212.

Wrestling: Redm ond, Ridgeview,Sisters, Madras, Culverat CulverInvite,7p.m.; CrookCounty, Redmond atCoast ClassicTournament Tiemin North Bend,TBD Swimming: Centennial atMadras,4:45 p.m.

National Finals Rodeo Thomas &MackCenter, LasVegas Sunday night Round Four Bareback riding: 1. Jessy Davis, Power, Mont., 86points onGrowney Brothers Rodeo's Raggidy Ann,$18,630;2. RyanGray,Cheney, Wash., 84.5, $14,724;3.WillLowe,Canyon,Texas,84.0, $11,118; 4. KayceeFeild, Payson, Utah, 81.5, $7,813; 5. (tie)AustinFoss,Terrebonne,Ore., and Caleb Bennett,Morgan,Utah,81,33,906 each;7. J.R. Vezain,Cowley,Wyo.,80.5;8.TyBreuer,Mandan,N.D.,79;9.BobbyMote,Culver,Ore.,77;10. Jared Smith, CrossPlains, Texas,76; 11. Steven Peebles,Redmond,Ore.,75.5;12. StevenDent, Mullen, Neb.,75; 13.WesStevenson, Lubbock,Texas, 73; 14. Clint Cannon,Waller, Texas,70; 15. Casey Colletti, PuebloCol , o., NS Steer wrestling:1. DeanGorsuch, Gering, Neh., 3.1seconds,$18,630; 2. BrayArmes, Ponder, Texas,3.5,$14,724; 3. K.C.Jones,Decatur, Texas, 3.6, $11,118; 4. Matt Reeves, CrossPlains,Texas, 3.8, $7,813; 5.Jule Hazen, Ashland, Kan.,4.0, $4,808; 6. JasonMiler, Lance Creek, Wyo., 4.1, $3,005; 7.DakotaEldridge, Elko,Nev., 4.5; 8. Straws Milan, Cochrane,Alberta, 4.6; 9. Tyler Pearson, Louisville, Miss.,4.8; 10.StanBranco, Chowchiga, Calif., 5.2;11.TrevorKnowles, Mount Vernon, Ore., 5.4; 12. CaseyMartin, Sulphur,La., 5.7; 13.Wade Sumpter,Fowler,Colo., 5.9;14. HunterCure, Holliday,Texas,12.3; 15.LukeBranquinho, LosAlamos, Calif., NT. Team roping:1. NickSartain, Dover,Okla./Rich Skel ton,Llano,Texas,4.2seconds,$18,630;2.Kaleb Driggers,Albany,Ga./TravisGraves,Jay, Okla., 4.9, $14,724; 3.ClayTryan, Bilings, Mont./JadeCorkig, Fallon,Nev.,5.2, 311,118;4. DustinBird,CutBank, Mont. /PaulEaves,Lonedell,Mo.,5.4,$7,813;5.Luke Brown, Stephenvile, Texas/Kollin VonAhn, Blanchard, Okla., 5.6,34,808;6.Turtle Powellt Stephenvile,Texas/Dugan Kely, PasoRobles, Calif., 6.1, 33,005;7. BrandonBeers, Powell Butte,Ore./JimRossCooper, Monument,N.M.,6.3;8. ColhyLoveg, Madisonvile, Texas/MartinLucero,Stephenvige,Texas, 9.9; 9.Riley Minor, Ellensburg,Wash./BradyMinor, Ellensburg, Wash., 10.9;10.Derrick Begay,SebaDalkai, Ariz./ CesardelaCruz,Tucson, Ariz., 14.2;11r(tie) Trevor Brazile, Decatur,Texas/Patrick Smith, Lipan, Texa s; ErichRogers,RoundRock, Ariz./Cory Petska, Marana, Ariz.;DrewHorner, Plano,Texas/Buddy Hawkins I , Columbus,KancCharly Crawford, Prinevile, Ore./ RyanMotes, Weatherford,Texas;andJustin VanDavis, Madisonvige,Texas/Clay OB ' rien Cooper, Gardnerville, Nev.,NT . Saddle bronc riding:1. Jake Wright, Milford, Utah, 86 pointson Brookman-Hyland Rodeo' s Kid Rock, $18,630;2.Wade Sundeg,Boxholm,lowa, 83.0, $14,724;3. Tyler Corrington,Hastings, Minn., 82.5, $11,118;4. Sterling Crawley, Stephenvile, Texas, 78.5,$7,813;5. HeithDeMoss, Heflin, La.,78.0, $4,808; 6.TaosMuncy, Corona, N.M., 76.5, $3,005; 7. JacobsCrawley, Stephenvige, Texas,76; 8. Jesse Wright,Milford,Utah,74.5; 9.(tie) IsaacDiaz,Desdemona, Texas,andColeElshere,Faith,S.D.,71.5each; 11. Cort Scheer,Elsmere, Neh., 67; 12.(tie) Cody Wright, Milford, Utah;ChadFerley, Oelrichs, S.D.; Chet Johnson,Sheridan, Wyo.;andBradleyHarter, Weatherford,Texas, NS. Tie-downroping:1. (tie) CodyOhl, Hico, Texas,andRyanJarrett,Comanche,Okla.,6.9seconds, $16,677each;3. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas, 7.0, $11,118;4.Scott Kormos,Teague,Texas, 8.2,$7,813; 5.TysonDurfey,Colbert,Wash.,8.5,$4,808;6.Shane Hanchey ,Sulphur,La.,8.6,$3,005;7.CalebSmidt, Begville,Texas,8.7; 8.ShaneSlack, Idahel, Okla.,9.1; 9. (tie)TufCooper, Decatur, Texas,andTimber Moore, Aubrey,Texas, 9.6 each; 11.Justin Maass, Giddings, Texas,10.0;12. RandagCarlisle, BatonRouge, La., 11.9; 13. C l i f Cooper, Deca tur, Texas,12.5; 14. StetsonVest, Childress,Texas, 14.5; 15. Sterling Smith,Stephenvile,Texas,17.5. Barrel racing:1. TaylorJacob,Carmine, Texas, 13.49seconds,$18,630;2.KaleyBass,Kissimmee, Fla., 13.77,$14,724;3. Sherry Cervi, Marana,Ariz., 13.81, $11,118; 4. BrittanyPozzi, Victoria, Texas, 13.82, $7,813;5.Sabrina Ketcham,Yeso,N.M., 13.86,$4,808;6.ShadaBrazile, Decatur, Texas,13.88, $3,005 ; 7.Michele McLeod,Whi tesboro, Texas, 13.89; 8.LisaLockhart,Oelrichs,S.D., 14.05;9.Jane Melhy, Burneyvile,Okla.,14.08; 10.Christy Loflin, Franktown,Colo., 14.09; 11.JeanWinters, Texline, Texas,14.20;12.MaryWalker, Ennis,Texas, 18.78; 13. FallonTaylor, Whitesboro, Texas,19.07;14. Sydni Blanchard, Albuquerque, N.M.,19.28;15. TrulaChurchill, Valentine,Neb.,23.91. Bull riding:1. J.W.Harris, Mugin,Texas,88.5 points onPeteCarr's Classic ProRodeo's Medicine Show, $18,630;2. (tie) TrevorKastner,Ardmore, Okla., and ChandleBo r wnds, Lubbock,Texas,87.5, $12,921 each; 4. (tie) TylerSmith, Fruita, Colo.,andSteve Woolsey,Payson, Utah,86, 36,310each; 6. Cody Campbell, Summ ervile, Ore., 85, $3,005; 7. Cody Teel, Kountze,Texas, 81; 8. ShaneProctor, Grand Coulee,Wash.,80.5; 9. Parker Breding, Edgar, Mont., 79;10. (tie)TreyBenton glr RockIsland, Texas; Cole Echols,ElmGrove, La.; Elliot Jacohy,Fredricksburg, Texas;JoshKoschel, Nunn, Colo.; CooperDavis, Jasper,Texas,andTylerWilis, Wheatland, Wyo., NS.

Charlotte77,AppalachianSt. 59 EastCarolina77,Mount Olive75 FloridaSt.77, Jacksonville St.53 glinois81,Auburn62 Oregon115,Mississippi105, OT VCU69,OldDominion48 VirginiaTech61, Miami60, OT Midwest Creighton82 Nebraska67 Detroit 70,RhodeIsland 68 Far West ColoradoSt.109, SWOklahoma55 Saint Mary's(Cal) 93,E.Washington 65 SanDiegoSt.70,Washington63 SouthernCal78, BostonCollege62

OREGON (B-O)

RODEO

RODEO

National Finals Rodeo, sixth round

Tuesday Boys baskelbag:Sistersat Madras,7p,mcLa Pine at Ridgeview, 7p.mcChiloquin atGilchrist, 7 p.m. Girl sbaskelbalhMcKayatRedmond,7p.m.;Madras at Sisters, 7p.m.;Ridgeviewat LaPine, 7 p.m.; Mitchell at Trinity Lutheran,5 p.mcChiloquin at Gilchrtst,5:30p.m.

ESP N

TUESDAY

NHL, Nashville at NewYork Rangers SOCCER UEFAChampions League, SL Benfica vs Paris Saint-Germain FC UEFAChampions League, Manchester United vs Shakhtar Donetsk UEFAChampions League, Galatasar yA.S.vsJuventusFC UEFAChampions League, FC Bayern Munich vs Manchester City FC

Today Girlsbasketball: BendatSpringfield, 6 p.m.

5 :25 p.m.

RODEO

National Finals Rodeo, fifth round

ON DECK

Poinsettia Bowl At SanDiego Northernglinois(12-1)vs.UtahState(8-5), 6:30p.m. (ESPN) Friday, Oec.27 Military Bowl At Annapolis,Md. Marshal(9-4) l vs.Maryland(7-5),11:30 a.m.(ESPN) Texas Bowl At Houston Minnesota(8-4)vs.Syracuse(6-6), 3p.m. (ESPN) Fight HungerBowl At San Francisco BYU(8-4)vs.Washington(8-4), 6:30p.m. (ESPN) Saturday,Dec.28 Pinstrlpe Bowl At NewYork NotreDam e(8-4) vs.Rutgers(6-6), 9a.m.(ESPN) Belk Bowl At CharluNe, N.C. Cincinnati(9-3)vs. NorthCarolina (6-6), 12:20p.m. (ESPN) Russell AthleticBowl At Orlando,Fla. Miami(9-3)vs.Louisville (11-1),3:45p.m.(ESPN) Buffalo Wild WingsBowl At Tempe, Ariz. KansasState(7-5) vs. Michigan(7-5), 7;15 p.m. (ESPN) Monday,Dec.30 Armed ForcesBowl At Fort Worlh, Texas Middle Tenne ssee(8-4) vs. Navy(7-4), 8:45 a.m. (ESPN) Music City Bowl At Nashville, Tenn. Mississippi(7-5)vs.Georgia Tech(7-5), 12:15p.m. (ESPN) Alamo Bowl At SanAntonio Oregon(10-2)vs.Texas(8-4), 3:45p.m. (ESPN) Holiday Bowl At SanDiego ArizonaState(10-3) vs.TexasTech(7-5), 7:15p.m. (ESPN) Tuesday, Dec.31 AdvoCareV100Bowl At Shreveporl, La. Arizona(7-5) vs. BostonCollege(7-5), 9;30a.m. (ESPN) Sun Bowl At El Paso, Texas VirginiaTech(8-4)vs. UCLA(9-3), 1I a.m.(CBS) LiberlyBowl At Memphis, Tenn. Rice(9-3) vs.Mississippi State(6-6),1 p.m.(ESPN) Chick-fil-A Bowl At Atlanta TexasA&M(8-4) vs.Duke(10-3), 5 p.m.(ESPN) Wednesday,Jan. 1 Hearl of Dallas Bowl At Dallas UNLV (7-5)vs. NorthTexas(8-4), 9 a.m.(ESPNU) Gator Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Nebraska (8-4) vs.Georgia(8-4), 9a.m.(ESPN2) Capital OneBowl At Orlando,Fla. Wisconsin(9-3) vs. SouthCarolina (10-2), 10a.m.

(ABC)

OutbackBowl At Tampa, Fla. lowa(8-4)vs.LSU(9-3),10 a.m.(ESPN) Rose Bowl At Pasadena,Calif. Stanford(11-2)vs. MichiganState (12-1), 2 p.m. (ESPN) Fiesta Bowl At Glendale, Ariz. Baylor(11-1)vs.UCF(11-1),5:30 p.m.(ESPN) Thursday, Jan. 2 Sugar Bowl At NewOrleans Alabama(11-1) vs. Oklahoma(10-2), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN) Friday,Jan.3 OrangeBowl At Miami OhioState(12-1) vs.Clemson(10-2), 5 p.m.(ESPN) Cotton Bowl At Arlington,Texas Missouri(11-2)vs.OklahomaState (10-2), 4:30p.m. (FOX) Saturday, Jan. 4 BBVACompassBowl AI Birmingham,Ala. Vanderbilt(8-4)vs.Houston (8-4), 10a.m.(ESPN) Sunday,Jan. 5 GoDaddytcomBowl AI Mobile, Ala. ArkansasState (7-5) vs. Ball State(10-2), 6 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Jan. 6 BCSNational Championship At Pasadena, Calif. Florida State(13-0) vs. Auburn(12-1), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Six computerrankingsareusedto determinethe overall computercomponent. Thehighestand lowest rankingfor eachteamis dropped, andthe remaining four areaddedanddivided to producea Computer Rankings Percentage.Thesix computer ranking providers areAnderson&Hester, RichardBigingsley,Cogey Matrix,Kenneth Massey,JeffSagarin, andPeterWolfe. Eachcomputer rankingaccountsfor schedulestrength in its formula. The APTop26 TheTop25teamsin TheAssociated Presscolege football poll,withfirst-placevotes in parentheses,recordsthroughDec.7, total pointsbasedon25 points for a first-place votethroughonepoint fora25th-place vote,andpreviousranking: R ecord Pls P v 1 . Florida St. (56) 13 - 0 1, 496 I 1 2-1 1,444 3 2. Auburn (4) 1 1-1 1,376 4 3. Alabama 1 2-1 1,278 10 4. Michigan St. 1 1-2 1,217 7 5. Stanford 1 1-1 1,185 9 6. Baylor 1 2-1 1,130 2 7. OhioSt. 8 . South Carolina 10 - 2 1, 099 8 9. Missouri 1 1-2 1,066 5 10. Oregon 10-2 88 0 12 11. Oklahom a 10-2 87 8 18 12. Clemson 10-2 84 8 13 13. Oklahoma St. 10-2 79 7 6 14. LSU 9-3 7 2 6 14 15. UCF 11-1 62 9 15 16. Arizona St. 10-3 61 4 11 17. UCLA 9-3 5 4 4 17 18. Louisville 11-1 52 5 19 19. Wisconsin 9-3 3 8 3 21 20. Texas A8M 8-4 2 8 2 22 21. Fresno St. 11-1 22 7 24 10-3 20 1 20 22. Duke 8-4 1 9 6 25 23. Georgia 1 2-1 14 4 16 24. N.Illinois 8-4 76 NR 25.NotreDame Othersreceivingvotes: SouthernCal74, lowa48, Miami 47, Vanderbilt 25,Texas22, Cincinnati 11, BowlingGreen10,Washington 9, Rice7, N.Dakota St. 4, Minnesota 2.

USATodayTop25 Pol The USA Today Top25 football coachespoll, with first-placevotes in parentheses, recordsthrough Dec.7,total pointsbasedon25 points for first place through onepoint for 25th,andprevious ranking: Record Pls Pvs 1. FloridaState(62) 1 3- 0 1 550 I 2. Auburn 1 2-1 1486 3 3. Alabama 11-1 1414 4 4. Michigan State 12 - 1 1 3 4 2 9 5. Baylor 1 1-1 1275 t 7 6. OhioState 12-1 1211 2 7. Stanford 1 1-2 1188 1 0 8. SouthCarolina 1 0-2 1108 t 7 9. Missouri 11-2 1088 5 10-2 91 3 15 10. Oklahom a 10-2 89 9 11 11. Clemson 10-2 88 7 12 12. Oregon 13. Oklahoma State 1 0- 2 845 6 9-3 7 1 9 14 14. LSU 15. CentralFlorida 11 - 1 658 17 11-1 61 1 16 16. Louisville 10-3 60 2 13 17. Arizona State 18. UCLA 9-3 5 2 0 19 19. Wisconsin 9-3 4 0 8 21 20. Fresno State 11-1 34 4 22 21.Texas A&,M 8-4 2 4 7 25 21.Duke 10-3 24 7 20 23. Northernglinois 1 2 - 1 1 4 9 18 24. Georgia 8-4 135 N R 25. Miami(Fla. ) 9-3 73 NR Othersreceivingvotes:Cincinnati 47; Vanderbilt 40; SouthernCalifornia 33; lowa30;Texas27; Rice23; BowlingGreen12; NotreDame8; Minnesota6; Ball State 2;Nebraska1; VirginiaTech1; Washington1. Harris Top26 The Top 25teamsin theHarris InteractiveCollege FootbalPol l l,withfirst-placeyotes inparentheses,recordsthroughDec. 7,total pointsbasedon25 points for afirst-place votethroughonepointfora25th-place

voteandpreviousranking;

Sunday'sGames East AmericanU.47, Drexel 41 BostonCollege65, Hartford 45 CCSU82,Vermont 68 Duquesne 86, St. Francis(Pa.)66 PennSt. 77,Georgetown68 StonyBrook71, Lafayette61 South Alabama 51, Houston 44 FloridaSt.71,Jacksonville 33 Indiana77,MoreheadSt. 54 Louisiana-Monroe 85,StephenF.Austin 83 NC State 91, Elon51 SouthCarolina76, Charlotte61 SouthFlorida72,Stetson68 Tennessee 75, Texas61 Troy 94,Evansville 86 Tulane82,LoyolaNO66 Southwest Duke94,Oklahoma85 TexasA&M-CC68,Texas-PanAmerican54 Midwest BowlingGreen87, Milwaukee64 Cincinnati83,YoungstownSt. 62 GeorgiaSt. 56,KentSt. 55 Gonzaga 59,OhioSt.58 lowa St.79,CalSt.-Fullerton 52 Minnesota46,North Dakota44 Missouri126,Bradley55 Nebraska95, UtahSt. 75 Purdue91, IPFW70 Far West ColoradoSt.86, Denver78 FresnoSt.69,SantaClara49 Portland85, BoiseSt. 71 San Diego 79, Seattle 56 Tournament ASUClassic Championship Ariz onaSt.74,LongBeachSt.67,OT Third Place Harvard74,SacredHeart 63 Brown Classic Championship Fairfield 80,Maine59 Third Place Brown63,MorganSt. 53

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE

AU TimesPST

EaslernConference AtlanticDivision Boston Montreal Detroit Tampa Bay Toronto Ottawa Florida Buffalo

GP W L OT PlsGF GA 3 0 20 8 2 4 2 84 61 3 1 19 9 3 4 1 85 65 3 1 15 9 7 3 7 85 82 2 9 17 10 2 3 6 80 70 3 1 16 12 3 35 86 87 3 0 11 14 5 27 86 99 3 1 9 1 7 5 2 3 70 104 3 0 6 22 2 1 4 51 91

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA P ittsburgh 3 1 2 0 10 I 4 1 96 70 W ashington 30 16 12 2 3 4 92 85 C arolina 3 0 1 3 1 2 5 3 1 71 84 N .Y.Rangers 31 15 15 I 3 1 69 80 N ewJersey 31 12 13 6 3 0 69 77 P hiladelphia 29 13 14 2 28 64 73 C olumbus 29 1 2 14 3 2 7 72 80 N .Y. Islanders 30 8 1 7 5 2 1 75 104 WeslernConference Central Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA Chicago 3 2 21 6 5 4 7 116 89 St. Louis 2 8 19 6 3 4 1 98 66 Minnesota 32 18 9 5 4 1 77 75 Colorado 2 8 20 8 0 4 0 82 65 Dallas 2 8 14 9 5 3 3 81 80 Winnipeg 3 1 14 13 4 3 2 82 88 Nashville 3 0 13 14 3 29 67 88 Pacitic Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA Anaheim 3 2 2 0 7 5 45 101 84 SanJose 3 0 1 9 6 5 4 3 101 75 L os Angeles 30 19 7 4 4 2 79 62 V ancouver 32 1 7 10 5 3 9 86 81 Phoenix 29 1 6 8 5 37 94 93 C algary 29 1 1 1 4 4 2 6 78 98 E dmonton 31 10 18 3 2 3 84 105 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. Sunday'sGames Minnesota3,SanJose1 Boston5,Toronto2 Washington 4, N.Y. Rangers1 Chicago6, Florida2 Vancouver 3,ColoradoI Today'sGames PhiladelphiaatOttawa,4:30 p.m. Columbus at Pittsburgh,4:30p.m. CarolinaatVancouver, 7p.m. N.Y.IslandersatAnaheim,7 p.m. Tuesday'sGames Ottawaat Buffalo, 4p.m. TampaBayatWashington,4p.m. NewJerseyatColumbus,4p.m. Los Angeleat s Montreal, 4p.m. Detroit atFlorida,4:30p.m. NashvilleatN.Y.Rangers, 4;30p.m. St. LouisatWinnipeg,5p.m. ChicagoatDalas, 5:30 p.m. Phoenixat Colorado,6p.m. BostonatCalgary, 6;30p.m. Carolinaat Edmonton, 6:30p.m. N.Y. Isl andersatSanJose,7:30p.m.

R ecord Pls P v 1 . Florida State(97) 1 3- 0 2 ,617 I 1 2-1 2,527 3 2. Auburn (8) 1 1-1 2,405 4 3. Alabam a 1 2-1 2,242 10 4. Michigan State 1 1-2 2,102 7 5. Stanford 1 1-1 2,058 9 6. Baylor 1 2-1 2,048 2 7. OhioState 8. SouthCarolina 1 0-2 1,866 8 9. Missouri 1 1-2 1,850 5 10. Oklahom a 10-2 1,51 7 16 11. Clemson 10-2 1,512 11 12. Oregon 10-2 1,499 12 1 3. Oklahoma State 1 0 - 2 1 , 430 6 14. LSU 9 -3 1,267 14 1 5. Central Florida 11 - 1 1, 098 1 8 16. Louisville 1 1-1 1,091 17 17. Arizona State 10-3 90 9 13 18. UCLA 9-3 9 0 7 19 Polls 19. Wisconsin 9-3 6 7 3 21 BCS 20. Fresno State 11-1 57 9 22 AH RB CM KM JS PW 21. Texas A8M 8-4 4 7 1 23 1. FloridaSt. 1 1 2 2 1 I 22. Northernglinois 1 2 - 1 40 8 15 2. Auburn 2 2 1 1 2 2 23. Georgia 8-4 3 1 8 25 3. Alabama 4 3 6 3 5 3 24. Duke 10-3 29 1 20 4. MichiganSt. 5 4 7 5 4 4 25. Miami(FL ) 9-3 110 NR 5. Stanford 3 6 3 4 3 5 Otherteamsreceiving yotes: Bowling Green75; 6. Baylor 6 7 10 12 8 8 USC53; Notre Dame46; Cincinnati 43;Texas32; Rice 7. OhioSt. 7 5 4 8 10 9 28; BalState18; l Vanderhilt13; Washington12;lowa 8. Missouri 8 9 5 6 7 6 8; Minnesota 2. 9. SouthCarolina 10 8 8 9 6 7 10. Oregon 11 11 11 10 13 11 DEALS 11. Oklahom a 1 2 12 12 15 9 1 2 Betting line 12. Clemson 16 10 14 14 15 10 NFL Transactions 13. Oklahoma St. 13 13 13 22 11 17 (Home teams inCAPS) 14. Arizona St. 9 16 9 7 1 4 1 3 BASEBALL 15. UCF 15 14 15 19 12 14 Favorite Opening Current Underdog AmericanLeague Today 16. LSU 18 18 18 13 17 16 H OUSTO N A ST R O S—Agreedto termswith RHP BEARS 1.5(D) PK Cow boys ChadQuagsonatwo-y 17. UCLA 14 19 16 11 16 15 ear contract. 18. Louisville 23 15 20 23 23 National League 19. Wisconsin 20 20 24 23 19 22 LOSANGELESDODGERS—Agreedto termswith BASKETBALL 22 21 - 24 RHPBrianWilson onaone-year contract. 20. Fresno St. 21. Texas ABM 24 25 - 17 20 19 HOCKEY Men's College 19 - 1 9 16 21 18 22. Georgia National HockeyLeague 23. N. Illinois 17 17 18 21 Sunday'sGames CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS — RecalledDMichael 24. Duke 21 23 - 22 East KostkafromRockford (AHL). 25. SouthernCal 17 24 22 18 - 24 Canisius93,Siena78 FLORIDA PANTHERS—LoanedDMatt Gilroy to George Washington77, Maryland 75 SanAntonio(AHL). Explanation Key lona 83,Fairfield 72 COLLEGE TheBCS Averageis calculatedbyaveragingtheper- Manhattan 75, Monmouth(NJ) 66 NOTRE DAME—AnnouncedNGLouis Nixgl wil centtotalsof theHarris Interactive,USATodayCoaches Niagara 61,St. Peter's 56 entertheNFLdraft. and Com puter polls. Tea mpercentagesare derived by Oklah oma81,GeorgeMason66 RUTGER S — Fired defensive coordinator Dave dividing ateam'sactual voting points byamaximum Rider90,Quinnipiac78 Cohen, quarterbackscoachRobSpenceandoff ensive 2625possiblepointsin theHarris InteractivePoll and SetonHall77,Rutgers71 line coach DamianWroblewski. 1550possiblepoints intheUSATodayCoachesPoll. South WYOMING —NamedCraig Bohl football coach.


MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

Late field goal propels 49ers to victory over Seahawks By Janie McCauley

More NFL

The Associated Press

•A completeroundupofSunday's games,B4

SAN FRANCISCO — Frank

NFL

Gore saw a huge hole with the clock ticking down and his said. "We're playing playoff team trailing, and went for it football right now. It's win or with everything he had. go home." Maybe not a season-saving Gore broke for his big gain 51-yard burst, but darn close with just more than four minto it. utes left, sparking the key 11The San Francisco 49ers are play, 76-yard drive that helped far from ready to hand over the 49ers (9-4) stop the playtheir two-year division reign off-bound Seahawks (11-2) — and certainly not on their from grabbing away the West home field, where they rarely in San Francisco. lose against the NFC West. Dawson's fourth field goal Phil Dawson kicked a 22- gave him 20 successful atyard field goal with 26 seconds tempts in a row, a franchise reremaining and the Niners cord topping Joe Nedney's 18 held off the Seahawks 19-17 consecutive kicksin 2006-07. on Sunday, denying Seattle a Russell Wilson threw a 39chance to clinch the division at Candlestick Park.

"We're playing for

our

lives," wideout Anquan Boldin

sixth road victory in its fifth

the game with a head injury, intercepted a last-ditch deep pass by Wilson with 9 seconds

straight loss at The 'Stick. "I don't know if it was their

left to seal it.

Super Bowl, but they played a great game," Seahawks defensive end Red Bryant said. The 49ers are unbeaten at

finished with nearly the same stats. Wilson went 15 of 25 for

The two young quarterbacks 199 yards and a touchdown with one interception, while

counterpart Colin Kaepernick losing to the Seahawks on Oct. threw for 175 yards and comhome against the West since 26,2008. In an e motionally fueled

pleted 15 of his 29 passes with a TD and an interception.

Vernon Davis caught an 8-yard touchdown pass just ry game more than lived up to before halftime to give San the hype. Francisco some momentum. afternoon ofmissed chances and costly penalties, this rival"Enjoy it? Not the word I

After a home rout of New

would use. It's like going to the Orleans on Monday night, dentist chair for 3t/z hours and the Seahawks were trying getting a root canal," 49ers

to make i t

t w o m a m moth

coach Jim Harbaugh said. wins over NFC powers in Willson and Marshawn Lynch "These games are only for the seven days. They hurt themran for an 11-yard score for Se- tough." selves several times down the yard touchdown pass to Luke

attle, denied a franchise-best

Eric Wright, who briefly left

stretch.

Ben Margot/The Associated Press

San Francisco 49ers tight end VernonDavis (85) is greeted by 49ers' wide receiver Michael Crabtree (15) after Davis scored a touchdown against the Seattle Seahawks in the first half of Sun-

day's game in SanFrancisco.

NFL SCOREBOARD Shiancoe 2-2, Preston1-6. Denver:Decker8-117, DThomas7-88,Moreno631,Welker5-61,JThomas 5-35, Tamm e4-47, Ball3-10, Dreessen1-8. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

Summaries Sunday'sGames

Cardinals 30, Rams10 3 0 0 7 7 9

St. Louis Arizona

7 — 10 7 — 30

First Quarter Ari — Mendenhaff3run (Feelykick),10:32. StL — FGZoerlein 44, 6:12. SecondQuarler Ari — Fitzgerald 7 passfrom Palmer(Feely kick), :50. Third Quarler Ari — Dansby 23 interception return (Feelykick), 14:42.

Ari — Abrahamsafety, 9:10. Fourth Quarter StL — Stacy1 run(Zuerlein kick),14:57. Ari — Elington 6 run(Feely kick),1;55. A—60,643. S lL 14 2 57

Ar i 25 369 19-100 32-107 1 57 262 1-1 2-3 5 -126 2 - 2 1 0 -0 2 - 29 16-27-2 27-32-0 4-24 1-7 5-51.4 4-47.3 1-0 1-1 1 1-90 6 - 31 24:53 35 :07

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PontReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Chargers 37, Giants14 N.y. Giants SanDiego

0 0 7 7 — 14 7 17 7 6 — 3 7

First Quarter SD — Allen43passfromRivers (Novakkick),8:18. SecondQuarter SD — FGNovak36,11:01. SD — Allen4passfromRivers(Novakkick), 3:49. SD — Woodhead6 passfromRivers (Novak kick),

:19.

Third Quarler NYG —Hiffis1run (J.Brownkick),1045. SD — Mathews1 ron(Novakkick), 5:06. FourthQuarter NYG —Myers5passfromManning(J.Brownkick), 14:54. SD — FGNovak27,7:31. SD — FGNovak43,3:24. A—65,132.

N YG SD 18 25 3 33 388 20-92 40-144 2 41 244 0-0 2-2 7 -126 2 - 34 0 -0 2 - 71 20-32-2 21-28-0 2-18 2-5 3-47.0 1-39.0 1-1 1-1 7 -72 6 - 30 23:04 36:56

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards

Passing PontReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Penalties-Yards RUSHING —St. Louis: Austin 1-56, Stacy Time ofPossession 14-25, Clemens 2-10, Cunningham2-9. Arizona: Ellington11-46,Mendenhaff17-41, Peterson1-12, INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Taylor2-9,Palmer1-(minos1). RUSHING —N.Y. Giants: A.Brown16-81,Hilis PASSING —St. Louis: Clemens16-27-2-181. 4-11. SanDiego:Mathews29-103,Woodhead7-42, Arizona: Palmer27-32-0-269. Mcclain1-1,Whitehurst3-(minus2). RECEIVING —St. Louis: Cook 3-49, Bailey PASSING — N.Y. Giants: Manning 20-32-23-46, Stacy3-(minus3), Cunningham2-16, Givens 259. SanDiego: Rivers21-28-0-249. 1-21, Pettis1-19,Kendricks1-15, Austin1-9, Harkey RECEIVING —N.Y. Giants: Nicks5-135, Cruz 1-9. Arizona:Fitzgerald12-96, Hoosler3-42, Dray 5-42, Myers4-26, A.Brown3-15, Randle 2-27, Pas3-32, Taylo3-16, r Floyd2-26,Ellington 2-17,Brown coe1-14 .SanDiego:Woodhead4-52,Gates4-50, 1-32, Roberts1-8. Allen 3-59,Mathews3-32, V.Brown3-30, Royal 3-13, MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Arizona:Feely 50 R.Brown1-13. (WR),25(WR). MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

49ers19, Seahawks17

Dolphins 34, Steelers 28

Seattle

Miami Pittsburgh

014 0

3 — 17

SanFrancisco 6 10 0 3 — 1 9 First Quarter SF — FGDawson23, 5:04. SF — FGDawson48,:58.

SecondQuarler Sea—Lynch 11run(Hauschkakick),1217. SF — FGDawson52, 7:56. Sea —Willson 39 passfromWilson (Hauschka kick), 3:47. SF — V.Davis 8 passfrom Kaepernick (Dawson kick),:06. Fourth Quarter Sea —FGHauschka31, 6;20. SF — FGDawson22,:26. A—69,732. Sea

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards

SF

13 19 2 64 31 8 23-86 33-163 1 78 15 5 3-49 1-0 4 -79 3 - 8 1 1-2 1-0 15-25-1 15-29-1 2 -21 2 - 20 6-31.0 4-49.8 1-0 0-0 9-85 77 -0 27;32 32:28

Timeof Possession

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS

RUSHING —Seattle: Lynch20-72, Turbin2-12, Wilson1-2.SanFrancisco:Gore17-110,Kaepernick 9-31,Hunter4-16, Miler 3-6. PASSING —Seattle: Wilson15-25-1-199. San Francisco:Kaepernick15-29-1-175. RECEIVING —Seatne: Tate 6-65, Wilson3-70, Baldwin3-36, Kearse2-15, Miler 1-13.San Francisco:Boldin 6-93, Crabtree4-40, Miller 3-21, V.Davi2-21. s MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.

Broncos 51, Titans 28 Tennessee Denver

14 7 7 0 — 28 10 10 14 17 — 51

First Quarter Ten —Greene1ron(Bironas kick),1237. Den —Welker 1 passfrom Manning (Prater kick),

7:28.

Ten —C.Johnson3ron(Bironaskick), 7:01. Den —FGPrater 25,:25.

SecondQuarler Ten —Greene28run(Bironaskick),6;58. Den —J.Thomas 8 pass fromManning(Prater kick), 1:50. Den —FGPrater 64,:00. Third Quarler Den —D.Thomas 4 passfrom Manning(Prater kick), 11:52. Den —Moreno1run(Praterkick),734. Ten —Hunter 41 pass fromFilzpatrick (Bironas kick), 4:50. Fourth Quarter Den —FGPrater19,13:15. Den —Decker 20 passfromManning(Prater kick), 9:12.

Den —Ball5 run(Prater kick),3:07. A—76,554.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PontReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

T en D e n

15 39 2 54 55 1 22-96 32-154 1 58 397 0 -0 4 - 27 5-209 5-126 0-0 1-2 13-24-1 39-59-0 2-14 0-0 4-50.3 2-32.5 1-1 0-0 8 -66 7 - 60 20:40 39:20

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Tennessee: C.Johnson 12-46, Greene 9-46, Fitzpatrick1-4. Denver:Moreno14-78, Ball15-77,Manning3-(minos1). PASSING —Tennessee: Fitzpatrick 13-24-1172.Denver:Manning39-59-0-397. RECEIVING —Tennessee: Hunter 4-114, N.Washington2-24, Wright 2-17, C.Johnson2-9,

3 7 14 10 — 34 7 0 14 7 — 28 First Quarter

Pit — Sanders5 passfrom Roethlisberger (Suisham kick),4:20. Mia — FGSturgis 30,:40. SecondQuarter Mia — Clay 6 pass fromTannehiff (Sturgis kick), 8:15. Third Quarler Mia — Dan.Thomas4run(Sturgis kick),10:50. Pit — A.Brown43passfromRoethlisberger(Suisham kick),8:58. Pit —Polamalu 19interception return (Suisham kick), 8:05. Mia — Hartline 4passfromTannehig(Sturgis kick), 4:52.

Fourth Quarter Pit —Cotchery 16passfrom Roethlisberger (Suishamkick),14:56. Mia — Clay12 passfromTannehil (Storgiskick), 2:53. Mia — FGSturgis 27,1:08. A—52,489. Mia

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Pit

18 16 3 60 41 2 24-181 21-84 1 79 32 8 3 -23 5 - 14 4-82 5-103 0 -0 1 - 19 20-33-1 23-39-0 3 -21 3 - 21 5-46.4 6-39.2 2-0 1-1 5 -36 9 - 63 28:55 31:05

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Miami: Dan.Thomas 16-105, Tannehig 2-56, Miller 6-20. Pittsburgh:Bell 15-61, Dwyer3-8, Roethlisberger1-8, FJones2-7. PASSING —Miami: Tannehil 20-33-1-200. Pittsburgh:Roethlisberger23-39-0-349. RECEIVING —Miami: Clay7-97, Hartline 5-51, Wallace2-19, Miler 2-13,Sims1-7, Matthews1-5, Thigpen1-4,Dan.Thomas1-4. Pittsburgh:A.Brown 5-137,Cotchery5-62, Bell5-28,Sanders4-57, Miler 3-56,W.Johnson1-9. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Miami: Sturgis 52

(SH).

Patriots 27, Browns26 Cleveland New England

3 3 13 7 — 26 0 0 11 1 6 — 27

First Quarter

Cle — FGCundiff 43,9:18.

SecondQuarter Cle — FGCundiff 37,14:45. Third Quarler Cle — Barnidge40passfromCampbell (run failed),

10:15. NE— FGGostkowski33,1:37.

Cle — Gordon 80 passfrom Campbell (Cundiff kick), 1:25.

NE —Vereen6run(EdelmanpassfromBrady),:06. Fourth Quarter NE— FGGostkowski50,5:43. Cle — Cameron 4 passfrom Campbell (Cundiff kick), 2:39. NE — Edelman 2 passfrom Brady(Gostkowski kick), 1:01. NE — Amendola1 passfromBrady(runfailed),:31. A—68,756.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

Cle

NE

24 30 4 94 484 25-108 21-87 3 86 39 7

1 -(-1) 3 -62 1-0

2-7

3 - 46 0-0 29-44-0 32-52-1 1 -5 4 - 21 6-43.2 5-40.0 0-0 1-1 7 -75 6 - 41 31:40 28:20

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING — Cleveland:Gordon1-34,McGahee

AMERICAN CONFERENCE W NewEngland 1 0 Miami 7 N.Y.Jets 6 Buffalo 4

L 3 6 7 9

T 0 0 0 0

Cin — Green-Effis1run (Nugent kick),1041.

Ind — Rogers 69 passfrom Luck(Vinatieri kick), 9:57. Ind — Brazig 19 passfrom Luck(Vinatieri kick), East P c t PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC D i v 6:20. Cin — Gresham1 passfromDalton (Nugentkick), . 7 69 349 287 7 - 0-0 3 -3-0 7-2-0 3-1-0 3-1-0 3:05. .5 3 8 286 276 3 - 3-0 4 -3-0 6-3-0 1-3-0 1-2-0 Fourth Quarter .4 6 2 226 337 5 - 2-0 1 -5-0 3-7-0 3-0-0 2-3-0 Cin — Green 9 passfrom Dalton (Nugent kick), .3 0 8 273 334 3 - 4-0 1 -5-0 3-6-0 1-3-0 2-2-0 13:25.

Ind — Brazil 29 passfrom Luck(Vinatieri kick), South 9:48. W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC D i v Cin — Dalton8 run(Nugent kick),4:03. - Indianapolis 8 5 0 .6 1 5 313 316 4 - 2-0 4 - 3-0 6-3-0 2-2-0 4-0-0 Ind — Rogers 2 passfrom Luck (Vinatieri kick), e nnessee 5 8 0 .38 5 292 318 2 - 4-0 3 - 4-0 4-6-0 1-2-0 0-4-0 1:20. J acksonville 4 9 0 .30 8 201 372 1 - 5-0 3 - 4-0 4-5-0 0-4-0 3-1-0 A—62,507. H ouston 2 11 0 .1 5 4 250 350 1 - 6-0 1 -5-0 2-7-0 0-4-0 1-3-0 Ind Cin North First downs 21 28 T otal Net Y a r ds 3 89 430 W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC D i v Rushes-yards 12-63 35-155 Cincinnati 9 4 0 .6 9 2 334 244 6 - 0-0 3 -4-0 7-3-0 2-1-0 2-2-0 3 26 27 5 Baltimore 7 6 0 .5 3 8 278 261 6 - 1-0 1 -5-0 6-4-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 Passing Punt Ret u rns 1 -0 4 - 73 Pittsburgh 5 8 0 .3 8 5 291 312 3 - 3-0 2 - 5-0 4-6-0 1-2-0 2-2-0 Kickoff Returns 7-140 3 86 Cleveland 4 9 0 .3 0 8 257 324 3 - 4-0 1 - 5-0 3-7-0 1-2-0 2-3-0 0-0 0-0 InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int 29-46-0 24-35-0 West 0-0 0-0 Sacked-Yards Lost W L T Pct P F P A H o m e Away AFC N F C D i v Punts 7-47.6 5-50.6 x-Denver 11 2 0 . 8 4 6 5 1 5 34 5 7 - 0-0 4 - 2-0 7 -2-0 4 -0-0 4-0-0 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 Kansas City 10 3 0 . 7 6 9 3 4 3 224 5 - 2-0 5 - 1-0 6 -3-0 4 -0-0 1-3-0 Penalties-Yards 6 -47 7 - 60 SanDiego 6 7 0 .4 6 2 3 1 6 29 1 3 - 3-0 3 - 4-0 3 -6-0 3 -1-0 1-2-0 Time ofPossession 22:15 37:45 Oakland 4 9 0 .3 0 8 2 6 4 33 7 3 - 3-0 1 - 6-0 4 -5-0 0 -4-0 1-2-0 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Indianapolis: Lock 2-32, RichardNATIONAL CONFERENCE son 6-20,D.Brown4-11. Cincinnati: Bernard12-99, Green-Ellis17-48,Dalton5-11, M.Jones1-(minus3). PASSING — Indianapolis: Luck 29-46-0-326. East Dalton24-35-0-275. W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC D i v Cincinnati: RECEIVING —Indianapolis: Rogers 6-107, Philadelphia 8 5 0 .6 1 5 334 301 3 - 4-0 5 -1-0 7-2-0 1-3-0 3-2-0 Richardson 5-68, Fleener5-31, D.Brown4-18, Brazil Dallas 7 5 0 .5 8 3 329 303 5 - 1-0 2 -4-0 6-2-0 1-3-0 4-0-0 3-53, Heyw rd-Bey a 2-23, Hilton 2-7, Saunders1-11, N.Y.Giants 5 8 0 .3 8 5 251 334 3 - 3-0 2 -5-0 4-5-0 1-3-0 2-3-0 Cincinnati:Green6-72, Gresham5-41, Washington 3 10 0 . 2 31 279 407 2 - 5-0 1 -5-0 1-8-0 2-2-0 0-4-0 Doyle1-8. Bernard4-49,M.Jones3-60, Eifert3-20, Sanu2-26, Hawkins1-7. South MISSED FIELDGOALS—Indianapolis: VinatW L T P c t PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC D i v ieri 44(WR). 8-1-0 2-2-0 4-0-0 NewOrleans 1 0 3 0 . 7 69 343 243 7 - 0-0 3 -3-0 Carolina 9 4 0 .6 9 2 298 188 5 - 1-0 4 - 3-0 7-3-0 2-1-0 3-1-0 Eagles 34, Lions 20 Tampa Bay 4 9 0 .3 0 8 244 291 3 - 4-0 1 - 5-0 2-7-0 2-2-0 1-4-0 Atlanta 3 10 0 . 2 31 282 362 2 - 4-0 1 - 6-0 2-7-0 1-3-0 1-4-0 Detroit 0 8 6 6 — 20 P hiladelphia 0 0 6 28 — 3 4 North SecondQuarler H ome Away N FC AFC D i v W L T Pc t PF PA Det—Bell2 run (BellpassfromStafford), 10:02. Detroit 7 6 0 .5 3 8 346 321 4 - 2-0 3 -4-0 6-4-0 1-2-0 4-1-0 Third Quarler Chicago 6 6 0 .5 0 0 323 332 4 - 2-0 2 -4-0 3-6-0 3-0-0 2-3-0 Det—Ross58 pont return(passfailed), 6:37. GreenBay 6 6 1 .5 0 0 316 326 4 - 2-1 2 -4-0 4-5-1 2-1-0 2-2-1 Phi — Jackson 19 passfrom Foles (passfailed), Minnesota 3 9 1 .2 6 9 315 395 3 - 3-0 0 - 6-1 2-7-1 1-2-0 1-3-1 4:05. Fourth Quarter West Phi — Mccoy 40 ron(Brown ron),14:34. Det — R o ss 98 kickoff return (kick blocked), W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away NFC AFC Div x -Seattle 1 1 2 0 .84 6 357 205 6 - 0-0 5 -2-0 8 -1-0 3-1-0 3-1-0 14:20.Phi—Mccoy57run(CooperpassfromFoles), S an Francisco 9 4 0 .6 9 2 316 214 5 - 2-0 4 -2-0 6 -3-0 3-1-0 4-1-0 13;13. Phi—Foles1run(passfailed), 8 18. Arizona 8 5 0 .61 5 305 257 6 - 1-0 2 -4-0 5 -5-0 3-0-0 1-3-0 Phi — Polk38 ron(ron failed), 2:58. S t. Louis 5 8 0 .38 5 289 308 3 - 3-0 2 -5-0 2 -7-0 3-1-0 1-4-0 A—69,144. x-clinched playoffspot y-clinched division D et Phi Thursday'sGame Thursday,Dec.12 First downs 11 23 Jacksonvile27,Houston20 SanDiegoatDenver,5:25p.m. T otal Net Y a r ds 2 28 47 8 Sunday'sGames Sunday,Dec.15 Rushes-yards 33-80 46-299 Green Bay22,Atlanta21 PhiladelphiaatMinnesota, 10aJm Passing 1 48 179 Baltimore29,Minnesota26 Washington atAtlanta,10a.m. Pont Returns 2-71 2 +7) KansasCity 45,Washington10 SanFranciscoat lampaBay,10a.m. Kickoff Returns 6 -202 2 - 41 Tampa Bay27,Buffalo6 SeattleatNYGiants,10am. 1-30 0-0 InterceptionsRet. Miami34,Piffsburgh28 ChicagoatCleve land,lga.m. Comp-Att-Int 10-25-0 11-22-1 Philadelphi34, a Detroit 20 Houston atIndianapolis,10a.m. Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 0-0 Cincinnati42,Indianapolis28 BuffaloatJacksonyige,10a.m. 6-39.3 6-41.5 Punts NewEngland27,Cleveland26 NewEnglandat Miami,10a.m. 7-3 1-0 Fumbles-Lost N.Y.Jets37,Oakland27 KansasCityatOakland,105p m. 9-48 1-5 Penalties-Yards Denver51,tennessee28 N.Y.JetsatCarolina, I:05pzm Time ofPossession 28:33 31:27 SanFrancisco19,Seattle17 Ariz onaatTennessee,I:25pzm SanDiego37, N.Y.Giants14 NewOrleansatSt.Louis,1:25p.m. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Arizona 30,St. Louis 10 GreenBa yatDallas,1:25p.m. RUSHING —Detroit: Bell 23-69, Riddick4-12, NewOrleans31,Carolina13 CincinnatiatPittsburgh,530pm. Stafford 6-(minus1). Philadelphia:Mccoy29-217, Today'sGame Monday,Dec. 16 Polk 4-50, Fol es6-23, Brown6-19, Jackson1-(minus DallasatChicago,5:40p.m. BaltimoreatDetroit,5:40p.m. 10). PASSING —Detroit: Stafford 10-25-0-148. Philadelphia:Foles11-22-1-179. AH TimesPST RECEIVING —Detroit: Bell 4-58, Johnson 3-49, Burleson 2-18, Petigrew1-23. Philadelphia: 4-59, Cooper3-74, Celek2-29, Smith1-13, 14-33,Campbell 2-27,Ogbonnaya4-8, Whittaker 4-6. 5-42, J.Jones 4-37, Dickson2-8, T.Smith1-11, Pierce Jackson Mccoy1-4. NewEngl and:Blount8-42,Ridley8-35,Vereen3-9, 1-5, Stokley1-2,Leach1-0. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. Brady2-1. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. PASSING —Cleveland: Campbell 29-44-0-391. New England: Brady32-52-1-418. Jets 37, Raiders 27 RECEIVING —Cleveland: Cameron 9-121, Gor- Bticcaneers 27, Bills 6 don 7-151, Dgbonnaya3-25,Whittaker3-18,Barnidge Buffalo Oakland 0 3 141 0 — 27 3 0 3 0 — 6 2-49, Little2-14, Bess1-10,Gray1-3, McG ahee1-0. N.Y. Jets 10 10 10 7 — 37 Tampa Bay 14 10 3 0 — 2 7 New England: Vereen12-153, Edelman6-64,AmenFirst Quarter First Quarter dola 4-36,Boyce3-49,Gronkowski2-32,Blount1-32, NYJ —FGFolk41,11:13. TB — Rainey 80ron(Lindell kick),14:42. Develin1-31,Mugigan1-15,Cogie1-4, Ridley1-2. NYJ — K erl e y 25 passfrom Smith (Folk kick), 317. Buf — FGCarpenter 40,8;07. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Cleveland:Condif SecondQuarler TB — Ja ck son 38 p as s f r om G lennon (Li n deff ki c k), 58 (SH). Dak—FGJanikowski 41,12:31. 2:34. NYJ —FGFolk23,5:03. SecondQuarler NYJ —Allen blocked punt recovery in endzone Ravens 29, Vikings 26 TB — FGLindell 53, 10:45. (Folk kick),3:55. TB — Wright 5 passfrom Glennon (Lindeff kick), Third Quarter Minnesota 0 3 3 2 0 — 26 :15. Dak —Reece63 run(Janikowski kick),13:58. Baltimore 7 0 0 2 2 — 29 Third Quarter NYJ — S m i t h 8 ron (Folk kick), 9:15. Firsl Quarler Buf — FGCarpenter 46,10:19. Dak—Streater 48 passfrom McGloin(Janikowski Bal — Dickson1 passfrom Flacco (Tucker kick), TB — FGLindell 32,:07. kick), 6:18. 4:14. A—59,194. NYJ —FGFolk51,2:47. SecondQuarter Fourth Quarter Min — FGWalsh39, 4:28. Buf TB Dak—FGJanikowski 40,13:21. Third Quarter First downs 14 13 NYJ —Ivory15 run(Folk kick),8:58. Min — FGWalsh40,12:02. TotalNetYards 2 14 246 Dak—Rivera 1 passfrom McG loin (Janikowski Fourth Quarter 22-67 36-165 kick), 2:24. Rushes-yards Min — Simpson8 passfrom Cassel (passfailed), Passing 147 81 A—76,957. 14:22. PuntReturns 5 -36 2 - 21 Bal — Pitta1 passfromFlacco(TSmith passfrom KickoffReturns 4 -56 1 - 20 O ak N Y J Flacco),2;05. InterceptionsRet. 2 -19 4 - 7 5 First downs 19 18 Min—Gerhart 41ron(Walsh kick), 1:27. Comp-Att-Int 18-33-4 9-25-2 T otal Net Y a r ds 3 83 352 Bal—J.Jones 77kickoff return(Tuckerkick), 1:16. Sacked-YardsLost 7-37 1-9 Rushes-yards 26-150 32-143 Min—Patterson 79passfromCassel(Walsh kick),:45. Punts 7-43.7 8- 44.6 Passing 2 33 209 Bal—M.Brow9npassfromFlacco(Tuckerkick),:04. Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-0 Pont Returns 0-0 0-0 A—70,921. Penalties-Yards 1 1-114 8 - 76 KickoffReturns 8-135 4 - 97 Timeof Possession 28:10 31:50 InterceptionsRet. 1-0 1-7 M in Ba l Comp-Att-Int 20-36-1 16-25-1 First downs 15 23 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 3 -32 1 - 10 Sacked-Yards Lost TotalNetYards 3 79 32 5 RUSHING —Buffalo: Manuel5-29, Spiler 11- Punts 3-28.3 2-42.5 25-114 27-97 Rushes-yards 22,Jackson5-12,Wingo1-4.TampaBay:Rainey Fumbles-Lost 2-0 1-0 Passing 2 65 22 8 22-127,Leonard7-26, Hil 5-17, Glennon1-0, Page Penalties-Yards 4 -31 4 - 36 1 -14 4 - 44 1-(minus5). PuntReturns Time ofPossession 30:34 29:26 5-131 4-152 KickoffReturns PASSING —Buffalo: Manuel 18-33-4-184. 3-1 0-0 Interceptions Ret. Tampa Bay: Gl e nn on 925-2-90. INDIVIDUAL ST AT I S TICS Comp-Att-Int 17-38-0 28-50-3 RECEIVING—Buffalo: Johnson5-67, Jackson RUSHING —Oakland: Reece 19-123, McGloin 0 -0 2 - 1 7 4-26,Woods3-20, Chandler2-24, Spiler1-26, Hogan 2-20, Sacked-Yards Lost Pryor 3-4, Jones 2-3. N.Y. Jets: Ivory18-76, 9-44.1 6-54.7 1-12, L.Sm Punts ith1-7, Wingo1-2. TampaBay: Jackson Smith5-50,Powell 8-14, Kerley1-3. 3-1 1-0 Fumbles-Lost 3-70,Rainey3-(minus4), Wright 2-21,Dawson1-3. PASSING —Oakland: McGloin 18-31-1-245, 6 -90 5 - 45 Penalties-Yards MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Pryor2-5-0-20.N.Y.Jets: Smith16-25-1-219. Time ofPossession 27:48 32:12 RECEIVING —Oakland: Streater 7-130, Rivera 5-21, Holmes3-63,Reece2-38,Dlawale2-10,Jones Bengais 42, Colts 28 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 1-3.N.Y.Jets: Kerley4-41, Nelson4-32, Winslow RUSHING —Minnesota: Gerhart15-89,Peter3-61, Holmes 3-55, Powe01-24, Bohanon1-6. son 7-13,Cassel 2-6,Paterson1-6. Baltimore: Rice Indianapolis 0 0 14 14 — 28 MISSED FIELDGOALS—Oakland:Janikowski 7 7 14 14 — 42 17-67, Flacco1-22,Pierce7-12, Leach1-0, J.Jones Cincinnati 52 (WR). 1-(minus 4). First Quarter Cin — M.Jones29passfromDalton (Nugent kick), PASSING — Minnesota: Cassel17-38-0-265. Baltimore: Flacco 28-50-3-245. 8:03. Chiefs 45, Redskins10 RECEIVING —Minnesota: Patterson 5-141, SecondQuarler Jennings5-53, Simpson4-48, Carlson2-19, PeterCin — Green-Egis1run (Nugentkick),1:06. KansasCity 17 2 1 0 7 — 4 5 son1-4.Baltimore:M.Brown7-92, Pitta6-48, Rice Third Quarter Washington 0 10 0 0 — 1 0

