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SUNDAY November10,2013
x orin eccenric u ene,
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
INTERVIEW
Wyden sees
5'
Death toll 10,000?-
groundswell
That's the fear as the extent
of devastation from Typhoon Haiyan becomesapparent in
Chris Boyce at the time of his arrest in 1977, on suspicion of espionage.
ofsupport to rein in NSA
the Philippines.A2
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — Almost six months after Edward Snowden became a household name by leaking classified documents about secret electronic
Sleep keepssick away — Late nights and jet lag may
be making you ill, becauseyour internal clock may be entwined with your immune system.A3
As the worldwarmsWith fossil-fuel emissions dis-
spying programs, Sen.
A Cold Warfigure known as'The Falcon' finds a new home, and anew life, in Central Oregon.And in aforthcoming book, hetells hisversion of events.
Ron Wyden, D-Ore., sees
growing
rupting marine life, might evolution come to the rescue?A4
Veterans Dayweekend
g% ~
— A full list of Il nr I alll placein Central
Orego n .gt
hl SISterS —Hope and headaches asbusinesses prepare for a three-month closure of Highway 20.E1
,e
Elsewhere inOregon — One man isdeadafter a nightclub shooting.B3
And aWedexclusiveThe French,already usedto long summer vacations, alsomade Wednesday an official day off
from school. Notanymore. bendbnlletin.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
To alleviate health care mess,turning to insurers By Juliet Eilperin and Amy Goldstein The Washington Post
The White House is increasing its reliance on insurers by accepting their technical help in efforts to repair the problem-ridden online health exchange and prioritizing consumers' ability to buy plans directly fromthe Inside carriers. • Analysis: The Little time for adminisObama to fix t r ation's two urgent broader coproblems,AS operation with insurers is a tacit acknowledgment that the federal insurance exchange — fraught with software and hardware flaws that have frustrated Americans trying to buy coverage— might not be working smoothly by the target date of Nov. 30, according to several health experts familiar with the administration's thinking. White House officials reject the idea that the strategy represents a contingency plan if the online system continues to falter. "We are working 24-7 to ensure that the site is working smoothly for the vast majority of users by the end of November," said Chris Jennings, an aide to the president on health policy. SeeHealth care/A5
W yden
support for reforming how the intelligence community operates. "In the last few weeks, you've seen come together the kind of coalition that has been successful in past battles over major issues where technology was involved," he told The Bulletin recently. Three important groups — lawmakers, members of the tech industry and voters — are beginning to embrace the idea that the National Security Agency needs to be reined in. Last week, Sen. Patrick Leahy,D-vt.,the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, signed on as a co-sponsor to the Intelligence Oversight and Surveillance Reform Act, legislation introduced by Wyden and others that would stop the bulk collection of metadata, or records on where and to whom calls were placed and for how long. SeeWyden /A5 Joe Ktrne /The Bulletin
Chris Boyce — who sold secrets to the Soviets, robbed more than a dozen banks and served two decades in prison — holds Higher Power, the name of his gyrfalcon, near his home in Central Oregon on Friday. Boyce, 60, has been interested in falconry most of his life and frequently hunts with his bird. It's part of what drew him to the area, somewhere he could do his hobby. "Because of my background and I'm kind of a loner anyway, I keep to myself. To me, going out and flying falcons is like going to church. Central
Oregon, to me ,everyday isa Sunday."
FALCONkl RIIDTEl
By Sheila G. Miller • The Bulletin n crisp fall days so common in Central Oregon, Chris Boyce likes to take his falcon out to open lands and watch him soar. After spending more than two decades surrounded by the cement of prison walls, you'd forgive the 60-year-old for wanting a little space around him. "When I go out there on the grasslands and I put that falcon up into the air and watch it climb up into the clouds, I'm forever grateful," Chris said. "I love it here. I love flying falcons here. I love our little house. I love working in the yard and our flower garden.... I've found a peace here in Central Oregon." Let's back up some 35 years. Maybe you've read the book or seen the movie "The Falcon and The Snowman." Chris Boyce is the Falcon. The basic story: Two young Californians, Christopher John Boyce and his friend Andrew Daulton Lee, worked together to sell secret information about U.S. satellites to the former Soviet Union. The pair were caught and sentenced to hard prison time. That's where the book and the movie end. But it's not where Chris Boyce's story ended. In fact, he's living the sequel right here in Central Oregon. SeeFalcon /A8
ATrueSterpef i'endehipanrtEgpionalr
' EII -lIISO
New York Times News Service
GENEVA — Marathon talks between major powers and Iran failed to produce a deal to freeze its nuclear pro-
gram today, puncturing days of feverish anticipation and
TODAY'S WEATHER Cloudy High 58, Low 33
Page B6
underscoring how hard it will be to forge a lasting solution to Iran's nuclear ambitions. Both sides badly wanted agreement. The U.S. and its five partners were looking for initial caps on Iran's ability to make an atomic bomb, while Tehran sought some easing of
— but hate
your tvveets By Natasha Singer New York Times News Service
Robert Lindsey Submitted photos
Chris Boyce and his wife have written "The Falcon and The Snowman: American Sons" (left) — a sequel of sorts to a best-seller (right) that spawned a 1985 film. The new book will be available in
paperback soon onAmazon.com.
Onthe Wed • To hear a clip of The Bulletin's interview with Chris Boyce,
visitQ bendbulletin.com/chrisboyce • For more information on theBoycesandtheir new book, visitQ< thefalcnnandthesnowman.com
U.S. alliessplinter on Iran, and deal slips By Mark Landler and Michael R. Gordon
Collegesmay love yourGPA
Graphic inside
Union's foreign policy chief,
• Possible steps to a broad agreement on Iran's nukes,AS
Catherine Ashton, and Iran's foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, said they had failed to overcome differences. The Western powers and Iran did agree to resume talks Nov. 20. See Negotiations/A6
sanctions stifling its economy. Emerging from a last-ditch bargaining session that began Saturday but stretched past midnight, the European
INDEX Business/Stocks E1-6 CommunityLife C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 D1-6 Calendar B2 Crosswords 06, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts Classified G 1 - 6L ocal/State B 1- 6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C7
At Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, admissions officers are still talking about the high school senior who attended a campus information session last year for prospective students. Throughout the presentation, she apparent-
ly posted disparaging comments on Twitter about her fellow attendees, repeatedly using a common expletive. Perhaps she hadn't realized that colleges keep track of their social media mentions. "It was incredibly unusual and foolish of her to do that," Scott Meiklejohn, Bowdoin's dean of admissions and financial aid, said. The college ultimately denied the student admission, he said, because her academic record wasn't competitive. But "we would have wondered about the judgment of someone who ... makes such awful remarks." SeeAdmission/A6
4 P We userecycled newsprint AnIndependent
vol. 110, No. 314, 7 sections
0
88267 0233 0
7
A2 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
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Health Care fraud —With millions of Americans frustrated and bewildered by the trouble-prone federal website for health insurance, con menand unscrupulous marketers are seizing their
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GENERAL INFORMATION
there is a new opportunity for people to take advantage of our residents, and we've seen it starting already," said Kate Abernathy,
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SeCreCy tentS —When President Barack Obamatravels abroad,
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his staff packs something more associated with camping than diplomacy: a tent. Even when Obama travels to allied nations, aides
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OUR ADDRESS Street
1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
Gay marriage —Hawaii's House of Representatives passed a bill late Friday to legalize same-sex marriage, all but ensuring that Ha-
outside the National Museumfor the U.S. Air Force in Dayton, Ohio. The fourth surviving member, Robert Hite, was
pimppop Am.
their place in history after a day of fanfare about their
gaycouplestowed.TheHouseapprovedthemeasureona30-19
1942 attack on Japan. Hundreds of people including family members of deceased Raiders watched asthethree Raiders each called out"here" as a historian read thenames of all
vote. The bill will be sent to the state Senate, which must accept revisions in the House version for the measure to become law. Gov. Neil Abercrombie praised the House action and indicated he would
quickly sign the legislation when it reached him.
80 of the original airmen.
Doolittle Raiders, all in their 90s, offered a final toast
The raiders sipped an1896 cognac from specially engraved silver goblets. Thecognacwas savedfor the occasion after being passeddown from Doolittle,
Saturday to their fallen comrades, asthey pondered
who was born in1896.
unable to travel to the ceremonies asthe last of the Cdldidd0dm.
waii will soon join15 states and the District of Columbia in allowing
Ai Behrman /The Associated Press
Three of the four surviving members of the1942 Tokyo raid led by Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle, from left, David Thatcher, Edward Saylor, and Richard Cole, stand next to a monument marking the raid Saturday
COnSerVatiVe CathOliCS —In the eight months since Pope Francis was elected, he haswonaffection worldwide for his humble mien and commontouch. His approval numbers are skyrocketing. Even atheists are applauding. But not everyone is so enchanted. Some Catholics in the church's conservative wing in the United States say Francis has left them feeling abandoned and deeply unsettled, especially after an interview published in October where he
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.powerbalt.com and www.oregontottery.org
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said that "everyone has his own idea of good andevil" and so every-
oon ea o cou reac By Jim Gomez
Even by the standards of the Philippines, which is buffeted TACLOBAN, P h i l ippines by many natural calamities — The death toll from one of — about 20 typhoons a year, the strongest storms on record earthquakes an d vo l c anic that ravaged the central Phil- eruptions — the latest disaster ippine city of Tacloban could shocked the impoverished nareach 10,000 people, officials tion of 96 million people. said today after the extent of The airport i n T a cloban, massive devastation became about 360 miles southeast of apparent and horrified resi- Manila, looked like a muddy dentsspoke of storm surges as w asteland o f d e b ris, w i t h high as trees. crumpled tin roofs and upRegional police chief Elmer turned cars. The airport towSoria said he was briefed by er's glass windows were shatLeyte provincial Gov. Domi- tered, and air force helicopters nic Petilla late Saturday and were busy flying in and out at told there were about 10,000 the startofreliefoperations. "The devastation is, I don't deaths in the province, mostly by drowning and from colhave the words for it," Roxas lapsed buildings. The gover- said. "It's really horrific. It's a nor's figure was based on re- great human tragedy." ports from village officials in Defense SecretaryVoltaire areas where Typhoon Haiyan G azmin said A q u ino w a s "speechless" when he told him slammed Friday. Tacloban city administrator of the devastation the typhoon Tecson Lim said that the death had wrought in Tacloban. "I told him all systems are toll in the city alone "could go up to 10,000." Tacloban is the down," Gazmin said. "There L eyte provincial capital o f is no power, no water, nothing. 200,000people and the biggest People are desperate. They're city on Leyte Island. looting." A bout 3 0 0 -400 bo d i es The city's two largest malls have already been recovered, and groceries were l ooted Lim said. A mass burial was planned today in Palo town near Tacloban. The t y p h oo n ba r r eled through six c entral PhilipSEVENTH The Associated Press
pine islands on Friday, wiping away buildings and leveling seaside homes with ferocious winds of 147 miles per hour and gusts 170 mph. By those measurements, Haiyan would be comparable to a strong Category 4 hurricane in the U.S., and nearly in the top category, a5. It weakened today to 101 mph with stronger gusts as it approached central and northern Vietnam where authorities evacuated more than 500,000 people. "The rescue operation is on-
one should "follow the good and fight evil as he conceives them."
Stop-and-frisk —New York City's Bloomberg administration, in its most aggressive push yet to erase the stain of a federal judge's
rulings on police stop-and-frisk practices, asked afederal appeals court on Saturday to vacate her decisions, which had ordered sweeping reforms, including the appointment of a monitor. The decisions by Judge Shira Scheindlin, of U.S. District Court in Manhattan,
had already beenhalted by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals while it considered the city's appeal of the rulings. But if Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio, as he has promised, withdraws the appeal, the court-
ordered reforms would most likely go into effect.
and the gasoline stations destroyed by the typhoon. Police were deployedto guard a fuel depot to prevent looting of fuel. T oday, th e c i t y ' s o v e r whelmed services were reinforced by 100 special police force units sent in from elsewhere to help restore peace and order. "On the way to the airport we saw many bodies along the street," said Philippine-born A ustralian M il a W a rd , 5 3 , who was waiting at the airport to catch a military flight back to Manila. "They were covered with just anything — t a r paulin, roofing sheets, cardboards,m she said. Asked how many, she said, "Well over 100 where we passed." At the request of the Philippine government, Defense S ecretary Chuck H agel d i rected U.S. Pacific Command to deploy ships and aircraft to support search-and-rescue operations and airlift emergency supplies, according to a statement released by the Defense Depattment press office.
E-CIQS —Facing a decision on whether to impose tight restrictions
on electronic cigarettes, the EuropeanParliament received a pleading letter in September signed by thousands of former smokers worried that "the positive story of e-cigarettes may be about to come to
an abrupt halt." The outcomeamounted to a victory for e-cigarette sellers. The European Parliament voted Oct. 8 to scrap proposals by health officials to regulate e-cigarettes as a medicinal product. The
Parliament's decision did not end the argument, but it lifted a big, immediate cloud threatening a business that some Wall Street analysts predict could be bigger than tobacco within a decade.
JOurnaliStS in Syria —Behind a veil of secrecy, at least 30 journalists have beenkidnapped or have disappeared in Syria — held and threatened with death by extremists or taken captive by gangs seeking ransom. Thewidespread seizure of journalists is unprecedented, and hasbeenlargely unreported by news organizations in the hope that keeping the kidnappings out of public view mayhelp to negotiate the captives' release. The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists says at least 30 journalists are being held and 52
have been killed since Syria's civil war began in early 2011. Myanmar unreSt —Paralyzed from the waist down, DawAye Kyi, 94, was too heavy for her daughter and granddaughter to carry into the jungle when a Buddhist mob stormed through their village hunting for Muslims. Her daughter and granddaughter fled. Several
hours later, AyeKyi's body was discovered. Aye Kyi was one of five Muslims killed in the attack on Thabyu Chaing, Myanmar, last month. In a year and a half of sporadic Buddhist-Muslim violence,
more than 200 people, mostly Muslims, have died. But the killing of a helpless elderly woman is one of the starkest symbols of the breadth of anti-Muslim feelings in this Buddhist-majority country. — Fromwirereports
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going. We expect a very high number of fatalities as well as injured," Interior S ecretary Mar Roxas said after visiting Tacloban on Saturday. "All systems, all vestiges of modern living — communications, power, water — all are down. Media is down, so there is no way to communicate with the people in a mass sort of way." President Benigno Aquino s aid the casualties "will be substantially more" than the official count of 151 — but gave no figure or estimate. He said the government's priority was to restore power and communications in isolated areas to allow for the delivery of relief and medical assistance to victims. The U.S. and other governments and agencies were mounting a major relief effort "because of the magnitude of the disaster," said Philippine Red Cross chairman Richard Gordon.
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
M ART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Sunday, Nov. 10, the 314th day of 2013. There are 51 days left in the year.
NEED TO KNOW
CUTTING EDGE
HAPPENINGS
For the paralyzed, brain power can control pair of virtual arms
Ii'Bll — A marathon round
of talks over the country's nuclear program ends.A1 TIfpllOOll —A massburial is
By Melissa Healy
planned in the Philippines for hundreds of victims of Haiyan,
one of the strongest storms ever to make landfall.A2
HISTORY Highlight:In1938, Kate Smith
first sang lrving Berlin's "God Bless America" on her CBS
radio program. In1775, the U.S. Marines were organized under authority of the Continental Congress.
Your circadian rhythm, Or your body's clock, is tied to your immune system.
In1871,journalist-explorer Henry Stanley found Scottish
missionary David Livingstone, who had not beenheard from for years, near LakeTanganyika in central Africa. In 1919, the American Legion
/'IX
opened its first national convention in Minneapolis.
In1928,Japanese Emperor Hirohito was formally enthroned,
almost two years after his ascension. In1938, Turkish statesman Mustafa Kemal Ataturk died in Istanbul at age 57. In 1942, Winston Churchill de-
' i/ j j jl .
livered a speech in London in which he said, "I havenot become the King's First Minister to preside over the liquidation
By Elizabeth Norton ScienceNOW
In1951, customer-dialed long-
Jet lag, shift work and even late nights staring at your tablet or smartphone may be making you sick. That's because the body's internal clock is set for two 12-hour periods of light and darkness, and when this rhythm is thrown off, so is the immune system. One reason may be that the genes that set the body clock are intimately connected to certain immune cells, according to a new study.
as Mayor M. Leslie Denning of Englewood, N.J., called Alame-
da, Calif., Mayor FrankOsborne without operator assistance. In1954, the U.S. Marine Corps Memorial, depicting the raising
of the American flag on Iwo Jima in 1945, was dedicated by President Dwight D. Eisen-
hower in Arlington, Va. In1961, the satirical war novel "Catch-22" by Joseph Heller was first published by Simon & Schuster. In1969, the children's
educational program "Sesame Street" made its debut on National Educational Television
(later PBS). In1972, three armed men hijacked Southern Airways Flight 49, a DC-9 with 24 other
passengers on board during a stopover in Birmingham, Ala., and demanded $10 million in
ransom. (The 30-hour ordeal, which involved landings in nine U.S. cities and Toronto, finally ended with a second landing in
Cuba, where the hijackers were taken into custody by Cuban
authorities.) In1975, the ore-hauling ship SS Edmund Fitzgerald and its crew of 29 mysteriously sank
during a storm in LakeSuperior with the loss of all on board. In1982, the newly finished Vietnam Veterans Memorial was opened to its first visitors
in Washington, D.C.,three days before its dedication. Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev died at age 75.
Ten years ago:Federal regulators allowed customers to switchhome phone numbers to their cellphones.
Five yearsago:President George W.Bushand his wife, Laura, welcomedBarack and Michelle Obama to the White
House for a nearlytwo-hour visit; the president and president-elect conferred in the Oval Office.
One yearago: Officials announced that President Barack Dbama had won Florida with 50 percent of the vote to Mitt Rom-
ney's 49.1percent, amargin
of about 74,000 votes. U.S. officials disclosed that the scandal that brought down CIA Director David Petraeus started when
harassing emails sent byhis biographer andparamour, Paula Broadwell, to another woman came to the attention of the FBI.
BIRTHDAYS Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., is 70. Lyricist Tim Rice is 69. Movie
director RolandEmmerich is58. Actor-comedian Sinbad is 57. Author Neil Gaiman is 53. Actor-
comedianTracy Morgan is45. Actress Ellen Pompeo is 44. — From wire reports
'
-
Thinkstock
of the British Empire." distance phoneservice began
two virtual arms carried out the command. For scientists building deThat acco m p lishment vices that would allow the holds out the prospect that paralyzed to i nteract with even patients with no control their environment (as well as over their limbs might one those wishing to understand day be able to choose a virtuthe workings of the brain), al arm — or two — and send it's important to understand them forth to turn on lights, that using two virtual arms punch in a phone number or is a more complex proposi- type a letter. tion than using each arm In the l atest study, r eseparately and multiplying searchers found that it would "recordings" by two. But with a little help take n e ural and a lot of technology, a new from many different clusters study shows, even a monkey of neurons across the brain can be taught to do it. to replicate the act of moving T he latest account of a both arms. brain-machine interface that In all, researchers listened could give a quadriplegic two in on and recorded the activgood hands was published ity of about 500 neurons disthis week in the journal Sci- tributed across the frontalence Translational Medicine. parietal lobes of each animal The article describes a pro- to create the neural signature cess by which two monkeys of each distinct movement of w ere taught to m ove t w o the arms. arms on a computer terminal T hat r e p r oducing th e in front of them, using only m ovement o f b o t h a r m s their thoughts. would involve such a widely One o f the mon k e ys distributed ensemble of neuachieved that feat by f i r st rons was a surprise even to m anipulating t w o v i r t u a l the r esearchers i n volved, arms, projected on a screen said lead author Dr. Miguel in front of him — with his Nicolelis of Duke University. own hands on a pair of joyThose neural signatures sticks. But the other did so b ecame t h e "commands" without ever actually using that d i rected t h e v i r t u al his hands. Instead, the sec- arms to move, even when the ond monkey watched a pro- monkeys' arms were gently jected image in which two immobilized at their sides. arms move around a field and When a computer program manipulate virtual "buttons." detected the telltale signaThat vicarious experience ture of a monkey wishing to alone produced a complex use his left arm to reach out pattern of neuronal firing in and press on a red square on the monkey's brain. Later, the screen, it executed that when the monkey re-enacted movement virtually. that distinctive firing p atThe research, carried out tern by thinking about how largely at Duke University's he would move his arms, the Center for N e uroengineerLos Angeles Times
The finding "was a happy accident," says Lora Hooper, an immunologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. She and her colleagues were studying NFIL3, a protein that guides the development of certain immune cells and turns on the activity of others. The gene for this protein is mutated in some human patients with inflammatory bowel disease, and mice lacking the gene for NFIL3, the team found, had more so-called TH17 cells in their intestines. These cells are a type of immune cell known as a T cell. They get their name from a signal they produce, called interleukin 17, which tells other T cells to increase the immune response. In normal numbers, TH17 cells, which live in the intestines, help the body fight bacterial and fungal infections. But when there are too many, the immune defense begins to cause illness rather than prevent it. B oosting NFIL3 levels in T cells growing in lab cultures resulted in fewer of them turning into TH17 cells, the researchers found, suggesting that the protein's job is to prevent T cells from going into that area of specialization. The absence of the protein, the team concluded, leads to runaway TH17 activity. At this point, the researchers had no reason to suspect a connection to our body's internal timekeeping system — also known as our circadian clock — which responds to daily cycles of light and dark. But as they continued to explore the connection between N FIL3 and TH17 cells, they found that some ofthe proteins produced
by the body's "clock genes" attach to the N FIL3 genes. What's more, cultured cells and mice whose clock genes were experimentally tampered with produced fewer TH 17 cells. The researchers surmise that a key protein in the clock network binds to the NFIL3 gene to keep the production of TH17 cells synchronized with periods of light and darkness. And the team found that normal mice produce less NFIL3, and thus more TH17 cells, during the day than at night. In a final experiment, the researchers gave the mice jet lag. "We didn't fly them anywhere," Hooper jokes. Instead,
the team shifted the rodents' light/dark cycles by 6 hours every 4 days. "It would be like flying from the U.S. to Europe, India, and Japan and spending 4 days in each country," she explains. Mice with altered light cycles had nearly twice as many TH17 cells in their spleens and intestines, compared with mice having a normal day, the team reported online this week in Science. The jet-lagged mice also mounted a stronger inflammatory response to irritation by an experimental chemical — a test used to gauge immune-system sensitivity that hints the animals may be more prone to inflammatory disease. The finding adds to a growing body of research showing that a healthy pattern of light and dark, sleepingandwaking, is essential to keep the immune systeminbalance, Hooper says. She notes that inflammation is the basis of many chronic disorders, such as heart disease, asthma, chronic pain, bursitis and dermatitis. Inflammatory conditions are more prevalent in developedcountries,where people'scircadian rhythms are chronically disrupted. Even people who don't work shifts or cross time zones still wake and sleep out of sync with light and darkness, Hooper says. "We all have screwed up lightcycles. We stay up late, keep the lights on, look at our lit-up iPhones at 2 a.m." I mmunologist D a n Li t t man of New York University finds the results in cultured cells convincing. He cautions, though, that the neatly defined pathway from clock gene to TH17 suppression might not be so tidy in a living animal. "Even if NFIL3 is involved in the way they show, circadian disruption affects many other things." Stress hormones, gut bacteria, and the actions of other types of T cells may also account for the effects of the experimental jet lag, he says. Littman also notes that the increased inflammation in the jet-lagged animals was a response to an induced chemical irritation, and more research is needed to prove a link to inflammatory or autoimmune disease. Hooper agrees that the present study is probably the tip of the iceberg, and more research will yield deepening insight into the relationship between immune cells and circadian rhythms. She is hoping to collaborate with other researchers to determine if TH17 cells a re i n creased i n h u m a ns with chronically altered light cycles. For now, she says, she tries to keep her own sleeping patterns more aligned with nature, starting by limiting exposure to artificial light at night. "I turn off the lights, I draw the curtains, and I keep my iPhone off."
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ing, is part of a broad field of research into "neural prosthetics" and "brain-machine interfaces" that could restore function lost to illness or injury. Some hope that the same technologies could someday extend normal human capabilities as well. The work is led by Nicolelis, a Brazilian-born physician who heads an international consortium of b r ain and c o mputer s c i entists, engineers and p r o sthetics experts intent on building a full-body prosthesis for the paralyzed.The "Walk Again Project" aims to allow a person with p aralysis to u se t echnology and his or h er thought patterns to bypass a severed spinal cord. To that end, Nicolelis and his team have pioneered a wide range of brain-machine interfaces, tested first o n n o n human primates, that could restore movement, control and touch to those paralyzed below the neck. The consortium i s on course to unveil its exoskeleton in June in Brazil, at the opening of the Soccer World Cup, and is currently training a pool of patients in Brazil in the brain-machine interfaces that are at the heart of the project. The culmination of a project Nicolelis calls "the B razilian m o onshot," o n e of those paralyzed patients will be chosen to walk onto the field and open the games with a decisive kick of a ball. The two-armed monkey study is "one more step" toward achieving that goal, ¹ colelis said in an interview.
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
IN FOCUS: ENVIRONMENT
ansea iea a ttosoLirin oceansas art warms? How 'upwelling' works
By Craig Welch The Seattle Times
Winds in the Northwest and Northern California often bring
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. — The violet bot-
C02-rich waters to shore, where manyspecies vulnerable to ocean acidification live.
tom-dwelling, prickle-backed spheres wriggling in
QDeep,cold water normally
the tank in Gretchen Hofmann's lab aren't really
holds more carbon dioxide than waters near the surface;
known for their speed.
fossil fuel emissions add more C02
But these lowly sea urchins adapt so quickly
•I /
~--- ~--- <--- Wind Su r face water ~~ West Coast Upwelling Continental shelf
~ Ocean
they're helping answer a question that's key to
QWind blowing across the ocean pushes surface water away from shore
understanding ocean acidification: As fossil-fuel emissions disrupt marine life, will evolution come
QThat deep, cold
1
Steve Ringman /The Seattle Times
A sea urchin sits in a tank at the University of California-Santa Barbara, where scientists study the creatures' adaptation to ocean acidification.
C02-rich water is
Cr)
to the rescue?