First Quarter KC — FGSoccop33, 11:30. KC — Charles2 run(Succopkick), 5:52. KC — Bowe 21 passfrom A.Smith (Succopkick),

1:02.

SecondQuarter

KC — Charles 5 passfromA.Smith (Soccopkick),

11:27.

KC — Mccluster 74 punt return(Succopkick),

9:45.

Was —Paulsen 7 passfromGriffin III (Forbath kick), 1:07. KC — Demps95kickoffreturn(Soccopkick),:53. Was —FGForbath 50,:00. Fourth Quarter KC — Davis17 run(Succopkick),13:37. A—56,247.

KC W as

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PontReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Ponts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

20 13 3 47 25 7 38-193 17-65 1 54 192 7-177 0-0 2-123 8-179 1-40 1-0 15-23-1 19-42-1 0 -0 6 - 31 3-37.7 8-42.3 0-0 2-1 3 -30 4 - 27 34:10 25:50

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Kansas City: Charles19-151, Davis11-30,Gray3-8, A.Smith 2-7, Daniel3-(minus3). Washington: Morris12-31, GriffinIII 4-29,HeluJr. 1-5. PASSING —Kansas City: A.Smith14-20-0-137,

Daniel 1-3-1-17.Washington:Griffin III 12-26-1164, Cousins7-16-0-59. RECEIVIN G— Kansas City:Bowe4-69,McCluster4-22,McG rath 2-20, Charles2-8, Davis1-17, Hemingway 1-11, Avery1-7. Washington:Garcon 5-37, A.Robinson4-67, Paulsen3-44, Moss3-30, Paul 1-25,Morgan1-15, Royster1-3,HeloJr. 1-2. MISSEDFIELDGOALS— KansasCity:Succop

34 (WR).

Packers 22, Falcons21 Atlanta GreenBay

0 21 0 0 — 2 1 7 3 6 6 — 22 First Quarter GB — Lacy1 ron(Crosby kick),:00.

SecondQuarter Atl —Dr.Davis 36 passfromRyan(Bryant kick), 11:01.

Atl — Gonzalez 2 passfromRyan(Bryant kick),

8:43. GB — FGCrosby40,3:39.

Atl —Weatherspoon 71interception return(Bryant kick),:23. Third Quarler GB — FGCrosby33,9;06. GB — FGCrosby25,:45. Fourth Quarter GB — Quarless2 passfromFlynn (pass failed), 12:01. A—77,550.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PontReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards

Timeof Possession

Atl GB 18 20 2 85 334 23-83 33-112 2 02 22 2 1 -8 1 - 12 6 -126 4 - 9 7 1-71 1-0 20-35-1 24-32-1 1-4 5-36 4-44.5 3-47.3 1-1 1-1 3 -15 2 - 10 26:28 33:32

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS

RUSHING —Atlanta: Jackson 15-71, Rodgers 7-14, Snelling1-(minos 2). GreenBay: Lacy20-65, Flynn6-28,Starks7-19. PASSING —Atlanta: Ry an20-35-1-206. Green Bay:Flynn24-32-1-258. RECEIVING —Atlanta: White 8-74, Rodgers 3-33,Gonzalez3-25,Douglas2-20,Dr.Davis1-36, Jackson1-9,DiMarco1-7, Snelling1-2. Green Bay: Quarless6-66,Nelson 4-85, J.Jones4-19, Lacy3-25, Bostick2-28,Boykin2-23, R.Taylor 2-7,White1-5. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Atlanta: Bryant52 (SH).

Saints 31, Panthers13 Carolina N eworleans

6 0 0

7 — 13

0 21 3 7 — 31 First Quarter Car—FGGano45,8:42. Car—FGGano24,1:56. SecondQuarter ND — Colston 6 passfrom Brees(Hartley kick),

13:35.

ND — Colston 15passfrom Brees (Hartley kick),

2:44.

ND — Graham5passfromBrees(Hartleykick),:18. Third Quarler ND — FGHartley19,4:18. Fourth Quarter ND — Graham 8 pass from Brees(Hartley kick), 9:52. Car—Smith 17passfromNewton (Gano kick), 5:15. A—73,089.

First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PontReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

C ar

ND

16 24 2 39 373 23-128 17-69 1 11 30 4 1 -32 2 - 17 2 -73 1 - 22 0-0 0-0 22-34-0 30-42-0 5-49 2-9 5-45.4 4-44.3 0-0 1-0 5 -35 5 - 45 32:27 27:33

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS

RUSHING —Carolina: D.Wiliams13-52, Newton 6-48,Stewart1-16, Tolbert3-12. NewOrleans: Sproles1-38,Thoma s7-14, K.Robinson1-6, Ingram 3-4, Meach em1-4, Brees3-3, Collins1-0. PASSING —Carolina: Newton 22-34-0-160. New Orleans:Brees30-42-0-313. RECEIVING —Carolina: Dlsen8-40, Smith 6-49, LaFeg2-22, Tolbert2-17, GinnJr. 2-5, Stewart1-16, D.Williams1-11. NewOrleans: Colston9-125, Graham6-58,Thomas 4-14,Moore 3-40,Sproles 3-23, Stills 2-22,Wa tson1-20, Meachem1-7, Collins1-4. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Carolina:Gano49

(WR).


B4

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013

a essurvive izzar, u

aw a o e a i o n s

NFL ROUNDUP

The Associated Press

Packers 22, Falcons 21:

PHILADELPHIA — O n ce

LeSean McCoy put his head down and ran straight ahead instead of juking and jiving, no one could stop him. McCoy ran for a f r a n-

14 degrees when Prater kicked his record setter to close the

chise-best 217 yards, includ-

BALTIMORE — Joe Flacco

GREEN BAY, Wis. — Matt Flynn threw for 258 y ards

and Green B ay's s t ruggling defenseforced a key fourth-quarter turnover to snap a f ive-game winless string. Mike Neal's sack forced

first half an d p ul l D e nver within 21-20.

Ravens 29, Vikings 26:

ing touchdowns of 57 and 40 threw a 9-yard touchdown yards, and the Philadelphia pass to rookie Marlon Brown Eagles overcame two TD re-

with 4 seconds left to ice the

turns by Jeremy Ross to beat

win. Brown's catch concluded a five-play, 80-yard drive

the Detroit Lions 34-20 in a

blizzard Sunday. "It was tough, to be honest," McCoy said. "But the guys were giving me so much room. I actually like to run in between the tackles." R oss returned a punt 5 8

yards for a score and ran a kickoff 98 yards. But McCoy ran 57 yardsup the middle for a tying TD, and Nick Foles connected with Riley Cooper on the 2-point conversion. Foles sneaked in from the 1 and Chris Polk had a 38-

yard touchdown run to cap a 28-point fourth quarter for the Eagles (8-5). Snow began falling two hours before kickoff and intensified after the game start-

Matt Ryan to fumble. Defen-

sive lineman Johnny Jolly scooped up the loose ball and celebrated with a little belly dance at chilly Lambeau Field.

a 79-yard touchdown pass to e

seconds remaining. Patriots 27, Browns 26: FOX-

and Bobby Rainey scored on an 80-yard run on the second play of the day to propel Tampa Bay. The Bucs (4-9) intercept-

Antonio Allen blocked a punt

thers' winning streak at eight

and returneditfor a score to help the Jets (6-7) in the AFC playoff hunt. Chargers 37, Giants 14: SAN DIEGO — Philip Rivers found

games. The Panthers' defense had not allowed more than

1:01 left. Cleveland received

rookie Keenan Allen for two

alone.

a 15-yard penalty on the play, then Kyle Arrington recovered

ofhis three touchdown passes, and San Diego kept alive its long-shot playoff hopes. Manning dropped to 0-3 against San Diego since 2004, when

BOROUGH, Mass. — Tom Brady threw two touchdown

passes in the final 61 seconds and New England recovered an onside kick to set up the comeback win. The Patriots (10-3) cut the deficit to 26-21 on Brady's 2-yard touchdown pass to Julian Edelman with

I

' •

the onside kick at the Cleve-

land 40-yard line. Bengals 42, Colts 28: CIN-

Ron Cortes/ Philadelphia Inquirer

Philadelphia Eagles' LeSean McCoy (25) leaps over two would-be Detroit Lions tacklers as he runs to score his first of two touchdowns on Sunday in Philadelphia.

Dec. 28, 2001.

eight rebounds in his season Nick Young scored 19 debut for the Lakers, but Amir points for the L akers, who Johnson scored a career-high went 10-9 without Bryant this 32 points in the trade-depleted season, forging a winning record without the five-time NBA champion and with little

ry over Los Angeles on Sunday night. help from fellow injured MVP Bryant began hi s 18th Steve Nash. NBA season by going 2 for Adoring fans cheered Ko9 with four assists and eight be's every move and forgave

two touchdowns in a game this

season until the Saints scored three in the second quarter

Pure. &md.6 j"o.

>j B~ du Bend Redmond

John Day score was 17-0afterthe first

quarter and 38-10 at halftime. Cardinals 30, Rams 10: GLENDALE, Ariz. — Carson Palmer completed 27 of

the fifth time in six games.

Dolphins 34, Steelers 28: PITTSBURGH — Charles Clay caught two touchdown passes,

the fourth, but USC product DeRozan and Lowry held off

La Pine

70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeittteriors.com

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Ryan Tannehill with 2:53 re-

maining to lift Miami. Daniel Thomas ran for 105 yards and a score. His zig-zag 55-yard burst at snowy Heinz Field set

up Clay's winner.

Light Up A Life V~

l~te~

~

Heat 110, Pistons 95: AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — LeBron James had 2 4 p o i nts,

The 35-year-old Bryant hadn't played since getting hurt in a home game against Golden State on April 12,

nine assists and seven rebounds, and Miami beat Detroit, avenging a home loss to the Pistons less than a week ago. Thunder 118, Pacers 94:

making two free throws on

OKLAHOMA CITY — Kevin

the Lakers.

Burns Lakeview

mplements trrsrrue J~le~ee~J

including a 12-yard strike from

a torn Achilles tendon before Durant had 36 points and 10 limping to the Staples Center rebounds and Oklahoma City locker room. He had immedi- turned a matchup of two of the turnovers in 28 minutes. The every misstep, but B r y ant atesurgery,vowing to return NBA's best teams into a blowfourth-leading scorer in NBA couldn't rally the Lakers late close to full strength — and out over Indiana. history hadn't played since despite another huge game by after working his way back Rockets 98, Magic 8 8: tearing his Achilles tendon Los Angeles' reserves. Xavier into practices with the Lakers HOUSTON — Dwight Howin April, undergoing several Henry scored 17 points off the in the past few weeks, he pro- ard celebrated his 28th birthmonths of r ehabilitation to bench, and Jodie Meeks added nounced himself ready. day in a big way, getting 20 return for Los Angeles' 20th 14. The building had the buzz points and 22 rebounds to lead game of the new season. The Raptors had 11 players of a playoff game before the Houston over Orlando. But the Lakers never led, available after holding out opening tip, with most fans and Toronto i m probably Gay, center Aaron Gray and in their seats with camersnapped its five-game losing forward Quincy Acy, all set to as trained on Bryant during streak despite playing with- head to the Kings in exchange opening warmups. The buildout forward Rudy Gay, who for Greivis Vasquez, Patrick ing erupted in loud applause Patterson, John Salmons and

possession of first place in the NFC South and snap the Pan-

the No. 1 overall draft pick

and returned both a punt and for 269 yards and a touchdown akickoffforatouchdown. The as the Cardinals (8-5) won for

NBA ROUNDUP

The Associated Press

beat Carolina to regain sole

the Chargers took him with

Bryant returns, but Raptors take win over Lakers

is expected to be traded to

Buccaneers 27, Bills 6: TAMPA, Fla. — Mike Glennon threw two touchdown passes

passed for 313 yards and four touchdowns and New Orleans

32 passes, 12 of them to Larry Fitzgerald, and Arizona ended an eight-game losing streak against NFC West foes. PalmDenver to a victory over Ten- sacked Robert Griffin III five er, questionable for the game nessee. The temperature was times and Kirk Cousins once, with a sore right elbow, threw

Toronto Raptors' 106-94 victo-

contention.

as New York set a season high for points and stopped a threegame skid. Chris Ivory had a touchdown run, Nick Folk kicked three field goals and

ed. Workers used shovels and CINNATI — A n d y D a l ton hand-held blowers to clear off threw for three touchdowns yard lines. Conditions were so and ran for another as Cinpoor neither team tried a field cinnati remained perfect at goal, and there were 2-point home and in control of the conversion attempts after sev- AFC North. The Bengals (9-4) en of the eight TDs. improved to 6-0 at Paul Brown Also on Sunday: Stadium on a cold, windy day: Broncos 51, Titans 28: DEN- 28 degrees at kickoff with VER — Unbothered by the a wind chill of 19 and light freezing weather, Matt Prat- flurries. er set an NFL record with a Chiefs 45, Redskins 10: 64-yard field goal and Peyton LANDOVER, Md. — KanManning threw four more sas City scored on its first touchdown passes, lifting four possessions in the snow,

LOS ANGELES — K obe Bryant had nine points and

of draft picks. The Giants (5-8) were knocked out of playoff

ed EJ Manuel four times en Jets 37, Raiders 27: EAST route to their fourth win in five RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Geno games following an 0-8 start. Smith threw a t o u chdown Saints 31, Panthers13: NEW pass and ran for another score ORLEANS — D r e w B r ees

that took only 41 seconds. It came after Matt Cassel threw Cordarrelle Patterson with 45

and then sent him to the Giants for Rivers and a handful

V

Ceremonial Candle Lighting & Reading of Names honoring loved ones who have died. Special Musical Presentation by Katie Cavanaugh Sunday

Wednesday

December 15th

December 18th

5:00 p.m.

4:30 p.m. Hospice of Redmond

The Art Works Building 204 W Adams, Sisters

732 SW 23rd, Redmond

No Admission Fees / Donations Gladly Accepted

Presented by

For Information, call

541.548.7483

HOSPiCE of Redmond

before December 6th.

e

at every mention of Kobe, who w as introduced last i n t h e

Sacramento today as the cen- Chuck Hayes. terpieceof an apparent sevThat turned out to be plen- starting lineup. en-player deal. ty, thanks to two Los Angeles Also on Sunday: Kyle Lowry had 23 points natives. Johnson, who attendCeltics114, Knicks 73: NEW and eight assists, and DeMar ed nearby Westchester High YORK — Jordan Crawford DeRozan added 10 of his 26

School, went 14 for 17 and

points in the final 4:35 of the surpassed his previous career Raptors' first road win over high early in the third quarter. the Lakers in 11 tries since Johnson didn't take a shot in

scored 23 points and Boston

had the most-lopsided victory in the NBA this season, batter-

ing New York.

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings All TimesPST

d-jjjdjajta

d-Mjami Atlanta

Eastern Cottterettce W L Pet GB 18 3 857 16 5 762 2 10 12

Detroit Washington Charlotte

Chicago Toronto

Cjeyejajjd

Philadelphia Orlando Brooklyn NewYork Milwaukee

524 7 455 8'/t 1jj 11 476 8 9 to 474 8 9 11 450 8'It 8 to 444 8'A 7 12 368 10 7 1 3 350 to'/r 7 14 333 11 6 1 4 300 11'/t 6 1 4 300 u'/z 5 14 263 12 4 1 6 200 13'A 11 tjj

d-Bostojj

tNestern Conference Nj L

d-portjajtd d-Sajj Antonio

Oklahoma City d-L.A.Clippers Houston Dallas Denver Golden State Phoenix LA. Lakers NewOrleans Memphis Minnesota Sacramen to Utah

d-divisiojt leader

17 4 15 4 15 4 13 8 15 7 t3 8 12 8 12 9 11 9

10 to

Pet GB 810 789 t 789 t 619 4 682 2'A 619 4 6jjO 4t/r

571 5

550 5'/2 500 6t/z

9 10 474 7 9 to 474 7 9 u 450 rlt 5 13 278 tot/r 4 18 182 13'/t

Sttndatj's Games Bostojt u4, New York73 Miamj u0, Detroi95 t

Houston98,Orlando88 oklahoma cjjy u8, Indiana94 Toronto106,LA.Lakers94 Today'sGames LA. Clippersat Philadelphia,4 p.m. DenveratWashington, 4p.m. Golden Stateat Charlotte,4 p.m. OrlandoajMemphis, 5p.m. PortlandatUtah,6p.m. Dallas atSacramento, 7p.m.

Tuesday'sGames Miami atIndiana,4p.m. NewYorkatClevejand,4p.m. Sajj AntonioatToronto, 4 p.m. Bostonat6rookjyjj, 4:30 p.m. Oklahoma City atAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Minnesota atDetroit, 4:30p.m. Milwaukee at Chicago,5 p.m. PhoenixatLA. Lakers, 7:30p.m.

Summaries Sttnda y' sGames

Raptors106, Lakers 94 TORONTO (106)

Fields 0-60-0 0,A.Johjjsojt14-17 4-432,Vajancjujjas 2-61-2 5, Lowry8-136-623, DeRozajj 8-19

10-u 26, Novak1-9 0-03, Ross4-9 1-211,Stone 3-30-06. Totals 40-8222-25106. LA. LAKERS (94) WJohnson 1-30-02, Gasoj3-111-27, Sacre1-3 0-0 2, Blake1-6 0-0 3, Bryant2-9 5-7 9, Wiliams 4-6 0-0 to, Meeks 6-120-014, Young7-163-319, Hill 3-55-511,Henry6-83-317. Totals 34-791720 94. Toronto 30 21 22 33 — 106 LA. Lakers 20 27 21 26 — 94

Rockets 98, Magic 88 ORLANDO (88) Affjajo 6-173-416, Njchojson4-u 2-2 u, Davis 8-182-418,Nelson5-121-315,0jadipo2-u 4-68, Moore4-102-312, Maxjej t-4 0-2 2,Price0-30-0 0,Harkless2-72-46,Lamb0-00-00,O'Quinn0-0 0-00. Totals 32-9316-2888. HOUSTON (98) Parsons7-121-518, TJones6-132-716, Howard 6-1281420,Beverley391-39, Harden71710-u 27, Brooks1-40-0 2, Casspi2-5 2-2 6, Garcia0-3 0-00, MotiejujasO-t 0-00, Brewer0-00-00. Totals 32-76 24-4298. Orlando 18 20 23 27 — 88 Houston 28 24 31 15 — 98

Thunder118, Pacers 94 INDIANA (94)

George9-1710-1132, West5-111-1 11,Hibbert

6-12 0-012, G.Hijl 2-8 0-0 4,Stephejtsojj 4-u 0-0

8, Scoja2-4 2-2 6, Johnson0-32-2 2, Watson 1-4 2-25, Mahijjmi 1-41-1 3,Copejajd1-40-02, Sloajt

0-1 0-0 0,SHijj1-21-2 3, Butler2-40-0 6. Totals 34-85 19-2194.