/j
drawn up to replace
colored moths r eturned t o dominance. Hofmann suspected variat013 MCT Like Darwin's finches or can accommodate thesemore tions in urchin DNA left some Source: NOAA Deep w Graphic: Mark Nowlin, Seattle Times Great B r i t ain's p e p pered corrosive seas — and for how predisposed to handle acidimoths, these hedgehogs of long — will depend on many fied seas. Nature, quite by "When you start k n ock- thing else, too: Some larvae accident, had been preparthe sea increasingly embody factors, from where they live didn't change at all. nature's stunning capacity for to their population sizes to the ing out the very bottom of ing a long time for this very "When we started raising resilience. depth of stress they face from the food chain, it's incredibly moment. A number of p l ants and other forces, such as warming terrifying," Steele said. "But our babies in the lab, we saw It was all about the waanimals threatened by sour- temperatures and pollution. that's what the research is that some of them shrank," ter. Water chemistry close to ing seas, including some mus- Survival will vary species by showing us." Hofmann said. "But, in fact, shore is rarely static. Ocean sels, abalone, rock oysters, species. Not everything will Increasing CO2 not o n ly some of them didn't. There CO2 can vary with the time of plankton and even a few fish, make it. makes oceans more corro- were some in there that didn't day or the tides, when plants "This kind of change is not appear likely — at least at first sive, it reduces carbonate ions, respond the same way." suck up CO2 to grow, or when — to adjust or evolve. But few free; evolution is not a gentle which everything from scalHofmann k n e w e n o ugh animals die and decay. seem as wired as these salt- sport," said Stephen Palumbi, lops to crabs, coral and sea about genetics to know that The change is more prowater pincushions to come an evolutionary ecologist at urchins need to build shells or d istinction mig h t pr ov e nounced in Northern Califorthrough the next several de- Stanford University, who also skeletons. important. nia and the Pacific Northwest. cades unscathed. w orks extensively with u r So Steele dialed up HofW hen heavy w i n d s b l o w Yet work with urchins, as chins. "When evolution hap- mann, his local university ex- Natural selection along shore, deep, cold wawell as other species, suggests pens, it's because the unfit are pert on spiky echinoderms. In the century after Charles ter that naturally holds more "She thought it was a crank D arwin returned from t h e CO2 suddenly wells up from that acidification sooner or dying. It's pretty brutal." later may still push these and And t h at's w hen t h i ngs call or s omething, because Galapagos carryingbirds with the bottom and gets drawn other marine organisms be- work well. ... I don't know," Steele said. different-shaped beaks, these toward the beach. That means "I guesspeople figure a sea finches came to represent the some West Coast urchins have yond what they can tolerate. "Evolution can happen, and Ocean acidification urchin diver's not going to power of natural selection. As spent millions of years being it can happen quickly," said In the late 2000s, commer- be reading a whole bunch of the birds expanded to areas exposed to high-CO2 waters. Hofmann, a marine biologist cial urchinfisherman Bruce science." with new f o ods, variations In fact, upwelling is part of at the University of CaliforSteele feared things would Hofmann dismissed Steele in their genetic code allowed the reason Northwest oyster nia, Santa Barbara, who has not go so well. And for good at first, but q u ickly c alled new traits to emerge. larvaewere among the world's studied urchins for years. "But reason. back and started investigatSuch selection c a n be first-known victims of acidificoncerns about e x tinctions Urchins graze o n a l gae, ing his concerns. She exposed simple, elegant and fast. In cation. Because the water alare very real and very valid. drive out kelp and are eaten by sea urchin larvae to high-CO2 Manchester,England, a comready was near the extreme Biology can bend, but eventu- sea otters, sunflower stars and water and made a troubling mon tree moth evolved from edge of what oyster larvae ally it will break." humans. Steele, a scuba diver, discovery:Their bodies often mostly speckled ivory to black can tolerate, when man-made The oceans are absorbing had made his living since the got smaller. in just decades. Soot from acidification spiked it higher, "Overall, their body size re- the Industrial Revolution had that wiped out b i l l ions of a quarter of the carbon diox- 1970s scooping the spiny deliide emitted by burning coal, cacies off the seafloor to sell to ally matters in how well they killed lichen and d arkened shellfish. oil and natural gas. That, re- sushi restaurants as uni. swim and how m uch f ood local trees, which scientists S o Hofmann and a c o l searchers say, is causing sea But when he read a research they get," Hofmann said. "So believe allowed birds to more league, UCSB evolutionary chemistry to c h ange faster paper about acidification, he if you're smaller, it's really bad readily pick of f t h e l i ghter biologist Morgan Kelly, mated "wimpy" Southern California than it has for tens of millions saw right away what it could news if you're a baby sea ur- insects. Once pollution was of years. mean for his business — and chin in the water." controlled, the t ree t r u nks sea urchins — those expeWhich plants and animals for the ocean he loved. But Hofmann noticed some- grew light again, and ivoryriencing less CO2 exposure «u
r' ~
the windblown water
— with hardier males from northern upwelling zones. The result: northern animals passed on genes more resistant to acidified water. "The progeny, the babies — the kids — of that father were much better at maintaining the size of their body and not succumbing to the stress of high-CO2 water," Hofmann said. At the same time, Palumbi and other Stanford researchers reared urchins in water from Southern California and from high-CO2 zones in Oregon. They found the frequency of some gene sequences shifted in response to growing up under higher CO2. Urchins, in both cases, were showing they could evolve. "It was really kind of surprising, and a little bit on the hopeful side," Hofmann said. The very upwelling phen omenon that m a ke s t h e Northwest a n a c i dification hot spot could actually help some species get through it. But which ones? And for
how long'? "Thetruth is we don't know," Palumbi said. "The experiments don't tell us how long it will take for them to reach their limit. And it doesn't tell us the price they'll pay."
Adaptation Animals affected by elevated CO2 don't always need to adapt. Sometimes new environmental stressors trigger a change in the way they or their offspring use the genes they have. For example, baby clownfish born to parents reared in high-CO2 water seem to survive just fine, while juvenile clownfish simply placed in high-CO2 water die more often. Parents produce kids that survive better in the environment they're going to face, said Australian scientist Gabrielle Miller, at James Cook University, who has studied this phenomenon. "But it's not a change ingenetic makeup. It's not evolution."
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S
Wyden
aware their networks were being accessed. In response, two Continued from A1 members of Google's security W yden's bill w o ul d a l so team posted public, expletivemake significant changes to laden comments directed at the operation of the Foreign In- the NSA. "(Expletive) these guys," telligence Surveillance Court, which operates out of public wrote Google security engiview, and close loopholes that neer Brandon Downey."(E)ven allow intelligence officials to though we suspected this was conduct "backdoor searches" happening, it still makes me of American individual com- terribly sad. It makes me sad munications without first ob- because I believe in America." taining a warrant. To Wyden, the tech commuWyden added his name to nity's engagement in the intelthe USA Freedom Act, Lea- ligence reform discussion is hy's intelligence reform bill extraordinary. "These arecompanies that that would also end the bulk collection of phone records have a long history of really and requiregreater oversight, being under the radar with transparency an d a c count- respect to Washington, D.C., ability for domestic surveil- politics," he said. "But they're lance and spying. Leahy's bill basically signaling now that already has more than 100 co- their brand is being damaged. sponsors in both chambers of ... They're going to lose bilCongress and has drawn sup- lions of dollars with the status port from such companies and quo." organizations as AOL, Apple, Voters have also grown leery Google, Facebook, Microsoft, of the government's claims Yahoo, the A m erican Civil regarding checks and safety Liberties Union and the Na- measures inplace to prevent tional Rifle Association. abuses, he said. "What I'm p leased about "Increasingly, A m e r icans is on issue after issue, we're are starting to look at these building bipartisan interest," statements and say, 'This just said Wyden. doesn't add up,'" he said. Recent weeks have a l so Examples o f m i s l eading brought the revelation that the statements include Director of NSA was accessing cloud data National Intelligence James from Google and Yahoo with- Clapper's now famous denial out their permission, and with- — in response to a carefully out the companies even being worded question from Wyden
Health care Continued from A1 He said the administration remains confident that the site, HealthCare.gov, will be ready by the end of the month and that the White House always envisioned insurers' direct enrollment of customers would be important to the law's success. The government has said for months that consumers would be able to go directly to insurance companies to buy the health plans offered on the exchange. But this was always imagined as a secondary route, along with call centers and inperson enrollment assistants. If insurers' sites became a main way to buy coverage, it would undermine the side-byside comparison shopping — as is used on travel websites such Kayak — that HealthCare.gov is meant to promote. That's because individual insurers are not obligated to tell their customers about competing health plans available. They are required only to advise consumers that other plans exist. Insurers are eager to take on a larger role. But they, like consumers, have been stymied by the online system's technical problems. During one step in enrolling customers — determining whether their income qualifies them for government help with paying for health plans — insurers must connect to part of the federal online system, and that part does not work. White House officials and insuranceindustry leadershave been talking about how to solve this problem, perhaps on a temporary basis, and insurers are insisting that they be allowed to keep any extra subsidy money they might accidentally be paid, said people familiar with these discussions who, like others interviewed, spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the topic's sensitive nature. The Affordable Care Act requires most Americans to have health insurance, and December is a vital period. Those who are uninsured must buy plans by Dec. 15 to be covered by Jan. 1, the date the requirement begins. Those who do not buy coverage by March 31 will face financial penalties. The questionis whether everyone will be able to meet those requirements if the website's problems persist. T he possibility o f u s i n g health plans to directly sign up large numbers of uninsured Americans is a strategy by the administration and the insurance industry to try to deflect growing pressure from Capitol Hill. Even some Democratic lawmakers want to give people more time to buy coverage. Such delays are anathema to the insuranceindustry,whose l eaders have w a rned t h at companies would end up with mainly sicker people signing up early on. A lthough p otentially e n -
abling more people to buy health plans promptly, a greater reliance on the industry to sign up new customers could have other ripple effects, such as prompting ads that might run counter to the administration's messaging. "One key question is wheth-
"For years, there's been a culture of
NSA acquiring A m ericans' phone records from Verizon, with 40 percent saying they heard a little and 24 percent saying they hadn't heard anything about the issue. Morris Davis, a retired U.S. Air Force colonel who was chief prosecutor at Guantanamo terrorism trials for two years and now teaches law at Howard University, said his students debate whether Snowden is a hero or traitor for divulging classified information to journalists. The public debate on privacy versus national security wouldn't have happened without all this information coming to light, he said. "To me, it's unfortunate that it takes a Bradley (now Chel-
Davis' students have largely come of age post 9/11. This has fostereda broad acceptance of government claims thatgreater monitoring of calls and emails is needed toprevent another attack, part of a sea change in attitudes toward government activities, including torture, surveillance and drone strikes, he said. — U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-ore. "Movingthe pendulum back to a morereasonable center is going to take some time," he at a March hearing — that the and done another in private. sa>d. NSA collects data on millions, That's confirmed practically For that to happen, Conor hundreds of millions, of every week when some new gresshas to take a more active Americans. After documents set of revelation comes up role in overseeing the intellileaked by Snowden contra- that proves that something gence community, he said. "Congress largely abdicated dicted this c l aim, C l apper the government has said isn't later said that it was the "least really so," Wyden said. "That their duty, and they're just now untruthful" answer he could has been a factor in Ameribeginning, at least some, to rehave given at the time. cans saying, 'Well, in the fuassert their role in providing a In September, Gen. Keith Al- ture, this "trust us" argument sea) Manning (a U.S. Army check and balance," he said. exander, director of the NSA, doesn't carry much weight.'" privatesentenced to 35 years For Wyden, that starts with suggested in testimony before In a p ol l c o nducted last in prison for disclosing classi- instituting reforms requiring the Senate Select Committee on month by The Huffington Post/ fied information to WikiLeaks) intelligence officials to be more Intelligence, of which Wyden YouGov, 54 percent of Ameri- or an Edward Snowden" to in- forthcoming with Congress. "The president has stated, is a member, that Americans' cans said they felt the oversight creasepublicawareness ofthe phone records data be placed provided by Congress and fed- NSA's activities, he said. correctly in my view, that all in a "lock box." eral courts of the NSA's collecIn response, the Obama of this only works if it's posA quick YouTube search tion of Americans' phone and administration has c r acked sible for the Congress to do turns up an earlier video of Internet data was inadequate. down on leaks, he said. vigorous oversight," Wyden "After pledging to be t he Alexander denying that the Almost half of r espondents, said. "The Congress can't do agency even collects such re- 48 percent, said the same of most transparent administra- vigorous oversight if the incords, Wyden said. the oversight of the NSA's col- tion in the history of America, t elligence leadership is n o t "For years, there's been a lection programs that target they have really dropped the straight with t h e C ongress culture o f mi s i n formation foreigners. hammer on anyone who has and theAmerican people.And that the intelligence leaderA June poll by the same or- the audacity to let the public in too many instances, they ship — not the rank and file, ganizations found that 36 per- know what they're doing," Da- have not been." but the intelligence leadership cent of respondents indicated v>s sa>d. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, — has said one thing in public they had heard a lot about the With an averageage of 25, aclevengerC<bendbulletin.com
misinformation that the intelligence leadership — not the rank and file, but the intelligence leadership — has said one thing in public and done another in private.... That has been a factor in Americans saying, 'Well, in the future, this "trust us" argument doesn't carry much weight."
I
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Analysis: For Obama and his legacy, it's crunch time
E0
President Barack Obama
likes to say hewill never again be running for office,
but every Democrat knows he will be on the ballot figuratively in 2014 and 2016. Right now they are rightly nervous about that
prospect. Obama facestwo urgent problems. Thefirst is to make the Affordable Care Act work. That begins, but
does not end, with fixing HealthCare.gov. He and
Health and HumanServices Secretary KathleenSebelius have promised the site will be running smoothly by the end of this month. But fixing the website is only one of the repairs that
are now needed.Theviability of the new program has
been undermined aspeople learn about the real-life changes being forced by the law's implementation.
A lawascomplexasthe
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Affordable Care Act will
continue to bring surprises as new regulations go into effect. A shortfall in sign-
ups, particularly by young and healthy uninsured Americans, would present major problems. Absent buy-in by the public, the
new law could end upbeing blamed for almost anything
that goes wrong with people's health care coverage, whether justified or not.
The second andbroader challenge the president
faces is restoring his credibility, not only on health care but also on his overall leadership. It could take
years for the public to reach a full judgment on the Affordable Care Act. With talk already turning to the contest to succeed him, the president knows he has
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14 points lower than it was at the end of last year. — oan i3aiz The Washington Post
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er insurance company advertising will accurately reflect the benefits people can get from the Affordable Care Act or if they will attempt to use fear and uncertainty to push people into a particular plan to increase their profits at customers'expense," said Eddie Vale, a strategist with Protect Your Care, an advocacy group that promotes the law. In recent days, several people familiar with work on the website — all of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity — said the system is improving but that they cannot say definitively that all of the problems will be fixed by the 30th.
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Ao T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
"(Students) imagine admissions officers are old professors. But we tell them a lot of admissions officers are very young and
technology-savvy."
IN FOCUS: IRAN'SNUCLEAR PROGRAM
Whatlranhas one,will oan might o
— Lenny Libenzon,a high school guidance counselor WHAT IRAN HASALREADY DONE
Admission
sions officer at Pomona College in Claremont, Calif. But Continued from A1 those were rare instances, he As certain high school se- said, and the supplemental niors work meticulously this material didn't significantly month to finish their early affect the students' admisapplications to colleges, some sions prospects. may not realize that comAdmissions officials also ments they casually make saidthey had occasionally reonline could negatively affect jected applicants, or revoked their prospects. New research theiracceptances,because of from Kaplan Test Prep sug- online materials. Often, these gests that online scrutiny of officials said, a college may college hopefuls is growing. learn about a potential probOf 381 college admissions lem from an outside source, officers who answered a Ka- such as a high school counplan telephone questionnaire selor or a graduate, promptthis year, 31 percent said they ing it to look into the matter. had visited an a p plicant's Last year, an undergraduFacebook or other personal ate at Pitzer College in Clasocial media page to learn r emont, Calif., w h o h a d more about them — an in- befriended a pr o s pective crease of5 percentage points student on Facebook, notifrom last year. More crucially fied the admissions office for those trying to get into col- because he noticed the aplege, 30 percent of the admis- plicant had posted offensive sions officers said they had comments about one of his discoveredinformationonline high school teachers. "We thought, 'This is not that had negatively affected an applicant's prospects. the kind of person we want "Students' social m edia in our community,'" Angel a nd digital f o otprint c a n Perez, Pitzer's dean of adsometimes play a role in the mission and financial aid, admissions process," says said. With about 4,200 appliChristine Brown, executive cations annually for a firstdirector of K-12 and college year class of250 students, prep programs at Kaplan Test the school can afford to be Prep. "It's something that is selective. "We didn't admit becoming more ubiquitous." the student," Perez said. Employers now vet the online reputations of job candi- Transparency dates as a matter of course. But colleges vary in their Given the impulsiveness of transparency. While Pitzer typical teenagers, however doesn't contact students if — not to mention the already their social media activities fraughtnature of college ac- precluded admission to the ceptances an d re j ections school, Colgate University — the idea that admissions does notify students if they officers would covertly nose are eliminated from the aparound the social media posts plicant pool for any reason of prospectivestudents seems other than being uncompetimore chilling. tive candidates. "We should be transparent There is some reason for concern. Brown says most with applicants," says Gary colleges don't have formal Ross, Colgate's dean of adpolicies about a d missions mission. He once called a stuofficers supplementing stu- dent, to whom Colgate had dents' files with their own offeredacceptance, to check online research. If colleges whether an alcohol-related find seemingly troubling ma- incident that was reported terial online, they may not online was indeed true. It necessarily notify the appli- was, and Colgate rescinded cants involved. the offer of admission. "To me, it's a huge prob" We will a lways ask i f lem," said Bradley Shear, a there is something we didn't lawyer specializing in social understand," Ross said. media law. For one thing, In an effort to help high Shear told me, colleges might school students avoid selferroneously identify the ac- sabotage online, guidance count of a person with the counselors are tutoring them same name as a prospective in scrubbing their d i gital student — or even mistake identities. At Brookline High an impostor's account — as School in Massachusetts, jubelonging to the applicant, niors are taught to delete alpotentially leading to unfair cohol-related posts or phototreatment. "Often," he added, graphs and to create socially "false and misleading content acceptableemail addresses. online is taken as fact." One junior's original email address was "bleedingjesus," No standard said Lenny L ibenzon, the These kinds of concerns school'sguidancedepartment prompted this report, and chairman. That changed. "They i m agine a d m isemails to 20 colleges and universities — small and large, sions officers are old profesprivate and public, East Coast sors," he said. "But we tell and West Coast — asking them a lot of admissions ofabout their practices. Admis- ficers are very young and sions officials at 10 schools technology-savvy." agreed to interviews. Likewise, high school stuEach official said it was not dents seem to be growing routine practice at his or her more shrewd, changing their institution for admissions of- searchable names on Faceficersto use Google searches bookoruntaggingthemselves on applicants or to peruse in pictures to obscure their their social media posts. Most digital footprints during the said their school received so college admission process. "We know that some stumany applications to review — with essays, recommen- dents maintain two Facebook dations and, often, supple- accounts," said Wes Waggonmental portfolios — that staff er, dean of undergraduate admembers wouldn't be able to mission at Southern Methoddo extra research online. A ist University in Dallas. few also felt that online invesFor their part, high school tigations might lead to unfair seniors say that sanitizing or inconsistent treatment. social media accounts doesn't "As students' use of social seem qualitatively different media is growing, there's a than the efforts they already whole variety of ways that make to present the most college admissions officers appealing versions of themcan use it," Beth Wiser, the selves to c o lleges. While director of admissions at the Megan Heck, 17, a senior at University of Vermont, said. East Lansing High School in "We have chosen to not use it Michigan, said she was not as part of the process in mak- amending any of her posts as ing admissions decisions." she applied early to colleges Other admissions officials this month, many of her peers said they did not formally around the country were. "If you've got stuff online prohibit the practice. They said admissions officers did you don't want colleges to look at online material about see," Heck said, "deleting applicants on an ad hoc ba- it is kind of like joining two sis. Sometimes prospective more clubs senior year to list students themselves ask an on your application to try to admissions office to look at make you seem more like blogs or videos they have the person they want at their posted; on other occasions, an schools." admissions official might look up an obscure award or event mentioned by an applicant, forpurposes ofelucidation. "Last year, we w atched some animation videos and we followed media stories about an applicant who was involved in a political cause," bendbulletin.com said Will Hummel, an admis-
Find It All Online
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P.7
Centrifuges
3.5%
20%
gp
Only 0.7 percent of natural uranium ore is uranium 235, the isotope
During the process, uranium is placed
Iran enriches uranium to 3.5 percent, which it
Iran has also been enriching uranium to 20 percent. This raises
If Iran were to make a bomb, it would need to continue the enriching
says it plans to use at a nuclear power
concern becausea
process to 90 percent
stockpile of 20 percent
plant that it has by the Persian Gulf.
uranium makesthe process of accumulating
or higher. Iran has the technology to do this but has not yet done So.
in thousands of centrifuges, which gradually work to
needed for bombsand nuclear plants. To work
as fuel, uranium needsto go through a process
increase the percentage of
called enrichment.
uranium 235.
fuel for a bomb much faster.
Today, Iran could quickly move to a nuclear "breakout."
IRAN'S NUCLEARSTOCKPILE IN AUGUST
Iran has enoughenriched uraniumand centrifuges to producefuel for a weapon — anuclear breakout — in one
+ g +
to two months, according to a study by the Institute for Science and International Security, a
Washingt on-basedgroupthathasbeen skeptical of lran's peaceful claims. Iranian officials have said that Tehran intends to preserve its right to enrich uranium as part of a deal. But lran
would probably need toagree to slow its program, which would increase the time needed to achieve a breakout.
3.5% URANIUM
20% URANIUM
6,774 kg
186 kg
TIME TOA BREAKOUT
C5 CENTRIFUGES
90% URANIUM
19,000
1.6 months
Slowlng down Iran while allowing it to maintain its enrichment capability
Israel has argued that lran's ability to enrich uranium
More time for a bomb? Despite Iran's ability to
might require that lran reduceor
needs to beeliminated to
produce fuel quickly, according
eliminate its stockpile of enriched uranium and would probably affect
ensure that it does not maintain the option to
to the study, it would still take additional time to make a
the number of centrifuges it has.
develop nuclear weapons.
reliable warheadfor a missile.
Source: Institute for Science and International Security
Negotiations
New York Times News Service
we're all on the same wavelength, and that's important." Iranian officials had promoted the possibility of a deal for days, generating an expectant atmosphere that swelled when Secretaryof State John Kerry cut short a tour of the Middle East on Friday to join the talks. He was joined by the foreign ministers of Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and a vice foreign minister from China. "There's no question in my mind that we are closer now, as we leave Geneva, than when we came," Kerry said. "It takes time to build confidence."
other pathway to a bomb, using plutonium, rather than enriched uranium. Moreover, the Iranian explanations for why it is building Arak have left most Western nations and nuclear experts skeptical. The country has noneed for the fuel for civilian uses now, and the reactor's design renders it highly efficient for producing the makings of a nuclear weapon.
fewer political restrictions on ending their core sanctions, Continued from A1 which means any decision to lift And they insisted they had them could bemore far-reachmade progress."A lot of coning. In addition, the measures crete progress has been made, would be harder to reinstate but some differences remain," should Iran renege on its pledgAshton said at a news conferes. Those considerationsleft ence earlier today. She apthe Europeans more hesitant to peared alongside Zarif, who consider easing sanctions. added, "I think it was natural Still, European officials apthat when we started dealing peared to be balancing their with the details, there would wariness of Iran with a hopeIsrael, France and sanctions ful sense that these negotiabe differences." In the end, though, it was not Israel has been vocal about tions were fundamentally difonly divisions between Iran not letting the new reactor get ferent from the fruitless sesand the major powers that preto the point where the fuel is sions during the presidency of vented a deal but fissures withinserted, after which military Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. "All of the ministers who are in the negotiating group. Earaction against th e r e actor lier in the day, France objected The Arak reactor could create an environmental here areconscious of that fact strenuously that a p roposed Despite the insistence on disaster. Israel has destroyed that some momentum has built deal would do too little to curb progress, the failure to clinch two reactors from the air in the up in these negotiations," BritIran's uranium enrichment or an agreementraised questions past three decades, in Iraq in ain's foreign secretary, William to stop the development of a about the future of the nuclear 1981 and in Syria in 2007. Both Hague, told reporters Saturday. nuclearreactor capable of pro- talks, given the fierce criticism attacks took place before fuel "There is now a real concentraducing plutonium. that the mere prospect of a had been put in the reactors. tion on these negotiations, so "The Geneva meeting al- deal whipped up in Israel and French officials also noted we have to do everything we lowed us to advance, but we among Republicans and some a difference between the U.S. can to seize the moment." were not able t o c o nclude Democrats in Congress. and Europe on the issue of But that m omentum has because there are still some D aryl K i m ball, t h e e x - sanctions relief, which Iran is disturbed o t her A m e r ican questionsto be addressed,"the ecutive director of the Arms seeking in return for a halt in allies, notably Israel, which French foreignminister,Lau- Control Association, said the nuclear activities. The most continued Saturday to inveigh rent Fabius, told reporters. h eavy-water reactor Iran i s sweeping Americansanctions against an interim deal. "There are very strong feelNeither Ashton nor Z arif building near the city of Arak, on Iran's oil and banking incriticized France, saying it had which will produce plutonium, dustries were passed by Con- ings about the consequences of played a constructive role. But could be dealt with in a future gress. That has led the Obama our choicesforour allies,"K erthe disappointment was pal- phase of the talks because it administration to focus on a ry said. "We have enormous pable, and the decision to hold would take a year for it to be narrower setof proposals in- respect for those concerns." — TheAP contnbuted to this the next meeting at the level of completed and even longer for volving Iranian cash that is fropolitical director, not foreign it to produce plutonium that zen in overseas banks. Freeing minister, suggested that the could be extracted for a bomb. that cash in installments, in retwo sides were less confident Once the reactor at Arak is turn for specific steps by Iran, lES SCHNIB of their ability to bridge the operational, as early as next would not require the repeal of gaps in the next round. year, it might be very hard to any congressional sanctions. For all that, Zarif tried to put disable it through a military France and other European a brave face on the three days s trike w i thout r i sking t h e Union countries, however, face of talks, saying that the atmo- dispersal of nuclear material. sphere had been good, even if That risk might eliminate one the parties disagreed on the de- of the West's options for retails of a potential agreement. sponding to Iran and reduce "What I was looking for was its leverage in the talks. EVERGREEN thepolitical determination, willThe Arak reactor has been In-Home Care Servrces •E g• Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. ingness and good faith in order a contentious negotiating point ' 541-389-0006 I I I i I to end this," he said. "I think because it would give Iran anWWW.CVergreeninhOme.COm
SiSTTIRE VAi.tii PROMISE
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Primary Care. Specialty Care. Urgent Care. Total Care. Bend Eastside Clinic I Bend Westside Clinic I Sisters I Redmond bendmemorialclinic.com I Call 541-382-4900 to make an a ointment
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 â&#x20AC;˘ T HE BULLETIN A 7
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To everyone who's ever worked with us, banked with us, merged with us, invested in us, and believed in us
For our 60th anniversary, we celebrate our crossing paths and collective courage to build a community bank of strength and significance. Cheers to 60 more years, and to the small town that planted this little acorn.
UMPQUA B .A . N . K
MEMBER FDIC
A8 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
Falcon Continued from A1 A nd now, Chris and h i s wife, Cait Boyce, along with freelance writer Vince Font, have broken their silence for the first time since 2003, with interviews on CNN and other media and in a book telling their side of the story. "The Falcon and Th e Snowman: American Sons" is currently available as an e-book and will be for sale in paperback next week on Amazon.com.
The 'guy next door' S entenced in 1977 to 4 0 years in prison for selling secrets to the Russians, Chris was sent to Lompoc Federal CorrectionalInstitution,where he broke out in 1980 by hiding in a hole, cutting through barbed wir e a n d c l i mbing over a wall with a homemade ladder. Then he stayed gone for 19 months, living in Idaho and Washington and robbing a seriesof banks to pay forhis life on the lam. Caught while eating a hamburger in his car in Port Angeles, Wash., he was sent back to prison, sentenced to stay there until 2046, locked up among criminals like Timothy McVeigh and Ted Kaczynski. And that's where Cait comes in. Cait Boyce, a lo n g time paralegal, first took an interest in Lee's case. Lee, who served as the courier of the secret documents, was sentenced to life in prison, in part because of his criminal history as a drug dealer. Beginning in 1980, Cait visited Lee at the prison in Lompoc, Calif., and began crafting arguments for his parole. It took a couple decades, but in 1998, she was successful. During that same period, Cait started c o rresponding with Chris in an effort to build Lee's case. "We corresponded a lot," she said, laughing. "Like every day. And then he would call
me, every day." Chris was r eleased from prisonin September 2002. They married the following month, and shortly thereafter discovered Central Oregon on a fishing trip with the Boyce family to the Metolius River. His parents lived inthe area for a decade. Chris' father, an FBI agent before working as the security director for McDonnell Douglas, an aerospace manufacturer a n d d e f ense contractor, dedicated much of his retirement to fly-fishing. Chris was taken by the area, excited by the hunting and fishing but also the beautiful surroundings and the quiet solitude it allowed. After so much time behind bars, it's about as free and open as you can get. And it's a perfect place to fly his falcon, "Higher Power." "I mostly keep to myself," he said. "Because of my background and I'm kind of a loner anyway, I keep to myself. To me, going out and flying falcons is like going to church. Central Oregon, to me, every day is a Sunday." According to Chris, he spent nearly 10 years in solitary confinement, d r eaming a b o ut these types of lands. Last week during a stroll along the Deschutes River, he came upon a herd of deer, he said, and then a cougar. He watched the w i l dlife scene play out. "Just never, in a m i l l i on years, did I ever believe that I'd see something like that again," he said. "Sitting in those supermaxes, and the reason that I'm able to do this, to fly my falcons and see things like cougars and bear and elk, is that my wife, Cait, got me out of prison." Now Chris is just "the guy next door," he said. He's worked in the area, for a time serving as the tarmac manager at the Redmond Airport, fueling planes and calling out air ambulances. When presidential candidates visited the areain 2008, Chris was the one fueling their planes. When the Drug Enforcement Administration conducted surveillance on smugglers at the airport, it took place in his office. He'd like to live a quiet life, and he relishes the open spaces that Central Oregon has to offer. And he knows how lucky he is to be here, not locked up in Lompoc or L eavenworth or Marion, or even Sheridan, the federal lockup in Oregon where he spent his final prison time before heading to a halfway house in San Francisco. "If you have your life to live over again, there's so many things you w ould c hange," Chris said.
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wants to be a regular guy, he's still a bit behind the times. "He went to prison in the days of e i ght-tracks," Cait said. She noted he still uses a flip phone but is getting pretty good at using an iPad. "It was like Rip Van Winkle, waking up and 20 years had gone by," Chris said. "People d idn't even t alk t h e s a me anymore." He's up to date on current issues, though. While Chris isn't proud of his role as aspyinthe 1970s,he supports Edward Snowden, the 30-year-old who last year disclosed classified information about surveillance programs to the press before fleeing to China and then Russia, where he currently has asylum. "I think that the U.S. government is morphing into a surveillance state," Chris said. "I think i t ' s appalling that the government reads all our email,keeps track of everyone we call on our telephones, and (I) don't believe the post office should be recording the addresses and return addresses of every letter and package that's sent. ... I really think Snowden has done a service for civil rights in this country, and I hope Congress acts to rein in the surveillance state."
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Chris Boyce at Lompoc Federal Penitentiary in1980, just before he escaped from the prison. After his escape, the U.S. Marshals issued an information sheet, shown below. (Listed as a "possible hobby"? Falconry.) Boyce was on the lam for 19 months. He was caught in Washington state, and he went back to prison. H S C A P L' D
F EO H RA L
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Chris and Cait Boyce at home inCentral Oregon. They met for the first time at Oak Park Heights Prison in Minnesota in 1997 (right). They married in 2002, a month after Chris Boyce was released from prison. Submitted photo
the prison breakout, the bank robberies — has faded, and so it usually takes some work to IT IS AHTICIPATEO BOVCE WILL utt AN ALIAS AND ATTEMPT TO put the facts together. CHIiNGE HIS APPEARANCE. "It's pretty easy to connect AEQUEST ALL POSSIBLES BE THORthe dots," Chris said, and most OUGHLY CHECKED AHD THEIA FIN" ' j CEllPRIMTS COHPAlttD WITu TIIE i of the time it's his falconry that llTTIICHED FIHCFAPRIHT CARD. gives it away. l)78 IF CONTACTED, MOTIFY UNITED But while the story of his esSTA1ES HARSHAL, SEATTLE (206) 442-550II10290 OR UHITED STATES NARSHAL SERVICE HEADQUARTEiit pionage has largely faded into (703) 285-1100. myself." Cold War history, that doesn't But he h a d r e servations mean it has lost meaning for The public eye a bout writing th e b ook. I t people. Recently, Chris said, r —. Now after nine years in the would mean being a lot more he was fired from his job after II — =' ' 1979 area, livingin relative obscurity, open about his past, which he a customer realized who he af4!ilgg@IQ 9»I, the couple decided it was time doesn't relish. was and complained that a felx gj. "I was actually very leery to tell their side of the story. on had been let into her home. R obert L i n dsey's b o o k , of people in Central Oregon But even if it means more "The Falcon and The Snowknowing that I'm here," he ire from the public, in the end man," became a best-sell er said. "It's embarrassing to be Chris wanted a chance to tell and was made into a movie by an ex-felon around people." his own story. 1977 "The book, to me, is a tale of John Schlesinger in 1985 starCait is less concerned about ring Sean Penn and Timothy what the book's publication two escapes," he said, his first Hutton. Lindsey even wrote means for their privacy. on his own from federal pris"I'm just a lot more bold," on and his second, with Cait's His acts of espionage, he while on the lam in 1980 and a sequel, "The Flight of the said, were the result of dis1981. "I was terrified of going Falcon," about Boyce's escape she said. "I don't care if people help, through parole, which don't like me because I'm mar- kept him from turning 90 in i llusionment wit h t h e U . S . back to prison," he said. "(The from federal prison. government. bank robberies) I most regret. But those books, the Boyces ried to him or don't like him prison. "My wife orchestrated "That doesn't justify what I ... That made people afraid, said, don't tell the whole story. because, oops, he made a huge my second escape.... Every did, but I used it as an excuse that affected people for a long, It was Cait who first started mistake and atoned for it." time I go out flying my falto launch a one-man war on long time. Of all the things I've writing the book about five It isn't that the Boyces hide cons, or go out on a fly-fishing central intelligence. Of course, done in my life, that's what I years ago after hearing from who they are. They haven't trip (in) the Cascades or out at that was insane." most regret." a friend and others that it was changed their n a mes, and Mann Lake, I have my wife to He's been out o f p r i son a story they'd love to read. Ac- they're identifiable through thank for that." While he regrets the spying, he's most upset by the about 11 years now and off cording to Font, it was origia Web search. But the his— Reporter: 541-617-7831, bank robberies he committed parole since 2007. But while he nally going to be told entirely tory — the selling of secrets, smiller@bendbulletitt.com W GT :
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from Cait's perspective. "I was tired of the misconceptions," Cait said. C hris soon joined in t h e writing, eager for a chance to tell his own story. "I'm just weary of having other people define me,"he said. "And I wanted to be part of a definition of myself by
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4
Weather, B6
©
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
www.bendbulletin.com/local
e n waer ro'e wor o s WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON
— Monday, the Senate confirmed Debra Brown to be a U.S.
District Court judge for Mississippi by a 90-0 vote. President Barack
Obama nominated Brown, an attorney from
Jackson, Miss.,inMay, and she passedoutof the Judiciary Committee in August.
U.S. SENATEVOTE • Confirm Brown as U.S. District
Merkley (D) ..................Y I/I/yden (D).................... Y Although Brown's
confirmation vote was unanimous, a potential
impasse over judicial nominations is brewing. See Week/B6
By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
Construction along Skyliners Road of an upgraded water system for Bend may start Dec. 5, provided a legal challenge does not delay the job. The U.S. Forest Service issued a permit Nov. 4 to allow the city to begin work on what is part of Deschutes National Forest. A legal challenge by opponents of the $24 million project is likely but the permitting process allows a 30-day window for public response to the Forest Service decision. If work goes forward under the revised city plan, the road to Tumalo Falls would close temporarily in the spring. A false start last year drew public attention when officials with the national forest announced the popular Tumalo Falls Road would close for months while the city undertook work on the water project. A legal challenge delayed the work a full year.
Bridge Creekconstruction in phases
Construction would occur in reverseofthe order planned last year. The 17-page permit outlines three phases of construction: under Skyliners Road, under Tumalo Falls Road and the road to the city Outback facility, and at the intake facility and a pipeline under Tumalo Creek. Phase one should take place late this fall into the winter, phase two in the spring and phase three next summer into fall. Installing the pipeline would start near the end of the Skyliners Road close to town, said Rod Bonacker of the Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District of the Deschutes National Forest. Traffic around the work site would be limited to one lane. "I would guess that there would be some short delays," he said. The project aims to revamp the water intake at Bridge Creek in the Cascade foothills
The U.S. Forest Service permit allowing the City of Bend to build a new $24 million surface drinking water system on national forest land west of town details three phases of construction.
I )
Upper Tumalo Creek Watershed
BEND
Watershed
Municipal watershed
Outdack facili Tumalo Falls
TumaloCreek
Bridge Creek
umaio" Mountain g)X
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Lower Tumalo Creek
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Proposed pipeline
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Swampy Lakes
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ascade LakesHighway 46
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46
Phase1
Phase 2
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Installation of pipeline under
Installation of pipeline under
Rebuilding of the Bridge Creek
Skyliners Road,starting in early Decemberandcontinu-
Tumalo Falls Road andthe
water intake andinstallation of pipeline passing underTumalo Creek, plannedfor summer
road to the city's Outback facility, set for spring 2014.
ing through the winter.
and fall 2014.
and replace two aging pipelines with a new one. SeeWater /B6
Source: U.S. Forest Service, City of Bend
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Well shot! reader photos • We want to seeyour photos of signs of winter
foranotherspecial
version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submityour best
work at bendbulletln.com /slgnsofwlnter and
Jill Kaufmann, left, with the Central Oregon Beer Angels, judgesthe fake beard worn by Valarie Seiders, of Bend, during the One Beard to Rule Them All real and fake beard competition on Saturday evening at Silver Moon Brewing in Bend.
2
we'll pick the best for
publication. • Email other goodphotos of the great outdoors
to readerphotos© bendbolletln.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them.
We'll choosethe best for publication.
Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number.Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
.ttftr: '
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Photos by Joe Kline The Bulletin
Have a story idea Or SudmiSSIOn?
ear s rea an com ee Ol" C
Contact us!
The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ...................541-617-7829 Redmond ...........541-548-2186 Sisters ................541-548-2186 La Pine...............541-383-0367 Sunriver.............541-383-0367 Deschutes.........541-383-0376 Crook.................541-383-0367 Jefferson...........541-383-0367
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Submlsslons: • Letters and opinions: Mail: My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, duhetin©benddulletin.com
'b
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Bend's biggest and bushiest beards were on display at Silver Moon Brewing on Saturday night, for the first-ever "One Beard to Rule Them All" competition. Matt Barrett, co-owner of Silver Moon, said the idea for the event came about through a discussion between himself and his co-owner, James Watts, and Bend Urology, looking for a way to support prostate cancer awareness. The combination of beer and beards seemed very male-oriented and"so Bend," Barrett said,
and could be tied in to "Movember," an effort that encourages men to grow mustaches in November to raiseawareness of prostate cancer. "Everyone has been touched by cancer in one way or another, whether it's prostate cancer, or any other form ofcancer,"he said. All proceedsfrom beer and merchandisesales from Saturday's festivities, will be given to the St. Charles Foundation, Barrett said, to support the foundation's free prostate cancer screening
program. SeeBeards/B5
Bll
l'
Editor's note
Rick Havern, of Bend, sports facial hair he calls the "Flying V," Havern said he's experimented with a variety of beard styles over the years.
In a calendar listing that the Redmond
Spokesman printed Wednesday, Nov. 6, the date for the10th An-
niversary Barrel Tasting Celebration at Maragas Winery was incorrect. The event is Nov. 30.
Further information is available at www.
maragaswinery.com.
Paper wantsjudge 'chasedout of office' in 1913 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archived copies oj The Bulletin at the DesChutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARS AGO For the week ending Nov. 9, 1913
La Pine paper says what it thinks of Springer (La Pine Inter-Mountain) Does Crook County intend to keep in office as county
YESTERDAY
By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Buckingham Elementary, on Bend's far east side, is transitioning to a STEM curriculum. Last spring, the Bend-La Pine board gave the green light for the school to focus on STEM, or science, tech-
nology, engineering and math. Beforeapproaching the board for approval, the school's faculty voted unanimously for the change. "It struck me that none of the other STEM schools we had looked at developed in a grassroots direction. Instead they were approached, identified or pushed in that way," said Buckingham Principal Skip Offenhauser. "We were never pushed, but instead we thought it would be the best approach for our students." The school isn't diving in head first though; Offenhauser insists that the school's greatest focus will be on achieving early literacy. In fact, Offenhauser told parents "to not expect a lot of change at all this year." "We're starting a STEM advisory board, which will start laying down the groundwork for where we want to be four years from now," Offenhauser said. "But this year, teachers are looking at doing one unit that is very STEM, something they can hang their hat on and build on for next
year."
• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news@dendbulietin.com, with "Civic Calendar" inthe subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
School to focus on science andmath
judge for the next three years a man who has proven to be grossly incompetent for that important position? The InterMountain overestimates the judgment of its people if they
son of State Highway Commissioner Bowlby, together with that of a dozen of the most progressive and public spirited citizens of the county, deserves to be literally chased out of his office and back to the job of repainting that prize
do.
hog of his again.
A man so bigoted, or knavish, as to presume to place his judgment against that of one of the greatest civil engineers and good road experts in the Pacific Northwest, in the per-
This paper was in error last week when it stated that
Judge Springer alone changed the route on the election notices of the proposed highway through the county. The offi-
cial proceedings of the regular meeting of the county court in September show that Commissioner Brown acted with him in changing the route. At that time, too, a Prineville attorneydiscovered the order for the election was made too early, the law requiring that a county court shall order a special bond election either 20 or 40days before the date set. A special meeting of the court was afterwards held. SeeYesterday/B2
What does a STEM unit look like? Second-grade teacher Joshua Hayden, who is on the advisory board, said he is developing a project focused on rescuing a 6-inch doll of Ralphie from the movie "A Christmas Story." "We're doing a rolling marbles unit that ties in science, math and engineering, where the students will measure how fast and far marbles roll down a ramp and how changing the height and material may affect those measures," Hayden said. "It's an engineering design challenge, as at the end they will have to make a marble roll down a ramp and end at a certain spot in order to rescue Ralphie. I've been using Ralphie ever since I've been teaching." SeeSTEM /B6
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
E VENT
AL E N D A R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vrrvrrvrr.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
younger; 2 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541312-9626 or www.beatonline.org. I ).,Q VETERANSDAYANDMARINE "THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR HOLMES CORPS BIRTHDAY RUN: A5K run FOR THEHOLIDAYS":A1936 and1-mile walk that finish in Drake whodunit about a Broadway star 1tg Park; prizes, refreshments and noted for playing Sherlock Homes raffle; proceeds benefit Disabled American Veterans; $14-$21; 9 a.m., solving one of his guests' death; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 8 a.m. registration and check in; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, City Hall, 710 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-383-8061 or www.vetsdayrun. 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. homestead.com/. cascadestheatrical.org. HOLIDAYSHOW:Central Oregon CASCADEHORIZON BANDFALL Saturday Market and Bend High CONCERT:The band performs School's orchestra team up with Richard Rodgers' "Victory at Sea," local vendors, musicians, food and Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture, Santa photos; proceeds benefit Bend High School's scholarship marches, Broadway music and Roh Kerr/The Bulletin file photo program; free admission;11 a.m.-5 more; free, donations accepted; 2 Spectators hold signs of support as a JROTC group marches past p.m.; Mountain View High School, p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. during a prior Veterans Day parade in downtown Bend. A variety of Sixth St.; 541-420-9015. 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-330parades and other events are scheduled for Veterans Day Monday. 5728,cascadehorizonband©aol. JEWISH BOOK FAIR: The 3rd com or www.cascadehorizonband. annual literary event featuring a screening of the film "The Struma," OI'g. Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010 or a.m.; American Legion Post No. author presentations by Arthur KNOW SWEAT:SWEAT LODGES: dudleysbookshopcafe©gmail. com. 44,704 S.W. Eighth St.,Redmond; Lezin and Leonard Gross, and a Learn how sweat lodges are a 541-526-1 626. HOUSE CONCERTSINTHE GLEN: book talk on "The Book Thief"; time for cleansing and purifying Randy Brown, an East Texas-based VETERANSDAYCEREMONY:An free; 11 a.m.-7 p.m., 11 a.m. film by Sweet Medicine Nation, singer-songwriter performs, with assembly honoring all veterans and and David Stoliar speaks,1 p.m. founder and president of Four Bill Valenti and Steven Flotow; bring their families with guest speakers, and 3 p.m. author presentations Winds Foundation; free; 2 p.m.; dish or beverage to share; $5-$10, patriotic music followed by a coffee and 5 p.m. book talk; Barnes & Sisters Public Library, 110 N. reservation requested; 7 p.m., doors reception; free; 10:30 a.m.-7 p.m.; Noble Booksellers, 2690 E. U.S. Cedar St.; 541-312-1032 or www. open at6 p.m.for potluck; The Sisters High School, 1700 W. Highway 20, Bend; 541-504-1160 or deschuteslibrary.org. Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 N.W. McKinney Butte Road; 54 I-549patgivens@bendcable. com. HOOPS FORTHE HOUSE: A Stannium Drive, Bend; 541-4804045, ext. 1024. SECONDSUNDAY:Emily Carr basketball game between the 8830 or ja©prep-profiles.com. BEND VETERANSDAYPARADE: presents "Footnote to Forfeit: Harlem Ambassadors and the JUSTIN JAMES BRIDGES: The The annual event to honor veterans; Autopsy of a Murder"; free; 11 a.m.; Ronald McDonald House Defenders; Portland blues musician performs, free; 11 a.m.; downtown Bend; 541Downtown Bend Public Library, $10, $8 for students and seniors with Bobby Lindstrom; $5; 7 p.m.; 480-4516 or rabbine©aol.com. 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or in advance, add $2 at the door; $5 Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. for children 4 and older, free for Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 LA PINE VETERANSDAY "KILL ME, DEADLY":A comic children younger than 4; 4-6 p.m.; CEREMONY:Featuring guest or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. Trinity Lutheran Church & School, play set in the film noir style of the speaker Mayor Ken Mullinix 1940s; $8, $5 students and seniors; 2550 N.E. Butler Market Road, followed by an open house and Bend; 541-318-4950 or www. 2 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. barbecue hosted by the American rmhcofcentraloregon.org. Sixth St.; 541-383-6290. Legion Post 45, 52532 Drafter MONDAY "MIRACLE ON34TH STREET": POETRYREADING:Featuring Road; free; 11 a.m.; La Pine VETERANSDAYBREAKFAST:The Community Cemetery, U.S. Bend Experimental Art Theatre's original poetry by High Desert Highway 97 and Reed Road; production of the Christmas Poetry Cell; free; 4:30 p.m.; Dudley's annual event to celebrate veterans; 541-536-1402. classic; $15, $10 for children18 and BookshopCafe,135 N.W. M innesota free, donations requested; 8-11
PRINEVILLEVETERANSDAY PARADE:Parade begins on Main Street and ends at Ochoco Park, with a ceremony to honor veterans followed by a free spaghetti lunch open to the public at the Veterans Club, 405 N. Main St; free;11 a.m.; downtown Prineville; 541-447-545 I. VFW OPENHOUSE:Meet military service members and veterans in honor of Veterans Day; free; 11 a.m. after parade; VFWHall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-480-4516. REDMONDVETERANSDAY PARADE:Parade honoring veterans in downtown; followed by a chili feed for all veterans and families at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4108, 1836 S.E. Veterans Way; free; 11:11 a.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-280-5181. MADRAS VETERANSDAY PARADE:Featuring local schools, Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps and more; free; 2 p.m., 1:45 flyover by a civil air patrol; Madras High School, 390 S.E. 10th St.; 541-777-7741. VETERANS MEMORIALWALL AND GARDENDEDICATION: Featuring guest speaker and medal of honor recipient, Bob Maxwell; free; 3:30 p.m.;Hospice ofRedmond, 732 S.W. 23rd St.; 541-548-7483 or www.hospiceofredmond.org. PHILLIPBARTO CANCER BENEFIT: Featuring live music by The Rum and the Sea, Dustin Nagel and Christian Lilliedahl; raffle; free, donations accepted;5 p.m .; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.j.mp/PBBenefit. VETERANSDAYDINNER: Featuring a free dinner for all veterans; proceeds benefit veterans; free, donations accepted for family and friends' meals; 5:30-8 p.m.;
Elks Lodge, 262 S.W. Second St., Madras; 541-475-6046. MEDIA SALON: A Thanksgivingthemed evening; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www. btbsbend.com.
Yesterday
the victory was something he could give to Jack Harris, the school's principal who is retiring at the end of the year. Both Powell and Harris have been at the school since it opened. "This one's for Jack," Powell said. "That's important to the staff." And while Powell was more than happy to accept the title, it was the effort that went into the victories that counted more. "I'm pleased for my staff and kids," he said, "but individually, my reaction is we've had a lot of kids who haven't won it, and1 am just as proud of them as I am of this group. "More important to me i s
the kids. Their consistent effort, the energy they put into the games, their dedication to Mountain V iew f o otball means more to me than the
TODAY
ten story, it appears, was its radio dramatization Sunday Continued from B1 night over a national network. But from the day of the reg- Thousands were fear stricken ular meeting up to the appear- as they listened to the proance of the election notices, gressive report of the Martian repeated appeals were made invasion and missed explanato Springer by the Good Roads tions that it was only a story. Association officials to change The same thousands, it may the route to conform with that be taken for granted, had nevshown on the petitions — cit- er read "War ofthe Worlds." ing Mr. Bowlby's estimate that This in spite of the fact that it it would take one-twentieth of has been inprint for over 40 the entire bonds issue to build years and that copies of it are the 5 or 6 miles into Deschutes, on the shelves of most public and the opinions of the ablest libraries. lawyers that if i t w e r e n ot For a few days, we predict, changed the whole election spare copies of the book will would be thrown out — but to be rather less available while no avaiL some of the thousands catch Springer's detestable act up on their back reading. has thrown back the march of progress and development 50 YEARS AGO in Crook County for years, if new petitions are not circulatFor the week ending ed shortly and another bond Nov. 9, 1963 election called in t h e n e xt Viking community three months. The power of in Newfoundland found the recall offers a solution in Springer's case, in the meanAt last scientists have found time, and if the county is not to the remains of a Viking combe burdened with him in office munity in North America. longer, the time is ripe to strike The settlement was founded now. nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus sailed to the New World in 1492. 75 YEARS AGO It may well be the Vinland For the week ending which, according to the IceNov. 9, 1938 landic sagas, was established a round 1000 A .D. b y L e i f Bend-Eugene road Erickson, popularly k n o wn blocked by deep snow as Leif the Lucky. It is on the The storm-swept McKenzie northern ti p o f N e w foundPass,still in the grip of a blind- land near the fishing village of ing snow storm, was tempo- J'Anse Aux Meadows. rarily closed to travel today The discovery of what so far as drift five feet deep in places appears to be the only scienpiled into the big cut, at the tifically authenticated Norse east approach to the summit remains in America was made lava fields. bythe Norwegian explorer Dr. Signs warning the public of Helge Ingstad, who reported the temporary closure have his findings at a news conferbeen placed at all approaches ence Tuesday. to the pass highway after field He found it after years of men reported from the snowy misdirected effort by st udydivide that hazardous condi- ing a "road map" made by Leif tions existed. and reported in detail by the Heavier equipment was be- sagas. The sagas are legending moved into the divide and ary Norse narratives, handed maintenance crews are hope- down by word of mouth from ful of w i n ning t heir b attle generation to generation. against the storm and reopenThe sagas say Leif and his ing the mountain road when fleet of longboats sailed from the blizzard abates. western Greenland a round Early today the depth of 1000 A.D., arrived at the coast snow on the lava beds was 42 o f L abrador, sailed d o w n inches. the coast until they passed a steep-sided island in a fairly That Martian invasion large fiord, and wound up a One of the most prolific of short distance beyond at a modern En glish wr i t ers i s sandy strand fringed by luxuH.G. Wells. His works, seri- riant grasslands. alized and in book form are According to modern Iinwidely read. One of his earli- guists, the "vin" in V i n land est and also one of his most meant grass. And according to fascinating tales is "War of Dr. Junius Bird of the Amerithe Worlds." It is, moreover, can Museum of Natural Hisone of the most fantastic, but tory, if you follow the route is told with such realism that described in the sagas to the the average reader shares in site excavated by Ingstad, "you the terror in which the inhab- can't miss it." itants of Mars inspire as they Nevertheless, " it wa s a l invade the Earth, to lay waste most a m i racle," Bird said, its cities and countryside and that Ingstad found anything to live upon the destruction of a t all t o u n earth. The o l d its people. Norse buildings, nine houses Fully as realistic as the writ- and a primitive smithy, were
built of sandy sod which long since has crumbled, leaving only their outlines plus some typical Norse hearths and the rusty remains of Viking iron smelting. If, in the nearly 10 centuries since the settlement was abandoned, somebody had planted potatoes or other crops over the old b u ilding sites, the evidence would have been destroyed forever. Ingstad's findings, authenticated after three years of painstaking excavation, were reported at a news conference sponsored by t h e N a t ional Geographic So ciety, wh i ch helped to f inance his 1963 work.
a certain priest would come once a year and a traveling priest usually w ould co m e once a month." With the end of the homestead movement, h owever, came the end of activity in the church. As years passed, the old building began to decay. Its roof rotted, rats infested its walls and — recently — vandals began to destroy it. Now, Parks said, members of the historical society will put a new roof on the church and reconstruct its bell tower, which was removed before the church was hauled to the museum.