OKLAHOMA CITY (118)

Durajjt14-236-636,jbaka6-81-213,perkins2-2 226,Westbiook0-1t3326,Sefolosha2-4004, Adams t-j 3-3 5, Jackson6-112-2 15,Cojjisojj O-t 2-2 2, Lamb 2-6 0-0 5, Fisher0-1 0-00, Jones3-3 0-06. Totals 47-7719-20118. Indiana 18 19 32 25 — 94 Oklahoma Cit y 2 8 2 8 34 28 — 118

Heat110, Pistons 95 MIAMI (110)

James 10-154-524, Batier 1-30-03, Bosh5-13 6-616, Chalmers 3-71-2 8, Allen6-10 4-418, Andersejt 4-52-210, Lewis3-5 0-09, MasonJi. 4-6 j-0 12, Cole3-52-28, Haslem1-20-02, JonesO-t jj-0 0. Totals 40-7219-21110.

25 yoga elasses a week in addition to... Pilates, over 60 youth and family activities a week, over 40 cardio/strength group exercise classes a week, cycling, cardio, aquatics, tennis, basketball, racquetball, private women's only fitness center, and exceptional service from Bend's best professionals.

DETROIT (95) Smith 6-140-0 13,Monroe3-10 4-510, Drummond 8-u 3-619, Jennings6-146-7 19, Caldwell-pope 0-40-00, Sijjgjer 34 3-4 10, Jerebko5-9 0 012, Vjllajjueva 480 010, Harreljson 030 00, Siva 1-30-02,Datome0-40-00, Mitchell0-10-00. Totals 36-8516-2295. Miami 29 30 32 19 — 110 Detroit 21 32 17 25 — 95

Celtics114, Knicks 73 BOSTON (114)

Bass4-88-916,Green6-9 3-316, Sujjijjger 9-t3 1-1 21,Crawford8-141-1 23,Bradley4-u 3-313, Humphrj es2-52-26,Lee4-70-010,Wallace0-00-2 0, Faverajji 0-00-00, Pressey0-31-21, Brooks2-2 3-48. Totals 39-7222-27114.

NEWYORK(73) Hardaway Jr. 3-7 t-1 8, Anthony5-15 8-1019,

Bargjjajjj1-7 0-0 2, Fejtojj 0-6 0-0 0, Shumpert0-6

0-0 0, J.Smjth1-5 1-2 3, Pljgioni 1-1 0-0 3, Stoudemjre5-7 7-1017,World Peace5-10 0-012, Udrih 2-50 05, Aldrich 0-00-00, Murry2-40-04. Totals 25-7317-2373. Boston 34 24 34 22 — 114 New York 11 20 25 17 — 73

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MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B5

No.13 Oregonbeats Mississippi in overtime MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

The Associated Press

OXFORD, Miss. — Mike Moser s cored 2 4 po i n t s, 3 -point shooting f ro m

Rogeuo V. Sous/The Associated press

Oregon guard Damyean Dotson (21) watches his dunk against Mississippi during Sunday's game in Oxford, Miss.

Washington 63: SAN DIEGO — Xavier Thames scored 19

Johnathan Loyd added 23 Rebels. points and 15 assists, and the The Ducks (8-0) felt fortu-

field, including 10 of 23 from points, and San Diego State 3-point range. rallied from a nine-point halfThe final minute of regula- time deficit to beat Washing-

Oregon Ducks made almost

the

tion was wild, with Ole Miss

ton. Winston Shepard added

every shot they tossed toward um with a victory. "They made it tough for us the basket Sunday. It's a good thing. They need- to put the game away," Moser ed just about every single one said. "That's the best I've ever

nate to leave Tad Smith Colise-

hitting three difficult 3-point-

17 points for the Aztecs (7-1). Southern California 78, Boston College 62: LOS AN-

of them. No. 13 Oregon outlasted

five players in double figures Jarvis Summers nailed an with 16 points and Southern off-balance 22-footer to tie it at California pulled away over 89 with 0.8 seconds left. the final eight minutes to beat Also on Sunday: Boston College, improving to No. 24 San Diego State 70, 5-0 at home.

seen a team shoot before in that short of a span."

Mississippi 115-105 in an enMarshall Henderson had a tertaining overtime game career-high 39 points for Ole that featured 15 lead changes, Miss (6-2). The 6-foot-2 guard 14 ties and some ridiculous made 11 of 27 shots from the

T HAN K

ers in the last 40 seconds to climb out of an 86-80 hole. H enderson made tw o w i t h a hand in his face and then

GELES — Julian Jacobs led

Y O U t o a ll o u r

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H OME S 1690 N Hvvy97, Redmond 541-548-5511 Postal Connections" 2660 E Hvvy20, Bend 54'I-382-1800

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Kelly J.WittConstruction 19430ApacheRd. Bend 54t-40B-56&3 Re/Max KeyProperties 431 NW Franklin, Bend 54t-72B-0033 SunriverBooks&Music Building25C,Sunriver 54t-593-2525 VanHandelAutomotive, Inc. 127 W. Sisters ParkDr.Sisters 54t-549-0416 SherwinWiliams 125 NE Franklin, Bend 54t-3&9-2536 Advanced CabitnetryInc. 2&53S.W.High Desert, Prinevile 54t-447-7024 GaryGrunerChevrolet 2000 SW Highway 26, Madras 54t-475-2238 SuperiorService B27 SEBusinessWay, Bend 54t-3BB-B839 AllenClarkTreeService 13-661 SECayuseRd., Prinevile 54t-447-B2&3 LeadingEdgeAviation Inc. 6304BPowegBute Rd., Bend 54t-3&3-BB2 5 TheGarnerGroup 2762 NW Crossing Dr.¹100, Bend 54t-3&3-4360 AlternativeConstruction Inc. 60003MinnetonkaLane, Bend 54t-Bto-5&ft Big CountryRV 63500USHwy97, Bend 9th StreetRVStorageCenter 169 SE9thStreet, Bend 54t-3&9-6740 AmeripriseFinancial 2t4 SEVineLane, Bend 54t-3&9-2528 CentroPrintSolutions 629t5 NEtgth,Bend 54t-3&2-3534 BendPlumbingandHeating Inc. P.O.Box5203,Bend 54t-3&2-B577 BacheloRe r alty 65-260TweedRd., Bend 54t-3&9-5516 Greg &Patty Cushman Bt370 Tam McArthurLoop,Bend 54t-3&9-3044 Big MountaiGu n ters 63506VogtRd,Bend 54t-3BB-18&5 BrianHemphig Attorney 339 SW Century Dr,ft0t, Bend 54t- 3&2-2991 MSTCorporation 1659 SW BaldwinRd., Prinevige 54t-4t6-9000 Blondie'sPizzaTwoCountry Mal P.O.Box 4&39, Sunriver 54t-593-1019 CentralWindowWashing&Janitorial 20490WoodsideNorth Dr., Bend 54t-3&9-0490 Mt. View Hospital 470 NE ASt., Madras 54t-460-4039 Consolidated Towing Inc. 1000 SE 9thST., Bend 54t-3&9-BO BO ChezChienneHouseof DogsGroommgBt405 SHwy 97Ste. 1, Bend 54t-3&3-5909 ChristmasValey Market B7497ChristmasValleyHwy, SilverLake 54t-576-2200 DairyQueen BI331 S.Hwy97-PO.Box9459, Bend 54t-3&5-SBB O Gogenolco a nstruction 19058ChoctawRd., Bend 54t-3&3-7t55 SuperiorService B27BusinessWaySte.Mt,Bend 54t-3BB-BB 39 DaysInn B49NE3rdSt., Bend 54t-3&2-6811 NAPA AutoParts 5t477 Hwy 97,LaPine 54t- 536-2192 TrailerWorld 64601BaileyRd.,Bend 54t-3&9-BB94 Del Barber Excavation P.O.Box6554,Bend 54t-54B-099B PahlischHomes 630BBNEt BthSt. Ste.t00, Bend 54t- 3&5-6762 UBS Financial Services, Inc. 600SW ColumbiaSt.Ste.6200,Bend 54t-617-7020 FiveTalentsoftware Inc. 404 SW Columbia St,r150, Bend BOO-770-1868 Balzer Painting,Inc. 20676CarmenLoop,Bend 54t-330-0756 BirkenstockofBend B36 NW Wall St., Bend 54t-3&9-46BB Hutch'sBicycles 725NW ColumbiaSt.,Bend 54t-3&2-9253 BelforPropertyRestoration tt17 SE Centennial St., Bend 503-40B-BB BO CenturyInsuranceGroupLLC 695 SW Mil ViewWay Bend 54t-3&2-421t LaRosa Authentic Me xicanKitchen 19570AmberMeadowDr., Bend 54t- 31B-72tg BlueSageConstruction 59745Calgary Loop,Bend 54t-306-4771 DesertSkyRealEstate 636 NW CedarAve.Redmond 54t-504-9792 LaRosa Authentic Me xicanKitchen 2763 NW Crossing Dr.,Bend 54t- 647-t624 CentralLakesMarine 741 SEGlenwoodDr., Bend 54t-3&5-779t HongKongRestaurant 530 SE3rd, Bend 54t-3&9-BB BO LesSchwabeAmphitheater 15 SWColoradoAvetf10, Bend 54t-322-93&3 CentralOregonPathologyConsultants 134BCushing St.200, Bend 54t-3&9-7490 ShevlinSand&Gravel 632&5NWSkyline RanchRd., Bend 54t-St2-4730 MerlotMortgage 2&40NESedalia Loop,Bend 54t-Stg-5246 CentralOregonSeeds 1747 NW Mil St., Madras 54t-475-723t SoundsFast 142 NE RevereAve., Bend 54t- 312-4332 NCMMedia Network Bt1 NETrackerCt., Bend 54t-3&9-6609 ChesterCabinets P.O.Box7994,Bend 54t-3&9-B130 The Pony Express 160 S. Oak,Sisters 54t-549-153B O'DellLakeResort P.O.Boxt159, Cresent Lake 54t- 433-2&40 ClassicMotorCarCo. 1tBSNWWall St., Bend 54t- 317-3403 AvionWa ter Company Inc. 60&t3 ParrelRd., l Bend 54t-3&2-5342 OnTo Technology 63221ServiceRd.Ste.F, Bend 54t-3&9-7897 CulverRealEstate&Expresso 701 1stAve,Culver 54t-546-63&2 CanalBargeCruises.com 2t50 Condor Court, Redmond 54t-504-6264 OptimaFoot andAnkle 1506 NE WilliamsonBlvd., Bend 54t-3&3-366B DiamondTree 2669 NE TwinKnols Dr.Ste.20B,Bend 54t-706-9340 Fireside Inc. 424 NE3rdSt, Bend 54t-3&2-2597 PremierPrintingSolutions 920 SW Emkay Dr., Bend 54t-617-9899 Energyconservation Insulation Co. P.O.Box7772,Bend 54t-67B-5566 FivePineLodge 102t Desperado Trail, Sisters 54t-549-5900 Stephen AGrimmGrading&Excavating 17735OldWoodRd., Sunriver 54t-593-1455 J.LWardCo.- Back9Golf Course 60650ChinaHatRd, Bend 54t- 3&2-0491 LaPinePetBed&Bath 5t590 RusselRd., l LaPine 54t-536-5355 Swan's Automotive 20664CarmenLoop,Bend 54t-3&5-B948 Jeferson CountyTitle Co. P.O.Box51,Madras 54t-475-7201 Tetherow Golf Club Bt240SkylineRanchRd., Bend 54t-3&9-5&57 The VilageBarandGrig PO.Box 4213,Sunriver 54t-593-ftoo LaPineCommunity Health Center St600HuntingtonRoad, LaPine 54t-536-3435 Blockbuster 2tf NERevere,Bend 54t-3&5-1033 UBS Financial Services, Inc. 600SW ColumbiaSt.Ste.6200,Bend 54t-322-6122 McMurray &SonsRoofing 920 SE9thSt., Bend 54t-3&5-0695 Northwest Benefits Group 64745SylvanLoop,Bend W.W.West Inc.Publishers 20&75SholesRd., Bend 54t-3&5-Bgft PrecisePlumbing P.O.Box 3456,LaPine 54t-536-2464 On PoinCo t mmunity Credit Union 950 NW BondSt., Bend BOO-527-3932 www.shipmate.com P.O.Box 787,Sisters 54t- 370-3600 Stephen AGrimmGrading&Excavating 17735OldWoodRoad, Bend 541-94B-O B10 Robinson &OwenHeavyConstruction 750 Buckaroo Trail, Sisters 54t-549-1&4B NobleBuildersLLC 19-B97SWHogygrapeAve, Bend 54t-420-2494 Allen Design Group 541-330-O OB3 60762Radcliff Circle,Bend SunrayVacationRentals 56&70Venture Lane,Sunriver 54t-593-3225 Erickson'Thri s ftway 315 NW 3rd St., Prinevige 54t-447-6291 Barnes&Noble Booksellers 2690 NE Hwy 20, Bend 541-3fB-7242 WarmSpringsMarket 2t32 Warm SpringsSt., WarmSprings 54t-553-1597 BendGarbage&Recycling 20&35NEMontanaWay, Bend 54t-323-4069 Bend TechSupport LLC 20585BrinsonBlvdSuite 3, Bend 541-3BB-2401 Tim Underw oodProductions 777 NW Wall Ste. 1gg, Bend 54t-3&2-B2B B Deja Vu Interiors 225 SW Century Dr., Bend 54t-317-9169 Bows&BritchesKidsConsignment 12f0 N Mainf2, Prinevile 541-362-5604 CascadiaVehicle Tents Bt5tgAmericanLaneSte.140, Bend 54t-St2-B36B BajaFresh Bt6 NE3rdSt.,Bend 54t-Bt7-B7&t CalderaGrile 927 NW Bond, Bend 541-3BB-B B99 HighDesertAssistedLiving 2660 Ne Mary RosePlace, Bend 54t-312-2003 CRFabrication,LTD. 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Btf NE4thSt. Ste.2**, Bend 54t-3BB-4822 LongHollowRanch 7t105 Holmes Rd,Sisters 54t-923-1901 Schwa Country Store&Marketplacefgf60 Cottonw oodRd.tf222, Sunriver 541- 593-Bf13 Baregreen Elingson 63-046LaytonAve, Bend 54t-Bt7-9400 Midstate Power Products 1&1BS.HWY97, Redmond 54t- 54B-6744 Sunriver 541-3BB-7229 Bend BendPropertyManagementCo. 405 NE Seward, Ste. 4, Bend 54t-3&2-7727 Sabor AMi 304 SEThird St, Bend 54t-7BB-9351 SuperiorMobileAutoGlass ColoradoAve. Suite2BO,Bend 541-6f7-OBB B Capstone WealthManagementGroup 105t NEBondSt. Ste.200,Bend 54t-330-0266 Satterlee JewelryRepair&DesignCenter St3 NWFirAve., Redmond 54t-54B-B7B B AdvisoryServices&Investments, LLC f5 SW CentralServiceInc. 6296BClydeLane, Bend 54t-420-2977 AllenReinsch 145t16LanewoodDr., LaPine 54t-536-1294 AmbientArchitectureLLC 920 NW Bond Suite204,Bend 541-647-5675 ChinaDoll 547 NE Begview Pft3, Bend 54t-St2-9393 BrentWoodard Inc. 3743 N.Hwy97, Redmond 54t-504-553B BirtolaGarmynHighDesert Realty f01 NE GreenwoodAve tff00, Bend 541- 312-9449 Fitnesst4 401569NE2ndSt., Bend 54t-3&9-2009 CarpetcoFlooring 154BS.Hwy97, Redmond 54t-54B-33&3 CSConstructionLLC 541-6f7-9f90 1506 NE 1st St., Bend PhoenixAsphalt 63066PlateauDr., Bend 54t-647-2356 Crooked RiverSanitory f3-9IBSW CommercialLp Rd,CrookedRiver 541- 54B-1542 CentralOregonAssoc. ofRealtors 2112NE4thSt., Bend 541-3B2-3452 ProCaliberMotosports of Bend 3500 N.Hwy97, Bend 54t-3&2-5731 HarvestMoonWoodworks 66224BarrRd,Bend 54t-330-3960 C.S.I.Compu ter Solutions 230SE3rdSt. Suite100,Bend 541-306-6700 Quality Inn 20600GrandviewDr, Bend 54t-Stgg&4& Jeld-Wen 3737LakeportBlvd.,KlamathFals B00-JELD-W EN CooperRacing 541-59B-9170 56B57Enterprise Dr.,Sunriver ReliableMaintenanceService 2660 NE Hwy20, Bend 54t-3&9-6528 LesSchwabof Madras 2B NE Plum,Madras 54t-475-3834 CulverMarket 41 f W.1stSt.,Culver 541-546-6032 Rigoberto's 1913 NE 3rdSt., Bend 54t-SBB-67& 3 Little Enterprises Painting Service 633t1 CarlyLn,Bend 54t- B15-3561 RiveraBrothersLandscapingCo. 1&04NWBTHSt., Redmond 541-923-2704 SchillingColarCity Gardens 64640OldBendRedmondHwy, Bend 54t-3BB-46BO Little Pizza Paradise Cascade Vilage, Bend 54t-312-2577 541-3BB-9743 S itzman E q u ip m e n t S a l e s & R e n ta l 65260 94th St., Ben d Springtime Landscape&Irrigation 62990PlateauDr., Bend 54t-3&9-4974 Pro-Vend Service 625 SE9thSt., Bend 54t-3&9-9999 6th St. SuiteC,Redmond 541- 526-5674 ValuePlumbing 55 NE6thSt., Bend 54t-322-6928 QuiltersAttic Bt5411thSt., Redm ond 54t 54B-Btfg SkrubzMedical &Supply LLC 636 NW 541-330-599B 629BO NHwy 97,Bend YellowknifewirelessCo. 136 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend 54t-3&5-Otft RealtyProsLLS B50NW 55thSt,Redmond 54t- 4BO-9567 SugarloafMountainMotel ARC Docu m ent So l u ti o ns 1 151 SE Ce n t e nn i a l Co u r t , Be n d 541-749-2f51 Pilot Butte Drive-In -Westside 320 SW Century Dr.Ste.410, Bend 54t-323-3272 RogersBuildingCo. 1515 NE 10th St., Bend 54t-B15-4072 1462 S.Hwy97, Redmond 541-316-1511 2B Sports 2t17 NE KimLane,Bend 54t-SBB-3&29 Sagewood Grocery 87I64Christm sV aalleyHwy, ChristmasValley 54t-576-2500 CentralOregonGlass ClineFallsHwy,Redmond 541-54B-1455 BendPineNursery 190tg BakerRoad, Bend 54t-977-B733 SerenityLane 601 NW harmonBlvd., Bend 54t-3&3-0844 ClineButteRockPit-SteveFoxConstruction67-5B5 gnsCustom Designs 615 SW Umatila, Redmond 541-54B-7226 Benham Fals Asphalt LLC. 20-5&3Shaniko Ln.,Bend 54t-Stg-B32B SmolichMotors 1&65 NE Hwy20, Bend 54t- 3BB-t177 DanaSi CentralOr.Leasing&Mgmt.Residential 1250 NE 3rdSt., Bend 54t-3&5-6830 WellsFargoBankN.A. Bt7 S.6thSt., Redmond 54t-54B-4595 Elliott ScottHoldings,L.L.C. 325 NW Vermont -Suite105, Bend 541-647-1000 ColimaMarket 22B NE GreenwoodAve., Bend 54t-Bt7-9250 Wilderness Garbage&Recycle St420RussellRd.,LaPine 54t-536-1&34 J & MHomes 1690 N Hwy 97, Redmond 541-54B-5511 DanielAutomotive 204 NE LaFayette Ave., Bend 54t-3&9-9912 BendMailingService 1036 SE PaiuteWay, Bend 54t- 3BB-07B B PremierAutobody&Paint 950 NE 5th St., Redmond 541-52B-2299 DeschutesDogSalon 1225 NE 3rdSt., Bend 54t-749-400t BendRVRepair 62-BBO BoydAcresRdfrA2, Bend 54t-SBB-544B ProfessionalHeating&CoolingInc. 4fBSW Bl ackButeeBlvd,Redmond 541-923-3366 ExquisiteLimousineLLC 3939 S.6thST., KlamathFags 54t-3&2-2977 DrakeRestaurant B01 NW Wall St., Bend 54t-306-3366 Redmond Fitness1440 3&53 SW 21st, Redmond 541- 504-6050 GustafsonConstruction Inc. 20650E.High Desert Laner3Bend 54t-94B-2t46 ElRanchoGrande 63455 N Hwy97,Bend 54t-St2-2022 SavorySpinceShop 55 375 SW PowerhouseDr., Bend 541-306-BB LearningTymesNurseryRhymes 20003ChrisRhodesDr., Bend 54t-312-2765 IT onDemand 477 NE Greenwood, Suite C,Bend 54t-323-3571 ShoeboxBookkeeping 20965LimestoneAve., Bend 541- 3&2-4795 LifetimeVisionCare 901 NW Carlon Ave., Bend 54t-3&2-3242 Kelleher Group-Caldwel BankerMorris www.soldonben d.com 54t- 322-2416 StanleySteamer 20727HighDesert Ct. unit f, Bend 541-706-9390 Mountai nSkyLandscapingInc. 64604OldBendRedmondHwy, Bend 54t-3&9-B474 LeaderBuilders,LLC 1t7 NEGreenwoodAve, Bend 54t-4BO-3547 17-600Century Drive,Sunriver 541-593-1000 Sunriver Resort SunCountryWater 2264BNelson Rd., Bend 54t-3&2-5t03 Linda MackLMFT/LPC 745 NW Mt.Washington Dr. Ste30f, Bend 54t-Bt7-gtgB Hardware B06511thSt., Terrebonne 541-54B-B707 TheCen tral OregonBreeze 62995PlateauDr., Bend 54t-3&9-7469 Lumberm an'sInsurance 965 SWEmkay Dr., Bend 54t-3BB-0374 Terrebonne 541-54B-1009 539 NW 6th St., Redmond Beacon Hil Properties 221BB Neff Road,Bend 54t-3&9-0606 Mother'sCa fe 2locationsin Bend 54t-Stg-OBB B TexacoFoodMart TK Ja c ob s on I n v e s t me n t s , I n c . 23-451 Butterfield Trai l , Bend 541- 3&3-B502 BendPlasticSupply &Fabrication Bt505AmericanLane,Bend 54t-3BB-1525 Pack,Ship&More WagnerMal-Century Drive,Bend 54t-3BBO SBB 15 SW Colorado k220,Bend 541-3B5-0534 CarKareInc 1092 SE Centennial St,Bend 54t-3&2-4&96 Precision Countertops 63051Corporate Place, Bend 54t- 3BB-7&3 0 ModeFarrens 541-54B-1225 516 SW 5th St, Redmond CarlsengDesigns-LandscapeDesign 1t33 NW Knoxvile Blvd,Bend 54t-610-696t Pro SteelFabrication &Consulting 10-460CornettLoop,Powell Bute 54t- 447-5532 Moe'sFoodMart 26BO NEhwy 20, Bend 541-3BB-B BB7 DappleE darth Designsto NurtureLife PowelButte l 54t-350-7436 Redmond CentralOregonKOA 2435 SW Jericho Ln,Culver 54t-546-3046 Pacific Video Floyd ABoydCo. 1223N.E.1st.St., Bend 54t-633-7671 R eganErtleWigiamette FinancialGroup2514 NE Division, Bend 54t-330-7454 SpringleafFinancialServices 974SW Veter ansWay,Ste.5,Redmond 541- 923-3697 GlasweldBe nd 54t-SBB-ft56 RHRHeating 39&9NWXavier, Redmond 54t-92 3-OBOO The TutoringClubofBend 745 Mt.WashingtonDr.,Bend 541-6f 7-9473 HillsideInnBed&Breakfast 54t-3&9-9660 RichardW.Little Jr.CP A PC 742 SW Forest Rd.,Redmond 54t- 923-0231 VillageInteriors Design 3&2 E.HoodAve., Sisters 541-549-3431 Hull'sConstructionSisters 54t-St2-2344 SonicDrive-In Bend,Redmond&M adras 63076 NHwy97,Bend 54t-306-7279 TableTops 1645 NE Lytle St., Suitef, Bend 541-3B2-211B Landon Construction 633tg Johnson RanchRd,Bend 54t-94B-2568 TozerDesignLLC 724 NW Federal St., Bend 54t- 3&3-Bgt5 Dr. KeithKrueger 1475 SW Chandler Ave.ftf, Bend 541-322-5717 M.C.SmithSign&Graphics 1515 NE 2nd St., Bend 54t-3&9-247t US Bank 1442 NE 3rdSt., Bend 54t-3&9-533t BendSurgeryCenter 541-3fB-O B58 1303CushingDr.ft200, Bend Miracle-Ear 31BBNHwy97rftB, Bend 54t-330-5503 WagnerMal NE3rd &Revere, Bend 54t-3&2-9423 MtBacheloVi r lageResort 197t7 MtBachelor Dr,Bend 54t-322-1265 WebformixHighSpeedInternet 67 NW HawthorneAve, Bend 54t-3&5-B532 NewportAvenueMarket 1t2t NWNewport Ave,Bend 54t-3&2-3940 Amada HornerHomeCare 2475SW 26thSt.,Redmond 54t-526-56&1 Nik'sDieselRepair 20475BrandisCt,Bend 54t-3&9-1295 AvionWa ter Company Inc. 60&t3 ParrelRd., l Bend 54t-3&2-5342 OlsenDaines 141 NW Greenwood, Bend 54t-330-5044 BendAnimalHospital 63-240Service Road, Bend 54t-3&9-7778 OpportunityFoundation PO Box 430, Redmond 54t-54B-261t Bend Spine&Pain Specialists 929 SW SimpsonAver250,Bend 54t-647-1645 Oregon WholesaleHardwareInc 653 NE1st St., Bend 54t-3&2-3371 Dano'sCleaning Bend 54t 38B-B35t PaigeElectrical WireandCables 3607 NW FalconRidge,Bend 54t-3&5-5&12 Diane'sRidingPlace 65535ClineFags Rd., Bend 54t-3&5-7933 PaulHumphreyConstruction Inc Bend 54t-610-5798 Dunes Motel 1515 NE 3rdSt., Bend 54t-3&2-6811 Pelican BayForestProducts P.O.Box6958,Bend 54t-54B-261t Furnish 761 NW Arizonz Ave., Bend 54t-Bt7-Bgft PineTavern Restaurant 967 NW BrooksSt, Bend 54t-3&2-55&1 GSIWaterSolutions,lnc. 147 SW Shevlin HixonDr.Jt201,Bend 54t-67B-5117 YorkBuildingandDesign PO Box Bt59, Bend 54t-2BO-77& t HarrigonPriceFronk&Co. LLP 975SW Colorado-Suite200,Bend 54t-3&2-479t Above&BeyondHomeFurnishings 1435 SW Hwy 97, Madras 54t-475-1112 HongKongRestaurant 530 SE3rdSt., Bend 54t-3&9-BBB O LongButteMetal Roof Products, Inc 65261 97thSt,Bend 54t-4tg-1202 PaultheComputer Guy 244 NE Franklin Ave.Ste. 2, Bend 54t-330-0610 Lowe's 20501CooleyRd,Bend 54t-693-0560 PilatesConnection Bt2 NESavannahDr., Suite 4,Bend 54t-420-2927 AmyAndersonFarmersInsurance 120B NE 4th ST.Suite B,Bend 54t-St2-tt43 PostalConnections 2660 EHwy20,Bend 54t- 3&2-tBOO Beem Construction 60351ArnoldMarket Rd.,Bend 54t-3&2-3064 ABCFenceCo. 421 NW10th,Prinevile 54t-447-67BO BendChamberofCommerce 777NW Wal lST.,Bend 54t-3&2-322t Airgas 63051PlateauDr., Bend 54t- 617-0450 BigfootBeverages 2440 NE 4th, Bend 54t-3&2-4495 BendConstruction Supply Inc. 2BOSEBridgeford Blvd., Bend 54t- 3&2-9200 Brian'sCabinets Bt-527AmericanLoop,Bend 54t-3&2-3773 BendSpay&Neuter Project Btg SEWilson Ste. B-f, Bend 54t-Bt7-1010 CascadeInsurance Center 336 SW CyberDr., Bend 54t-3&2-2241 CentralOregonNutrition Bt456ElderRidgeSt., Bend 54t-3BB-0694 HolaRestaurant www.holabend.com 54t-3&9-4652 ConcreteMobile Mix,Inc. 441 t NW Eliott Ln.,Bend 54t-447-137B Lulu'sBoutique 150NW MinnesotaAve.,Bend 54t-617-B948 H20 Sportswear t50 NE BendRiverMal Dr.Jr250, Bend 54t-3&9-5590 ParigaGril 635 NW14thSt., Bend 54t-Bt7-9600 Spectrum BuildingandRestoration 90 SEBridgeford Blvd.,Bend 54t-3&5-0752