25 YEARS AGO
Ten years and 101 games a fter Mountain View H i g h School started its football program,the Cougarsclaimedthe right to be called champions. For MV Coach Clyde Powell,
For the week ending Nov. 9, 1988
Church rolling after 70 years of rest FORT ROCK — Farmers a nd county w o r kers p e r formed a moving service at the old St. Rose Catholic church here Saturday. They picked the church up off its c ement foundations, dropped it onto the back of a heavy truck and carted it 8 miles down the road to its new resting place, the Pioneer Museum in the tiny town of Fort Rock. And when the pilgrimage was over and the old building was at rest amid the sagebrush on the museum site, the 10-member work crew t h at had hauled it there looked at what they'd done and said it was good. "It looks g reat," said I r a Dutcher,a Fort Rock resident who helped organize the work crew. "It'll look better when we get a new roof on it." The moving of the church was the culmination of two years of planning by the historical society, a 100-member organization that created the museum as a tribute to the homesteaders who settled this remote desert valley 50 miles southeast of Bend. It was also the most activity the old church had seen since the last Mass was said there more than half a century ago. In fact, 70 years have passed since a sharp-tongued Irish immigrant named Bridget Godon ordered the church built after she and her fellow Catholic parishioners were turned away from the local worship hall by a Protestant Sunday school class. For two decades after its construction, priests traveled from Bend and Lakeview to lead services at the church. "It wasn't used that much," said Fort Rock resident Helen Parks, a member of the historical society who is writing a book about the history of the Fort Rock area. "Sometimes
It's quite a night for Mountain View
TUESDAY "A FIERCEGREENFIRE: THE BATTLEFOR A LIVING PLANET": A screening of the documentary on five decades of the environmental movement; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-322-3116 or www. afiercegreenfire.com.
WEDNESDAY "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: TOSCA" ENCORE:Starring Patricia Racette in the title role of jealous diva opposite Roberto Alagna as her lover, Cavaradossi; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. CASEY NEILL &THENORWAY RATS:The Portland-based Americana group performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. NEKROFILTH:Death metal thrash from Cleveland, with Existential Depression; free; 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 S.E. Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017.
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
MIDDLE SCHOOL HOOTERS PARTY
CQLlrt:
Net-guilty plea iu Slaying —A Springfield man authorities say
Blocking carmade
killed his girlfriend with a baseball bat and confessed has pleaded
not guilty to a murder charge. Robert Cromwell entered the pleaduring his arraignment Friday. The 32-year-old Cromwell told hospital workers last week that he had killed his former girlfriend, 26-year-old
Casey Wright. Her bodywasfound in a housethe couple formerly shared. An autopsyconducted bythe Lane County medicalexaminer's office found she died of blunt force head trauma.
traffic
1
stop illegal
e
IrrigatiOn embeZZlement —A southern Oregon womanfaces theft and forgery charges for allegedly embezzling $20,000 from an
1'C
irrigation district. RebeccaLynnSantana, 61, of Central Point was arrested on charges of first-degree aggravated theft and first-degree
By Nlgel Duara
forgery. Jackson County Sheriff's detectives saySantana, a bookkeeper for the EaglePoint Irrigation District, embezzled the money
The Associated Press
over a two-year period. Irrigation district officials notified law enforce-
Traffic stops hold a unique place in Oregon law. They are, technically, "temporary seizures" that allow police to investigate a violation, identify a driver and issue a citation. At that point, the stop is over. But what if the driver doesn't leave? And what if he can't because the officer's car is in the way? A decision by the Oregon Court of Appeals last week s ays the a n swer i s , w e l l , complicated. The case in question involves apolice officer in Marion County who pulled over a driver he recognized from a couple of previous high-speed chases, one of which ended in a struggle with police. The officer parked behind the car, a Buick driven by Myles Peterson, and blocked him in. He proceeded to get Peterson's car registration, cited him for running a red light and told him he could leave. But the officer wa s s t ill parked behind the Buick, blocking it in. Then, he started to chat with Peterson and realized that the registration Peterson showed him was for an Acura, not a Buick. The officer started a search and found a Visine bottle filled with heroin. A jury used that evidence to convict Peterson of the drug charge. The appeals court f ound that, from the moment the officer told Peterson he could leave, the search was over. And by blocking him in, he created an "unlawful extension," Judge Timothy Sercombe wrote in the ruling. eYou told him he was free to go, but he wasn't actually able to leave at that point, was he?" Peterson's attorney asked the officer during a hearing that was quoted in the ruling. "If (Peterson) had asked me to move my patrol car at that point, I would have moved ... and he would have been on his way," the officer replied. "But without asking you, he couldn't have left, isn't that right?" the attorney said. Such stops have precedence, and the courts haven't been kind to law enforcement. In one case, an Oregon State Police trooper told a g r oup of men they could leave but leaned onthe driver'sside door, asked them if they were transporting contraband and asked to searchthe car.The court said that's illegal. Prosecutors said that Peterson should have just asked the officer to move his car. "We reject that argument because the obligation to unambiguously end traffic stops does not fall on citizens," Sercombe ruled, "it falls on law enforcement officials."
ment after discovering discrepancies in account documents. Santana had worked at the district for about15 years. Shewasfired from her job after the theft was discovered. She was cited and released. ! /ii .
ShOOting lawSuit —An Oregon manwho shot at a deerbut instead wounded aboy waiting at a school bus stop is being sued
r..7i"'
by the boy's family. The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Ulises Hernandez
inJosephineCounty,seeks$270,000damages.Thesuitclaims47Michael Lloyd /The Oregonian
The Corbett Middle School football team arrives
"I find the location appropriate and actually
at Hooters for its team party Saturday in Portland.
perfect for this age group," Burbach said last week.
bus stop, shot and killed a deer in his front yard. Onebullet also
The team has been the subject of days of media coverage after their volunteer coach, Randall
"I see this as a family sports bar, and that's where
struck the boy in the leg. Green pleaded guilty last year and was convicted on a charge of negligent wounding. He was sentenced to10
Burbach, was dismissed for planning a party at the
we're going to haveour banquet." Hooters, sensing a publicity moment, said it
restaurant known for its buxom waitresses. The coach went ahead with the event, which is
would pick up the tab for the party, donate $1,000 to the Corbett Youth Football Board and send a corpo-
not sanctioned by theschool.
rate representative to the restaurant.
By Kelsey Thalhofer
balo runs a medical clinic in desperate need of supplies — namely,an ambulance. "The whole thing just feels like a miracle to me," said Grants Pass naturopathic doctor Ellen Heinitz, who spent part ofher summer at the Congolese clinic in Central Africa. On Craigslist, Heinitz spotted an old surplus ambulance for sale in Oakridge and contacted Interim Fire Chief Tim Whittaker with a $1,500 bid. It was the lowest bid Whittaker received. But it was the most convincing. "Our department has received so many gifts throughout the years," Whittaker said. "It was just really exciting to finally be able to help somebody else out."
The Eugene Register-Guard
O AKRIDGE — Call it a miracle or a simple act of kindness; the city of Oakridge has decided it's time to pay it forward. Two years ago, the city was in financial crisis when it became thesubjectofan episode of the ABC television show "Secret Millionaire." On the show, a Texas doctor and his wife gave a number of donations to the city, including a new ambulance for the Oakridge Fire Department. Now the town has reached out to another cash-strapped community — Lubumbashi, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. That is where Dr. Yumba "Ysu" Sanga Um-
But he didn't stop there. Whittaker pu t p a r t-time firefighter-paramedic Patrick Frare to work contacting other fire departments and clinics, and they filled the ambulance to its ceiling with a few thousand dollars' worth of medical
supplies.
The Associated Press PORTLAND — One man is dead and a man and woman were injured early Saturday during a large fight at a Portland nightclub, police officials said. Officers were called to the Fontaine Bleau nightclub at about 12:45 a.m. to respond to what a 911 caller described as a riot, police spokesman Sgt. Pete Simpson said. All available Portland officers responded to the scene. Officersfound three gunshot victims and a "hostile" crowd of 75 to 100 people outside the club, Simpson said. A 30-year-old man died at the scene. Two other gunshot victims — a 44-year-old man and a 50-year-old woman
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— were taken to a Portland hospital. They remain at the hospital as of Saturday morning recovering f ro m n o n -lifethreatening injuries, Simpson said. The names of the three victims have not been released. The Oregon medical examiner will p erform an autopsy today to determine the 30-year-old's exact cause of death. I nvestigators stil l d o n 't know what caused the fight and the shooting, and whether it started inside or outside the club, Simpson said. T hey also d o n't k n o w whether the shooting was gang-related, he said, but detectives are investigating.
NOVEMBER 21, 2013
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Then Whittaker and the city formed a secret plan to reject Heinitz's $1,500 personal check — in favor of donating the ambulance completely. The plan came together at Thursday's City Council meeting, when Heinitz and her husband, John Heinitz, gave a p resentation about Lubumbashi and the clinic, and the council followed with a unanimous vote to donate the ambulance.
1 dead, 2 injured in nightclub shooting
Rich rrrith stories and eaamples of programs that rr iork, Dr. Byock reveals practical ways to get the best end- of life care for yoarself or those yoa love.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Alan Charles Terp, of Bend Oct. 18,1928 - Nov. 2, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private family graveside service will be held at November 29, 2013, at Willamette National Cemetery, 11800 Mt. Scott Blvd., Portland, OR 97266 Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701
Brian Allen Smith, of Bend May17,1962- Nov. 6,2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Memorial service will be held at Autumn Funerals, 61555 Parrell Rd., Bend, on Nov. 15, 2013, at 1:00 p.m. Contributions may be made to:
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Shepherd's House, P.O. Box 5484, Bend, OR 97708
Frank Victor Oliver, of Redmond Nov. 20, 1936 - Nov. 8, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services to be held.
Forrest Warne Lane, of Bend Oct. 13, 1948 - Nov. 5, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No Services will be held at this time.
Jean Marie Misterly, of Terrebonne Sept. 13, 1921 - Nov. 6, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A memorial service will be held on Thursday, Nov. 21, 2013, at 3:00 p.m., at Cooper Mountain Presbyterian Fellowship, 6955 SW 201st Ave., Aloha, OR. An urn committal service will take place on Thursday, Nov. 21, 2013 at 1:00 p.m., at Willamette National Cemetery. Contributions may be made to:
Shriner's Hospitals for Children, 2900 Rocky Point Drive, Tampa, FL 33607.
Frederick 'Fred' Francis Owens, of Bend Oct. 30, 1924 - Nov. 2, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend. 541-318-0842 Svww.autumnfunerals.net Services: At his request, no services will be held.
Jim Ervin Sexton, of Culver May 6, 1964 - Nov. 4, 2013 Arrangements: Bel-Air Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Services will be held 1:00 p.m. Saturday, November 16, 2013 at Culver Christian Church, 501 West 4th Ave. in Culver.
Mary C. Crenshaw, of Bend March 15, 1946 - Oct. 9, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, Bend. 541-382-2471 www.niswonger-reynolds. com Services: A private family service was held.
Lois lrene Gould, of Redmond July17, 1944- Nov. 7, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond, 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A memorial service will be held at a later date.
Paul F. Engbrock, of Terrebonne
D eLila J an e S t i l l s a Pendleton resident, passed July 8, 1924 - Nov. 3, 2013 away Tuesday, November 5, 2013, at a local care faArrangements: c ility. S h e w a s 8 3 y e a r s Baird Funeral Home of old. Bend 541-382-0903 Services will be held at a www.bairdmortuaries.com later date. Read the obituServices: ary and send condolences A Memorial Service will online at w w w . b urnsmorbe held on Saturday, t uary.com Bu r n s M o rtuNovember 23, 2013, at a ry of P e n dleton i s h a n 2:00 PM, at Kingdom Hall dhng arrangements. of Jehovah's Witnesses in DeLila was born A u gust Terrebonne. 15, 1 9 30 , i n Sa r a t o g a, Richard Nergaard, of W yoming, to Sam L . a n d Lila ( Stinard) Ra m s e y . Prineville S he wa s r a i sed i n De s Sept. 23, 1930 - Nov. 6, 2013 c hutes County w h er e sh e Arrangements: a ttended School. On A p r i l Prineville Funeral Home; 8, 1947, at the age of 16 she 541-447-6459. Please married Vernon L. Stills in visit the online guestbook Bend, Oregon. They made at their home in Bend where www.PrinevilleFuneralHome.com t hey r a i se d t h e i r t h r e e Services: children. A memorial service will be She ha d w o r k e d a s a held at a later date. P ostal Clerk f o r t h e U . S . P ostal Service a t a g r o Sharon Uilani Hinton, cery store Postal S ubstaof Madras t ion for m any y ears. S h e Nov. 3,1949 - Nov. 5, 2013 a ttended t he Bap ti s t Arrangements: C hurch in Bend. S h e h a d Autumn Funerals, been a me m b e r o f t he Redmond 541-504-9485 Fraternal Order of E a gles www.autumnfunerals.net ¹2089 Auxiliary. Services: H er t r u e p a s s io n w a s No services will be held. spending t i m e w i t h h er f amily. D e L i l a ha d a b i g h eart, she spent a l o t o f t ime c a r in g f o r o th e r s ; friends as well as people in May 17, 1962 - Nov. 6, 2013 need. B rian, 51, of B e nd , w a s S he is s u r v ived b y h e r b orn i n Ch i c ag o I l l i n o i s son, G o r d o n St i l l s of and gr ad u a te d fr o m Pendleton, OR; h er D owners Gr o v e N or th d aughter, Nancy S t i ll s o f H igh School i n D o w n e r s Fresno, CA; a sister, DorGrove, Illinois. o thy S t i l e s o f K l a m a t h B rian wa s a n a v i d a n i - F alls, OR ; a n d h e r f iv e mal lover. g randchildren, Justin G a He is survived by his parrant, Joshua Cravy, Travis e nts, R o n and N an c y S tills, A d a m S t i l l s , a n d Smith of La Pine, brothers Sammie Stills. Michael (Elfi) a n d Patrick S he w a s pr e c eded i n o f Illinois, hi s a u nt , N o r d eath b y h er h u s b a n d , een Tibbit , u n c le , R o g er Vernon Stills; her parents, Allen, and many beloved Sam and Lila Ramsey; and cousins, both here, and in her daughter, Lila Paul. Illinois. A memorial service will be held at I : 0 0 p . m., Frid ay, November 15, at A u Jan. 29, 1938 - Oct. 20, 2013 tumn Funerals, located at 61555 Parrell Rd, in Bend. Clark Wetzel, 75, died on In lieu of f l owers, please O ctober 20, a f ter a l o n g consider a donation to The battle with L e ukemia. His Shepherd's House, PO Box w ife o f 5 4 y e a rs, L y n d a, 5484, Bend, OR 97708-5484 was by his side. Autumn Fun e r a ls-Bend He was born in Emmaus, w as honored to serve th e PA on January 29, 1938, to family. 541-318-0842 Miles and Bessie Wetzel. C lark a t tended Penn Oec. 26,1916- Nov. 6,2013 State J ames F r a n k li n E a s l ey Univ., was born in Bache, OK, to h eld a Charles Fr a n k l i n and Bachelor's M yrtle ( B r o w n ) E a s l e y . Degree Clark Wetzel The f a m i l y mov e d to from LaGrande, OR, and then to Bluffton Cottage C ollege, B l u f f t on , O h i o , Grove, a nd a M as t e r' s D e g r e e OR, from M i chigan State Uniwhere Jim v ersity. Po s t Gr ad u a t e graducourses in Education were a ted fr om taken. Most of his career high w as spent i n E d u cation school. He T eaching, D e a n i ng , a n d s erved i n A dministration , h avi n g t he A i r s erved a s Pr e s i dent o f Force M onte V i s t a Chr i s t i a n James Easley S chool, W a t sonville, C A , WWII f ro m 1 941 to 1945, b efore hi s r e t i r ement, a t a nd was d i scharged as a w hich time Clark an d h i s Master Sergeant. w ife m oved t o B e n d . H e Jim e n j o yed h o r s eback then served as H e admasriding, but his passion was t er f o r tw o yea rs at flying his "tail d r a gger" Bridges A c ademy, S i ster, arrplane. OR. Surviving i s h i s b e l oved In the early 70s, the Wetw ife, I m ogene; son , J i m , zels were proprietors of and dau gh t e r - i n-law, t he M ou n t a i n Ped d l e r Sandy; step-daughter, Gail, which was located on 3r d and her husband, Marvin, St., in B e nd, w h ere T a co a nd t h ei r t wo ch i l d r e n , Bell sits today. Amy an d D o ug ; step-son, His i n t e r ests i n c l u d ed Kim, a n d h is d a u g h t er, education, acrylic painting, Lisa; granddaughter, Amy, golfing, f i s h ing , r e a d ing, and her husband Tim; and t raveling, w ood w o r k i n g two gr e a t -grandchildren, and more. He has been deJonathan and Audrey. Jim scribed by others as strong also leaves behind his cary et humble, k i nd , a w i s e egivers, Janine and Linda, leader, thinker, and g r eat from Home Instead Senior family man. Care. James was preceded C lark is survived by h i s i n death b y w i v e s , D e l i a wife, Lynda; sons and their P aine a n d V el m a Fo r - w ives, E r i c a n d Tr a c e y r ester; a n d t wo si s t e r s, W etzel of B e nd, Ti m a n d Edith and Zina. S ara Wetzel o f O l y m p i a , A S e r v ic e o f Re m e m - WA; s i x gr a n d c h i ldren, b rance w i l l b e at Des - Kailee Hart an d h u sband, chutes Mausoleum Chapel M asson H ar t , M ak e n a on Tuesday, November IZ, Wetzel an d f i a n ce, N o ah at 2:00 p.m. Corpus, Bryley W etzel, Memorials are suggested O wen Wetzel, Holly W e t to Hospice House Partners zel, and Justin W etzel, as I n Care, 2075 N E W y a t t well as sister-in-law, Gayle C ourt, B e nd , O R 9 7 7 0 1. Dosher. P lease v i s i t w w w .d e s C ontributions i n C l a r k ' s chutesmemorialchapel.co m emory may b e m a d e t o m to l e ave o n l ine c ondoHospice House, Bend, Orlences. egon.
Brian Allen Smith
Clark Wetzel
James Franklin Easley
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DeLila Jane Stills Robert 'Bob' Lee Aug. 15, 1930 - Nov. 5, 2013 Hershey -
TWe u l l etin~
Oct. 28, 1932 - Oct. 30, 2013
R obert L e e H e r shey o f Redmond, OR, died October 30, Z013, at the age of 81. He was b or n O c tober Z8, 1932, in Bend, OR, to Carl and N a om i ( G i lbert) Hershey. B ob gr ew up a nd attended school in central O regon, g r aduating f r o m R edmond H i g h i n 19 5 2 . On March 15 , 1 953, Bob married Peggy Thorton in Redmond, OR. Bob was a cattle rancher most of his life in 1960, he s tarted H e r s he y Cat t l e company. B o b w as a member of the ELKS and Lions Clubs, and also enjoyed hunting and rodeos. B ob i s s u r v ived b y h i s w ife, P e g gy ; a n d t he i r children, Rod Hershey and Leona Norman; and eight g randchildren; a n d e i g h t great-grandchildren. A private family s ervice will be held at a later date. In lieu o f f l o w er s p l ease s end donations to a n o n p rofit c h a r it y of o ne ' s c hoice. P l e a s e s ig n o u r o nline g ues t b oo k at www.redmondmemorial.com.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©beridbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: John Hawk, 89: Army serg eant in World War II w h o was awarded the Medal of Honor for a single-handed exploit that led to the capture of more than 500 German troops in northern France in 1944, Died Monday in Bremerton, Wash. — From wire reports
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Robert "Bob" Falley May 8, 1926 - October 28, 2018 Robert "Bob" Falley continues his life in Paradise with Jesus Christ after passing from this life on Monday, October 28 in Bend, OR. He leaves behind the legacy of a faithful life , that will help many who knew him to share his joy in that place. Bob was born May 8, 1925 into a Topeka, Kansas farming family. Growing up poor but never knowing it, he sprang up big and strong and starred at fullback in high school. He met his eventual wife of 70 years, Doris Miller, his senior year in high school. Bob obeyed the call of his country to serve in the Navy in WWII but not before marrying Doris in 1943. After serving on a PT boat in the Philippine theater he joyfully returned home to Doris in Kansas, but found that farming wasn't his calling. They moved to Oregon in 1947. Blessed with an outgoing, sanguine personalig and a winning laugh, Bob found success in the insurance business. Bob told many that the greatest event in his life was being saved in the Lord in 1949. Doris played an important role. The blessings continued with the arrival of three boys and one girl into their family. The family moved to Bend in1967and Bob led a rich and rewarding life for several decades there. His most important experience was his fellowship and work with Westside church. He enjoyed his involvement with former PT boaters from the war and he treasured his association with his veteran group, the band of brothers. He and Doris roamed the country seeing family and making new friends in an amazingsuccession ofm otorhomes -numbering more than 30. He is survived by his loving wife Doris and children Sam, Sandy, Steve, and Scott; sister Marlene; eleven grandchildren, numerous great grandchildren, and one great great grandchild. C ontributions in h i s m e mory ca n b e m a d e t o th e Westside church. Please sign our o nline guest book at www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Frantr, Paz BerezoJr SePtember 19, 1926October 30, 2013 =..If4
Frank Paz Berezo, age 87, passed away peacefully in Bend, Oregon October 30, 2013. Born in Skelton, West Virginia, Frank's family later moved to Youngstown, Ohio, where he grew up. He served i>>during World War II and returned to ~ Youngstown where he met A gnes Baytos of N o rth J a ckson, Ohio. ) They married one year later in 1950, and he and Agnes had four children from 1951-1961. During that time, he worked as a mechanic/service manager for Baglier Motors in Girard and Bob Dodd Chevrolet in North Jackson. He was an amazing mechanic and generously offered his services to friends and family. Always having a love for California, Frank moved his family to Hollister, California in 1972. He spent many happy years there where he enjoyed photography, nature, and roller skating. He was an especially g ifted p h o tographer an d captured many beautiful family moments. In their later years, he and Agnes moved to the Pacific Northwest, having a home in Vancouver, Washington, until health reasons moved them to ., Oregon. Frank was preceded in death b y hi s m o t her, P ura a n d father, Frank; his sister, Linda Berezo; and his wife, Agnes. 'r He is survived by his three siblings, Pearl Berezo-Sinistro iRalphi and Lalo Berezo iJol of Boardman,Ohio, and John
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Pennsylvania; his four children, Patty NcMeen of Bend, Oregon, Phil Berezo ltvfelaniel of Vancouver, Washington, Barbara Berezo of Kalaheo, Kauai, and Francie Berezo of Santa Barbara, California; four grandsons, Kyle and Sam Greening of Bend, Oregon and Brandon and Derek Berezo of Washington; as well as numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins spread throughout the tJ.S. He will be remembered by all for his sense of humor, warm smile, strong work ethic, and as a loving husband and father. Services will be held April 12, 2014, in North Jackson, Ohio. The family asks that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to Partners ln Care/Hospice in Bend, Oregon.
Donald Leroy Johnston June 26, 1926 - Oct. 31, 2013 Donald died on Thursday, October 31, 2013, in Winston-Salem, NC at the age of 87. He was born on June 26, 1926, in Concrete, WA, the second child of Robert R. and Marian 0. Johnston. He graduated Valedictorian of Concrete (WA) High School in 1944 and enlisted in the U.S. Navy. He married the love of his life, Colleen Fern Briggs, on November 10, 1951, in Seattle, WA. He studied accounting at the University of Washington and his top score on a civil service exam landed him the job of assistant manager of the Seattle Civic Auditorium. In 1961, as manager of the Seattle Auditorium, he was made part of a group of industry professionals, civic leaders and visionaries who created the 1962 Seattle World's Fair. Following the Fair, the facility became the "Seattle Center," and Don was named its first Executive ln 1969, he left that post to take a similar position at the Kentucky Fair and Exposition Center in Louisville, KY. In 1973, he was elected president of the lnternational Association of Auditorium and Arena Managers. In 1979, Don ended his career in public assembly facility management and founded TNT Productions, which produced and promoted indoor truck and tractor pulling events. He retired from TNT in 1985 and began a new chapter in his life, retiring in Bend, OR.Don was already an avid fisherman and loved the outdoors. In Bend he hiked, skied cross-country, and practiced his fly fishing skills at many of the dozens of pristine streams, rivers and lakes in the area. He was a member of the Central Oregon Fly Fishers and received numerous awards and recognitions. He was most proud of creating the "Kokanee Karnival," a youth education program that gives many children their first-ever fishing experiences and seeks to instill lessons of conservation and the need to enhance and preserve the availability of sport fishing for everyone in central Oregon. The event has grown to include more than 3,800. Don's values were very straightforward: he believed in honesty, integrity and compassion. Don was a loving and devoted husband and father. His wife, Colleen, and brother, Stuart, preceded him in death. He is survived by his children, Scott Johnston of Ocean Shores, WA, Robin Cohen of Advance, NC and Richard Johnston of Korat, Thailand; granddaughters, Mary Colleen and Alix Johnston of St. Louis, MO, Leigh Cohen of Winston- Salem, NC, Jordan Cohen of Austin, TX and Michelle Cohen of Columbus, OH; his brother and sister-in- law, Hal and Barb Johnston of Bend, OR.
Expressions of sympathy may take the form of donations to the Kokanee Karnival (www.kokaneekarnival.org)
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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Ashley Beaty, of Bend,
sports a beard she fashioned fromtree moss, one of many fake beards in competition on Saturday at Silver Moon Brewing in Bend.
By Tony Barboza Los Angeles Times
GROVELAND, Calif. — As autumn turns to winter and rain falls over the charred landscape left behind by the Rim fire, forest rangers and
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emergency planners have a new worry: water. Over 90 percent of the blaze burned in the Tuolumne River watershed, where more than 2,600 miles of s treams cut through steep, n ow-burned slopes ofthe Sierra Nevada. Those mountains are primed for flooding and debris flows in a big storm. The 410-square-mile blaze — California's third-largest on record — ignited on Aug. 17 in the Stanislaus National Forest and burned into the northwest part of Yosemite National Park. More than two months later, the fire is fully contained, but some of the most serious hazards are just now presenting themselves. Trails and roads are at risk of washing away, cutting off access to world-class whitewater rapids. Burned trees and debris will almost certainly be flushed downstream, fouling irrigation water supplies. San Francisco officials are closely m o nitoring h y d r oelectric facilities, soil conditions and water quality in and around Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, where the fire crept around the edges of the city's drinking water supply a nd made some slopes more prone to erosion. The U.S. Forest Service has rushed to p repare culverts, stabilize roads and trails, and put mulch and straw bales over burned soil to keep it from sliding away in heavy rain. Rangers have closed roads and campgrounds and posted signs to warn of falling rocks and trees.