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BS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013

T EE TO

REEN GOLF ROUNDUP

Johnsonrallies for World Challengewin The Associated Press THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — Zach Johnson put together the storybook finish at Sherwood on Sunday that for the lon-

gest time belonged to Tiger Woods. Johnson rallied from four shots behind

with eight holes to play, holed out from a dropareaforparonthelastholetoforcea playoff, and beat the No. 1 player in golf at the World Challenge when Woods missed a 5-foot par putt on the first extra hole. "Pretty impressive what he did," Woods

said. "He got me." It was an extraordinary send-off at Sherwood, which hosted the World Chal-

lenge for the 14th and final time before it They were tied after Johnson hit his tee moves to Florida next year. shot to 4 feet for birdie on the 17th hole. The big surprise was the winner in so Playing from the left rough, Woods came many ways. up just short and watched his approach "I feel very fortunate, and a bit lucky," tumble down the elevated green and into said Johnson, who moved into the top 10

the bunker. Johnson followed with his

in the world ranking for the first time in worst shot of the week, an 8-iron so weak his career. For Woods, it was only the fourth time

that it came up well short and into the

hazard. Johnson knew Woods had a difficult two shots going into the final round, the bunker shot, and he figured if he could second time at Sherwood. Graeme Mc- stick his wedge close from 58 yards away Dowell overcame a four-shot deficit in inthedrop zone,abogey mightbeenough Mark J. Terrill/The Associated Press 2010 and beat Woods in a playoff. to get into a playoff. Zach Johnson tees off on the sixth hole during the final round of This was far more dramatic. SeeJohnson/B9 the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge in Thousand Oaks, Calif. in his career that he lost a lead of at least

Offseasonupdate: Juniper GolfCourse By Zack Hall

ir

Juniper, at a glance

The Bulletin

ars » e nmarrt

This is the latest install-

IIIi l l fllfl

ment of a weekly Tee To Green feature in which

' rss gH

w e check i n

Number ofboles: 18 Status:Openyear-round, weather permitting location:1938S.W.Elkhorn St., Redmond Tee times:541-548-3121 Course stats:Par 72, 7186

v i a e mail

with Central Oregon golf facilities for an offseason update. This week we con-

tacted Bruce Wattenburger, the head golf professional at Juniper Golf Club

yal'ds

in Redmond since 1983. Wattenburger, a mem-

Head golf professional: Bruce Wattenburger Course designer:John Harbottle III (2005) Extras:Driving range, putting green, practice pitching green, restaurant, banquet facility Website: www.playjuniper.com

ber of the Pacific Northwest Section PGA Hall of

Fame, is the longest-tenured Central Oregon head pro. This is what he had to say about the current business of golf and about Juniper, Redmond's municipal golf course: • How was business • in 2013? The 2013 season had

A •• its ups and downs,

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Golf accessories often make better gifts for golfers than clubs and golf balls. That includes golf bags, such as this blue Mizuno Aero-

lite bag ($160) and black andred Ogio Cirrus ($240) seen here. Mobile Warming Men's LongmenShirt ($160, seen here in black) offers battery-powered heat, while Linksoul's blue polo ($70) is one of anew breed of cotton golf shirts. Spikeless shoes, including from left to right, Nike's Fl Impact ($176), Ecco's BIOM($190) and FootJoy's M Project ($129), have become the style of choice for many golfers. Belts,

but all in all it was pretty much level to 2012.

Q•

such as this red The White Ball version ($100), come in all kinds of colors. And GPS watches, such as the Bushneg Neo X ($200) and

Expresso WR67($200), are less cumbersome to usethan more conventional range finders.

Were any chang-

• es of note made to the facility during the last

year'? •

ed a practice fairway bunker to our south driving range and practice area.

A

• We added a forward • set of tees this past

any changes andl Q •• Are or improvements to the facility scheduled for 2014? • F inish two m o re f o r • ward tees on the 10th and 15th holes.

A

SeeJuniper/B9

year. Our 5,500-yard red tees are on the long side

• Don't know what presentto buyfor the special golfer in yourlife? Checkoutthis gift guidefor ideasfromclothing to rangefinders By Zack Hall

Like most golf outerwear,

The Bulletin

in Central Oregon, too. "Eight out of 10 shoes we are selling are spikeless," Von Stroh says. "It's pretty crazy. Even the pros are all going spikeless." The benefits of the molded cleats are debatable, but the downsides are negligible. And many golfers find them more

can hit. Golf clubs can be partic-

comfortable than more con-

technical outerwear that fea-

ventional golf shoes. ularly troublesome as gifts Other wea t h er-resistant The best news is that manin this age o f i n creased gear can be appreciated too. ufacturers are making cleats customization. Manufacturers — from adi- that last longer than the origiEven golf balls are meant das Climawarm+ gear and nal incarnations. For instance, to be fit to a golfer's particular an array of Nike Hyperwarm Ecco ($70-$190), an industry swing speed. gear to high-end Sunice Brand leader, uses for its cleats a pil"Do NOT buy golf balls (as — are in a constant race to lar design that the company gifts) unless you know spe- provide gear as dry, warm and touts will offer traction even cifically which ball the golfer lightweight as possible. after years of normal wear. uses," says Bruce WattenburgBut if fashion itself is the Ashworth's Cardiff ($129) er,head professional at Juni- aim, golf belts are all the rage cleats are another popular per Golf Club. these days. pick. And Nike, which recentOf course, if you do know On the PGA Tour, every ly released its FI Impact ($130), the correct ball, then "person-

A golfer's clothing may ap-

weekend seems like a contest

Spikel essgolfshoes

offers a sportier look than the

"deck shoe" design of many spikeless shoes.

I'm Caddie ($129) is a

v oice-activated GP S

r a n ge

finder that clips the bill of your hat or visor. Just press a button and the device provides

ln-Heme Care Servlces 541-389-0006

wwNr.evergreentnhomacom

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i

about any office in America.

able recent innovations in golf

in Powell Butte, suggests Bea-

But golf fashion has a high- equipment. verton-based Leupold's GXly functional side. According to a Sports Illus- 31 range finder ($500), which That includes battery-op-

trated column written earlier

gives accurate distances to

erated heated apparel by Mobile Warming, which makes a golf-specific line of shirts and jackets for men and women ($160-$220).

this year, about 50 percent of golf shoes sold are now spike-

any object on a golf course.

less. In 2011, only 10 percent of

SkyCaddie Watch ( $170), "could also be hot this Christmas," says Zach Lampert,

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Daniel Wendt, head pro at Brasada Canyons Golf Club

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1302 NE 3rd St. Bend www.mtmedltr.com

Care for loved ones. Comfort for all.

the yardage to the middle of the green, says Crooked River

worn on casual Friday at just

golf shoes sold were without replaceable golf spikes.

541-388-7799

EVERGREEN

pact and easy to use.

Von Stroh.

BEST TIRE IIAI.IIE PRBIRISE

Immediate Care

Electronic GPS range finders have become more comSkyCaddie, Bushnell and Expresso make range finders that are "all pretty good," says

lESSCNNM

Mountain Medical

Knowyour distance

Spikeless golf shoes have been among the most notice-

pear to be not unlike the duds

See Gifts /B9

tures heating."

alized golf balls are a good to determine which golfer can Christmas gift," Wattenburg- wear the belt with the most er continues. eye-catching color. Popular What is a gift giver to do? manufacturers include OakThankfully, the range of ley, Nike, White Ball and Next golf gift options goes far be- Belt, and belts come in every yond just the newest driver or color imaginable. a dozen Titleists. Additionally, cotton golf Here are some suggestions, wear is making a c omecobbled together with advice back with every manufacfrom several of Central Or- turer chipping in. And John egon's golf pros and retailer Ashworth's Linksoul line of Pro Golf of Bend. (All prices "Make Par, Not War" shirts are estimated retail prices and ($35) has become a cult hit can vary widely among retail among golfers, says Erik Nieloutlets.) sen, head pro at Bend Golf and Country Club.

Styleofthegame

head pro at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville.

That trend seems to be true

the clothing is made to be pliableenough to not hamper a golf swing. And in a region like Central Oregon, where a jacketis often necessary even professionals just what makes in June, Mobile Warming is a great Christmas gift, and the "either weather-resistant or diversity in answers will be ri- weatherproof," says Nelson valed only by the multitude of Von Stroh, co-owner of Pro wedge shots Phil Mickelson Golf of Bend. "It's basically The array of golf goodies makes even a golf writer's head spin. Ask a couple of dozen golf

for novice lady players. We shortened the yardage by 400 yards and still have two more holes to do. Our goal is to get it around 5,000 yards. We also add-

I

Up To 8200 I with this coupon. i

I PHONE: n/entry perperson. Couponhat nocashvalue.Must be18or oldertoenter Winnerswil benotified byemail only. I Couponvalid12/09/t3 onlyOneoriginal newsprint coupoWinners nameandphoto may bepublishedinTheBulletin. •m ~ ~ ~

GPS watches, such as the

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MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B9

GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its at RidgeCourse weekly local goli results listings andevents Two NetBestBalls Plus Bonus calendar. Clearly legible items should be 1, Jim Trench/JimWhitehurst/HenryRogers/Jim faxed to the sports department, 541-385- Meyers,109. 2,RickMangels/ReedSloss/Bob Hock0831, emailed to sportsObendbulletin.com, er/DonGreenman,110. 3, Jerry Coday/Dennis Flinn/ ormailedtoP.O.Box8020;Bend,OR87708. Jim Kelly/Billy Balding, 112. 4, HelmutBloo/Mike Narzisi/AffanFalco/SamPuri, 116.5, DanBroadley/ TomJoyce/JohnBoynton/LarryRygalski,120.

Club Results AWBREYGLEN

BandonDunesGetaway, Nov.24-28 Net Better Ball at BandonDunes, Nov.24 1, RonKnapp/Jerry Heck, 64.2 (tie), TomMurray/ LarryLangsen,66;B.J. Mils/Jerry Mils, 68. at Pacilic Dunes,Nov.28 1,TamJohnson/DickJohnson,69.2,Tom Murray/ LarryLangsen,70. atOldMacdonald,Nov.26 1, B.J.Mils/JerryMils, 68.2, TomMurray/Larry Langsen, 71. DESERT PEAKS

SundayGroupPlay, Dec.1 Stroke Play Gross:1, Chuck Schmidt, 72.2, Carl Daniels,80. Net:1(tie), LowelPat l terson,70;JimWyzard, 70. KP —RussScholl. LD —Lowell Patterson. EAGLECRESTRESORT Men's Club, Nov.27

Gifts

weeks.Formoreinformation orto register: 541-6337277 orwww.coigbend.com. TOURNAMETS N Dec. 14: ChristmasGooseGolf Tournam ent at

MeadowLakes Golf Coursein Prinevile. Chapman is for two-person teamsand tees offwith an11 a.m. shotgun.Costis $30plus$25per-persongreenfee. To registeror for moreinformation, call theMeadow Lakesgolfshopat541-447-7113. Hole-In-One Report Jan. 17: Central OregonWinter Seriesevent at Kah-Nee-TaHigh Desert Resort near Warm Nov. 30 Springs. Triple-six tournament begins with an 11 THEGREENSATREDMOND a.m, shotgun,Two-personteamswith nomorethan Alex Valley, Bend one professi o nal al l o wed per team. Cost is $30 No. 4 1 9 7 yards 5-iron for professionals,$50for amateurs.Cost includes gross andnet skinscompetitions. Cartcostsextra. All playersmustsignup bynoon ontheWednesday Calendar beforetheevent. Toregister orfor moreinformation, The Bulletia welcomes contributions to call PatHuffer,headproat CrookedRiverRanch,at its weekly local golf events calendar. Items 541-923-6343 or email himat crrpat©crookedrivshould bemailedtoP.O.Box6020,Bend,OR erranch.com. 97708; iaxed to thesports department at 641Jan. 31:CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent 388-0831; oremailed to sporlsObendbulletin. at Meadow Lakes Golf Coursein Prinevile. Aggrecom. gate shambletournament begins with an 11a.m. PUBLICLEAGUES shotgun.Two-personteamswith no morethan one Central OregonIndoor Goli: Leaguesheld in professionalallowedperteam.Costis $30for prowinterandspring, beginningthefirst weekof Decem- fessionals,$50for amateurs. Costincludesgross ber. Rounds areplayedon electronic golf simulators and net skinscompetitions. Cartcosts extra. All at CentralIndoorGolf at1245S.E.3rdStreet. Costis player smustsign up bynoonontheWednesday $20 perteamper seasoninaddition toafeeof$15 per beforetheevent. Toregister orfor moreinformation, personforeveryleaguenight. Leaguesplay one night call PatHuffer,headproat CrookedRiver Ranch,at aweek,Tuesdaythrough Friday, for nineconsecutive 541-923-6343or email himat crrpat@crookedriv-

erranch.com. Feb.1:SuperBowlScrambleatMeadow Lakes Golf CourseinPrinevile. Scrambleis for four-person teamsandteesoffwith an11 a.m. shotgun. Costis $80 per teamplus $25per-persongreenfee. Toregister orfor moreinformation, call theMeadowLakesgolf shop at541-447-7113.

Feb. 14: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat CrookedRiver Ranch. Beter-ball tournam ent begins with an 11a.m. shotgun.Two-person teams with no morethanoneprofessional allowedper team.Cost is $30 forprofessionals,$50foramateurs. Costincludes gross andnet skins competitions. Cart costsextra. All playersmustsign upby noononthe Wednesday beforetheevent. Toregister orfor moreinformation, call PatHuffer,headpro at CrookedRiver Ranch, at 541-923-6343oremail himat crrpat©crookedriverranch.com. March1: PolarBearOpenatMeadow LakesGolf Course in Prinevile. Individualstroke-playtournamentteesoffwith a10a.m.shotgun. Costis $20per teamplus$25per-persongreenfee. Toregister orfor moreinformation,call theMeadowLakesgolf shopat 541-447-7113.

March 13: CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at JuniperGolfClubin Redmond. Triple-six tournament beginswith an 11a.m.shotgun. Two-person teams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team.Costis $30for professionals, $50foramateurs. Cost includes grossandnet skinscompetitions. Cart costs extra.All playersmustsignupby noononthe Wednesday before theevent. Toregister orfor more information, call PatHufer, headproat CrookedRiv-

er Ranch,at 541-923-6343or email himat crrpat© crookedriverranch.com . March 21: CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at PronghornClub's NicklausCourse nearBend. Scramble tournamentbegins with an 11 a.m. shotgun.Two-personteamswith no more than one professional allowedper team. Cost is $30 for professionals$50 , for amateurs. Cost includes grossandnetskins competitions. Cart costsextra. All playersmustsignupbynoonontheWednesday beforetheevent.Toregister orfor moreinformation, call PatHuffer,headproat CrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343 or email himat crrpatOcrookedrIverranch.com. March 29: CrossCountry tournament at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. Individual stroke-playtournament forces golfers to takeanew path aroundMeadowLakesover12 holes.Teetimes begin at8a.m.Flightedfield includesbothgrossand net payoutsandKPcompetitions. Costis $20plus reducedgreenfee of $15.For moreinformation or to register,call theMeadowLakespro shopat541447-7113.

April 4: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat BrasadaCanyonsGolf Clubin Powell Butte. Shamble tournamentbegins with an 11a.m. shotgun.

Two-personteamswith nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperteam. Cost is $30 for professionals,$50for amateurs. Costincludesgross and net skinscompetitions. Cartcostsextra.All players mustsignup by noonon theWednesdaybefore the event. Toregister or for moreinformation, call Pat Huffer, headpro at CrookedRiver Ranch,at

Continued from BS

Oddsand ends • A high-quality push cart is often appreciated by golfers who choose to walk when they play, which is the case for many in Central Oregon. Clicgear push carts ($220) are "one of our most popular items sold

schools and teams, would be

at Christmas," says Huffer.

In addition, many of the clubs

0 ~Q

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welcomed by any sports nut. Todd Sickles, general manager at Quail Run Golf Club in La Pine, says most ball manu-

Professional PGATour NorthwesternMutual WorldChallenge Sunday At SherwoodCountry Club ThousandOaks,Calif. Purse: $3.5million yardage: 7,023;Par72 Final (x-won onfirst playoff hole) x-Zach Johnson,$1,000,000 67-68-72-66—275 TigerWoods,$400,000 7 1 -62-72-70—275 Matt Kuchar,$212,500 6 8 -68-76-67 —279 BubbaWatson, $212,500 70-70-69-70—279 WebbSimpson,$150,000 73-71-69-68—281 Graeme McDowell,$145,000 7267-75-69— 283 lan Poulter, $140,000 76 - 67-73-69 —285 72-69-74-71 —286 Jim Furyk,$135,000 76-68-70-73 —287 JasonDay,$122,500 Bill Haas,$122,500 73-68-74-72 —287 RoryMcllroy,$115,000 7 3 -77-68-70—288 HunterMahan,$110,000 70-80-72-69—291 KeeganBradley, $108,500 75-68-75-74—292 JasonDufner,$108,500 7 4-71-78-69—292 SteveStricker,$107,000 75-74-74-72—295 JordanSpieth,$105,500 7 7-72-77-71—297 LeeWestwood, $105,500 74-75-74-74—297 DustinJohnson$100000 74-79-72-74—299

any golfer who enjoys listening to music while golfing or while recreating outside," says Josh Willis, Crosswater Club's head professional. • A lessons package with a favorite instructor can always be useful, even for highly skilled golfers, and most instructors offer Christmas

that are coated by Meyer Per-

formance Composites ($40 per club) with the colors of the University of Oregon and Oregon State, among other

541-923-6343or email himat crrpat@crookedriverranch.com.

faCtktrerS Will StamP a CuStOm

discounts that make lessons

logo for free this time of year.

more affordable. • And of course, you can give golf itself. Golf courses throughout the region often use the holidays as a way to promote package deals or gift certificates that can be used for play during the golf season.

And extremely lightweight bags made to be used with

and retail outlets can custom orderlogos fora golfer. "We do well with logoed push carts, such as Mizuno's Aerolite ($160) and Ogio's glassware, HydroFlasks, monAndy Tullis/The Bulletin Cirrus ($200) have become in- ey clips, etc., that range in Even shafts, such as these True Temper Dynamic Gold shafts, can be customized. This permanent creasingly easy to find. price from $20 to $55," Nielsen coating is by Meyer Performance Composites ($40 for coated shaft). • Just about every piece of says. What can be betterfor a golf equipment can be cus• The SwingByte 2.0 ($149) golfer than the gift of free tomized with the insignia of a is a device that attaches to a a smartphone, says Tetherow ES12 ($249) is a launch mon• Goal Zero Rock Out golf? college or professional sports club shaft and relays a variety Golf Club's Louis Bennett. In i tor that relays post-impact speakers ($30) for portable — Reporter: 541-617-7868, team. True Temper shafts of swing data via Bluetooth to addition, the Ernest Sports d a t a to a smart device. music players "are a must for zhaII®bendbulletin.com.

Johnson

Johnson l o oked

a l m o st PEI, Taiwan — Lydia Ko rallied to win her first title as a

few inches into the cup for an

a pologetic w he n W o o ds missed his par putt in the playoff, and it was shocking to see. No one from his generation as made more clutch putts

unlikely par and a 4-under 68.

than Woods, who spoke about

"A little too dramatic for me," Johnson said.

the topic earlier in the week.

Woods' hit a superb bunker shot to 2 feet and matched his par for a 70. They finished at

Sherwood, where W oods

Continued from BS The ball

b o unced t h r ee

times and then spun back a

But not this time. It was not the way he wanted to leave has five wins and now five rumter-up finishes. The only

13-under 275.

Woods was between clubs

consolation was $400,000 for finishing second, bringing

from the 18th fairway in the

playoff and tried a smooth 7-iron that he lost enough to

to just over $14 million the

the right that it again found

his foundation from the three tOurnamentS (AT8cT NatiOnal,

earnings he has donated to

the bunker. He hit an exquisite sand shot, this one sliding

Deutsche Bank, World Challenge) that support his education programs. Also on Sunday: Jimenez defends title in Hong Kong: HONG KONGMiguel Angel Jimenez successfully defended his Hong Kong Open title to extend his record as the oldest winner in European Tour history. The Spaniard won at 49 years, 337 days to break the record he set last year at Hong Kong Golf Club, holing an 18-foot birdie on the first hole of a playoff with Thai-

5 feet by the hole, and the par

putt spun out of the left side. Johnson won $1 million and should go to No. 9 in the

world. Woods ended what he called

a "damn good year" — five wins, the most of anyone in the world — with a shocking loss to Johnson. 7wo years ago, Woods ended the longest drought of his career when he went birdie-birdie at Sher-

wood to beat Johnson by one shot.

Wales' Stuart Manley. Eagles propel Bjorn in South

9-under 279. round in 14 years at Sher-

wood. Traffic outside the tony club in the Santa Moni-

Mark J. Terrfll/The Associated Press

Zach Johnson scratches the head of the tiger on the trophy after winning a playoff against Tiger Woods in the final round of the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge on Sunday in Thousand Oaks, Calif.

freeway in what could be the last chance in the near future three-putted from long range Johnson finally caught him S outhern on the 14th, an d

Africa: SUN CITY, South Africa — D enmark's Thomas

Bjorn had two back-nine eagles in a comeback victory in the Nedbank Golf Challenge The 42-year-old Bjorn closed

ca foothills looked like an LA to see Woods in

a 4-under 68 on LPGA Inter-

professional. The 16-year-old national's Jones Course. She from New Zealand won the broke the event 90-hole mark Swinging Skirts World Ladies of 18-under 342 set by StaMasters, closing with a 4-un-

cy Lewis in 2008. The top 20

der 68fora three-stroke victo- earned Category 12 status, the ry over South Korea's So Yeon next 26 players received memRyu. Ko had an 11-under 205 bership in Category 17, and total at Linkou Miramar and theother22 playerswho made earned $150,000 in the event the 72-hole cut got Symetra sanctioned by the Taiwan and

Tour status.

Korean tours. Ryu finished with a 73. Top-ranked Inbee Park was third at 7 under after a 70.

Little ad

BIG savings!

Green takes LPGA qualifying tourney: DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Jaye Marie Green completeda runaway victory i n

Advanced Technology

t h e L PG A T our

qualifying tournament, finishingwith a record 29-under

25% to

331 total for a 10-stroke mar-

gin. The 19-year-old Green,

40/o

Find It All Online

OFF MSRP

owOBW f-d,

bendbulletin.com

BeltoneServing Central Oregon for over 22 years!

land's Prom Meesawat and

Matt Kuchar (67) and Bubba Watson (70) tied for third at The attendance Sunday was 24,922, a record for any

from Boca Raton, closed with

J ohnson with a tee shot to 4 feet for

with a 7-under 65 for a two-

stroke victory over Wales' Jamie Donaldson and Spain's Sergio Garcia. Teen wins first pro title: TAI-

California. saved his par with an 8-foot birdie on the 17th, leading to Woods appeared to have his putt to get within one shot. the big finish. sixth title at Sherwood sewed The rest of the way looked up when Johnson missed a like the final rounds of a short par putt on the 10th hole heavyweight fight, even if to fall four shots behind with only one of them looked the eight holes to play. Woods had part. said on Saturday that JohnJohnson laid up on the parson wasn't the kind of player 5 16 and nearly holed a sand who went away easily, and he wedge from 88 yards, setting up a tap-in birdie. Woods, was right. The support from the team of Johnson picked up birdies with a tough chip left of the specialists made it easier and I on the 11th and 12th holes, green, rehearsed the shot over surpassed my goal quickly. I feel and then got back in the game and overand itcame out perAMAZING and have so on the 14th w hen W o ods fectly for a matching birdie.

OVERWEIGHT'?/.-

i

HIGH DESERT BANK

541-389-9690

r•

I

141 SE 3rd • Bend We bill insurances

CHRISTMAS G IFT CERTIFICATES ~gYWQ 1~8>Holes ', for ONLY

Z I i 0

valid all of ~ Zo<4!

"I lost over 30 pounds,

YOU cantoo!"

much energy, more than I ever imagined. My entire team is grateful. Thanks MRC!

Juniper

think all of the courses A •• Irealize that local players

Continued from BS

are the base of their business.

it is important to provide a

The PGA is pushing Golf 2.0 programs such as "Get Golf Ready" (a structured lesson program in a group setting). Introducing new players to the game as well as increasing activity of current players is always a challenge. A challenge

quality product and strive to

that we embrace and workto

• After a r e cession that

• began in 2 007, how have your golf operations changed in recent years'? • We haven't changed too • much other than adjustments to labor. We still believe

meet the player's expecta- help meetour personal goals tions each and every time they and budgets. Be it lessons, come to Juniper. player recruitment, junior activities or tournament activi-

Are the local golf facil- ties, we are always trying to • ities doing enough to get those golfers in the door. attract and foster local play'? — Reporter: 541-617-7868, If not, what more can be done? zizall@bendbulletin.com.

Q•

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WEIGHT LOSS "... PROGRAMS centerr rreru

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Christmas Goose Golf Tournament Dec.14-11 am ''

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B9.0 TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided byWeather Central, LP ©2013.

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I Today: 1~ Mostly sunny

Tonight ydly I dy

Partly cloudy

5

Partly cloudy with a slight

2

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chance of rain

25 FORECAST:5TATE WEST Mostly sunny skies with a slight chance of raln thls evening.

i )Cannon Beach 41/35

Tillamo • 39/29

HillsboroPO31 • McMinnville 32/21

Lincoln Ci

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25/13

34/22 4&

40/34

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30/20

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200

Riley

18/8

23/5

17/3

Frenchglen 23/6

Rome

• 42 0 Brookings • -30 0 Bums

20/4

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30/1 7

Yesterday's stateextremes

Jordan lley

29/0

28/4

Chiloquin 31/6

• 33/12

• Brookings

Mostly sunny skies.

unity

18/6

Lake

51/33

Baker C

25/10

• Pal ina zu4

Christmas lley • Sjiver 29/-2

emult

26/20

Grants Pass

Gold • Bear/i

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La Pine28/3 ~ a

Port.Orford 51/31

EAST

31/0

33/1 5

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45/28 m

Mostly sunny skies.

• Blothels 25/

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Cottage Grove

Coos Bay

21/13 Uniorr 21/q

Mltch 0 27/14

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40/33

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23/9

24/14

27/14

27/11

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Pendleton

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31/24•

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45/34

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Camp 26/21 %

Salem

39/31

Umatilla

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Seasidee

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Ashla d

Fields •

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Falls 26/2

50/36

McDermitt

23/6

27/4

17/-2

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

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30/28.

ts/5

•Seattle . 33/30 "

(in the 48 contiguous states):

31/03

• 90 0 Marco Island, Fla

Saskatoon -2/-1 5

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42uphd Thunder Bay 9/-1

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69/53

68/35

ALASKA

4/64

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• Miami 83/72

65/46.ss Mazatlan yOS xxXxxxxxx 82/66

Juneau

37/32

Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain

dy

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

35 20

38 28

41 28

40 30

BEND ALMANAC

PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend Tomorrow Rise Mercury....6:41 a.m...... 3:48 p.m. High/low..............16/-22 24 hours ending4 p.m.*.. 0.00" Venus.....10:14 a.m...... 7:11 p.m. Remrdhigh........ 61 in1976 Month todate.......... 1.78" M a r s......1248am...... I:03 pm. Remrdlow........ -15in1972 Averagemonthtodate... 060" Jupiter......6:29 p.m...... 9:45 a.m. Average high.............. 40 Year to date............ 6.36" Satum......4:51 a.m...... 2:54 p.m. Average low............... 23 Average year to date..... 9.76" Uranus.....105 pm......135 a m. Barometricpressureat4 pm3030 Remrd 24hours ...058in 2004

Sunrise today...... 7:29 a.m. MOOnphaSeS Sunsettoday...... 427 Pam Sunrisetomorrow .. 7:30a.m. Sunsettomorrow... 4:27 p.m. Moonriisetoday... 12:1 2 p.m. Moonsettoday........ none

Fjrst Fug

New

*Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX ~ SKI REPORT

OREGON CITIES

Yesterday Monday Tuesday The higher the UV Index number, the greater HI/Lo/PcP H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeandskin protection. Index is City Precipitationvaluesare 24-hourtotalsthrough4 p.m. for solar at noon. Astoria ....... 29/13/trace... 40/35/pc.....46/39/sh Baker City..... 12/-I 7/0.00...... 21/1/f.....25/1 3/pc Brookings 42/26/0.00.....50/31/s.....51/33/pc Burns.......... 4/-30/0.00...... 20/1/f......32/8/pc 19/-I 0/0.00....30/20/pc......35/27/c Eugene Klamath Falls ...6/-20/0.00......26/2/s.....34/10/pc Lakeview....... 7/-27/0.00......27/4/s......35/6/pc La Pine....... 17/-I 9/0.03 ......28/3/s.....35/10/pc Medford .25/2/0.00.....33/12/s.....38/20/pc Newport 32/I 9/0.00... 40/34/pc......41/40/c North Bend.....41/23/0.00.....44/28/s.... A7/33/pc Ontario.......10/-1 2/trace......18/8/f.....28/1 6/pc 17/-6/0.00 .....23/9/pc.....31/15/pc Pendleton Portland 28/I 2/0.00....31/03/pc..... 34/31/rs 19/-I 6/0 00.....28/1 0/s.....36/1 9/pc Prineville Redmond 16/-27/0.00.....26/2/pc.....35/14/pc Roseburg 26/I 5/0.00..... 26/20/I......34/28/c Salem .29/8/0.00....31/24/pc.....35/31/sn Sisters........ 15/-I 6/0.00......29/7/s......35/I 3/c The Dages 17/-4/0.00....27/I 5/pc.....37/25/pc

Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 26 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland.................0.0...no report

1 L

MED IUM HIGH 4

6

8

111

Snow levelandroadconditions rePresenting condi jjmbe~rirne 00 tions at 5 P.m.yesterday. Key:T.T. = Traction Tires. warner canyon........ . . . . . .0.0... no report

Pass Conditions W igamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0... no report 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1.84 at CabbageHig.......... Carry chains or T.Tires Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . .25-29 Hwy. 20 at cantiam pass ...... Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California...... 2. . . . . .25-30 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hmi 26 at Ochoco Dlvlde..... Car e chains or TTlres Squaw Valley, California....... . 5 . . . . . .27-29 Hys e 58atWigameue Pass.... (arrychainsorjjjres SunValleY Idaho....... . . . . . .1-0.. . . . .1535 Hwy.138 atDiamond Lake ......Chains> 10,000 lbs. Hwy.242 atMcKenzi e Pass........Ciosed forseason For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.trip«he«k.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legsnd:W-wsatherPcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partialclouds,c-clouds, hhazs, shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i ice,rs rainsnowmix,w wind,f fog, dr drizzle,tr trace

JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

wv w o a a w

Yesterday's extremes

Cloudy with a chance of rain/snow

CONDITIONS

FRONTS

y++hh.

Cold W arm Stationary

44 ** ** * 4 4 4, 4 4 4 a4 ' * * ** * *

+riy+nyet

Showers T-storms R ain Flurries Snow

Ic e

Yesterday Monday Tuesday

Yesterday Monday Tuesday

Yesterday Monday Tuesday

Yesterday Monday Tuesday

City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp HigoAN HiRo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hri/Lorig City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene1X......41/20I 00... 32/I8/c .. 39/2?/s GrandRapids....23/W003 ..29/14/pc. 24/15/sn RapidCity........ 4/-9/0.02....17/8/c .. 26/2/sn Savanan h.......53/SOI.49..76/60/pc.75/49/sh Akron ..........26/I4I 00... 36/I7/c. 25/13/pc Green Bay........13/3N 09.. 15/4/pc ..14/2/pc Reno........... 20/-II.OO.... 26/9/s. 31/1 5/pc Seattle..........36/?OI.OO ..33/30/pc. 39/36/sh Albany..........31/23I.OO... 39QS/I .. 33/I9/c Greenshoro......smjNj 7 .. 5I43/sh.45/28/sh Hchmond... ....36/3?I.96..49/40/sh.42/25/sh Sioux Fais,,, ..,,,12/3/0,11,,,. 4/2/sn..16/-9/pc Albuquerque.....35/26/0.00... 31/9/sn .. 3N15/s Hamsburg.......29/26/01 5 .. 42/28/sh. 34/1Npc RorhssiaNY....29/I9N.OO r, .41/24/sn. 27/I9/Pc Spokane........1 5/-2/trace... 21/Imc.25/INsn Anrhorage......34/3M 00..29/21/pc. 25/18/pc Hartford,CT.....33/240.00... 36/29/i. 35/2$sn Sacramen to..... 44/?IO.OO... 48/27/s.. 50/33/s SpringfieldMO , ..26/I8/0.00... 25/I 5/c.. 27/6/pc Atlanta ........ A6/44/0.13... 62/50/r. 53/37/sh Helena.......... 3/-15/0.01...147/sn... 22/5/c St. Louis.........27/19N05..28/18/pc. 32/I4/pc Tampa..........83/66/000..83/67/pc. 82/65/pc AtlanticCity.....32/25I 51 .. 51/35/sh..40/29/rs Honolulu........85/69/0.00... 82//2/s .. 83/72/s Salt Lake City....23/1 5N07...207/Jpc. 24/I2/pc Tucson..........57/42/000.. 52/32/pc.. 57/35/s Austin......... A6/28I.II ..41/30/sh.. 42/27/c Houston ........47/37/0.00... 54/42/t. 47/37/sh SanAntnni o.....52/32/000..47/33/sh..46/3ic Tulsa...........3I21I II...28/20/c .. 33/19/s Baltimore.......31/27/0.35 .. 41/29/rs..35/24/rs Huntsville ...... A6/36/0.96.. 45/34/sh.. 43/30/c SanDiygo.......57/53/0.00... 63/43/s.. 63/48/s Washington,DC.33/29I.50 .. 41/32/rs ..36/25/n Billings ......... 7/ I7/000... 19/9/sn .. 23/11/c Indianapolis.....27/21N 02.. 28/I6/pc .. 26/1Ols SanRancism....47/36/0.00... 51/34/s.. 53/39/s Wichita.........2419I 00...20/14/c .. 35/15/s Birmingham.....53/41/1.52... 52/41/t. 46/32/sh Jackson,MS.....43/340.74... 554it. 46/32/sh SanJose........47/31/000... 52/3Ns.. 57/33/s Yakima......... 21/2I 00 ..23/IC/pc.32/19/pc Bismarck........1/15I 01....10/2/c ..9/12/pc Jacksonvile......68/62/000..81/61/pc. BIS?/pc Santare........30/22/0.00... 21/-2/c... 25/Is Yuma...........59/45N.OO .56/37/pc .. 59/39/s Boise...........11/6I00..2ili/pc. 29/17/pc Juneau..........3022/000 .. 37/32/rs..37/33/rs INTERNATIONAL Boston..........31/27I 00..41/33/sn .. 37/25/c Kansas City......22/1 8005... I 7/9/pc .. 3ml5/s Bridgeport,CT....33/24I 00..43/34/sh. 37/25/sn lansing..........22/9NOI ..30/I4/pc. 23/13/sn Amstsrdam......50/SM.02...48/32/c. 39/36/pc Mecca..........79/77/0.00... 85/65/s .. 84/64/s Buffalo .........28/19I 00.. 39/24/rs.29/IIsn LasVrqas.......42/32/0.00... 38/23/s.. 43729/s Athens..........58/43I.58 ..57/49/pc.57/35/pc MeximCity......75/43I 00 ..71/53/pc. 72/46/pc Burlington,VT....29/22/0 00.. 36/23/sn. 31/18/pc Lexingion.......34/25I.33 ..37/23/pc. 33/I4/pc Auckhnd. .......7059/0.00..69/57/sh..69/60/c Montreal........27/14I.OO .. 36Q3/rs.. 27/I8/s Caribou,ME.....22/I3/0 00.. 21/20/sn.. 27/9/pc Linmln..........IN1 ON.7...15/7/pc 1 .. 28/9/pc Baghdad........66/51I.OO .. 56/39/pc. 53/40/pc Moscow........23/23N I8 ..16/I 3/sn.. 18/4/sn Charleston, SC...49/46I.09..76/62/pc. 73/47/sh Little Rock.......3I22/001...37/27/c.35/?I/pc Bangkok........75/70I.OO ..91/70/pc. 91/76/pc Nairobi .........64/63N.01 ..76/57/sh. 72/58/sh Charlotte....... 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A6/43/0.00.. 58/40/sh. 57/40/sh El Paso..........56/28/0.00 ..Sf/33/pc.. 49/27/s Pitishurgh.......29/1 7/0.03 ..40/22/sh. 30/I6/pc Usbon..........55/32I.OO... 57/42/s .. 6I48/c Toronto.........28/IIO.OO .. 36/22/rs. 27/18/pc Fairbanks.......31/2?I.OO... I4/3/sn...8/-7/sn Portland,ME.....?9/19/000..37/29/sn. 35/21/pc London.........43/43I.00...44/41/c.44/35/pc Vancouvsr.......3I21/0.00..30/28/pc..34/32/sf Fargo........... 7/14/002... 0/ 5/pc..I/15/pc Providence......32/23N.OO... 41/33/i. 37/24/sn Madrid .........28/28I.OO... 48/27/s .. 52/36/s Visnna..........45/43I.OO..41/39/sh.36/24/pc Flagstalf........27/2M.09... 24/3/pc... 30/Is Raleigh........ 42/331.05..57/4Ish. 49/31/sh Manila..........82/77I 11 ..8N75/sh.N75/pc Warsaw.........37/37I.OO .. 35/22/sf. 27/?I/pc

SKIINGROUNDUP

Switzerland's Gut winssuper-G;

America Hears

Vonn takesfifth with eye onSochi

HEARING AIDS. rrdrplyyvryyyople rdss-r Better Establlshed 19FS

The Associated Press LAKE LOUISE, AlbertaAfter a fifth-place finish in a

World Cup super-G, her third race in three days, Lindsey Vonn used six simple words to sum up where things stand in her comeback from major knee surgery. "I know," Vonn said, "I can

win again." She also had this to say after coming within a second of

grand Ope~l~g Specia(! Join our Grand Opening celebration and get a pair of 32 channel Freedom SIE

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00PAIR

winner Lara Gut of Switzer-

land onSunday: "I'm ready for Sochi." The 2014 Winter Games

are less than two full months away, and Vonn said she might race only one or two times before then.

$799 due at at time of purchase, receive $400 rebate after completion of 30 day trial period.

Jeff Mclntosh/The Canadian Press

Lara Gtit of Switzerland reacts in the finish area following her run "I know t hat I ' m s k i i ng during the women's World Ctip super-G at Lake Louise, Alberta, on well," said Vonn, th e 2010 Sunday.

Offer valid thru 12/31/13 vaEE70

Olympic downhill gold medalist and a four-time overall World Cup champion. "So I

know that I don't need to push myself and try to push the limits of my knee to race as many as races as I can."

The "very good progression," as U.S. Ski Team wom-

2-3 in Saturday's downhill. Maria Hoefl-Riesch of Germany, who won both Lake

en'sspeed coach Chip White put it, continued Sunday with Louise downhills to tempoVonn's best showing yet. rarily take the overall lead U ntil t h i s w e ekend, t h e She declaredhersel fpleased from Gut, made a mistake on 29-year-old American had not with her mental and physical the hill's lower section Sunday competed since a high-speed improvement overthese past and was 19th. crash at the world champion- few days. Gut was 10th Friday, and "My run was pretty good. 13th Saturday, and said: "I had ships last February ripped two ligaments in her right knee I was pushing the line really two pretty hard days. But toand broke a bone in that leg. hard and I think I went a little day, I knew how to ski." Working her way back from bit too straight in some secVonn, of course, knows how that, Vonn had a setback less tions. But that's a good mistake to ski rather well, to say the than three weeks ago, partial- to make — pushing the limits least. What she's needed to do ly re-tearing her reconstructed and trying to go straighter," of late is figure out how to do right ACL. Vonn said after finishing in 1 it properly with, as she joked uShe had a trauma about a minute, 23.71 seconds. "That's Friday, "a little bit of ACL left." month ago, so it's very impres- far from where I was two days Also on Sunday: sive that she's doing it," said ago. So I think it was a huge Llgety edges Miller to win U.S. teammate Leanne Smith, step in the right direction. I World Cup giant slalom: BEAwho was sixth Sunday. "Ev- think it was a perfect way to VER CREEK, Colo. — Ted Liery one of her teammates are end the weekend." gety turned in a flawless final her biggest fans, I would say. Gut was timed in 1:22.86, run to win a fourth straight We're happy to have her back." edging Tina Weirather of World Cup race, edging U.S. V onn's first r a c e i n 1 0 Liechtenstein by t h r ee-hun- t eammate Bode M i ller. L i months was Friday's down- dredthsofa second to reclaim gety completed the technical hill, and she was — not sur- the lead in the overall World course in a two-run combined prisingly — rusty and a tad Cup standings with her fourth time of 2 minutes, 35.77 secnervous, and wound up 40th, victory of the young season. onds, eclipsing Miller by 1.32 ending a seven-race winning She's won half of the races so seconds. Marcel Hirscher of streak at a resort in the Ca- far. Bend's Laurenne Ross fin- A ustria was third. I t ' s t h e

nadian Rockies nicknamed ished in 41st place at 1:25.76. first time the Americans have "Lake Lindsey." Anna Fenninger of Austria placed two skiers on a GS poIn Saturday's downhill, was third in 1:23.19. Weirather dium since 2005, when Miller Vomt was 11th. and Fenninger also finished and Daron Rahlves went 1-2.

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Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all volunteer, non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/ neuter. Cans for Cats t railer at B end P et Express East, across from Costco; or donate Mon-Fri at Smith Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or at CRAFT in Tumalo. Call for Ig. quantity pickup, 541-389-8420. www.craftcats.org English Bulldog, 3-yr old spayed female, very sweet, $500. 1-877-877-9392. 541-382-9334 French Bulldog 4-yr feThe Bnlletm male, ServingCeneet rtregon since tges looking for forever home with no other pets. 55 gal fish aquarium & $500. 541-382-9334 wood stand, no flaws! $125 obo. 541-408-8611

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Coins & Stamps Private collector buying postagestamp albums 8 collections, world-wide

and U.S. 573-286-4343 HANCOCK & (local, cell phone). MOORE SOFA Salmon/Coral che240 nille fabric with diamond pattern. TradiCrafts & Hobbies tional styling with loose pillow back, Queensland Heelers 3rd Holiday Fair down-wrapped seat Standard & Mini, $150 coming to Sisters, at cushions, roll arms, & up. 541-280-1537 Outlaw Station two matching www.rightwayranch.wor skirt, EIShoppinrj enter p illows and a r m dpress.com close to Ray's Food covers. L i ke new Place, Hwy 20. Rodent issues? Free condition. $1 500. Opening 11/29 thru adult barn/ shop cats, 541-526-1332 12/22, Mon.-Thur. fixed, shots, s o me 10%, Fri. Sat. Sun. friendly, some not. Will Therapedic full size mat10-6. Vendors deliver. 541-389-8420 tress 40 Karat Gold boxwanted! Please call 541-595-6967 Scottish Terrier AKC pup- spring, frame + bedding, pies, born 11/19. Black, 1 $100. 541-504-3833 male, 3 female. parents on s ite. $ 6 00-$700. The Bulletin AGATE HUNTERS ServingCentral Oregonsince isfg Call/text 541-815-0594 Polishers • Saws recommends extra smaghingsuccege©msn.com Lab puppies black and I • • I ceuflo h e Du yellow pur e bred, Sibenan Husky pup chasing products or • Repalr & Supplfes males and females AND Wolf-Husky pup» services from out of I I I J ready to go now. $250 $400 ea. 541-977-7019 the area. Sending lI Call 541-771-5511.