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Science and Policy Analyst William Sears, with the Hetch Hetchy Regional Water System, walks along the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir near the O'Shaughnessy Dam in Yosemite National Park.
of a storm that drops too much at once. Scientists predict that 15 minutes to an hour of intense rainfall — the type of storm that happens about every 10 years — would be enough to unleash a slurry of boulders, fine mud and brush. Normally, rain bounces off trees and brush, slowly percolating through the soil. But after a fire, the earth sits unprotectedand, if severely burned, can even repel water. With fewertwigs,leaves and vegetation to slow down the water, it picks up speed and flows over the soil in sheets. "You get 3 inches of rain in 15 minutes, and things can happen," said Jerome DeGraff, a geologist with the U.S. Forest Servicewho helped draft a post-fireassessment of the burned area. The report found that 44 percent of th e soil burned at high and moderate severity, a predictor of how sus'Not over when the fire's out' ceptible the slopes are to slides, "The emergency's not over erosion and runoff. when the fire's out," said JaMost catastrophic would be son Carkeet, utility analyst for a rain-on-snow storm, in which the Turlock Irrigation District. showers fall on thin snowpack, His agency has p u rchased melt it and send monster runoff extra booms to capture logs downstream. That's what happened in and woody debris that t he Tuolumne River is l ikely to January 1997, when a huge dump into 26-mile-long Don storm dropped rain over snow Pedro Reservoir, which stores and sent f l o odwaters and water to irrigate more than mounds of debris barreling 200,000 acres of Central Valley down the Tuolumne River into farmland. Don Pedro Reservoir, clogging After two dry years, officials its marinas. would welcome rain and snow, Though the area could use a but they shudder at the thought wet winter to fill the reservoir,
"we don't want gully-washers," said Carol Russell, director of the Don Pedro Recreation Agency. "If we could just have a little bit of rain all winter long, we would be happy.Of course, California doesn't really do that."
has studied, rafted and hiked along the Tuolumne for more than three decades. Once debris is set loose by rain, it could take years to work through the watershed's channels, he said. "If you have a dry winter, you'rebetter off because you allow some slope-stabilizing Recreation economy vegetation to get in," Mount Among th e r o utes most said. "The re-colonization of at risk of being obliterated is the slopes takes place amazLumsden Road, a steep, nar- ingly fast after that." row dirt roadthat drops down a Tests have shown that in 2,000-foot canyon to the banks many areas, the soil was not as of theTuolumne River and pro- scorched as initially feared. videsaccess to the area's most That includes the s teep, popular rafting and kayaking granite valley around Hetch run. Hetchy Reservoir, a priority Steve Welch, general managduring the firefighting effort er of Groveland-based Ameri- because it stores 85 percent of can River Touring Association, the drinking water supply for a nonprofit that charters white- 2.6 million people in the Bay water trips, dispatched employ- Area, including San Francisco ees down that road in August and Hayward. Though some with inflatable rafts to ferry of the Rim fire burned so hot it firefightersacross the river as could take away the soil's abilthe blaze raged. ity to absorb water, scientists "That's our lifeline," Welch for the Hetch Hetchy Regional said. "It's how everyone gets Water System do not believe to the launch point. It is now areas near the reservoir were the most tenuous thing that we scorched enough to be prone to have, looking forward." major slides. Before any significant rainThe fire's toll is more evident fall, portions of roads and trails downstream, where hundreds this fall have already been of wooden utility poles were decovered with dirt that has slid stroyed by the flames and are down. Trees, roots and under- being replaced by helicopter. brush that once held soil in In more severely burned areas, place were burned away. public utility officials worry "Forget rain, i t's a l ready that debris flows could take out showing high rates of erosion," key roads used to access hysaid Jeffrey Mount, founding droelectric facilities that power director of the UC Davis Center San Francisco's airport, streetfor Watershed Sciences,who lights and city buildings.
F resh of f a fr e e p r e c ompetion touch up w i t h Continued from B1 a straight razor, Burnham Various sponsors put up said he felt he was ready for $1,500 in prizes, and the his first foray into competiCentral Oregon Beer Antive bearding. "I was wanting to get a gels volunteered their services to judge the best of haircut before I came down the beards, as well as the here," he said. "I think the best of the fake beards, a hair should really match the category of mostly women beard." w earing everything f r o m Rick Havern wore what he a tangle of pine boughs in- calls the "Flying V," a broad terspersed with Christmas mustache nearly r eaching lights to a d r ape of b eer hisears,paired with a second bottle caps and a wedge of m ustache-shaped g r o w t h cut steel. emanating from just below B arrett c o nceded t h a t his lower lip. his b eard w a sn't r e a l ly Havern said he's expericompetition-ready. mented with various beard "I've made it about nine styles over the years, but days, and that's about as j ust happened to be i n a long as I've ever gone with- F lying V m o d e w hen h e out shaving," he said. dropped in to Silver Moon M ike Burnham, on t h e recently. Someone told him other hand, said he's sport- the contest was coming up, ed a beard of some kind ever and that his beard would be since he could grow one. perfect. "I grew it back in the '70s, The current beard, nearly six inches long from the tip and it wa s a l i t tl e w eird of his chin, traces back two then," he said. "Now, people years to when he last wore are more accepting." a closely-cropped beard for — Reporter: 541-383-0387, his wedding. shammers@bendbulletinicom
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Act now to take control of this school year.
Washington quickly extendsBoeingtax break By Mike Baker
manufacturing work that will The Associated Press come with Boeing's new 777X OLYMPIA, Wash. — Wash- production. He praised the biington l a w m akers m o v ed partisan work that went into swiftly Saturday t o e x tend the package and said the deal aerospace tax breaks in a bid will reverse the outflow of to satisfy Boeing Co. and win aerospace jobs from the state. "This is an unprecedented the manufacturing work that will come with the company's guarantee that multiple genernew 777X production. ations of aircraft will be built The Legislature gave final right here in the state of Washapproval to extend the tax in- ington," Inslee said. centives — worth a total proDemocratic Se n . Bob jected value of $9 billion — all Hasegawa was one of the two the way to 2040. Lawmakers senators to oppose the bill, exthen adjourned their t hree- pressing a variety of concerns. day session without taking up He was concerned that the bill a transportation package that didn't provide enough protecGov. Jay Inslee had sought. tions and that Boeing could Legislators from both parties touted the importance of
use the 777X work to supplant work being done on the 787. Hasegawa also expressed concern that the Legislature was essentially pressing union workers toaccept a contract that may not be beneficial to them. He was also concerned t hat lawmakers would a p prove such a large tax break afterconsidering the issue for just a couple of days. "We haven't, I don't think, fully thought out the uses of that $9 b i l lion," Hasegawa sa>d.
company's 777X commitment to the region. In Oregon, some 1,200 machinists who work at Boeing's Gresham facility and the network of Boeing suppliers across the Portland area could have been affected.
Syl v a n of NWX
www.sylvanlearning.com
bendsylvan@qwest.net
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THANKSGIVINGBRUNCH, WARM SPRINGSSTYLE.
Boeing has proposed a lengthy contract with the Machinists union and says the
the Boeing jobs, especially for the long-term. Senate Majority Leader Rodney Tom, a Democrat who leads a largely Republican caucus, said the company has had an enormous impact on the state over the years and said the bill was a way to make sure it continues. "It's an incredible opportunity that we can keep this going for the next generation," Tom said. Even though the tax breaks weren't set to expire for several more years, Inslee called the Legislature back to Olympia this week for a special session dedicated to the Boeing bills. Along with the tax package, lawmakers voted to spend millions of dollars on workertraining programs and an effort to aid permitting for large aerospace man u f acturing sites. Inslee said the bills were necessary inorder to win the
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
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Continued from B1 Hayden, who recently won an Oregon Science Teachers A ssociation o u tstanding teacher award, is better suited to STEM instruction than most. Before becoming a teacher, Hayden worked in nuclear waste management and later at Bend Research as an engineer. To help other teachers without professional STEM backgrounds, the staff members have met with other STEM schools. There are also professional development sessions in the works. "It's easier for me, I have all this background, but I'm proud of how all the teachers
Week
CONDITIONS
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STEM
Miami 83/74
Monterrey
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33/17
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W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
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here are willing to jump on board with the aim of giving our kids a better learning experience,u Hayden said. Hayden is i n sistent that STEM projects are an effective way to learn. «We spend a good deal of our time working on skills, but when we give students the chance to apply them through STEM experiences, that provides them with meaning," he said. "We have a way to make learning more engaging. I think kids are naturally interested in science and engineering and math, too. Kids naturally want to explore the world. Plus when you put out something that's interesting, you don't have to work so hard
to keep kids on task." More than j ust o f fering students a m ore engaging and effective curriculum, Offenhauser said STEM may be giving his K-5 students a better chance to land a job down the road. «We have a national crisis; we need more kids who are interested in STEM careers," he said. «Of course, Buckingham can't solve the problem, but when I look at our students, I want to give them that opportunity." The STEM advisoryboard's first meeting will be at 6 p.m. Nov. 20 in the school's library and is open to the public.
Harry Reid filed a cloture motion
Democrats may reconsider
— Reporter: 541-633-216P, tleedsCmbendIJufletin.com
to end debate on the nomination Using the sp-called "nuclear opof Nancy Pillard, Obama's third tion," which would allow them to D.C. Circuit npminee, setting Up a change Senate rules regarding procedural vote for Tuesday. filibusters with a simple majority Both Caitlin Halligan and pf only 51 vptes. Patricia Millett, Obama's pther The House of Representatives
Continued from B1 Senate Republicans recently filibustered two of President
Obama's nominees to theD.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, often called the most influential court in the country after the U.S.
nominees, failed to garner the 60 was on a district work period votes needed toadvance al this last week and did not cast any stage in their own nominations. votes.
Supreme Court. Majority Leader
If Republicans filibuster Pillard,
.'
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— AndreW Clei/e/7ger, The Bulletin
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Water Continued from B1 Bend-based Central Oregon LandWatch, whose l awsuit brought in U.S. District Court in Eugene halted work last year, has said it plans a new legal challenge. LandWatch arguesthe project could harm fish and wetlands. City officials are aware of the impending challenge, said City Manager Eric King. "But right now we are planning for a construction date in early December," he said. While construction crews will likely have to contend with snow this winter, Mortenson Construction, the contractor, intends to keep digging. "There might be a few days we can't work, but overall the contractor is confident that he can build right t hrough the winter," said Heidi Lansdowne, Bend c i t y p r o ject
' xt)
in 6 weeks!' PROGRAMS
filaL+loUc WEIGHT LOSS SPECIALISTS
Central Oregon's Past... Recreated.
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» Just North Of Deschutes Market Road Overpass « » 5 Miles North Of Bend «
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put in the pipeline under what will eventually be one of the new, larger bike lanes along Skyliners Road. The city will then put an asphalt patch over the pipeline, which the county will replace with the rest of the road. Doty said the city must install the pipeline before the road rebuild if it wants to have it under the new pavement. «We would not permit the city to cut up a new road," he said.
*
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> 65147 N. Hwy 97 <
The city a im s t o i n stall the w ater p i p eline u n d er Skyliners Road before spring 2015, when Deschutes County plans to widen and repave the road using a federal grant, said Deschutes County Public Works Director Chris Doty. The county is set to pay $1 million and receive $9 million from the Federal Highway Administration to pay for the repaving, but the grant goes away if work doesn't start in about a year and a half. The plan is to have the city
The U.S. Forest Service permit requires the city to keep Tumalo Falls Road open between Memorial Day in May and Labor Day in September. «SO it will be open during the s u mmer," L a n sdowne safd.
LOSEt.'30 lbs.
RESEARCH CENTER
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Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 32,985...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 93,152..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 58,443...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . . 9,819 . . . . 47,000 Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 80,969..... 153,777 R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 198 Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 36.0 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 14 Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 142 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 451 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . . 525 Crooked RiverAbove Prinevige Res.. ... . . . . . 45 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res.... . . . . . 74.2 Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 3.67 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 142 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 or go to www.wrd.state.or.us
manager.
Metabolic Research Center Supervisor
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Custom Leather Work Original Art & Furniture
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MEDIUM
•
The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......74/48/0 00..68/51/pc. 69/50/pc GrandRapids....52/41/0.00..46/34/pc..39/26/rs RapidCity.......50/34/000..53/24/pc. 32/21/pc Savannah .......72/42/0.00..74/49/pc. 71/51/pc Akron ..........58/30/000..47/33/pc..48/28/rs GreenBay.......48/41/012..43/33/pc.33/22/pc Reno...........70/31/0.00...69/36/s. 69/40/pc Seattle.........52/41/trace..54/46lsh. 56/48/pc Albany..........43/26/000...52/31/c. 48/28/pc Greensboro......57/28/000...67/37/s.. 60/37/5 Richmond.......61/32/0.00... 65/37/s .. 58/39/s SiouxFalls.......49/34/0 00..48/25/pc... 29/9/c Albuquerque.....67/34/000..67/43/pc.. 67/42/s Harnsburg.......52/28/000..53/32/pc. 53/35/pc Rochester, NY....49/33/0.02 .. 50/35/sh..48/29/rs Spokane ....... 44/31/0.00..47/36/sh. 52/36/pc Anchorage ......27/20/0 04...33/17/r.. 23/16/s Hartford CT.....47/28/0 00..56/31/pc. 52/35/pc Sacramento......74/43/0.00... 73/46/s. 71/50/pc Springfield, MO ..64/42/0.00... 60/42/s. 63/28/pc Atlanta.........60/40/0.00...65/44/s.. 67/45/s Helena..........46/31/0.00 .. 48/27/rs .. 46/28/c St.Louis.........69/49/000 ..53/38/pc. 60730/pc Tampa..........83/64/0.008476 .. 9/sh.. 83/65/s Atlantic City.....51/29/0.00...58/45/s .. 54/44/s Honolulu........82/72/0.19...82/70li. 83/67/pcSalt Lake City....62/35/0.00... 64/44/s. 66/45/pc Tucson..........83/52/0.00...84/53/s.. 88/53/s Austin..........71I54/003...73/52/s. 7e56/pc Houston ........70/53/000 ..75/54/pc. 75/57/pc SanAntonio.....71/56/0.10... 76/56/s. 76/57/pc Tuisa...........68/48/0.00 ..68/46/pc. 68/33/pc Baltimore .......54/29/0.00... 59/34/s .. 56/40/s Huntsville.......61/39/0.01 ..66/37/pc.. 66/40/s SanDiego.......74/52/0.00... 72/56/s .. 70/57/5 Washington, OC.56/34/0.00... 60/39/s .. 5I38/s Bitings.........46/34/0.00..47/24/rs.31/24/sn Indianapolis.....61/41/0.00...50/34/s. 51/30/sh SanFrancisco....65/48/000..65/49/pc.. 64/51/c Wichita.........65/39/0.00... 63/45/s.62/30/pc Birmingham .. 61/43/000 ..69/42/pc.. 70/43/s Jackson, MS.... 65/45/000...72/46/s .. 74/47/s SanJose........77/44/000.. 68/48/s 68/49lc Yakima.........50/33/000 51/35/c. 55/38/pc Bismarck........41/30/000... 44/15lc... 25/8/s Jacksonvile......74/49/000..75/55/pc. 75/57/pc SantaFe........63/34/0.00..62/33/pc.. 62/32/s Yuma...........83/53/0.00... 85/55/s .. 87/60/s Boise...........56/34/000..62/38/pc. 61/39/pc Juneau..........34/20/000..34/29/pc. 40/33/pc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........47/35/000 ..55/39/pc. 53/39/pc Kansas City......67/40/0 00... 57/46/s. 54/24/pc Bndgeport,CT....49/36/000 ..56/37/pc. 51/40/pc Lansing.........54/39/0.00..46/33/pc..36/24/rs Amsterdam......52/41/041 ..48/40/sh 45/42lc Mecca..........97/79/0 00 .91/72/pc.. 92/72/s Buffalo.........51/37/000 ..47/35/sh ..46/28/rs LasVegas.......73/48/000...74/50/s. 75/53/pc Athens..........78/58/000..69/60/pc.70/61/sh Mexico City .....73/48/0 00 .70/52/sh 68/46/sh BurlingtonVT....43/33/000..47/33/sh. 43/27/pc Lexington.......61/34/000...54/34/s.. 58/35/s Auckland........66/59/000.. 68/52/pc. 71/50/pc Montreal........39/32/000...45/30/r...41/25/r Caribou,ME.....34/31/001 ..35/30/rs..38/24/c Lincoln..........63/30/000..57737/pc..41718/c Baghdad........77/64/000 .. 78/63/sh. 78/64/sh Moscow ........46/36/0.00...43/40/c. 46/32/sh Charleston SC...65/38/000..74/49/pc.. 69/49ls Little Rock.......63/46/000...66/44/s. 68/44/pc Bangkok........93/79/0.07 ..87/77/sh.88/76/pc Hairobi.........75/61/0.76..67/56/sh. 75/58/sh Chariotte........60/26/000...66/39/5 .. 62/40/s LosAngeles......71/57/0 00 ..69/55/pc. 74/57/pc Beiyng..........61/37/000... 42/31ls .. 51/42/s Nassau .........86/77/0.00...80/75/t...80/76/t Chattanooga.....57/33/000...66/37/s.. 65/44/s Louisville........64/35/000...56/36/s. 59/35/pc Beirut..........75/70/0.00... 74/64/s .. 75/66/s New Delhi.......77/57/0.00...80/58/s.. 80/58/s Cheyenne.......54/36/000...58/34/s.. 44/29/s Madison Wl.....53/43/000 ..46/35/pc. 37/22/pc Berlin...........54/39/000 ..40/35/sh .. 41/35/c Osaka..........68/48/0.00..66746/sh.57/44/sh Chicago.........58/45/000..45/39/pc. 44/28/sh Memphis....... 62/44/000 64/43/s.. 68/45/s Bogota .........66/46/0.00...77/37/t...74/50lt Oslo............39/34/0.00 ..34/23/pc..3705/a Cincinnati.......61/32/000... 52I32/s. 56/33/pc Miami..........84/75/0.16 ..83/74lsh. 83/72/pc Budapest........61 /48/0 03... 47/42/c. 50/38/sh Ottawa.........36/23/0.00... 43/28/r ..39/21/rs Cleveland.......59/34/000 ..48/35/pc. 48/30/sh Milwaukee......55/46/000..46/37/pc. 41/27/pc BuenosAires.....79/59/000..70/60/sh. 72/58/sh Paris............$0/43/0.19 ..47/36/pc .. 57/54/c ColoradoSpnngs.58/32/000...63/33/s.. 58/28/s Minneapolis.....46/39/000...42/24/c.. 27/16/s CaboSanLucas ..86/64/0.00... 86/S9/s. 88/59/pc Rio deJaneiro....81/72/0.00..82/70/pc.. 86/75/s Columbia,MO...66/42/000... 54/40/s. 58/24/sh Nashvite........61/31/000... 62/37/s. 65/37/pc Cairo...........75/63/000 ..79/60/pc.. 80/60/s Rome...........73/63/0.00... 64/44/r. 57/52/pc ColumbiaSC....64/32/000 ..71/44/pc.. 66/43/s New Orleans.....72/49/0 00 ..75/56/pc .. 75/56/s Calgary.........39/16/0.03..14/12/sn.. 36/32/s Santiago........73/46/0.00 ..52/49lsh.. 71/61/s Columbus GA...70/41/000 ..71/44/pc .. 72/45/s New York.......50/38/0 00 ..56740/pc. 53/40/pc Cancun.........84/77/0.00... 84/77/t...82/76/t SaoPaulo.......84/63/0.00..83/65/pc. 88/70/sh Columbus OH....60/37/000... 50/34/s. 52/33/sh Newark HJ......52/35/000 ..57738/pc.53/38/pc Dublin..........46/37/0.02...46/44/c .. 55/45/c Sapporo ........52/35/0.01 .. 53/26/sh..36/29/sf Concord,NH.....43/31/000 .. 50/28/rs. 47/30/pc Norfolk, VA......59/37/000...67/43ls.. 58/41/s Edinburgh.......43/30/0 00.. 39/34/pc. 51/43/sh Seoul...........61/43/000... 58/39/s .. 46/43/s Corpus Christi....77/57/000 ..76/59/pc. 80/63/pc Oklahoma City...68/46/0.00 ..65/50/pc. 67/36/sh Geneva.........5445/1.21..43/31/sh. 39/27/pc Shanghai........81/66/0.00 60/51/sh .. .. 58/55/c DallasFtWorth...70/56/000 ..71/52/pc. 73/49/pc Omaha.........61/40/000..55/36/pc.. 39/18/c Harare..........84/64/0 07 .. 79/58/sh. 79/57lsh Singapore.......88/77/0.8689/78/sh. .. 89/79/sh Dayton .........60/40/000...49/33/s. 53/31/pc Orlando.........81/63/0.00 ..82/63/sh. 83/62/pc HongKong......86/73/0.00 .. 78/67/sh.. 72/67/c Stockholm.......45/36/0.00 38/27/sh .. .. 33/30/c Denver....... 65/32/000...64I37/s.. 61/31/s PalmSprings.....81/50/000. 87/56/s.. 88I56/s Istanbul.........66/46/0.00... 58/55/s ..67/60/c Sydney..........88/63/0 00 .. 64758/sh. 63/55/sh DesMoines......59/43/000..51/35/pc. 39/22/pc Peoria..........63/42/0.00..50/36/pc..50/25/rs lerusalem.......71/62/000... 75/58/s .. 77/61ls Taipei 86/77/000 79766/sh70/68/sh Detroit..........58/37/000 ..47/36/pc. 48/29/sh Philadelphia.....52/35/0.00..56/37/pc. 54/40/pc Johanneshurg....83/56/000 ..81/57/sh.77/57/sh Tel Aviv.........79/63/0.00...80/65/s .. 82/66/s Duluth..........36/34/003...41/21/c. 27/12/pc Phoenix.........85/58/000...87/60/s.. 88/62/s Lima ...........70/61/0.00..73/61/pc.73/61/pc Tokyo...........59/54/0.00 .. 64/44/sh. 54/45/sh El Paso..........74/46/000 ..75/46/pc .. 75/46/s Pittsburgh.......57/28/0 00 ..47/30/pc. 49/29/pc Lisbon..........64/50/0 00 64/51/pc 68/51/s Toronto.........50/34/0 00 46/37/sh 46/27/sh Fairbanks........24/15/000...30/4/sn...13/ 9/c Portland,ME.....46/32/0 00.. 51/32/sh. 47/33/pc London.........4609/0.15..41/34lpc.54/49/sh Vancouver.......48/45/0.06 ..50/45/sh. 50/45/sh Fargo...........40/37/000...40/15lc..23/8/pc Providence......46/29/000..55733/pc.. 52/37/s Madrid .........61/43/0 00..61/40/pc. 65/45/pc Vienna..........55/45/0.26 .. 50/40/pc. 42/36/sh Flagstaff........61/25/000 ..62/24/pc .. 63/26/s Raleigh.........59/30/0 00...70/37ls .. 60/39/s Manila..........88/82/2 00..88/76/pc. 87/74/pc Warsaw.........57/43/0.02 44/35/sh. .. 46/36/pc
I feel better than I could ever imagine. I look forward to the holidays and my little black dress. We are best friends again thanks to Metabolic. I know she's waiting to come out of your closet too. Call today, see results now and feel the Metabolic Difference.
Cowboy Collectables Russell Hill Sags
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"I went from size 22 to size 6!"
TPtAtlIIMC P Pr7 ) ,
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through 4 pm.
OVERWEIGHT?
COV'80
Wfl
WATER REPORT
Sisters..............................Low La Pine...............................Low Redmond/Madras........Low Prinevine..........................Low
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
305 Bismarck
ortland«
Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.04 Record24 hours ...0.35 in 2010 *Melted liquid equivalent
Legend Wweather,Pcpprecipitation, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze, shshowers,r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
Vancouver ' 50/4~'~ xo x«C819ary Saskatoon xx xo + a 34/32 10/6 ,i
Uranus.....3:00 p.m...... 3:31 a.m.
Monday Bend,westofHwy97.....Low Hi/Lo/W Bend,eastof Hwy.97......Low
O
o www m ~~~seattle
Jupiter......s:33 p m..... 1 45a.m. Satum......6:27 a.m...... 4;39 p.m.
Sisters.........64/40/0.00.....56/30/c.....53/31/sh YLDIN
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
(in the 48 contiguous states):
Sunday Hi/Lo/W
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 50/27 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........69m1955 Monthtodate.......... 0.15" Record low......... 12 in 1977 Average month todate... 0.32" Average high.............. 50 Year to date............ 4.45" Average low .............. 29 Average year to date..... 8.09"
FIRE INDEX
OREGON CITIES Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:24 a.m...... 4:07 p.m. Venus.....11:03 a.m...... 7:14 p.m. Mars.......1:21 a.m...... 2:22 p.m.
IPOLLEN COUNT
• 64'
62/32
Paisley
Sunsettoday...... 4 44 p.m. F ull L ast New Sunrise tomorrow .. 6:56 a.m. Sunset tomorrow... 4:43 p.m. Moonrisetoday.... 1:05 p.m. Moonsettoday ........none Nov. 17 Nov. 25 Dec. 2 Dec. 9
PLANET WATCH
The Dages......50/37/0.00....56/39/pc.....57/42/pc
Riley
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• Klamath
60/37
Yesterday's extremes
52 35
Lakeview
59/33
57/28
Ashland
56/44
55/36
Juntura
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• Fort Rock 58/26
Chiloquin
Medford
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• Brookings
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52 34
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Nyssa
58/30
rants Pass
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La Pine 55/26
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53 35
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
Vale« 57/36
58/33
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Sunriver Bend
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Redmand
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HIGH LOW
Astoria ........ 50/37/0.00....56/46/pc ....57/48/pc Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme Baker City...... 52/26/0.00....57/31/pc ....56/33/pc To report a wildfire, call 911 Brookings......64/40/0.00..... 56/44/f . ...56/48/sh 8urns.......... 53/20/0.00....59/27/pc . ...57/31/pc Eugene........ 51/42/0.00....59/42lp< ....59/46/p< Klamath Falls .. 61/20/000 ....60/25/s ...59/33/pc The higher the UV Index number, the greater Lakeview....... 61/1 8/0.00 ...61/31/pc. ...60/38/pc La Pine........ 55/21/0.00....55/26/pc ....55/29/sh the need for eye and skin protection. Index is Medford....... 55/38/0.00....58/39/pc . .... 58/43/f for sol t noon. Newport....... 52/43/0.00....57/46/pc . ...56/48/sh LO MEDIUM HIGH gggg North Bend..... 57/39/0.00....59/46/pc . ...59/49/sh Ontario........53/28/0.00....56/35/pc ....58/36/pc 0 2 4 6 8 10 Pendleton......52/34/0.00.....56/35/< . ...58/37/pc Portland .......49/42/0.00....58/45/pc ....57/47/pc Prineville....... 50/28/0.00.....57/33/c . ...55/35/sh Redmond.......48/25/0.00....59/29/pc . ...56/34/pc Roseburg.......61/44/0.00..... 62/43/f . .... 60/48/f Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Salem ....... 51/43/0 00 ...59/43/pc ...58/46/pc ~~
Ontano
58/31
5 6/44 ~
EAST Partly cloudy skies.