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$12 5pa 54f poo

• Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


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

C2 MONDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2013•THE BULLETIN

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

269

325

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Hay, Grain & Feed

BarkTurfSoil.com PROMPT DELIVERY

541-389-9663

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800

To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email

Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. classifiedttbendbulletin.com Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincergte

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photoin yourprivate party ad for only $15.00par week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER'500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 26 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

icall for commercial line ad rates)

*llllust state prices in ad

270

Lost & Found Lost hearing aid Redmond 12/05. $200 reward for return undamaged. Call Dixie, 541-548-7141

REIIIIEMBER:If you

have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbuiietin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

MX

Redmond 541-923-0882

p i e ise

54t-447-717e;

or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction '10- 3 lines, 7 days is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right '16 -3 lines, 14 days to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party (Private Party ads only) Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 286 249

249

255

Art, Jewelry & Furs

Art, Jewelry & Furs

Oil paintingby noted NY artistn Julie Heffernan, 22 x18 e framed, $500. 541-548-0675

Computers • T HE B U LLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.

255

Musical Instruments

14-kt white gold ladies wedding band with a bright polish finish, 1.66 carat diamond Hearts and arrows, round cut, Sl -1 Clarity, F color. Appraised at $15,000. Very unique piece. Asking $9500. 54'I -281-78'I 5

Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809

257

PLOTTER, HP1100PS, 44 in. wide postscript,

541-589-1835.

TURN THE PAGE

For More Ads The Bulletin

Mason & Hamlin Baby Grand Piano. Beautiful black lacquer finish. Still under warranty. A great Christmas Gift! $25,000 (orig. $47,000) swingroll61 ©gmail. com 541-312-2425 260

• •

C al l 5 4 I -385-5809 to r o m ot e

o u r service

Adult Care

Handyman

Life Tree Personal Service LLC-

ERIC REEVE HANDY

Snowblower, Craftsman 9hp, 29", excellent cond, $500 obo. 541-647-9283 265

Building Materials La Pine Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 52684 Hwy 97 541-536-3234

Open to the public .

Illlisc Items

A cabin west of Bend isolated by winter snow. Three victims. The Trapper Murders, A True Central Oregon Mystery. Link to site:

** FREE ** Garage Sale Klt

Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

Add your web address to your ad and readers onThe Bulletin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Development Director for KPOV, High Desert Community Radiopart time. Closes December 18. Details e t:~

RBEIKCC)

Employment Opportunities

k e .Dr

FOOD SERVICE

lnIKlhZM ®D

r.=.-"-,.— ..a caution when pur-

products or I I chasing services from out of • I the area. SendingI c ash, checks, o r I credit i n f ormationI • may be subjected to I FRAUD. I more informa- I I For tion about an adver- • I tiser, you may callI the Oregon State I Attorney General'sI s Office C o n s umer a

528

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,

Cook 1 - Work in resi- l Protection hotline atl dential High School I 1-877-877-9392. kitchen environment LThe Bulleting by preparing food, storing lef t overs, Call 541-385-5809 cleaning kitchen, su- Looking for your next or place your ad p ervise/instruct c a employee? on-line at dets while supporting Place a Bulletin help bendbulletin.com a Food Service Man- wanted ad today and ager. Starting salary. reach over 60,000 1-877-877-9392. $2112. Exc. benefit 341 readers each week. pkg. See full details Your classified ad Horses & Equipment and apply at will also appear on The Bulletin is your www.ore on'obs.or bendbulletin.com Employment OMD13-035R which currently EOE. receives over 1.5 Marketplace million page views 2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H Pet Grooming every month at slant Shilo, great Busy Dog Grooming Call no extra cost. c ondition. $ 5 9 0 0 B usiness i n Re d Bulletin Classifieds obo. 541-317-0988. mond is looking for 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 Get Results! EXPERIENCED pet Call 385-5809 groomer (must have 345 to advertise. or place own tools), and exp. Livestock & Equipment bather/brusher. Must your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com have resume. Leave www.bendbulletin.com BRED COyV msg 541-678-3421. BONANZA! Look at: Thurs., Dec. 12 Bendhomes.com 1:30 p.m. PST. Serving Central Omgon since lgta Intermountain Live- for Complete Listings of stock, La Grande, OR, Area Real Estate for Sale BANK TURNED YOU featuring 600+ of the DOWN? Private party r egion's to p s t o c k Plumber, Journeymen will loan on real esneeded for cows and bred heifnew construction. tate equity. Credit, no ers. Multiple dispersStart immediately! problem, good equity als, A-1 Bred Heifers! Call Gary, 541-410-1655 is all you need. Call For more Info call Oregon Land Mort541-963-2158 Quality Ass u rance gage 541-388-4200. Manager n e e ded. Oversee compliance LOCAL ff/fONEyrWebuy and implementation of secured trustdeeds & FDA cGMP 21 CFR note, some hard money Part 111 in a Nutraloans. Call Pat Kellev ceutical environment. 541-382-3099 ext.13. M inimum 2 yrs Q A and management exThe Bulletin's perience REQUIRED; "Call A Service salary commensurate with education/experi- Thousands ofads daily Professional" Directory 476 ence. Email resume to in print andonline. is all about meeting jenniferImetabolicEmployment yourneeds. maintenance.com; Opportunities 541.549.7800 (no Call on one of the •a phone calls please) professionals today! CAUTION: Quality Improvement Coordinator Ads published in "Employment Op-

I

The Bulletin

/I 0

Where buyers meet sellers Classifjeds

0

porlunilies e include

B~ SURonn

employee and indec • 6 • N • T • fs • R pendent positions. haeosse eHetoeaocoatttct Ads for p o sitions GARAGE SALE KIT at Job Summary: This position oversees the dethat require a fee or 1777 SW Chandler sign of and fosters an approach to, continuupfront investment Ave., Bend, OR 97702 ously improving quality, establishes quality immust be stated. With provement responsibilities in the organization; any independentjob The Bulletin Serving Centrel Oregon since 190S sets strategic priorities for quality assessment opportunity, please 266 i nvestigate tho r - and improvement. Reviews and analyzes all elements of Ql/RM programs. Coordinates oughly. Use extra Heating & Stoves with Board of Directors and insurance carrier caution when apfunctions of Risk Management. Co-chairs plying for jobs onNOTICE TO Quality Improvement/Risk Management Comline and never proADVERTISER mittee. R e ports to the Medical Advisory vide personal inforSince September 29, Committee activities of the Ql/RM Programs. mation to any source 1991, advertising for you may not have used woodstoves has Qualifications: Must have a current Oregon RN researched and been limited to modlicense. Must be able to demonstrate strong deemed to be repuels which have been communication and organizational skills. Must table. Use extreme certified by the Orhave working knowledge of QA, CQI, Pl proc aution when r e egon Department of 325 s ponding to A N Y gram, state and federal regulations regarding Environmental QualHay, Grain & Feed ASC's and accreditation standards. online employment ity (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmentalFirst quality Orchard/Tim- ad from out-of-state. Position details: Full Time position; Monday We suggest you call Protection A g e ncy othy/Blue Grass mixed through Friday. Complete compensation and (EPA) as having met hay, no rain, barn stored, the State of Oregon benefit package including profit sharing and smoke emission stan- $250/ton. Patterson Ranch Consumer Hotline bonus plan. at 1-503-378-4320 dards. A cer t ified Sisters, 541-549-3831 For Equal Opportuw oodstove may b e Interestedpersons should submit nity Laws contact identified by its certifiJust too many a cover letter andresume to Oregon Bureau of cation label, which is collectibles? iobs@bendsurgery.com Labor & I n dustry, permanently attached

Prineville Habitat ReStore Building Supply Resale 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 541-447-6934 Open to the public.

Computers

great plotter I'm just downsizing. B u r ns, Ore. $ 5 0 0 obo

264 Sales Northeast Bend Snow Removal Equipment

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classitieds Get Results!

Employment Opportunities

pICK up YOUR

SERVICES. Home & htt://www.christmasvalle .net Civil Rights Division, to the stove. The BulCommercial Repairs, 971-673- 0764. Sell them in letin will not know• Errands• Home Mgmt. Carpentry-Painting, ingly accept advertis- The Bulletin Classifieds • Organizing 541-389-2591 The Bulletin Pressure-washing, ing for the sale of Sernng Central Oregon sinceiate Honey Do's. On-time uncertified 541-385-5809 promise. Senior Building/Contracting 541-385-5809 woodstoves. Discount. Work guarNOTICE: Oregon state anteed. 541-389-3361 267 Pressman or 541-771-4463 law requires anyone Fuel & Wood Btfyfng Dlamonds Experiencedpress operator Bonded & Insured who con t racts for /Gofd for Cash CCB¹f 81595 construction work to Our Smith River, CA. production plant is seekSaxon's Fine Jewelers be licensed with the WHEN BUYING 541-389-6655 ing an experienced Goss community press Construction Contrac- Home Repairs, Remod FIREWOOD... operator. We have 8 units that have been well tors Board (CCB). An elst Tile, Carpentry BUYING Finish work, Mainte maintained and added to during the past sevactive license To avoid fraud, Lionel/American Flyer eral years including rebuilt quarter folder. We means the contractor nance. CCB¹f 6891 0 The Bulletin trains, accessories. have CTP operation with Kodak equipment as is bonded & insured. Phil, 541-279-0846. recommends pay541-408-2191. well. Verify the contractor's ment for Firewood CCB l i c ense at Landscaping/Yard Care BUYING & S E LLING only upon delivery We are Western Communications, lnc. a famwww.hirealicensedAll gold jewelry, silver and inspection. contractor.com ily owned company that has 7 newspapers in Oregon Land- and gold coins, bars, • A cord is 128 cu. ft. or call 503-378-4621. NOTICE: California and Oregon. Our company provides wedding sets, 4' x 4' x 8' Contractors Law rounds, The Bulletin recom- scape class rings, sterling sila great culture and work environment. This • Receipts should (ORS 671) requires all mends checking with businesses that ad- ver, coin collect, vinplant prints 2 of our publications plus a limited include name, the CCB prior to con- vertise t o tage watches, dental amount of commercial printing, which we hope pe r form phone, price and tracting with anyone. Landscape Construc- gofd. Bill Fl e ming, kind of wood to grow. This is a 4-day, 32-hour shift that re541-382-9419. Some other t rades tion which includes: quires hands on community press experience purchased. also req u ire addi- l anting, and ideal candidate will be willing to assist in deck s , • Firewood ads tional licenses and other areas outside the pressroom such as ences, arbors, MUST include certifications. prepress and mailroom as needed. water-features, and inspecies & cost per stallation, repair of ircord to better serve Smith River is centrally located between CresDebris Removal rigation systems to be our customers. cent City, CA, one of our papers that prints evl icensed w it h th e ery Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday a.m. with Landscape ContracJUNK BE GONE The Bulletin approximately 5,000 circulation, and Brooktors Board. This 4-digit Classic Stallion I Haul Away FREE number is to be inings, OR. Our Brookings publication is also For Salvage. Also Boots cluded in all adverapproximately 5,000 circulation that prints on Cleanups & Cleanouts Ladies size 7t/a, A-1 Dry Juniper tisements which indiWednesday andSaturday a.m. Both Crescent seldom worn, Mel, 541-389-8107 $185 split, or $165 rnds City and Brookings provide excellent quality of cate the business has Paid $1100; Multi-cord discount; a bond, insurance and life to raise a family. selling for $290. Delivery. 541-977-4500 workers compensaDomestic Services 541-480-1199 tion for their employIf this sounds like you, we would like to hear Where can you find a ees. For your protecfrom you. Please send resume with referA ssisting Seniors a t tion call 503-378-5909 Home. Light house helping hand'? ences and salary requirements to: David Deor use our website: Garage Sates longe, Qu a l it y Con t ro l Sup e rvisor keeping & other ser From contractors to www.lcb.state.or.us to vices. Licensed & ( ddelonge@triplicate.com), PO B o x 2 7 7 , check license status Garage Sales yard care, it's all here Crescent City, CA 95531. Bonded. BBB Certi before contracting with fied. 503-756-3544 in The Bulletin's Garage Sales the business. Persons "Call A Service doing lan d scape Find them Drywall maintenance do not Professional" Directory r equire an LC B l i Serving Centra( Oregon since 1903 in WALLS R US cense. All year Dependable The Bulletin Hang tape, texture, Account Executive Firewood: Seasoned; Advertising scraping old ceilings, Rewarding new business development Nelson Classifieds C edar, Split, D e l . & paint. 25 yrs. exp. Landscaping & Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 Call Bob, 760-333-4011 The Bulletin is looking for a professional and 541-385-5809 for $365. Lodgepole 1 Maintenance driven Sales and Marketing person to help our for $215 or 2 for $410. Serving Central customers grow their businesses with an Electrical Services Oregon Since 2003 Wanted- paying cash 541-420-3484. expanding list of broad-reach and targeted for Hi-fi audio & stuResidental/Commercial products. This full-time position requires a FIREWOOD: dio equip. Mclntosh, Mike Dillon Electric background in consultative sales, territory Cedar-fir-pine-spruceElectrical troubleshoot- Sprinkler Blowouts JBL, Marantz, D ymanagement and aggressive prospecting skills. lodgepole mixed, Sprinfrler Repair naco, Heathkit, Saning, new panel installaTwo years of media sales experience is sui, Carver, NAD, etc. dry, split & delivered, tions. 24 Yrs exp. Lic./ preferable, but we will train the right candidate. $175/cord. 541-408-8611 Bonded ¹1 92171 Fall Clean Up Call 541-261-1808 Holiday Special $50/hr BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP The position includes a competitive Snow Removal 5ff3-949-2336 compensation package, and rewards an The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are Schedule for 2014 aggressive, customer-focused salesperson with still over 2,000 folks in our community without Handyman eWeekly & Monthly unlimited earning potential. permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift Maintenance camps, getting by as best they can. I DO THAT! •Landscape Email your resume, cover letter The following items are badly needed to Home/Rental repairs Construction and salary history to: help them get through the winter: Small jobs to remodels .Water Feature Jay Brandt, Advertising Director e CAMPING GEAR:Used tents, sleeping bags, Honest, guaranteed 'brandt@bendbulletin.com Installation/Maint. tarps, blankets. work. CCB¹151 573 •Pavers or e WARM CLOTHING: rain gear, boots, gloves. Dennis 541-317-9768 •Renovations drop off your resume in person at •Irrigation Installation 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT Just bought a new boat? Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER Sell your old one in the Senior Discounts No phone inquiries please. 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. classifieds! Ask about our Bonded & Insured Super Seller rates! 541-815-4458 Please help,youcan make EOE / Drug Free Workplace LCB¹8759 a big differencein our community. 541-385-5809

Vacation Rentals & Exchanges

Christmas at the Coast

WorldMark Depoe Bay, OR 2 bedroom condo, sleeps 6 12/22 - 12/29 or 12/23 -12/30. $1399 541-325-6566

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

Senior Concierge Service

Pressroom

Night Supervisor

The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon, is seeking a night time press supervisor. We are part of Western Communications, AptiMultiplex Generall Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon CHECKYOUR AD and two in California. Our ideal candidate will manage a small crew of three and must be able to l e arn o u r e q uipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for our 3 t/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ leadership experience preferred. In addition to our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuon the first day it runs to make sure it is cormerous commercial print clients as well. We offer a competitive wage and opportunity for rect. eSpellcheckn and human errors do ocadvancement. If you provide dependability combined with a cur. If this happens to positive attitude, are able to manage people your ad, please conand schedulesand are a team player, we tact us ASAP so that corrections and any would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great adjustments can be place to live and raise a family, let us hear made to your ad. from you. 541-385-5809 Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at The Bulletin Classified anelson©wescompapers.com with your complete resume, r eferences an d s a l ary FIND IT! history/requirements. No phone calls please. SUY IT! Drug test is required prior to employment. SELL IT! EOE. The Bulletin Classifieds

Problem solved. NOW HIRING: Across Oregon!

The Bulletin

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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 9, 2013

DAILY B R I D G E

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sbortz

C L U B M onday,m Dec bere9,2013

Back to the future

ACROSS 1Treewith acorns 4Garmentunder a blouse 7 Expresses derision 13" Mir Bist Du Sch0n" (1938 hit) 14Dress that covers the ankles 16Lassie, for one 17 and tonic 18Droop in the heat 19Setoff from the margin 20 Lead-in to Bear or Berra 22 Post-monologue spot for Jay Leno 24 Male and female 25Shadeof meaning 27 Diatnbes 29 German coal region 30 Former penitentiary in San Francisco Bay 34 " luck!"

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Mark Twain advised planning for the future — where you'll spend the rest of your life. For declarer to plan before touching a card wouldn't seem hard, but players often lose out by playing in haste. North-South got to 3NT after East opened one spade, and West led the ten of s p ades. Dummy's queen covered, East played low and so did declarer. South next led a club to the king and a diamond to dummy's queen. East won and shifted to the queen of hearts, and South took the king and led another diamond: nine, three, ten.

heart, you raise to two hearts and he bids three diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: P ar t n e r's t hre e diamonds is a tr y f o r g ame (or perhaps slam), and since you have 15 high-card points, you must cooperate. A bid of three spades would porlray your pattern and preserve 3NT as a possible game. A practical option is a leap to five diamonds. East dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH

4QJ9

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GOOD HEARTS

4A J1098 6

When East next led the jack of EAST hearts, South ducked. He won the WEST 4 iK 8 6 3 2 next heart and led another diamond, 4107 QQJ'7 but West produced the king and took 9 1 06432 () K95 0 A10 his good hearts. Down two. 4Q73 South can succeed if he plays with 4 5 4 2 deliberation. He must win the first SOUTH spade with the ace, overtake his king 4A54 of clubs with the ace and return the (J) AK9 jack. If East wins and shifts to hearts, 0 J87 6 4 2 South wins and leads a spade, forcing 4K a dummy entry to run the clubs. This week: first trick. East Sou t h West Nor th 14 2O Pass 34 DAILY QUESTION Pass 3 NT All P a ss

64Say O.K., begrudgingly 65Westernmil. alliance 66Weddingwords 67 Dried plums 68 Imbecile 69 Prankster DOWN 1Maternityward doc 2Group to which "Y" is sometimes added 3"MontyPython and the Holy Grail" protagonist 4Mini Cooper maker 50akland N.F.L.'er 6Wheelturner 7Astron., e.g. BEponymof the city now known as Istanbul 9LikeSt. Augustine vis-8vis all U.S. cities 10Show off at Muscle Beach 11Alternative to a jail sentence 12Tennisunits 15Campclassic by the Weather Girls... or a homophonic hint to 3-, 8-, 26- and 31-Down 210ccupied, as a bathroom 23Alpo alternative 26So-called "Father of Europe" 28Sgt., e.g.

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 5 U ABB L E J A EUP HOR I A OR T I P SHE E T K I BBS M A L I CE ABA 5 K O TO H I LL I N WU ND E LE A NON P I ER SOU P C L O SEA GT 0 5 L I EX U I 5 I TE C AT U N E S UC H GR I P D E CAY S REV I SE K RA T AME L I E U T T E ME R E S T P E T P

Youhold: 4 A 5 4 Q A K 9 Opening lead — 4 10 0 I 8 7 6 4 2 4 K. Y ou open one diamond, your partner responds one (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking 8 friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

36 Japanese camera 37 Anger 380ne with a leading role? 39Santa win d s 40Tex-Mexfare with shells 42 East Lansing sch. 43Getaccess, as to a protected site 45" the Sheriff" (Eric Clapton ¹1 hit) 46 Grated cheese 48Ancient Peruvian 49 In the midst of 50"Ohmy stars!" 53 Miata maker 56 Prefix with present 58 BlackBerrys and Palms, for short 59 Mark that might be left with greasy fingers 61 Supply-anddemand subj. 63 Monthly entry on a bank statement: Abbr.

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PUZZLE BY JOHN LIBB

31Shakespeare play that begins "Now is the winter of our discontent" 32Suffixwith buck 33Joiede vivre 3 4"One o r two?" 35 Greece's Mount

36 1998 Winter

Olympics host 41 Musical alternative to B.M.I. 44Bear:Sp. 47 Infuriate 48 Imbeciles 51 Bit of candy that "melts in your mouth, not in your hand"

52 Legally prevent 53 Car showroom sticker inits. 54The "A" in U.S.A.: Abbr. 55 South African native 57Sweet 16 org. 60 Many "Star Trek" extras, for short 62 1, 2, 3, etc.: Abbr.

For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.

Annual subscripiions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX io 388 to download puzzles, or visit nyiimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nylimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytlmes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nyiimes.com/learning/xwords.

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TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 648

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Houses for Rent General

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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 9 2013 860

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Motorcycles & Accessories Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

Mobile Homes

FACTORY SPECIAL

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any

$46,500 finished on your site. J andM Homes 541-548-5511

745

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Lim-

Homes for Sale

Ited, LOADED, 9500

LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year NOTICE All real estate adver- conditional warranty. tised here in is sub- Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! ject to th e Federal F air Housing A c t , Redmond, Oregon 541-546-5511 which makes it illegal such pre f erence, to advertise any pref- JandMHomes.com limitation or discrimi- erence, limitation or Rent /Own nation." Familial sta- discrimination based tus includes children on race, color, reli- 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes under the age of 18 ion, sex, handicap, $2500 down, $750 mo. living with parents or amilial status or na- OAC. J and M Homes 541-548-5511 legal cus t odians, tional origin, or intenpregnant women, and tion to make any such people securing cus- preferences, l i mitatody of children under tions or discrimination. 16. This newspaper We will not knowingly will not knowingly ac- accept any advertiscept any advertising ing for real estate for real estate which is which is in violation of in violation of the law. this law. All persons O ur r e aders a r e are hereby informed hereby informed that that all dwellings adall dwellings adver- veitised are available tised in this newspa- on an equal opportu850 per are available on nity basis. The BulleSnowmobiles an equal opportunity tin Classified basis. To complain of 1994 Arctic Cat 580 d iscrimination ca l l 750 HUD t o l l-free at EXT, in good 1-800-877-0246. The Redmond Homes condition, $1000. toll f ree t e lephone Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149. number for the hear- Looking for your next ing i m p aired is employee? 1-800-927-9275. Place a Bulletin help Call a Pro wanted ad today and Advertise your car! Whether you need a Add A Ptcture! reach over 60,000 Reach thousandsof readers! fencefixed,hedges readers each week. Call 541-385-5809 Your classified ad trimmed or a house The Bulletin Classifieds will also appear on built, you'll find bendbulletin.com 658 professional help in which currently reHouses for Rent ceives over The Bulletin's "Call a 1.5 million page Redmond Service Professional" views every month Directory at no extra cost. Spacious 1800 sq.ft., 3 Bulletin Classifieds bdrm, 2 bath home w/ 541-385-5809 Get Results! 2 car garage located in S W Re d mond. Call 385-5609 or 860 Large living room and place your ad on-line at Motorcycles & Accessories utility room. Fridge incl. $1200 mo. + sec. bendbulletin.com dep. 615-400-8915 BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most Door-to-door selling with comprehensive listing of fast results! It's the easiest classified advertising... way in the world to sell. real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting The Bulletin Classified goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the 541-385-5809 print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 693 www.bendbulletin.com Office/Retail Space for Rent The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since SSia USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI

500 sq. It. upstairs office on NE side of 771 town, private bath, all Lots util. paid. $500 month plus $500 deposit. SHEVLIN RIDGE 541-480-4744 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, approved plans. More Find It in details and photos on The Bulletin Clsssifisds! craigslist. $159,900. 541-389-8614 541-385-5809

's.

2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384 Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939

865

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-365-5609 Serurn Cencrai Ore on since 1903

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales

880

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Honda TRX 350 FE 2006, 4 wheel drive, electric start, electric s hift, n e w tir e s , $2500, 541-980-8006.