Partly sunny with a slight chance of showers.
56 38
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Partly cloudy skies.
5 2/32
55/35
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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Milestones, C2
Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
VETERANS DAY ROUNDUP
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A variety of Veterans Day activities are
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planned today and Monday throughout Central Oregon, from
parades to ceremonies to fundraising runs: TODAY VETERANSDAYAND MARINE CORPS BIRTHDAYRUN:A 5K run and1-mile walkthat finishes in DrakePark; prizes, refreshments and raffle; proceeds benefit Disabled American Veterans; $14-$2'I; 9 a.m., 8 a.m. registration and check in; City Hall, 710 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 54 I-383-8061 or www. vetsdayrun.homestead. com/.
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MONDAY VETERANSDAY BREAKFAST:Theannual event to celebrate veterans; free, donations requested; 8-11 a.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-526-1626. VETERANSDAY CEREMONY: Anassembly honoring all veterans and their families with guest speakers, patriotic music followed by a coffee reception; free; 10:30 a.m.-7 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; 541-549-4045, ext. 1024. BEND VETERANSDAY PARADE:Theannual event to honor veterans; free; 11 a.m.; downtown Bend; 541-480-4516 or rabbine@aol.com. LA PINE VETERANSDAY CEREMONY:Featuring guest speaker Mayor Ken Mullinix followed by an open house and barbecue hosted by the American Legion Post 45, 52532 Drafter Road; free; 11 a.m.; La Pine Community Cemetery, U.S. Highway 97 and ReedRoad; 541-536-1402. PRINEVILLEVETERANS DAY PARADE: Parade begins on Main Street and ends at OchocoPark, with a ceremony to honor veterans followed by a free spaghetti lunch open to the public at the Veterans Club, 405 N. Main St; free; 11 a.m.; downtown Prineville; 541-447-5451. VFW OPENHOUSE:Meet military service members and veterans in honor of Veterans Day; free; 11a.m. after parade; VFWHall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-480-4516. REDMONDVETERANS DAY PARADE: Parade honoring veterans in downtown; followed by a chili feed for all veterans and families at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4108,1836 S.E. Veterans Way; free; 11:11 a.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-280-5181. MADRASVETERANSDAY PARADE:Featuring local schools, Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps and more; free; 2 p.m., 1:45 flyover by a civil air patrol; Madras High School, 390 S.E. 10th St.; 541-777-7741. MEMORIALWALLAND GARDEN DEDICATION: Featuring guest speaker and medal of honor recipient, Bob Maxwell; free; 3:30 p.m.; Hospice of Redmond, 732 S.W. 23rd St.; 541-548-7483 or www.hospiceofredmond. Ol'g.
VETERANSDAYDINNER: Featuring a free dinner for all veterans; proceeds benefit veterans; free, donations accepted for family and friends' meals; 5:30-8 p.m.; Elks Lodge, 262 S.W. Second St., Madras; 541-475-6046. — From staff reports
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Photos by John Gottberg Anderson /For The Bulletin
Oak and maple trees leave their autumn colors on Fourth Avenue, east of Van Buren Street in Eugene's Whiteaker neighborhood. A mix of residential and commercial structures, "The Whit" became a magnet for counterculture in the late 1960s.
• The Whiteaker is becoming a destination for beer lovers
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Nearly 1,000 bottled beers from around the world may be for sale at any given time at the Bier Stein, a German-style beer hall in downtown Eugene. The remarkable selection is complemented by another 30 international beers served on tap.
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NORTHWEST TRAVEL Nextweek: Woodinville, Wash.
EUGENEt wasn't always like this in Eugene's Whiteaker neighborhood. A former working-class district that later became a hippiehaven, "The Whit" — named for Oregon's first governor, John Whiteaker — was once considered a dangerous area for the average person to wander. Located west of the Washington-Jefferson Street Bridge and north of Eighth Avenue, about a mile northwest of downtown, the Whiteaker has recently become identifiedas Eugene's primary brewery district. Several craft breweries, including Ninkasi, Hop Valley and Oakshire, have established themselves within a few blocks of one another in The Whit. And more are on the way. A mix of residential and commercial structures, the Whiteaker became a magnet for counterculture in the late 1960s. By the 1980s, it had attracted a significant homeless population as well, and with that an increase in drug arrests and violent crimes. See Eugene/C4
'I
AUTHOR! AUTHOR
RebeccaSkloot kicksoff library series By David Jasper The Bulletin
In 1988, when Rebecca Skloot was 16, her basic biology teacher told her class about a line of immortal cells called HeLa cells, which had been culled from a black woman. That was it for the day's lesson, Skloot says on her website, but she wanted to know more. Skloot was so intrigued about the woman, named Henrietta Lacks, that her teacher even suggested she write an extra credit paper about Lacks. It would take 22 years, but eventually, she'd do better than an extra credit essay. In 2010, Skloot, who spent part
O
See RebeccaSkloot
If yougo
talk about her writing at
denddnlletin.com/skloot of her childhood in Oregon, published her first book, "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks." On Thursday, Skloot will visit Bend High School to speak about Lacks, bioethics and more, the first installment in this year's Author! Author! series, presented by the Deschutes Public Library Foundation. Lacks' descendents, and Sklootherself,are characters in "The Immortal Life," a nonfiction journey through the
What:Author!Author! with RebeccaSkloot, author of "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" Q
Lo
When:7 p.m. Thursday Where:Bend High School, 230 N.E Sixth St., Bend Cost:$20-$75; tickets for the entire series of
four readings are$70-$260 Contact:www.dplfoundation.org or 541-3121027 story of Lacks, a poor tobacco farmer whose cancer cells were taken for use in scientific research. Code-named HeLa cells, these "immortal" cells continue to divide under proper conditions and have
been used for decades in scientific research, figuring in the development of the polio vaccine, in vitro fertilization,
gene mapping, cloning, AIDS research and more. SeeAuthor/C3
Submittedphoto byManda Townsend
"The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" writer Rebecca Skloot appears Thursday in Bend. Skloot is the first speaker in this year's Author! Author! series.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
M j QESTONE ~
Formsfor engagemeni wedding anniversary orbirtitday announcementsareavaiiabieat TheBugetin i777SW ChandterAve.,Bend orby emailing milestones@bendbulletin.com. Forms andphotos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.
'Ca o Duty' inspiresunique we in
ENGAGEMENT
• The populagame r — anda bit of rivalry — brought aGeorgiacoupletogether
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By John Gaudiosi
chocolates. She looked at me confused. And I answered, According to video game tYou never know what's inresearchfirm Newzoo, there side.' When she lifted the lid, are over 200 million gamers her ring was sitting there around the world who play and she immediately said Activision's "Call of Duty." yes. A few minutes later it With that t yp e o f p l ayer started raining like crazy base, and t h e i n c reased and we walked back to my number of female gamers truck, but we didn't care." "The g a m e de f i n itely out there; it was only a matter of time before the first- helped our interest evolve person shooter brought a for each other," Kristian RolCourtesy Ross Goodman Photography/ MCT couple together. lins said. "I'm not sure we One of the shots from the "Call of Duty"-themed engagement and That's exactly what hap- would have hit it off like we wedding pictures taken for Kristian and Justin Rollins, of Hinespened with Justin and Kris- did if he hadn't been play- ville, Ga. tian Rollins (ages 22 and ing the game when I walked 2 3 respectively), who l i ve in. We still play ' M odern i n H i nesville, Ga. W h i l e Warfare'because it's one of "I'm not sure we how accurate it is or isn't to real they're currently playing the our favorite ones. It's nice would have hitit life. It's a stress relief. When new "Call of Duty: Ghosts" to replay the level and replaying, it gets your mind off offlike we did ifhe things and makes you feel like game, they also have an- live the beginnings of our hadn't been playing other big celebration this relationship. you're back at home playing. It month. Nov. 19 will be the also makes time pass, which the game when I couple's two-year wedding The wedding is always nice when you're on walked in. We still "Call of D uty" a lso beanniversary. deployment." B play 'Modern Warfare' I walked i n o n J u stin came part of the wedding Soldiers like Justin Rollins playing 'Call of Duty: Black celebration. The couple ex- because it's one of also respect the fact that AcOps' at a m u tual f r iend's p ressed their love for t h e tivision takes proceeds from our favorite ones. "Call of Duty" sales and gives house in Savannah (Ga.)," game in tandem with their It's nice to replay the Kristian Rollins said. love for each other through back to veterans through the "After being i n troduced the engagement photo ses- level and relive the Call of Duty Endowment. "It's hard making the transmy first sentence to him was sions and the actual wedbeginnings of our "Wow, you really suck," be- ding ceremony. fer from soldier to civilian," "When we decided toget relationship." cause he had been trying to Justin Rollins said. "Finding a beat a level on the campaign married, I didn't want tradijob to transfer too is the most — Kristian Rollins, stressful part and it is what and was failing miserably. tional engagement or wedHinesville, Ga. keeps soldiers in the A r my He was in shock at my com- ding photos (I'm not t h at ment and asked if I could do kind of girl)," Kristian Rolwhen they're ready to get out better. We started playing lins said. "I wanted somebecause they are apprehensive "We play as much as we the campaign in two-player thing unique and different. about finding a career when can," Justin R o l lins s a i d. all they have ever known is mode and we beat the level Since 'Call of Duty' brought " When I a m t r a i ning a n d the Army. Any program that together the first time we us together and Justin is in tried. It was the bridge level, the military, I wanted to instuff, it's hard because I don't supports troops and veterans where there are cars and corporate both. Ross Good- always have access to a TV is great. I am thankful to have helicopters and you're try- man (our photographer) was and Xbox. But i t ' s a lways things like the COD Endowing to make it across the also previous military and I pretty cool when we can ar- ment to help support and raise bridge. We played together met him at Georgia Military range a time. The other guys awareness." for a w h ile t hat n ight. It College while getting my as- always think it's pretty bad While there's always a lot of was a good ice breaker and sociates degree. He had al- ass that my wife plays with fighting going on in the Rollins helped it not to be awkward ways wanted to do a 'COD' me online." household, it remains virtual. for either of us. It was some- photo shoot. I called him up And the couple is proving that thing we had in common and told him I was engaged Marriage target loved ones who game together, "Call of Duty" plays an im- stay together, one multiplayer and opened the doorway for and gave him the details on other conversations." how Justin and I met. We portant role in th e m ilitary match at a time. "We play a lot on the weekall got together with Justin's today. Justin Rollins said that The engagement uniforms, AR-15, Xbox con- everyone he knows plays the ends and our time off," KrisThose long hours play- troller, a couch and a Kay's game franchise. And when a tian Rollins said. "It's nice to ing "Call of Duty" together Jewelers engagement ring, new game like "Call of Duty: just stay the night in and stay quickly sparked a love con- and the pictures were made. Ghosts" launches, it's always up playing and joking around nection. While many guys The setting was: Justin was the topic of conversation. with each other." "We all get in a party online i n r elationships h ave t o in the game and I was 'playIt might not have been love ing' him. We set up shots of and dominate in the game," at first target site for the Rolw eigh their g aming t i m e against time with their loved him in the woods posing in Justin Rollins said. "It's cool lins, but the game franchise one, this couple got to play uniform with his gun and me because it gives us an outlet, a has helped spark a love that together. Kristian grew up on the opposing side on the way to play war and have fun remains strong two yearsplaying games like "Halo," couch with the controller. with it. We make jokes about and a lot of frags — later. "Legend of Zelda," "Super "For the wedding we had Mario B r os.," "Assassin's to be a bit more formal," she Creed," "God of War" and said. "So Ross tweaked the " Call of D u t y " w i t h h e r colors in the photos to make brother. It didn't take Jus- everything the neutral earth 541-548-2066 tin, a U.S. Army Sergeant tones of 'COD' green, brown, bendbulletin.com at Fort Stewart in Georgia, tan. We also did some shots long to see the light. of Justin and the groomsTheButtetin MED- I F T "I took Kristian to down- men acting like they were town River Street in Savan- on a mission to get over this nah," Justin Rollins said. brick wall where the bridesHIGH DESERT BANK "She had no idea it was com- maids and I were. We were ing since we had only been married in November, which M XTTR E S S 't' I t together a short while, three is of course the month the G allery-Be n d s s s s s s months I think. I walked un- 'COD' games always come 541-330-5084 I I I I I t . • til I found a good spot. We out." Ia • s both sat down and I got on While "Ghosts" is t heir one knee and handed her a game of choice at the mobox of chocolate because she m ent, t h e c o u pl e l o v es loveschocolate,and 'Forrest " Modern Warfare 2 " b e Gump' was filmed in Savan- cause of the map variety and nah. I asked her if she knew "Black Ops" because of the what they say about a box of zombies. GamerHub.tv
Casey Mulvihill and Amy Wood
Wood — Mulvihill
Taejon Christian International School in Daejeon. Amy Wood and Casey MulThe future groom is the son vihill, both of Daejeon, South of Lolly Tweed and Brad MulKorea,plan to marry Jan. 3 in vihill, of Sisters. He is a 2001 Park City, Utah. graduate of Mountain View T he future b r ide i s t h e High School, a 2006 graduate daughter of Becky and Doug of University of Oregon, where Wood, of Park City. She is a he studied sociology, German 2004 graduate of Brent Inter- and music, and a 2012 gradunational School i n M a n i la, ate of Concordia University, Philippines, and a 2009 gradu- where he studied social studate of Taylor University in Up- ies and technology education. land, Ind., where she studied He works as the director of sociology and social studies technology at Taejon Chriseducation. She teaches social tian International School in studies and publications at Daejeon.
MARRIAGE
Caitlin Baird and Matthew Seitz
Baird — Seitz Caitlin Baird and Matthew Seitz, both of McCall, Idaho, were married Aug. 31 on the banks of the Salmon River in Idaho during a six-day whitewater rafting trip with friends and family. A reception followed on Nov. 2 at Sully's restaurant in Redmond. The bride is the daughter of Michael and Kathie Baird, of Lostine. She is a 2004 graduate of Enterprise High School and a 2010 graduate of Oregon
Health and Science University, where she received a degree in nursing. She works as a registered nurse at St. Luke's Hospital in McCall. The groom is the son of Peter and Carlye Seitz, of Terrebonne. He is a 2003 graduate of Redmond High Schooland a 2006 graduate of Boise State University, where he received a degree in respiratory therapy. Matthew works as a respiratory therapist at St. Luke's Hospital in McCall. They will settle in McCall.
Find It All
Online
BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend Eric andRebeccaBeaudin, a girl, Greta Jean Beatjdin, 8 pounds, 2 ounces, Oct. 23. Tiffany O'Dell,aboy, Ricky Ray O'Dell ,6pounds,4ounces,Oct.23. Cory and Sara Erickson,a boy, Preston Cory Erickson, 7 pounds,
12 ounces, Oct. 11. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Michael andAngelaGould,aboy, Roman Michael Gould,8pounds,7 ounces, Oct. 25. Patrick "Cody"Sheets andStefanie Powers,a boy, Kellan PaulSheets, 7 pounds, 8 ounces, Oct. 29.
WILSONSof Redmond
The Bulletin
MILESTONE
GUID
It's time to start planning yourholiday By Lynn O'Rourke Hayes The Dallas Morning News
preferredfamily.com/ seasonstreatings
A nticipating holiday a n d winter festivities is half the Stay at Three, Ski for f un, so don't put off m a k • Free." Ski-loving families ing plans.Here are five ideas who book a three-night stay worth considering: at each of three properties in Season's Treatings.Fami- the newly designated Hyatt . lies ca n e x pect t h r ee Mountain C ollection ( Park months of holiday surprises, Hyatt Beaver Creek Resort & thoughtful extras and special Spa, Hyatt Escala Lodge Park values, thanks to the Season's City and Hyatt Regency Lake Treatings promotion under- Tahoe Resort) this ski season way at 3 9 P r eferred Hotel will receive a complimentary Group properties around the EpicPass forthe next year.The world. P articipating h o tels Epic Pass provides unlimited and resorts are part of the access to 12 resorts, including Preferred Family Collection, Vail, Beaver Creek and Northindicating their special atten- star. Use booking code EPIC. tion to the needs of families Offer good for stays Nov. 27 exploring the world. Begin- through April 20. ning Nov. 15, guests can exContact: hyattmountain pect culturally relevant taste collection.com treats like tea and cake in Tokyo, gingerbread in Germany Gaylord National Resort, and maple-sugar delicacies in • National Harbor, Md. For Vermont, among other special 52 days beginning Friday, considerations. families can join in the ChristContact: 1-866-990-9491; mas on the Potomac celebra-
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tion taking place just 8 miles south of Washington, D.C. Twelve miles of lights illuminate the way as guests marvel at a 60-foot-tall glass Christmas tree, indoor snowfalls and the season's centerpiece, Ice!, 2 million pounds of hand-carved beauty. The "'Twas the Night Before Christmas" theme incorporates life-size vignettes from the beloved poem. Hotel packages includespecial access,culinary activities plus photo ops and character breakfasts. Contact: 301-965-4000; christmasonthepotomac.com
bler's Golf. Later, take part in a "wild elf chase" to win prizes, join Rudolph for breakfast or experi-
ence a gingerbread pedicure. For extra f un, hop a board the Thriller Sleigh Boat Ride, Charleston's version of sleighride caroling. Contact: 1-888-778-1876; wwwwilddunes.com
New York.From ice-skat• ing at Rockefeller Center to shopping on Fifth Avenue, there are few places that channel the holiday vibe like the Big Apple. Yet with so much Winter at Wild Dunes, Isle to see and do, the options can • of Palms, S.C. For those become overwhelming. A new s eeking seaside fun i n t h e website helps would-be travelmonths ahead, the Wild Dunes ers pare down the possibilities. Resort has packaged savings From insider restaurant and and surprises. hotel suggestions to museums, Kids and grown-ups can tours, events and entertainparticipate in a Harvest Hang- ment, the multifaceted site can out T h anksgiving Festival, turn detailed planning into a decorate golf carts for a festive pleasure. parade and enjoy Little GobContact: www.newyork.com
4
IN E S
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement,
wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of thesevalued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bend Metro Park 8 Recreation District The Bend Trolley Bend Wedding &Formal Black Butte Ranch Central Oregon Event Professionals Assoc.
Cuppa Yo The DD Ranch Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Eastlake Framing Enhancement Center Medical Spa
Erin Hardy Images Faith Hope Charity Vinyards 8 Events Giorgio's Wine, Brews & Spirits House on Metolius M. Jacobs MCMenamins Old St. Francis School Michelle Cross Photography Northwest Medi Spa Old Stone Pronghorn Sunriver Resort Totally Polished Widgi Creek Golf Club
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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rac in water a s in ort aroina • A trip around the GreatSmoky Mountains reveals hidden treasures
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By Mary Ann Anderson Specia( to The Washington Post
As waterfalls go, Bridal Veil Falls are fairly small and easy to find. They cascade above U.S. Highway 64 just a couple of miles north of the town of Highlands in the Great Smoky Mountains of western North Carolina. The fun fact about Bridal Veil Falls is that, if your car is small enough, you can drive under the 120-foot "veil" of water. Our 10-year-old Mini Cooper, whose name is D.B. — get it? D.B. Cooper? — easily fits into the wedge between water and mountain and made for a neat photo op. But if you drive, say, a big extended-cab pickup truck, the maneuver could get tricky. My husband, Roy, and I have come to Cashiers, a lovely village just a few miles from Highlands, for a late-summer sojourn. Both of us like to hike and to photograph waterfalls, and these ancient, mythical Appalachian Mountains and tapestries of forests are striated with dozens and dozens of them within just a few miles' radius of Cashiers. We were staying at the High Hampton Inn, which is just a mile from town and right smack in the middle of waterfall country. The inn, at a cool and comfortable elevation of 3,600 feet, is a welcome respite from the heat and humidity of our home inGeorgia. The High Hampton is reminiscent of those fabulous family resorts of the Catskills, sort of like the one in the movie "Dirty Dancing." But hubby and I have been married way too long for dirty dancing of any sort, so we spend our time chasing waterfalls instead. Armed with a map provided by the High Hampton — wa-
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Roy Anderson /For The Washington Post
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The High Hampton Inn, a historic resort in Cashiers, N.C., offers breathtaking views of Whiteside Mountain.
«II bears wallowing around in the s hallow parts of the water. The trail is steep, a little slippery, and scribbled with bright yellow, daisylike flowers. For someone like me who's, um, a little overweight and out of shape, it wasn't long before I was out ofbreathtryingto keep up with my better half. If there were
The next morning, fueled b y t h e High Hampton Inn's ri, ',J Lh;it"t't' r i m m ens e b u ffet b r e akfast, w e s tee r ed D.B. north of Cashiers o n state Highway 107 t o w ard Glenville. Here, Hurr i c ane F alls spill serenely into Courtesy Jackson County Tourism Development Authority t h e sapphire waters of Lake Whitewater Falls, plunging more than 400 feet, is the highest waterfalls east of the Rocky Mountains. G l envill e, a long finger ofw ater It is located in Nantahala National Forest in Jackson and Transylvania counties, near the state line surrounded by the with South Carolina. rolling Smokies. bears wallowing l n a W ay, A s w e d r o ve around, self-preser- Waterfa//S along the scenic terfall-viewing is a f r equent perfect antidote to a hot day. Whitewater Falls finally comes vatlonbedarned highway that hypnOtiC and request of the inn's guests, so There would be no stolen kiss- into view, th e m i s t r i s ing Though I didn't edges the lake, I a list of those nearby is graes here. against the mountains so that want to become a ta n t a l lZlng, thought of Ernest ciously provided — we struck At Whitewater Falls, which they're veiled in a ghostly haze, nice, plump ursine QaVe tQe H emi n g w a y ' s " Green Hills o f out north, south, east and was our next stop and, de- the massive rocks polished entree I was sure unique ability west in search of these liquid pending on whom you ask, is golden in th e soft sunlight. that I couldn't run Africa." The landtreasures. in either North or South Caro- As my camera clicked away, I onthoseprecipitous tO Send scape of the green First we went south to Sillina, the roar was impressive, knew in my heart that there's paths. No bears put one into a hills of the Appaver Run Falls, just under three and I was mesmerized by the no way to fully capture the e to the test that is comCOntemplatiVe lachians miles from the inn. Silver Run unharnessed power created falls' splendor in photos. day, but I have to pletely d i ff erent is considered small, at a drop by not much more than the That afternoon, we traveled say that the view of m OO d . from that of East of only 30 to 40 feet, and the simplest elements of time, wa- a few miles east of Cashiers the falls was bear-y Africa, certainly, hike into the deep woods is ter, rock, erosion and gravity. a long U.S. Highway 64 t o pretty. but sometimes ineasy on a trail surrounded by The beauty and power of wa- Gorges State Park, near SapOur next sojourn took u s s p i r atio n and creattv<ty anse cathedrals of mountain laurel terfalls never ceases to amaze phire, in Transylvania County. west on U.S. Highway 64 to s o l ely rom f the beauty of a and rhododendron. Beneath a me. The park has access to sev- Highlands, where we found p l a ce. sky brindled with silver-edged The thing about Whitewater eral falls, including Drift Falls, Bridal Veil Falls and Dry Falls. In a way, waterfalls, hypclouds and iridescent sunlight, Falls, at 411 feet the highest in Turtleback Falls, Bearwallow T he latter supposedly got their n o t i c and tantalizing, have it was pretty here, and no one theeastern United States, is that Falls, Horse Pasture Falls and name because you can walk the unique ability to send one else was around in the early you hear them long before you Rainbow Falls. o n a stone path behind the falls i n t o a contemplative mood. "If it's sunny, you can see a and not get wet. Roy accepted I t just seems easy to pull up a morning. The moment was ro- see them. As you glide along mantic, and we quickly stole a the footpath, the anticipation of rainbow at Rainbow Falls," a t he challenge and took a few r o c k a nd sit a spell and ponder clandestine kiss. seeing the falls grows, and the park ranger explained as he s teps under the falls before t h e m e a ning of life. Somehow Good thing, too. Our next ground practically hums with gave us a map of the park. "It's coming quickly back. these cold, sweet falling wa"I wouldn't call these falls ex- t ers pro vide answers to life's stop was Sliding Rock Falls, unseen energy. An amalgam just spectacular, but you have where the late summer warmth of fresh scents of rushing wa- to come in the morning when actly dry," he shivered. "There's c o nund rums in a peaceful and brought out lots of kids and ter and verdant forests fills the the light is right." a cold spray under there." har mon ious way. more than a few pups to frolic air. There are a thousand hues By then, it was early afteron the smooth rocks carved to of green in these hemlock for- noon, so we chose instead to softness by endless water. The ests that I never imagined ex- take an easier hike to the amusbottom of the falls forms a big isted and that can't possibly be ingly named Bearwallow Falls. swimming hole, the old-fash- found in any artist's palette. As we descended along the ioned country kind that's the Then, like a n a pparition, pathway, my mind visualized t($
Author
"I felt thatit was important to educate people about the fact that there are human
from, whether she had given consent, or whether her family Continued from C1 might care about that.'" Almost four years since the Oprah Winfrey, through her debut of "The Immortal Life Harpo Productions company, of Henrietta Lacks," Skloot's beings behind every and Alan B al l ( " A merican life seems inexorably linked to Beauty," "Six Feet Under") are the life of Lacks. Skloot spent one of the billions of producing a film version of "The Immortal Life" for HBO, much of her young adult life biological samples working as a veterinary techSkloot said. that are used in "I'm a consultant on the film, nician, and was on the verge of completingher bachelor's de- research every day." as are members of the Lacks gree in biology — after which family, which we're all thrilled — Rebecca Skloot she intended to continue on to about. Harpo and HBO plan to veterinary school — when she go into production for the film signed up for a creative writwithin the next year; so far no "I just felt that the story of ing class. actors have been cast." A writing prompt in t h at Henrietta Lacks and the HeLa Asked if the book's ongoing class would alter the course of cells was an important one to success and influence surprisher career, Skloot wrote in a tell," Skloot told The Bulletin es her, Skloot replied, "There piece for UAB Magazine at the by email. "But in addition to are so many factors in the pubUniversity of A labama. The that, I felt that it was impor- lishing process that are out prompt: "Write for 15 minutes tant to educate people about of the writer's control. I knew about something s o meone the fact that there are human all that going in, but I always forgot." beings behind every one of the believed that the facts of this Plenty had forgotten Lacks, billions of biological samples story are so incredible that if but not Skloot, even though it that are used in research ev- I could get them out to people, had been more than 10 years ery day." they would have the same resince her teacher first menSkloot said she can't count action I did, which was 'Oh, tioned Lacks. the number of emails she's my God. I have to tell people The instructor of that writ- received f ro m r e s earchers about this.'" ing class convinced her she "who tell me that they heard Skloot is the first author in was a science writer, and that, me talking on the radio or this year's Author! Author! if she wanted to, she could still read the book and had this series, in its second year. Still change trajectories. She went very powerful reaction of say- to come are National Book on to study creative nonfiction ing, 'Oh wow, I had no idea. I Award-winning author Sherwriting, and, of course, pen a did my dissertation on HeLa book about the woman she'd cells, I work with them every never met — Lacks died of day in my lab — I owe a lot of SOLUTION TO cervical cancer in 1951 — but my career to Henrietta's cells, TODAY'S SUDOKU had found so intriguing back and I never once stopped to in 1988. think about where they came =
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man Alexie (Jan. 24), "Wild" author Cheryl Strayed (March 16) and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist G eraldine B r o oks
A Ballet for Everyone
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(June 19). All proceeds from the series benefit the Deschutes Public Library system. "I'm thrilled that Deschutes Public Library Foundation has selected 'The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks' for its Author! Author! series," Skloot said. "I'm excited and encouraged by how open the public and scientists have been to really discussing the issues raised by my book and using those discussions to b egin working toward a future that involves more transparency about research practices, and b etter c ommunication a n d trust between scientists and non-scientists." — Reporter:541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
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Never The Osher Lifelong Learning Institute in Central Oregon invites you to an open house and presentation:
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
Eugene Continued from C1 But a community council ignited local activism, which led to citizen vigilance in the district as well as the building of a spacious new park. By the 1990s, the Whiteaker had earned a reputation as a center for radical politics and anarchism. Along with staunch environmental and animal-rights groups, antiglobalization and Occupy Eugene protests centered here, and over the years there have been several ugly confrontations with police. Butthese samenonconformists have helped to make "The Whit" a vibrant hub of culture and the arts. Artists, musicians, writers, independent filmmakers, community gardeners,creative restaurateurs and others have established homes and studios on the quiet residential avenues north and east of Blair Boulevard. One can now safely wander the streetsto see colorful murals on the outer walls of 1930s-era homes and an eclectic mix of small businesses, residences and private galleries.
Sam Bond andPapa Soul One of the Whiteaker's early residents was Sam C. Bond, who owned and operated a garage on Blair Boulevard at Fourth Avenue from 1926 to 1972. Bond's g randparents had come to Eugene as 19thcentury pioneer homesteaders, and he honored his heri-
Ifyou go
NINKAS1TBRCR(HG CCiH A
Travel Lane County.754 Olive St., Eugene; 541-484-5307, 800-547-5445, www.eugene
and dinner hours daily. Ninkasi Brewing Co.272 Van Buren St., Eugene; 541-3442739, www.ninkasibrewing
cascadescoast.org/eugenespringfield/
.com. Beer gardenopen lunch
LODGING
and dinner hours daily. Oakshire Brewing.207 Madison St., Eugene; 541688-4555, www.oakbrew
Downtown Inn.361 W.
Seventh Ave., Eugene;541345-8739, 800-648-4366,
www.downtownmotel.com. Rates from $53.99
.com. Tasting room openlunch and dinner hours daily.
Eugene Whiteaker International Hostels.970 W. Third Ave., Eugene; 541-3433335, www.eugenehostels .com. Rates from $25
OTHER EUGENE-AREA BREWERIES Agrarian Ales.31115W. Crossroads Lane,Coburg; (dormitory), $45 (private room). www.agales.com. Tasting room open 3 to 8p.m. Friday Executive Motel.1040 W. and noon to 8 p.m.Sunday. Sixth Ave., Eugene; 541-683-
Photos by John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
The small Ninkasi Brewing tasting room shines brightly on a dark and rainy night in Eugene's Whiteaker district. Opened in November 2009 on Van Buren Street, the tasting room is adjoined by a covered patio where patrons are served by local food-cart operators.
Eugenebreweries
Sixth Ave.
ing above a rust-red building beside Vanilla Jill's Scoops and Soups Cafe. Built in 1997 — three years after the canonization of John Maximovitch (1896-1966), a clairvoyant and healer who led congregations in Shanghai, Paris, Brussels and San Francisco during a 40-year career in the priesthood — its location appears to be incongruous with its surroundings. But that is certainly in keeping with the diverse nature of the neighborhood.
Seventh Ave.
Beertopia emerges
WP r~ine
Hop Valley
>4rty~~ M8ip~
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Oakshire ~tb
Sam Bond'sGarage Fifth Ave.
Ninkasi
Falling Sky PourHouse co
sters Red n
E gene Springfiel
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
gone dry."
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What Esquire didn't mention is that Sam Bond's soon will be leaping onto the brewing bandwagon with its own beer. Owner M ar k J a eger and brewer Jim Montgomery are converting a nearby 1895 warehouse space on Eighth Avenue, called The Foundry, into a craftbrewery whose production will b e p o uring from pub taps early next year. Across the street from the Garage is Papa's Soul Food Kitchen and BBQ, a b l ues joint established here by the late Ted "Papa Soul" L ee. He opened the restaurant in 2006, having first made his culinary mark at a bright-red food cart at nearby Seventh and Polk streets. His death three years later shocked the neighborhood. "People who you wouldn't catch dead i n W h i t eaker would go down to Papa's and ... stand in line to eat," one local told The Register-Guard, Eugene's daily n e wspaper.
room and Springfield brewery and restaurant are openlunch
INFORMATION
tage by serving 12 years on the Eugene City Council and guiding the Blair Boulevard Commercial Area (a designated historic district) through the GreatDepression. Today, Sam Bond's Garage — yes, that's its official name — is a casual restaurant and night spot famed near and far for showcasing regional musicians on an almost-nightly basis. It has been so since 1995, recently earning accolades from Esquire magazine as one of America's bestbars: "You're in the family room of one of the weirdest neighb orhoods in A m erica — a shady, overgrown co-op of artists, eco-anarchists, spirit healers, drug d ealers and permanently circling v agabonds.... The strong-limbed waitresses circulate the beers in mason jars and smile, but only if they really mean it. It's like a frontier dance hall in a mining town where the vein's
Kruse Way,Springfield; 541744-3330. Eugene tasting
(
n
I !
Beer lovers sample some of Hop Valley's10 signature brews at the company's new First Avenue tasting room in Eugene. Founded in Springfield in 2009, Hop Valley continues to operate a15-barrel brewery and restaurant in that city's Gateway District. "He was really helping Whitetaurant. Private residences are aker to turn around." sandwiched between bakeries Within three blocks of these and ice-cream purveyors; the businesses, up and down Blair Red Barn Natural Grocery Boulevard and i n tersecting occupies a repurposed dairy Van Buren Street, a curious barn, and around a corner is mix of restaurants and other the lively Eugene Whiteaker businesses prevail. International Hostel, which There's a traditional Japafor years has provided budnese bar and cafe (the Izakaya get lodging to travelers from Meiji Co.), a vegan pizza resaround the world or up the taurant (the Pizza Research block. Institute), two other vegetariAmidst all this is the Seran cafes, as well as Thai, Mexbian Orthodox church of St. ican-Salvadoran, Italian and John the Wonderworker, its a farm-to-table prix-fixe resbulbous golden domes ris-
G RAN D
HunterDouglas
Into this mishmash in 2007 stepped Ninkasi B r ewing. Only a yearbefore,partners Jamie Floyd and Nikos Ridge had brewed the first batch of Total Domination IPA inside a leased German restaurant space in Springfield. So immediate and complete was the reception to this initial brew, Ninkasi established a 15-barrel brew house in the Whiteaker — a system that, six years later, has grown to 50 barrels. A s m al l t a s t in g r o o m opened four years ago at the front of the brewery building on Van Buren Street. Adjoining is a large patio area, covered by an open tent in winter, that serves as a public beer garden. The brewery doesn't have a kitchen of its own, but a rotation of local food-cart operators set up here daily to serve patrons. Ninkasi beers are available throughout Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Alaska, as well as in San Francisco. In addition to the flagship IPA, the brewery produces a popular double IPA, a double red ale and oatmeal stout. And its various seasonal brews fill out a substantial selection. Hop Valley Brewing Co. established a 15-b a r r el brewery and restaurant in Springfield's Gateway District in 2009, then added its large new 60-barrel production facility in the Whiteaker. The new First Avenue facility, its emerald-green facade marked by hop vines climbing ropes beside an outdoor patio, opened this summer. Brewmaster Trevor Howard, an Oregon State University graduate and ex-Rogue Ales brewer,controls a flavor profile that i s s p ecifically " hop-centric." I sa t i n t h e German-style beer hall and
4000, 888-851-0943, www. executivemotel.net. Rates from $42.99. Hilton Eugene.66 E. Sixth Ave., Eugene; 541-342-2000, 800-937-6660, www.hilton.
Cla>m 52 Brewmg.1030 Tylnn St., Suite 1, Eugene; 541-5546786, www.facebook.com. Tasting room open 4 to 8 p.m. Friday. Falling Sky Brewing.1334 Oak Alley, Eugene; 541-505-
com. Rates from $114.
7096, www.fallingskybrewing .com. Tasting room and gastropub open lunchand www.secretgardenbbinn.com. dinner hours daily. Rates from $99. McMenamins High Street The Secret Garden Inn.1910 University St., Eugene; 541484-6755, 888-484-6755,
Brewery 8 Cafe.1243 High St., Eugene; 541-345-4905,
DINING CorndreadCafe. 1290 W. Seventh Ave., Eugene;541-
www.mcmenamins.com. Open lunch and dinner hours daily.
505-9175, www.cornbread
cafe.com. Threemeals (vegan) every day. Budget.
Plank TownBrewing Co. 346
Grit Kitchen and Wine.1080 W. Third Ave., Eugene; 541343-0501, www.gritkitchen
brewing.com. Brewery and
Main St., Springfield; 541-7461890, www.planktown restaurant open lunch and dinner hours daily.
.com. Prix-fixe dinner Tuesday
Rogue AlesPudlic House.844
to Saturday. Moderate.
Olive St., Eugene; 541-345-
Izakaya Meiji Co.345 Van
4155, www.rogue.com. Open
Buren St., Eugene; 541-5058804, www.izakayameiji.com.
lunch and dinner hours daily. Steelhead Brewing Co.199 E. Fifth Ave., Eugene; 541-686-
Dinner every day. Budgetand moderate. Laughing Planet Cafe.760 Blair Blvd., Eugene; 541-868-
2739, www.steelheadbrewery .com. Brewery andrestaurant open lunch anddinner hours daily.
0668, www.laughing planetcafe.com. Also at 2864 Willamette St., Eugene; 541505-5399. Lunch and dinner
Viking Braggot Co.520 Commercial St., Unit F, Eugene; 541-653-8371, www .drinkviking.com. Tasting room open 4 to10 p.m. Friday
every day. Budget. Papa's SoulFoodKitchen and BBQ.400 Blair Blvd., Eugene; 541-342-7500, www.papas
and Saturday.
soulfoodkitchen.com. Lunch
Expenses
and dinner Tuesdayto Saturday. Budget to moderate.
Gas, Bend toEugene(254 miles round trip at$3 30/ gallon):$33.53 Lunch,Laughmg PlanetCafe: $11 Lodging(two nights, with breakfast), Secret Garden:
Sam Bond'sGarage. 407 Blair Blvd., Eugene. 541-431-6603,
www.sambonds.com. Dinner every day. Budget. WHITEAKERBREWPUBS Falling SkyPourHouseand Delicatessen.790 Blair Blvd.,
$216.81
Dinner, SamBond's Garage: $14 Lunch, Papa'sSoul Food Kitchen:$17 Dinner, Izakaya Meiji:$12
Eugene; 541-653-9167, www .fallingskybrewing.com/deli/.
Lunch and dinner every day. Budget to moderate Hop Valley Brewing Co.990 W. First Ave., Eugene; 541485-2337, www.hopvalley brewing.com. Also at 980
Lunch, Falling Sky
Delicatessen:$22 TOTAL:$326.34
watched as the tasting-room bartenders drew from 25 separate taps — two dozen for beers, including Hop Valley's 10 signature brews, and one for cider. My favorites were Alphadelic IPA — a n o r a ngehued ale with a citrus rose, employing several hops varietals and two malts — and Howard's original V a n illa Bean Porter. Oakshire Brewing, launch-
ed by brothersJeff and Chris Althouse in 2006, wears its public face at it s M adison S treet tasting r o om, f o u r blocks east of Van Buren near Second Avenue.
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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From previous page Also filled with large communal tables, it is unique in serving a ne w s i ngle-batch beer every week (it was a pink pumpkin ale on m y r e cent visit). The release parties take place on Tuesdays. Brewmaster Matt Van Wyk and lead brewer Tyler West (formerly o f B e n d's S i lver Moon) don't work here, however. Their production facility is in an industrial district near the railroad tracks in Eugene's Bethel district. On the first Saturday each month, by appointment, they're glad to show visitors around the brewery.
et
' llit ~
Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/ For The Bulletin
Falling Sky Falling Sky Brewing didn't start out i n t h e W h iteaker. Partners Jason Carrier, a scientist who f ormerly owned a home-brew shop, and Rob C ohen, previously a n u p state New York restaurateur, launched the business in a vacated,back-alley garage in downtown Eugene in January 2012. Utilizing the creative skills of lead brewer Scott Sieber, once of Rogue Ales, Falling
Sky offers a non-repeating menu of beers — between 15 and 17 at any one time, from pilsners to chocolate stouts, according to general manager Josh Evert. The small-batch
Papa's Soul Food Kitchen and BBQ opened on Blair Boulevard in 2006, the passion of founder and blues musician Ted "Papa Soul" Lee. After Lee's death in 2009, area residents credited the businessman with "really helping Whiteaker to turn around." The Eugene Whiteaker International Hostel for many years has provided budget lodging to travelers from around the world. In addition to dormitory accommodation and several private rooms, it has a large common room and kitchen, a separate music room and an outdoor garden.
including one of them — Viking Braggot, which retains a small unit in an industrial park — that specializes in Norse braggot, a fermented blend of
beers are produced in a sevenbarrel, t w i n-kettle s y stem: "We're not production-oriented," said Evert. "Instead, we're tied to the experience of the
beer and honey (or mead).
tessen assumed the lease on a restaurant at Eighth Avenue and Blair Boulevard. Long and spacious, the room accommodates more rustic communal tables,from which chef Corey Wisun and his crew deliver fresh and authentic Jewish deli cuisine in the New York style.
space." It didn't take long before Falling Sky expanded into the Whiteaker. In July, the Falling Sky Pour House and Delica-
I found myself with a plate of veal tongue with kale and fresh chanterellemushrooms on Israeli couscous, and it was amazing. "It's a N o rthwest take on an East Coast deli," said Cohen. Counting Sam Bond's, there are now a dozen separate craft breweries in greater Eugene,
Brewing connoisseurs who want to sample as many beers as possible will find a remarkable selection at the Bier Stein, on 16th Avenue at Willamette Street in downtown Eugene. At any given time, there are 30 international beers on tap, and nearly 1,000 — yes, you read
that correctly — available by the bottle. They come from all over North America and, indeed, from all over the world. But few of them have their roots in a n eighborhood as quirky as the Whiteaker. — Reporter: j anderson@ bendbulletin.com
Weekly Arts &
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Inside
MACd LZINE
Entertainment
TheBelletie
MARYLAND
A commodious Baltimore inn By Joe Yonan The Washington Post
I've certainly seen elements of hotel rooms I w anted to bring back to my apartment: towels, sheets — okay, an entirebathroom here and there. But it wasn't until I stayed at the Inn at the Black Olive in Baltimore that I t h ought, "I could actually live here." Part of it is the fact that I'm in house-hunting mode lately, and part of it is the sheer size of the spaces in this all-suite hotel. Mine was more than 1,000 square feet, which is almost 25 percent larger than my Washington apartment. I felt a twinge of guilt at taking up the whole thing on my own. Shouldn't I be inviting friends over for a party? The guilt continued when the friendlyclerk checked me in and showed me around. Here's the TV with hundreds of channels and free Netflix. Here's the little fridge with a complimentary bottle of water — and wine on the way. "We didn't put it in here because we didn't know what kind you preferred," he said. "Red or white?" Um, I'll take red, I said — and within minutes, an entire bottle of organic cabernet from Chile showed up. Mine for the drinking, at no charge. The tour continued, much of it aimed at pointing out the place's enviro-friendly bent: aerated concretefloors, radiant heat from a geothermal system, limestone walls that resist mold, renewable or recovered-wood furniture custom-made with low-VOC glues and paints. I started to glaze over at the fast-paced chatter and came back into focus midway through his spiel about the bed. Organic, ergonomic, blah, blah, blah, blah, but then he added, "Be careful: Don't lie on it until you're ready to go to sleep. It's the most comfortable bed ever." That got my attention, so I heeded his warning — and adjusted my evening plans to include an early turn-in.
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The Inn at the Black Olive in Baltimore boasts spacious suites with extra-comfy beds and also has a well-regarded restaurant on the premises.
If you go
quickly led to the cobblestone streets, bars, shops and art galleries of Fells Point. The inn has a well-regarded restaurant, the Black Olive, attached, along with a nifty little food market on the ground floor selling w i ne, t akeout and even some produce. But I had off-site dinner plans, after which I fell into bed. (The s leep-inducing c o mfort o f the CozyPure brand bed, by the way, was no exaggeration. That one has gone on my wish list.) So I didn't partake of any food until the morning, when I ordered room-service b reakfast that m i ght h a v e had the s peediest delivery — all of 10 minutes — I've ever experienced. The coffee was strong (and made from l o cally r oasted beans, by Zeke's), but the standout was the Greek (of course) yogurt, luscious and thick, and there were a whopping two cups of it, topped with decent strawberries and with more fruit — strawberries, pineapple and kiwi — on the side. That's not all: There were walnuts, toasted and still warm. And unfiltered honey, also warm and pourable. It was simple, elegant, well-thought-out and bounteous, easily enough for two people. It cost all of $9.
Inn at the Black Olive 803 South Caroline St., Baltimore 443-681-6316 or www.the
blackolive.com Twelve suites from $229 Before dinner, I wanted to get out and walk around the Fells Point neighborhood, but it was pretty hard to leave the room. With its clean lines and terra cotta, beige and green color scheme, it had a Southwest vibe about it, or perhaps I should make that a southwestern Greece vibe (since the family that owns the inn is Greek). All the art on the walls is by local artists — for sale, of course. A little rowing machine is tucked into one corner. And accessible from both the largebedroom and the living room is a balcony, big enough for a table and a couple of chairs. The long-range view from that balcony, of downtown Baltimore and the Inner Harbor, is better than the short-range, of the vacant lot surrounded by a chain-link fence across the street. But as the sun set, it was enough to finally pull me outdoors, on a stroll that
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C6
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(C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Opening lead — 4 9
CLINTON, Tenn. — The Museum of Appalachia is the best kind of museum. It hums with warmth and humor. Everything has a story. It's the right size. It allows wandering. And it surprises. A glass eye! A hog kettle! And little handmade toys that will touch your heart. With a collection amassed by one man, John Rice Irwin, it opened as a museum in 1969 and is now a n onp rofit a n d a f f i l iated w i t h the prestigious Smithsonian Institution. Here, h i storical c a b ins, barns, privy, loom house and blacksmith shop create the feel of a 19th-century farm and A p p a lachian v i l l a ge spread over 65 acres. There also is a "hall of fame" building, my favorite, stuffed with amazing things, each with a story behind it. E laine Irwi n M e yer, t h e founder's daughter and now president, says her favorite object is a crib made by her great-grandfather and used by 5 generations, including her own children. In fact, the museum was started, she says, not as a del iberate venture but as t h e outpouring o f h e r s c h oolteacher dad's "hobby gone crazy" — collecting Appalachian artifacts. (John Rice Irwin is still alive and living in a retirement facility) "Really, the buildings came as an afterthought," she says. "We had all this stuff piled in
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of Knoxville. It is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily, with extended hours
some summerweekends. Admission is $18, $15for military and ages 65 and
older, $10 ages13-18; $6 ages 5-12, ages 4and younger free Contact:www.museumof appalachia.org or 865-4947680
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This small, sturdy log cabin was originally in Possom Trot in nearby Fentress County. It was author Mark Twain's parents' cabin. He was born eight months after the family left Tennessee in 1835. Irwin tracked the cabin down after
Highway, Clinton, Tenn., is1 mile off 1-75, exit122, north
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Details The Museum ofAppalachia, 2819 Andersonville
lived in a nearby Union County village aptly called Poor Gol Cooper's glasseye Land. The museum is heaven Six-year-old Go l C o oper for basket lovers, with many, w as bending down t o t i e many examples of l o c ally a shoelace in 1910 when it made and American Indian snapped, flinging the pocket baskets. knife in his hand into his left eye. His dad had a glass eye Cherokee basket made that he wore the rest of This stunning, huge Cherohis life. The family donated kee Rivercane Basket is evocathe eye and pocket knife to the tive of western North Carolina museum after Gol died. in the Great Smoky Mountains. Made by either Rowena Loom Houseand Privy Bradley or Eva Wolfe (they're The privy is a t w o-holer, not sure), the cane was dyed fancy for the turn-of-the-cen- with blood root for the light tury times. The loom house, design and butternut root for center, came f ro m n e arby the dark. Raccoon Valley. Some homePeters Homestead House steads had a separate building for weaving and spinning, Musicians sit on the porch although m o s t mo u n t ain of this cabin that was moved women did their weaving at from Lutrell in Union County. home. It dates from about 1840 and was owned by Nathaniel PeLord's Prayer quilt ters, then daughter Cordelia. our garage growing up. It beDating from about the 1890s Behind it, left, is the Parkey came so much that it grew out and made by "Granny Irwin," Blacksmith Shop. The Parfrom the garage to the yard. this Victorian crazy quilt was keys were African-American He put a tarp on it, but my used by the family only at business owners. mom thought it was hideous Christmas. The quilt includes and said we were going to get d epictions of a n i mals a n d Hog kettle "Ezra George's Hog Scaldrid of it. Then he started col- familiar items like a f i ddle, lecting cabins to get his stuff dog, chickens, butterflies. The ing Kettle," the sign says. The out of the garage and have Lord's Prayer is embroidered huge kettle has no date on it, someplace to store it." in the center. and later generations didn't After the museum opened, know what their earlier relait became clear that because Egg basket tives had used it for, but they of John Irwin's little hobby, This beautiful egg basket used it to scald hogs outside precious artifacts and buildwas woven by " old b asket their home in the Graveston ings evocative o f f l e eting, m aker Maston K i ng," w h o Community near Knoxville.
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LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD
hard and joyful mountain life had been saved from the trash can or bulldozer. "People love it once they get there and see what we are trying to do," Meyer says. "No matter where they come from, they appreciate their ancestors more, the way they persevered." Here are my favorite parts:
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CROSSW ORD SOLUTION IS ON C3
541-382-1S11 • www.bendbulletin.com
uein
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C7
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
Dom rama mar s Kenne assassination TV SPOTLIGHT
Ginnifer Goodwin stars as first lady Jacqueline Kennedy in the docudrama of National Geographic Channel's "Killing Kennedy." The show, which airs tonight, was filmed in Richmond, Va.
By Kate O'Hare © Zap2it
On Nov. 22, America and the world mark the 50th anniversary of one of the most momentous events of the 20th century, the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. As it did last year with "Killing Lincoln," National Geographic Channel has turned to another best-seller by Fox News' Bill O'Reilly and historian Martin Dugard to dramatize the occasion. P remiering t o n ight, t h e docudrama version of "Killing Kennedy" follows the twin trajectories of JFK and Lee Harvey Oswald until they meet on that fateful day in Dallas' Dealey Plaza. Directed by Nelson McCormick from a script by Kelly Masterson, "Killing Kennedy" stars Rob Lowe as JFK, Ginnifer Goodwin asfirst lady Jacqueline Kennedy, Will Rothhaar as Lee Harvey Oswald, Michelle Trachtenberg as Marina Oswald, Jack Noseworthy as Bobby Kennedy, Casey Siemaszko as J a c k R u b y, Francis Guinan as Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard Flood as Kennedy insider Kenneth O'Donnell. On this bright mid- June day in Richmond, Va., a stretch of closed-off street just outside the governor's mansion has become Dealey Plaza. There are no crowds, since this is a tight shot through a lens
Kent Eanea National Geographic Channel
with cross hairs on it, simulating Oswald's point of view from the Texas School Book Depository. Riding in a replica of the c onvertible used t hat d a y , Lowe and Goodwin re-enact the pivotal moment, as captured by chance on the famous footage from bystander Abraham Zapruder. Mimicking the the first couple's movements exactly, Lowe reacts to the impact of the assassin's bullets, while G oodwin dressed in Jackie's pink Chanel suit — launches herself over the car's trunk lid in pur-
suit of something precious. S itting afterward i n t h e m akeup trailer, still i n h e r suit, as the carefully coiffed brown wig is removed, Goodwin recalls reading that while Jackie could not remember reaching over the back of the car, she wound up in possession of part of her husband's brain matter. "I don't think t h ere was any thought," says Goodwin. "I think it was pure instinct, p ure survival. It's h ard t o imagine anybody surviving a moment like that." For Rothhaar, the challenge
have. Especially young people need to know what was lost." Because of the tight shooting schedule, Lowe arrived on set to find he'd been thrown in at the deep end. "My first day," says Lowe,
Marital infideli is unfit topic atevent Dear Abby: My b r o ther-in-law cheated on my sister two years ago. He was caught by the private eye his lover's husband had hired. My sister took him back and has been trying to be "the good wife," but he has neverreally seemed tobe sorry or a changed man.