N avion R V 2 0 08, Sprinter chassis 25'. Mercedes Benz diesel, 2 4 ,000 m i les, pristine con d ition, quality t h r oughout, rear slide-out with queen bed, deluxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets, no smoking. $79,950 obo. Financing avail.

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

541 u385-5809

$25,000.

541-548-0318

Boats & Accessories Beautiful

h o useboat,

'10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16- 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

(photo above is of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

$85,000. 541-390-4693

www.centraloregon houseboat.com.

a ROWI N G

•S

875

with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Watercraft

Sunchaser Pontoon Ads published in uWa boat - $19,895 include: Kay 20' 2006 Smokercraft tercraft" rafts and motor cruise, S-8521. 2006 aks, Ized 75hp. Mercury. Full watercrafts. personal Fo camping e n closure. "boats" please se Pop u p cha n ging Class 870. room/porta-potty, BBQ, swim ladder, all gear. 541-365-5809 Trailer, 2006 E asyloader gal v anized. P urchased new, a l l Serving Central Oregon since 1903

HDFatBo 1996

The Bulletin

records. 541-706-9977, cell 503-807-1973.

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them in someway.

$1 7,000

541-548-4607

This advertising tip

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

brought toyouby

The Bulletin Serving Cent sl Oregonslncu ISB

880

Motorhomes

COACHIIIIAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 Pristine - just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, ducted furn/ AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ smkg. 1 ownera must see! $52,500. 541-548-4969

18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g reat well maintained, Triumph Da ytona cond, 2004, 15K m i l es, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201 536. Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel mo$4995 torhome w/all DreamCsr options-3 slide outs, Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend 21' Sun Tracker Sig. se- satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, DreamCarsBend.com ries Fishin' Barge, Tracker etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. 541-678-0240 50hp, live wel( fish fndr, Wintered in h eated Dlr 3665 new int, extras, exc cond, shop. $84,900 O.B.O. 541-447-6664 $7900. 541-508-0679

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

NATIONAL DOLPHIN 1997, loaded! 1 slide, Corian surfaces, wood floors (kitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in shower, new queen bed. White leather hide-abed & chair, all records, no pets or smoking. $28,450. Call 541-771-4800 People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Classifistls

Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000

37'

541-460-2019

Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991Ideal for camping or hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, automatic levelers, Onan generator, king-size bed, awning. Nice condition Sell or trade? $6700.

Head south for the winter! 1997 Tropical by National RV.35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new awnings, everything works, excellent condition, 1 owner, non-smokers, $15,000 OBO. 541-408-7705

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

Winnebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, windows, Aluminum wheels. 17u Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L i k e ne w , $74,900 541-460-6900

•I•

Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243 881

Travel Trailers

541-815-9939

TiCk, TOCk

TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $125,900. 30,900 miles, new Michelin tires, great

TiCk, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

condl Dishwasher, w/d, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150

Fleetwood A m ericana Williamsburg 2006. Two king tent end beds w/storage t runk b elow o n e , slideout portable dinette, bench s e at, cassette t o i let & shower, swing level galley w/ 3 b u rner cook top and s ink. outside grill, outside shower. includes 2 propane tanks, 2 batteries, new tires plus bike trailer hitch on back bumper. Dealer serviced 2013. $8500 541-946-2216

2013

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2013 Golf

Carrera Volkswagen 1045 SE Third Street Bend M OT O R S

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541-382-2430

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

870

Get your business

880

Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1988 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelchair l ift. 4 0 00W g enerator, G ood condition! $12,500 obo 541-447-5504

The Bulletin

ATVs

Harley Davidson Sportster 2 0 01 , 1 2 0 0cc, 9,257 miles, $4995. Call Michael, 541-310-9057

Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665

miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32,000 in bike, only $23,000 obo. 541-318-6049

880

870

CarreraVW.COm ) 541-382-1711 DCIS AutO.

On approved creditthrough Volkswagen Credit. Supplies limited. Photos for illustration only (201 3 models shown). Offer ends 12/31/2013. ©2013 Volkswagen of America, inc.


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

C6 MONDAY, DECEMBER 9 2013 •THE BULLETIN 881

882

882

925

932

935

975

975

975

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

Utility Trailers

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Fleetwood Wilderness N.W. Edition 26' 2002, un • 1 slide, sleeps 6, queen bed, couch, stove/oven, tub/ shower, front elec. jack, waste tank heat- Arctic Fox 2003 Cold ers, s tabilizers, 2 Weather Model 34 5B, prop. t a nks, no licensed thru 2/15, exlnt smoking/pets, winter- cond. 3 elec slides, solar 10 gal water htr, i zed, g oo d c o n d.panel, awning, (2) 10-gal $8500 OBO 14' propane tanks, 2 batts, 541-447-3425 catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MANY features! Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call or text 541-325-1956. CHECK YOUR AD KeystoneLaredo 31' RV 20 06 with 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. on the first day it runs Air cond. Gas stove & to make sure it is correfrigerator/freezer. rect. "Spellcheck" and Microwave. Awning. human errors do ocOutside sho w er. cur. If this happens to Slide through storyour ad, please cona ge, E a s y Li f t . tact us ASAP so that $29,000 new; corrections and any Asking$18,600 adjustments can be 541-4947-4805 made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified •

Mirage 24' x 8Y2' wide 10,000 GV W car

-

.

. „

541-388-4362

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 or best offer. Call Peter,

931 Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

VW Bug Sedan, 1969, fully restored, 2 owners, with 73,000 total miles, (4) 235/65-17 Wintercat studded tires, like new, $10,000. 541-382-5127 $400. 4 c hrome rims 933 from 2002 Jeep Grand Pickups Cherokee, $100. 541-280-0514 307-221-2422, 4 P205/75R-14 studded in La Pine ) snow tires on 115mm ILL DELIVER GM wheels, used 2 mos, 1966 Ford F250 RV space avail. in $375. Bob, 541-548-4871 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, Tumalo, 30 amp hk-up, P/S, straight body, $375. 541-419-5060 4 P205/75R-1 5 studded t ires, 8 5 -90% runs good. $2000. tread, asking $275. 541-410-8749 Bob, 541-548-4871 o

CLASSIC

0 0

0Q 908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Les Schwab Mud & Snow blackwall Nurano P245/50/R-20 102T Observe G02, used 1 winter. Pd $1200. Will take reasonable offer. 541-306-4915 932

Antique & Classic Autos

Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Orbit21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

Sprinter, 35' 2008 Rear living, large refrigerator, walk-in shower, queen bed, lots of storage inside & out, newtires, electric jack, excellent condition, only used 3 times. Cali toseei 541-318-6919

Subaru Imp r eza 2006, 4 dr., AWD, silver gray c olor, auto, real nice car in great shape. $6200.

hauler, $5000 obo.

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located I Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, I $400/mo. 541-948-2963

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

Infinifi FX35 2012, P latinum sil v e r, 24,000 miles, with factory wa r ranty, f ully l oaded, A l l Wheel Drive, GPS, sunroof, etc. $35,500. 541-550-7189 Lexus RX330 2006 96,000 miles. ¹088156. $16,995

541-598-3750

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010

Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

www.aaaoregonautoG R E AT Chevy 1986, long bed, source.com four spd., 350 V8 rebuilt, custom paint, Volkswagen Touareg Ford Windstar van, 1996, Me t i culously 1 owner, only 68,100 great ti r e s and 2004 Ver y miles, new tires, always wheels, new t a gs, m aintained. $5000 obo. clean inside and out. serviced, no smoking/ V6. Recently serviced pets. Like new, $3950. 541-389-3026 541-330-4344 or - 60 point inspection Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD sheet. $8900 C a ll 541-420-6045 SLT quad cab, short box, 541-480-0097 auto, AC, high mileage,

m vv +

$12,900. 541-389-7857

975

The Bulletin's

Automobiles

"Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting yourneeds. Call on one of the professionals today!

Find It in The Bulletin Clnssifiedsi 541-385-5809

Corvette Coupe 1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol Honda Accord LX, fuel/synthetic oil, 2004, 4-door, garaged/covered. silver exterior with Bose Premium Gold charcoal interior, system. Orig. owner great condition, manual. Stock! Ford Supercab 1992, 67,000 miles, $10,500 OBO. brown/tan color with asking $9000. Retired. Must sell! m atching ful l s i z e Buick Skylark1972 Call 435-565-2321 541-923-1781 Call Dick, 2WD, 460 (located in Bend) 1/3 interest i n w e l l- Matchless! 17K oriqinal canopy, 541-480-1687. miles! Sunburst yeTlow/ over drive, 135K mi., equipped IFR Beech Bo- white Need help fixing stuff? vinyl/Sandalwood. full bench rear seat, nanza A36, new 10-550/ 15 factory includ- slide rear w i ndow, Call A Service Professional FIND ITr prop, located KBDN. ing A/C. options ' o• •' •Iui 'Sloan docu- bucket seats, power find the help you need. BQQ fTI % $65,000. 541-419-9510 ]g mentation." Quality re- seats w/lumbar, pw, www bendbulletin com SELL ITr paint. COMPLETELY ori- HD receiver 8 trailer The Bulletin Classifieds inal interior & trunk area brakes, good t ires. BMW 525 2002 PRISTINE). Enqine com- Good cond i tion. Luxury Sport Edipartment is VERY MUCH $4900. 541-389-5341 For Sale tion, V-6, automatic, original. No r ust, no 1990 5th Wheel loaded, 18" new leaks, evervthinu works! tires, 114k miles. $19,900. 541-323-1898 Need to get an ad Transporter 1/5th interest in 1973 $7,900 obo Low miles, EFI 460, in ASAP? Cessna 150 LLC Chevy 1955 PROJECT (541) 419-4152 4-spd auto, 10-ply car. 2 door wgn, 350 150hp conversion, low tires, low miles, alJaguar XJS 1990, time on air frame and small block w/Weiand Fax it te 541-322-7253 most new condition, dual quad tunnel ram V-12 co n vertible, engine, hangared in $3500. with 450 Holleys. T-10 auto, I m p eccable Bend. Exce//entperThe Bulletin Classifieds 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, cond., 56,600 mi., formance & affordAsk for Theo, Weld Prostar wheels, black w/ tan leather able flying! $6,000. 541-260-4293 extra rolling chassis + interior, tan top, A/C, 541-410-6007 extras. $6500 for all. cruise, PS, PB, air 541-389-7669. BMW IIII-Roadster, bag, Pirelli t i res, Where can you find a 2000, w/hardtop. s ame owner 1 3 helping hand? $19,500 years. $14 , 500. 57,200 miles, From contractors to Call Jeff Titanium silver. Not 541-410-0671 yard care, it's all here FORD XLT 1992 many M-Roadsters in The Bulletin's 3/4 ton 4x4 available. (See 1974 Bellanca matching canopy, "Call A Service Craigslist posting id Advertise your car! Ford Model A 1930 1730A 30k original miles, Add A Prcfure! ¹4155624940 for Professional" Directory Coupe, good condition, Reach thousands of readers! possible trade for additional details.) $16,000. 541-588-6084 Call 541-385-5809 classic car, pickup, 2180 TT, 440 SMO, Serious inquiries The Bulletin Clnssifieds motorcycle, RV only. 541-480-5348 180 mph, excellent $13,500. condition, always In La Pine, call hangared, 1 owner 928-581-9190 Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

for 35 years. $60K.

Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34'

fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide 8 o ut. 27" T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4

In Madras, call 541-475-6302

PriceReduced! Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K Fla t orig. miles, runs great, I nternational exc. cond.in/out.$7500 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. obo. 541-480-3179 trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.

541-548-3379.

Lincoln LS 2001 4door

sport sedan, plus set of snow tires. $6000. 541-317-0324.

Subaru STi 2010, 16.5K, rack, mats, cust snow whls, stored, oneowner, $29,000, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 541.410.6904 Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest Toyota Celica Convertible 1993 way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price Lincoln Zephyr 2006, V6, range, new t i res, wheels, clutch, tim29,000 miles, silver, It stone leather seats, good ing belt, plugs, etc. cond, priced to s e ll, 111K mi., remark$9700. 541-549-2500 able cond. i nside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! Porsche 911 $5995. R e dmond. Carrera 993 cou e 541-504-1993

Looking for your next employee?

Place a Builetin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647

Porsche 911 Turbo

2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700. 541-322-9647

Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809

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The Bulletin recoml extra caution ~ I mends when p u r chasing • I products or servicesI from out of the area.

I S ending c

ash ,I

I checks, or credit in-

I formation may be I I subject toFRAUD. For more informa-

I tion about an adver-I Porsche Carrera 911 tiser, you may call 2003 convertible with I the ' Oregon State I

hardtop. 50K miles, Attorney General's g new factory Porsche Office C o nsumer motor 6 mos ago with I Protection hotline at 18 mo factory war1-877-877-9392. ranty remaining. $37,500.

I

541-322-6928

I I

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since1903

Buick LaCrosse CXS Dramatic Price Reduc2005, loaded, new tion Executive Hangar battery/tires, perfect at Bend Airport (KBDN) $8495. 541-475-6794 60' wide x 50' deep, 1000 1000 1000 w/55' wide x 17' high biLook at: Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices fold dr. Natural gas heat, Bendhomes.com What are you offc, bathroom. Adjacent 541-419-5480. for Complete Listings of DEED: $358,581.33. Forfeiture: The propLEGAL NOTICE to Frontage Rd; great looking for? Area Real Estate for Sale ARNOLD IRRIGATION Notice is given that erty described below times total in last 5~i2 visibility for aviation busiC all The Bulletin At any person named was seized for forfeiYou'll find it in DISTRICT years.. No pets, no ness. 541-948-2126 or GMC Yi fon 1971, Only pursuant to Section ture because it: (1) 541-385-5809 MONTHLY BOARD Original low The Bulletin Classifieds smoking. High retail email 1jetjock@q.com $19,700! 86.753, Oregon Re- Constitutes the proexceptional, 3rd Place Your Ad Or E-Mail MEETING NOTICE $27,700. Will sell for Piper Archer 1 9 80,mile, vised Statutes, has ceeds of the violation $24,000 including slid- based in Madras, al- owner. 951-699-7171 At: www.bendbulletin.com the right to have the of, solicitation to vioThe Board of Direcing hitch that fits in 541-385-5809 hangared since Nissan Frontier 2005 tors of Arnold Irriga- foreclosure proceed- late, attempt to vioWhat are you your truck. Call 8 a.m. ways New annual, auto Crewcab 4x4, 39,500 tion District will hold ing dismissed and the late, or conspiracy to to 10 p.m. for appt to new. looking for? pilot, IFR, one piece their monthly board trust deed reinstated violates, the criminal Buick Regal S Cussee. 541-330-5527. windshield. Fastest Arcur i n g the laws of the State of tom 1994, 6 1,752 meeting on Tuesday, by You'll find it in cher around. 1750 toCheck out the December 10, 2013 at above-described de- Oregon regarding the mi., exc. cond., V6, tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. The Bulletin Classifieds classifieds online 3.1 L, fuel injected, 3:00 pm a t 1 9 6 04 faults, by payment of manufacture, distribuask for Buck Canyon R d ., the entire amount due tion, or possession of 4 dr., FWD, exc. all www.bertdbuffetin.cnm 541-475-6947, 541-598-3750 Rob Berg. (other than such por- controlled substances Bend, OR. www.aaaoregonauto- season tires, new Updated daily 541-385-5809 tions of principal as (ORS C hapter475); Tango 29.6' 2007, battery and alternasource.com LEGAL NOTICE would not then be due and/or (2) Was used Want to impress the tor, very clean, exc. Rear living, walkNOTICE OF SALE had no default ocor intended for use in 935 a/c and heater, pb, around queen bed, relatives? Remodel Mark G. R e inecke, pw and s teering. Successor T r ustee curred), and by pay- committing or facilicentral air, awning, Sport Utility Vehicles your home with the ing all costs and ex- tating the violation of, $4000. 541-419-5575 1 large slide, under the Trust Deed penses help of a professional actually solicitation to violate, $12,000. d escribed bel o w , incurred in enforcing from The Bulletin's attempt to violate, or 541-280-2547 or hereby elects to sell, the obligation and conspiracy to violate TURN THE PAGE "Call A Service Illlonaco Lakota 2004 GMC Sierra 1977 short 541-815-4121 pursuant to Oregon trust deed, together the criminal laws of 5th Wheel For More Ads Professional" Directory bed, exlnt o r iginal Revised Sta t utes w ith trustee's a n d the State of Oregon 34 ft.; 3 slides; imcond., runs & drives The Bulletin S ections 86.705 t o attorney's fees, at any regarding the manumaculate c o ndition; great. V8, new paint 86.795, the real proptime prior to five days facture, distribution or large screen TV w/ X3 2 0 07, 99K Cadillac EI Dorado and tires. $4750 obo. BMW erty described below the date last possession of conmiles, premium pack- 1994 entertainment center; 541-504-1050 Total Cream Puff! at 10:00 a.m. on Feb- before s et fo r t h e s a l e . trolled s u b stances reclining chairs; cenage, heated lumbar Body, paint, trunk as ruary 7, 2014, in the MARK G. REINECKE, (ORS Chapter 475). supported seats, panter kitchen; air; queen showroom, blue lobby of the offices of Successor Trustee. oramic moo n roof, bed; complete hitch $1700 wheels B ryant, Lovlien 8 WEEKEND WARRIOR Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- leather, IN THE MATTER OF: and new fabric cover. Save money. Learn w/snow tires although Jarvis, 591 SW Mill LEGAL NOTICE Toy hauler/travel trailer. $18,000 OBO. non headlights, tan & car has not been wet in View Way, Bend, OrNOTICE OF SEIZURE to fly or build hours 24' with 21' interior. black leather interior, (1) US Currency in (541) 548-5886 8 years. On trip to with your own airegon. All obligations FOR CIVIL Sleeps 6. Self-conn ew front & re a r Boise the am o un t of avg. 28.5 mpg., of performance which FORFEITURE TO ALL c raft. 1968 A e r o brakes © 76K miles, tained. Systems/ Jeep CJ5 1979, 1 ,555.00, Case N o Commander, 4 seat, are secured by the POTENTIAL appearance in good Original owner, 87k one owner, all records, $4800. 541-593-4016. 13-11069 seized June Trust Deed hereinaf- CLAIMANTS AND TO 150 HP, low time, condition. Smoke-free. miles, only 3k on new very clean, $16,900. 5, 2013 from Krista full panel. $23,000 ter described are in ALL UNKNOWN 541-388-4360 Tow with ~/~-ton. Strong 258 long block. Clutch Vela. PERSONS READ THIS obo. Contact Paul at default for reasons set suspension; can haul package, Warn hubs. 541-447-5184. forth below and the CAREFULLY ATVs snowmobiles, Excellent runner, very LEGAL NOTICE beneficiary declares even a small car! Great MONTANA 3585 2008, dependable. NorthNOTICE TO INTERexc. cond., 3 slides, all sums due under If you have any interprice - $8900. man 6V2' plow, Warn Chevy Tahoe 2001 ESTED P ERSONS. king bed, Irg LR, the note secured by est in t h e s e ized GINGER Cail 541-593-6266 L. DURDAN6000¹ winch. $7900 Corvette 1979 5.3L V8, leather, Arctic insulation, all the trust deed d eproperty d e scribed or best reasonable SHAW has been apL82- 4 speed. air heated seats, options $35,000 obo. scribed herein immebelow, you must claim pointed Personal Repoffer. fully loaded, 120K mi. 85,000 miles Looking for your 541-420-3250 diately due and pay- that interest or you will resentative of the ES541-549-6970 or Garaged since new. next employee? $7500 obo able. G R A NTORS: automatically lose that TATE 541-815-8105. OF LEI 541-460-0494 I've owned it 25 Place a Bulletin help Just too many Kris M. B ales and interest. If you do not DURDAN, Deceased, Superhavvkyears. Never damwanted ad today and Kimberly A. B a les. file a claim for the collectibles? Only 1 Share by the Circuit Court, aged or abused. reach over 60,000 BENEFICIARY: Frank property, the property State of Oregon, DesAvailable readers each week. $12,900. H. Baker, Trustee, may be forfeited even chutes County, under Economical flying Sell them in Your classified ad Dave, 541-350-4077 FBO Century Devel- if you are not con- Case in your own Number will also appear on The Bulletin Classifieds opment LLC Retirevicted of any crime. 1 3PB0143. All p e rIFR equipped bendbulletin.com ment Trust Dated De- To claim an interest, sons having a claim The Bulletin Cessna 172/180 HP for which currently rePlymouth B a rracuda Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989, To Subscribe call cember 17 , 2 0 02. you must file a written against th e e s tate only $13,500! New 541-385-5809 1966, original car! 300 auto, high miles, runs ceives over 1.5 milT RUST DEED R Eclaim with the forfeiGarmin Touchscreen ust p resent t h e 541-385-5800 or go to lion page views evhp, 360 V8, centeraood.$1700. CORDED: August 10, ture counsel named m avionics center stack! lines, 541-593-2597 541-6 3 3-6662 www.bendbulletin.com 2009, in Book 2009, below, The w r itten c laim w i t hin fo u r ery month at no Exceptionally clean! months of th e f i rst extra cost. Bulletin at page 34187, Offi- claim must be signed publication date of this Hangared at BDN. Classifieds Get Recial Records, Desby you, sworn to unto H e n drix, Call 541-728-0773 sults! Call 385-5809 chutes County, Order penalty of perjury notice A RE P U S L I C Brinich & B e rtalan, or place your ad egon. P R O PERTY before a notary public, LLP, at 716 NW Har916 on-line at COVERED BY and state: (a) Your riman Street, Bend, MCYFICES OPEN ROAD 36' Trucks & bendbulletin.com TRUST DEED: PAR- true name; (b) The Oregon 97701, ATTN: 2005 - $25,500 Heavy Equipment IM~ KTl L N~ CEL 1 O F P A RTI- address at which you Lisa N. Bertalan, or King bed, hide-a-bed TION PLAT 2005-69, will a c cept f u t ure they may be barred. 882 sofa, 3 slides, glass DESCHUTES m ailings from t h e Additional information shower, 10 gal. waFifth Wheels An important premise upon which the principle of COUNTY, OREGON. court and f orfeiture may be obtained from ter heater, 10 cu.ft. DEFAULT: Failure to counsel; and (3) A democracy is based is thatinformation about the court records, the fridge, central vac, A lpenlite 1993 29 f t pay: 1. Unpaid princi- s tatement that y o u Personal Representa5th wheel/gooseneck s atellite dish, 2 7 ' government activities must be accessible in order pal in the amount of have an interest in the tive or the followingTV/stereo syst., front S lide, queen b e d 2. seized property. Your 359 p o table for the electorate io make well-informed decisions. $312,065.00. attorney for he Onan gen e rator front power leveling Peterbilt Monthly interest-only deadline for filing the named water t ruck, 1 9 90, jacks and s cissor Personal RepresentaNeeds refrigerator re Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo 3200 gal. tank, 5hp payments i n the claim document with jacks, 16' Date of first pubpaired. $ 6 000/obo stabilizer pump, 4-3" h oses, co u nsel tive. amount of $1,658.62 forfeiture Like new! citizens who want to know more about government lication: December 9, Bend. Mes s age awning. camlocks, $ 2 5,000. from July 2011 to the n amed below is 2 1 541-419-0566 2 013. HEND R IX 541-306-1961 541-820-3724 ocfivifies. present: $43,124.12; days from the last day BRINICH & BERTA3. Late fee of five per- of publication of this LAN, LLP, 716 NW Need to get an Take care of cent (5%) for each notice. Where to file HARRIMAN, B END, Say "goodbuy" Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin payment received af- a claim and for more OR ad in ASAP? your investments classifieds or go towwvv.bendbullefin.com and to that unused ter the 10th of any i nformation: D a i n a 541-382-4980. 97701, You can place it with the help from month: $2,156.21; 4. Vitolins, Crook County item by placing it in click on"Classi%edAds" online at: Trustee's Sale Guar- District Attorney Of- Just bought a new boat? The Bulletin's The Bulletin Classifieds antee: $1, 2 36.00. fice, 300 N E T h ird Sell your old one in the www.bendbulletin.com "Call A Service S UM O W IN G O N Street, Prineville, OR classifieds! Ask about our The Bulletin O BLIGATION S E - 97754. Super Seller rates! 5 41-385-580 9 Professional" Directory 541-385-5809 CURED BY TRUST Notice of reasons for 541-385-5809


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