My problem i s I can't stand h i m. DEAR When we get togethABBY er as a family, I know I'm supposed to be civil and respectful, but I ask myself, "Why?" I love my sister and the children. The holidays are coming. I'd like to ask him if he's faithful now, but if I did, I know he'd only lie. Can you offer mesome advice? — Holdinga Grudge in St. Cloud, Minn. Dear Holding a Grudge:Yes. For the sake of your sister and the children, please resist the urge to make things more difficult by confronting your brother-in-law. Asking him about his fidelity status would embarrass him and possibly terminate their participation in any visit. Because your sister is trying to make her marriage work in spite of the hurt her husband has caused, the kindest thing you could do for her and the children would be to make
the reconciliation as easy as possible. Tempting as it may be, please don't stir the pot. Dear Abby:I'm a 10-year-old girl whose family is divided. My dad brought me up, and I love him. However, my aunt hates him. I don't really know why. Dad tells me she helped my mom argue with him. My aunt is nice to me. T hey rarely talk to each other anymore. I don't know which side to take. I don't want to take sides and I don't plan to. My mother died a few years back and my dad took custody. I want to stay neutral, but I don't know who to trust. — In the Middle in Missouri Dear In the Middle: Not knowing your father or your aunt, I can't decide this for you. I will point out, however, that when a couple is having a disagreement, it rarely helps if other family members get involved. If your aunt makes you feel torn between her andyour dad, then what she's doing is wrong. It's OK to love both of them. While I agree that you should remain neutral, your father is the person who is raisingyou, and he deserves your love and loyalty unless he proves he cannot be trusted. Dear Abby:My beautiful wife and
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, NOV. 10, 2013:This yearyou become more concerned with the quality of your communicati onand how yousaywhatyou feel. You will discover thatyou eliminate many misunderstandings because of your attentive listening Stars showthe kind and speaking skills. of day you'll have If you are single, ** * * * D ynamic you could have a ** * * P ositive wo nderful time ** * A verage dat i ng. Afriend ** So-so might become * Difficult more. If you are attached, the two of you share your thoughts with each other even more than in the past. You also are able to convey your feelings in a waythat your partner can understand. Closeness evolves as a result. PISCES is asemotional as you are. ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * You might have plans with friends, butasequenceofm ishaps could occur rightaround you. Do not get uptight, but understand that some plans might need to be adjusted. If someone says something a bit tasteless, just let it go. Tonight: Vanish. You need a timeout.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * How you see a situation right now could change later. You might be quite uptightand wondering what is going on. Your good intentions don'tseem to be conveyed to others in a clear manner. Visit with an older relative. Tonight: Relax with friends.
Iwere a team for many years. She was the brains and I was the brawn. She took care of business matters, taxes and household duties. I did the repairs, vehicle upkeep and took care of the lawn and our garden. She was a computer whiz, while I remained computer illiterate. As we advanced in age, I made preparations for my demise. I had everything perfectly planned. Then the unexpectedhappened. My wife died suddenly. I was devastated. Then I realized I was also totally lost. She had gone completely paperless. I had no knowledge of anything. Some things were filed in the computer and others in the filing cabinet. I didn't know her email address, any account numbers and no passwords. All business transactions stopped completely, and my credit rating plummeted. Pleaseremind your readers that the word "assume" can be a real meanie. — Somewhere in Texas Dear Somewhere:What a sobering letter. Usually the surviving spouse is the wife who was left in the dark. I'm glad you wrote, and I hope your letter will be a wake-up call to couples about sharing information. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com
or PO. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
relax once you're out of your immediate environment. Laugh at a mishap, and try to clear it up ASAP.Tonight: Head home. Get a head start on tomorrow.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ** * * A partner or loved one makes it quite clear that he or shewants you close. Spend the day with this person. Give in to the lighthearted, caring person within. Make plans later to join friends at a new spot or to try something new. Tonight: Try out a new restaurant.
LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * You will be far more sunny and upbeat if you relax and take your time. A child or loved one might want more ofyour time. Let this person know that you will join him or her, but on your time. Tonight: Dinner with a loved one at afavorite place.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You could be in a position where you have a lot to do but probably want to be leftalone. Ifyou could sneak in anap, you would be a lot more mellow. Note the changes around you, andassess how little control you haveover these issues. Tonight: Make time for people.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22)
** * * You are so childlike at the moment that a loved onecan't seem to get enough of you. The two of you will act as if you're two kids playing together in a GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * Take off and visit a friend out of sandbox. When you land, you will feel so town, or check out the changing fall foliage. much better for having had this adventure. You need achange of scenery, and you'll Tonight: Chill out at a favorite haunt.
"I did the death of (infant son) Patrick; I did the Cuban Missile Crisis; I was preparing to address the nation, getting my shots; I did the Bay of Pigs, with Jackie; then I did discussing whether there was enough room in the bunker for her and the children if there was a (nuclear) strike, and what we would do as a family. "Then I did scenes. With Jack and the girls that he fancied in the White House and then swimming in the pool with them, all in one day. The challenge — not the problem, the challenge — with doing that is to find the humanity and the small, realistic, daily details of a scene that's so iconic. All those scenes are iconic moments in his life. "We don't do scenes where he's having a peanut butter and jelly sandwich at 2 a.m. in the White House mess. We don't get to do those on this show." But in those rare intimate scenes with Jackie and the children, Lowe gets behind the image and the office to give a glimpse of the man. "Icons a r e un p l ayable," says Lowe. "You're lucky if you canplay an actual human being. So, to me, I was much more interested in how did he love Jackie, how did he feel about the children, what were his fears and strengths, what were the effects of his childhood? All that stuff was very interesting to me."
was finding the man inside the monster. "A lot of p eople want to make him a two-dimensional villain," he says, relaxing in the shade of a tree. "I want to make him three-dimensional, f ind the t h ings that m a k e you like him, to make him human. " He ha d a screwed-up childhood. His father died two months before he was born, and his mother was crazy as hell." Earlier in th e day, Lowe takes a break after shooting a family scene in the walled garden of the mansion's guest house and settles on a couch to discuss his affection for JFK, a hero of his even though the president died months before Lowe was born. "I can't remember which birthday," he says, "maybe it was my 40th, but my wife got me my favorite Jacques Lowe — no relation — photograph of JFK. It sits in my office, and I see it every day while I work." Lowe has another responsibility since he's friendly with members of t h e K e n nedy family, "I gave them a call. I know some of them would rather not go through this, but it's a conversation the nation should
** * You might need adayat home just to do your own thing. It is OK totake alazy day. You normally push so hard that it is hard to stop you. Getting some rest and relaxation could be more important than you realize. Tonight: Act like you havea new lease on life.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21j ** * * * Y ou could be taken aback by everything you hear. Youalso might have some difficulty communicating more of whatyouwantand needfrom someone. Lighten up. You probably did communicate well, but perhaps your timing was off. Tonight: Snuggle in.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times aresubject to changeafter press time. t
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 12 YEARS A SLAVEiR) Noon, 3:15, 6:20, 9:25 • ABOUTTIMEiR) 11:20 a.m., 3:10, 6:15, 9:10 • ALL IS LOST (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 4:15, 7, 9:40 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 2:20, 6:35, 9:50 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)11:35 a.m., 1:55, 4:20, 6:55 • THE COUNSELOR (R)4:35, 9:55 • ENDER'SGAMElPG-13j 1:35, 4:25, 7:20, 10:05 • EN0ER'S GAME IMAX lPG-13) 11 a.m., 1:45 • ENOUGH SAID iPG-13) 9:35 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 11:10a.m., 1:40, 4:40, 7, 9:20 • FREE BIRDS 3-0 (PG) 11:25 a.m., 2:10, 4:50, 7:10 • GRAVITYiPG- I3) 12:05 • GRAviTy 3-0iPG-13) 2:35, 5, 7:45, 9:20, 10:10 • JACKASSPRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 12:15, 2:50, 5:10, 7:35, 9:55 • LAST VEGAS iPG-13) 11:50 a.m., 1:15, 3, 6:30, 7:15, 9:05 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD(PG-13j 11:15 a.m., 2, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD3-0 (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:45, 2:30, 3:45, 5:15, 6:45, 8, 9:45 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD IMAX3-0 (PG-13)4:30,7:15, 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I
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TV TODAY 12 p.m. on ESPN,"NASCAR Racing" —As NASCAR's 2013 Chase for the Sprint Cup gets down to its penultimate race, the urgency to score points ramps up considerably, which should be in evidence today at Phoenix International Raceway in the AdvoCare500.Jimmie Johnson is especially dangerous on the 1-mile D-oval, as he has four career victories and an average finish of 6.45 here, best among active Cup drivers. Kevin Harvick won this race in 2012. Sp.m. onNGC, Movie: "Killing Kennedy" —Based on a book by Fox News pundit Bill O'Reilly and historian Martin Dugard, this new docudrama tells the stories of President John F. Kennedy and his assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, leading up to that day 50 years ago this month when Kennedy was gunned down in Dallas.Rob Lowe plays the president, with Ginnifer Goodwin as his wife, Jacqueline, and Will Rothhaar as Oswald. 5:20 p.m. on A f3, "NFL Football" —A battle of NFC division leaders is on tap tonight at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome in New Orleans, where Drew Brees and the Saints face a possible playoff foe in Tony Romo andthe Dallas Cowboys. With "Bountygate" behind them, the Saints are once again the best in the South, thanks in large part to the play of Brees and one oftheNFL' s bestpassdefenses. Romo, too, is one of the league's top passers, and the Dallas run defense isn't too shabby, either. 8 p.m. on Gt , "The Simpsons" —Homer made a to-do list when he was only10 years old. Now Marge wants him to start doing some of those things. Reminding him that "you only liveonce,"she encourageshim to invite an old pen pal for a visit. A new honor code is in place at Springfield Elementary, thanks to Lisa, in the new episode "YOLO." Jon Lovitz provides a guest voice. Sp.m. onHALL, Movie: "A Very Merry Mix-Up" —Alicia Witt ("Friday Night Lights") stars in this new holiday romance as a bride-to-be who's planning to meet her fiance's lScott Gibson) family over Christmas. She gets there first and is met at the airport by his brother — or so she thinks. It turns out she's got the wrong family, but she likes this one better, especially the son lMarkWiebe).Susan Hoganand Richard Fitzpatrick also star. ©zap2it
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CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * You might want to treat someone to a good time. You might think this idea works, but you need to count your change and know where your wallet is. You easily could make amistake. Be smart, and don't take any risks, especially with money. Tonight: Catch up on friend's a news.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** * * * T he Moon in your sign energizes you and puts you in a position where few will say "no" to you. If you do not have plans, makesure you are with the person you most enjoy and that you're doingwhatyou most enjoy.Maketheday memorable. Tonight: Go alittle wild.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * T aking a day off might suityou fine. You go out of your way for so many people, and you rarely take time for yourself. You might decide to invite a loved onealong on your lazy day. Your energy will start to build by late afternoon. Tonight: Out and about. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 1: I5, 4, 6:45 • EN0ER'S GAME iPG-13)2:05,4:35,7:10 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 2:35, 4:40, 6:50 • FREE BIR0S3-0(PG) Noon • JACKASS PRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(Rj 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:40 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)I2:05 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD 3-0(PG-I3)2,4:30,7 Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • FREE BIRDS (Upstairs — PG) 1:10, 3:40, 5:30, 7:20 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD(PG- I3) 1, 4, 7:15 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.
• Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's
0 G O! Magazine
CAMILM: Comrllte rs ct swerat 2 Vtanr old gnl looking For thra purr-fsct home! Cnmrllta con bta shV ot First. Once Shra WarmS up, She rS happV tO snuggle up closra. Cctmrllra doss snjoV chin rubs nnd ptats. Cnmrllta wns o s t r n V t ha t s o meonra brought in. If Vou think Vou hovs thta purr-fra«t fortavsr homs tor this grent girl, thran come bV thra shralter ond odopt hsr todoV!
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C8 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
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Scoreboard, D2
NHL, D4
NBA, D3
College football, D5 College basketball, D5
Golf, D3 Prep sports, D4 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/sports
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
PREP GIRLS SOCCER: CLASS 5A STATE PLAYOFFS
rm win, r
No. 1 Aladama routs No. 10 LSU Crimson Tide pull away late to stay unbeaten, DS
MOTOR SPORTS
Kenseth still in mix for title AVONDALE, Ariz.
— Roughly two months into the season, Mark
Martin was having a conversation with Matt Kenseth about the fast start to Kenseth's year.
Kenseth had grabbed two wins in his first eight races with Joe
Gibbs Racing, andMartin believed his former teammate could have le-
gitimately won all eight ofthe events. "I expected him to
win races and beawesome and be Matt Kenseth, but the start he had,
he could havewonthem all. Bar none. That was
staggering," Martin recalled. "And I remember last year when hewas getting ready to leave, he was scared to death.
PREP WATER POLO: 5A STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS
mi
• Summit defeats Putnam 4-0; set to faceBendHigh
View boys top Summit for state title
By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
It was not that Summit was playing poorly. The Storm led 1-0 at the half, but it sure felt like a much larger advantage considering they had taken 12 shots and put seven of them Inside on goal. • Bend High A s J a mi e B r o c k girls move on pointed out, her squad's to Class 5A s l i mlead was simply a state semis, matter of not adjusting, as do 5A n ot "m a n ipulating the Summitand s y s tem," according to 4A Sisters the ninth-year Summit b oys, D4 coac h . Within the first four minutes of the second half, the Storm adjusted to a P u tnam defense that stacked its players near the box to prevent Summit from breaking free. With a goal by Christina Edwards three minutes into the half and a score by Hadlie Plummer a minute later, the Storm put away the visiting Kingsmen on Saturday, rolling to a 4-0 girls soccer victory to advance to the semifinals of the Class
Mountain
Joe Kline Irhe Bulletin
Summit's Christina Edwards (9) heads a ball on a corner kick over Putnam's Tatiana Swenson (4) during the second half on Saturday at Summit High School in Bend. Edwards' header scored the second goal of the game for Summit. 5A state playoffs and a date with crosstown rival Bend High. "They packed them all in the middle," Brock said. "They were all sitting in the
center. So that first half, we just kept driving it into the middle and couldn't get anything in. See Storm /D5
Bulletin staff report CORVALLIS — Central Oregon was well-represented at the Oregon High School Water Polo 5A boys and girls state championships on Saturday. And Central Oregon represented well at Osborn Aquatic Center. In a battle of 5A North division and crosstown rivals, Mountain View broke open a 5-5 halftime score thanks to four goals by Quinn Corrigan en route to a 15-6 victory over Summit, securing for the Cougars their first boys state title in the program's eight-year existence. It marked the first time in the tournament's history that a team from Central Oregon — let alone two — advanced to the boys championship. See Water polo/D4
I liked that about him. I liked the fact that he was
scared.
PREP VOLLEYBALL: CLASS 4A STATE FINAL
"So I like what I see right now. He's living a
dream and hitting his full potential, and you
don't always get anopportunity to hit your full potential." It truly is a dream
year for Kenseth, who has won acareer-best seven races after jumping to JGRfollowing 16 years driving for Jack
• Crook CountydominatesCascadeto
Roush.
Now, 10 years after
extend its state championship run to eight
winning the only Cup
championship of his career, Kenseth is in the thick of another title
By Beau Eastes
race. Hegoes into the penultimate race of the
The Bulletin
Chase for the Sprint Cup
championship today at Phoenix International Raceway trailing Jim-
mie Johnson byseven points in the standings. "It would have been hard to believe some-
body if they said we would have hadseven wins and donesome of the things that we did this year in our first
year together, because throughout my whole
career I've never been able to do that," Kenseth admitted. — The Associated Press
"4
SOCCER
Timders set for conference final
EUGENE — Pressure? What pressure? Dominant in just about every aspect of the match, Crook County rolled past Cascade in three games Saturday night to win its eighth straight — yes, eighth straight — high school volleyball state championship. The No. 2-seeded Cowgirls never let the top-seeded Cougars in the match, winning the Class 4A final at Lane Community College 25-15, 25-17, 25-12. Hannah Troutman recorded 17 kills and 15 digs (both match highs), Karlee Hollis added 12 kills, and Abby Smith dished out 18 assists as Crook County routed Cascade of Turner in a match that was just 61 minutes old when Jennifer Roth ended it with a service ace. "We served them out of the building," Cowgirl senior mid-
Inside • Sisters takes third, while Ridgeview places fourth in Class 4A; Culver third in 2A; Bend fifth in 5A, D4
dle Kathryn Kaonis said. "At the beginning of the year, yeah, it felt like there was a lot of pressure (to win state again)," Kaonis added. "But we turned that nervousness into excitement and tonight played our best game." Crook County posted nine aces in the 4A final against just five service errors. The Cougars, who were making their first state final appearance in school history, struggled all evening to get into their offense, ending the match with just 25 kills compared with the Cow-
girls' 43.
See Crook County/D4
PORTLAND — The Portland Timbers have
beaten everyteam in Major LeagueSoccer's Western Conference this season except one: Real Salt Lake. The two teams will meet today in the first of the two-leg goal-ag-
if'. %a
gregate conference final in Salt Lake City. The series, which will be interrupted by interna-
tional play, concludes on Nov. 24at Portland's Jeld-Wen Field.
"The four gamesthat
we played with them
this season? That goes out the window," said Timbers midfielder Will
Johnson. The Timbers played to draws against Real Salt Lake in both of their
Photos hy Eugene Johnson / For The Bulletin
At left, Crook County's Hannah Troutman goes up for a kill during the first game of Saturday night's Class 4A state championship match at Lane Community College in Eugene. At right, the Cowgirls celebrate after scoring against Cascade in the opening game of the match.
Portland meetings this season. At Rio Tinto Stadium in Salt Lake, RSL won both matches, including a victory in the
Dolphins' Inmgnito, prizedfor aggression, struggled to stayin bounds
U.S. OpenCupsemifinals.
By Bill Pennington
Their last meeting
was a defensive 0-0 draw at Jeld-Wen on Oct.19. The Timbers did not give up a shot
on goal. —TheAssociated Press
New York Times News Service
He was a timid Little Leaguer teased by opponents and belittled by his own teammates. He was mocked for being pudgy and gentler than the other boys, even though he was bigger than most of them. Then, urged by his father, the Little
NFL Leaguer fought back, pummeling one of his tormentors, blackening both of his eyes. The chunky boy grew up to become a menacing 320-pound National Football League lineman who was largely
The news hardly came as a shock to most of those who had crossed paths with Incognito since his college years. being a big league bully. Richie Incognito wa s s uspended A snarling, tattooed, 6-foot-3 dynamo, by the Miami Dolphins, his third NFL Incognito dominated opponents even team in five years, amid allegations that as he stretched the boundaries of civil he bullied Jonathan Martin, his team- conduct during games and in everyday mate on the offensive line who left the life. team last week and has not returned. See Incognito /D5 unknown outside football circles — until last week, when he was accused of
D2 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
COREBOARD ON DECK Tuesday Boys soccer: 5A statesemifinals: Wilsonville at Summit,5:30p.m.; 4Astatesemifinals: Philomath at Sisters TBD Girls soccer: 5Astatesemifinas: BendatSummit, 3 p.m. Friday Football: 4Astatequarterfinals: Henleyat Ridgeview, TBD
PREP SPORTS Football Class 4A First Round Saturday's Result Philomath49,Ontano27 Class SA First Round Saturday's Results Nyssa 48, llinois Valley10 Vale 46, Clatskanie0 Class 2A First Round Saturday's Results Knappa 42,Weston-McEwen/Griswoid 7 GrantUnion49, Nestucca20 Heppner48, Reedsport Charter 8 Monroe25,LostRiver14 Regis61,Stanfield 0 Class1A First Round Saturday's Results Adrian 62,Elkton20 Camas Valley 64, Crane34 Imbler59,Perrydale14 Triad 38,PowderValey 34 Dufur 70,Monument/Dayville14
Volleyball Class 6A Af Liberty High School, HiUsboro Friday's Results Ouarterfinals CentralCatholicdet. Sheldon,25-20,25-15,25-16 Jesuit def.Sprague,25-16, 25-19,19-25, 25-23 Rosebur g det.WestLinn,22-25,25-15,25-20,2518 Lakeridge def. Clackamas,22-25, 25-18, 25-16, 25-20 Semifinals Central Catholic def. Jesuit, 23-25, 25-13, 25-18, 23-25, 15-13
Lakeridgedef. Roseburg,25-21, 24-26, 25-11, 2522 Saturday's Results Consolation Sheldondet.Sprague,25-23, 25-9, 26-28, 20-25, 15-12 Clackamas def. WestLinn,20-25,25-14,21-25,2522, 15-11 Fourth/Sixth Place Clack amasdef.Sheldon,25-15,25-21,25-22 Third/Fifth Place Jesuit def.Roseburg,25-27,25-15,25-11,25-17 Championship Lakeridgedef.Central Catholic, 31-29,23-25,25-12,
Condon/Wheeledet. r CountryChristian, 25-18, 2511,25-16 Imb erdef.Dufur,25-19,25-12, 25-15 Saturday's Results Consolation Lowell def. PortlandLutheran,28-26, 18-25, 13-25, 25-18,15-11 St. Pauldef.TrinityLutheran,25-19,25-16,25-17 Fourth/Sixth Place St. Pauldef. Lowell, 25-14,25-22, 25-20 Third/Fifth Place Dufur def. CountryChristian, 25-21, 19-25, 25-18, 25-22 Championship Imbler def. Condon/Whe eler, 25-21, 24-26, 25-22, 25-21
Girls Soccer Class 6A Quarlerfinals Saturday's Results Westview3, West Salem2(OT) Sunset3,Grant0 Tualatin1, Sheldon 0 Jesuit 2,Lincoln0 Semifinals Tuesday'sGames WestviewatSunset Tualatin atJesuit Class BA Quarlerfinals Saturday's Results Summit 4,Putnam0 Bend 2,Wilamette1 Wilsonville 4,CrescentValley1 Wilson 3,WestAbany1 Semifinals Tuesday'sGames Bend atSummit Wilson at Wilsonvile Class 4A Quarlerfinals Friday's Result La Sage 2, Philomath1 Saturday's Results La Grande 2, Brookings Harbor0 NorthBend2, KlamathUnion1(PK1-0) Scappoose 2,Gladstone1 Semifinals Tuesday'sGames NorthBendatLaGrande La Sage atScappoose Class SA/2A/1A Quarterfinals Saturday's Results OregonEpiscopal3, Corbett0 St. Mary'sMedtord3, Cresweg0 Catlin Gabel1,Western Mennonite 0 ValleyCatholic 1,Dayton0 Semifinals Tuesday'sGames St. Mary'sMedtord atOregonEpiscopal Catlin Cabel at Valley Catholic
Boys Soccer
Class 6A Quarterfinals 25-22 Saturday's Results CentralCatholic 2,Beaverton 0 Class 6A M cKay 2, So uth Eugene1(PK5-4) Af Liberty High School, HiUsboro WestLinn1,Century0 Friday's Results Jesuit1, Grant 0 Quarterfinals Semifinals WestAlbanydef.Corvallis, 25-17, 25-8, 25-13 Tuesday'sGames Benddef.Wilsonville, 25-21,19-25,25-22, 25-21 Willamette det. St. Helens, 25-23, 22-25, 25-19, McKayatCentral Catholic WestLinnat Jesuit 25-21 Churchill def. Lebanon,21-25, 25-17, 25-17,21-25, 15-7
Semifinals
WestAlbanydef.Bend,25-15, 25-14,23-25,25-13 Willamettedet. Churchill, 25-15, 25-21,31-33, 2517 Saturday's Results
Class BA Quarterfinals Friday's Result HoodRiverValley 4,Cleveland0 Saturday's Results Woodburn5,Putnam1 Wilsonville 3,Silverton0
Consolation Summit1, Marist0 Corvallis def. Wilsonville, 25-10, 2025, 25-14, Semifinals 25-18 Tuesday'sGames Lebanon def. St.Helens,25-17,22-25,25-22,25-19 HoodRiverValley atWoodbum Fourth/Sixth Place Wilsonville atSummit Lebanon def. Corvallis,25-18,21-25,25-16 25-20 Third/Fifth Place Class 4A Churchill def. Bend, 22-25, 25-21, 25-15, 23-25, Guarlerfinals 18-16 Saturday' s Results Championship NorthBend4,CotageGrove1 WestAlbanydef.Wiilamette, 25-21,25-11,25-15 Henley2,LaSalle 0 Philomath1,Stayton0 Class 4A Sisters 4,McLoughlin 3 (PK5-4) At Lane CommunityCollege, Eugene Semifinals Friday's Results Tuesday'sGames Quarterfinals NorthBendatHenley Cascade def. Philomath,23-25,25-16, 25-27,25-17 Philomath atSisters Sistersdef. Banks,25-11, 25-20,21-25,25-23 HiddenValleydef. LaGrande,26-24, 23-25, 25-17, Class SA/2A/1A 17-25,15-11 Quarlerfinals Crook Countydef. Ridgeview, 19-25,25-16, 26-24, Friday's Result 25-6 Portland Adventist 3, Canyonville Christian1 Semifinals Saturday's Results Cascade def. Sisters, 25-20,25-22 25-8 Crook Countydet. HiddenValley, 24-26, 25-9, 2519,25-16
Saturday's Results
Consolation Banksdet. Philomath,25-19,25-13,25-21 Ridge view def.LaGrande,27-25,25-18,23-25,2519
Fourth/Sixth Place Ridgeview def.Banks,29-27, 21-25,25-20,25-12 Third/Fifth Place Sisters def. Hidden Valley, 25-9, 25-17, 20-25, 2325, 15-7
Championship CrookCountydef Cascade,25-15, 25 17, 2512 Class SA At LaneCommunity College, Eugene Friday's Results Quarterfinals
Cresweldef. l Vale, 25-18, 25-18,25-12 ValeyCathoic def.Nyssa,25-22,25-22,16-25, 25-18 OregonEpiscopaldef. SalemAcademy, 19-25,25-12, 25-22,25-11 Santiam Christiandef Corbett,25-15,25-14,25-14
Semifinals Va leyCatholic def. Creswell, 25-19,25-18, 13-25, 25-21 Santiam Christian def. OregonEpiscopal, 25-15,2514,25-12
Saturday'sResults Consolation
Va edef. Nyssa,25-20, 25-10,21-25,25-11 Corbet tdef.Salem Academy,25-8,25-8,25-23 Fourth/Sixth Place Corbettdet.Vale, 1625, 25-20, 17 25,25-23, 15-13 Third/Fifth Place Creswell def. Oregon Episcopal, 25-15,25-23,1825,26-24 Championship Santiam Christian def.Valley Catholic,25-10, 25-19, 25-10
Class 2A At Ridgeview HighSchool, Redmond Friday's Results Quarterfinals Weston-McEwen def. Kennedy, 25-16, 25-11,25-17 ReedsportCharterdef.Delphian, 26-24,25-21,25-20 Days Creekdef. PortlandChristian, 25-10, 25-11, 25-14 Culverdef.Oakridge,25-14,25-15,25-7 Semifinals ReedsportCharter def. Weston-McEwen, 17-25, 2521, 25-17,17-25, 15-13 DaysCreekdet Culver,25 22,25-10, 25-16
Saturday's Results Consolation
Kennedy def. Delphian,20-25, 25-19,25-10, 15-9 Portland Christiandef. Oakridge, 25-23,23-25,12-25, 25-16,15-9 Fourth/Sixth Place Kennedydef. Portland Christian,20-25, 22-25, 2518, 25-23, 15-1 3 Third/Fifth Place Culver def.Weston-McEwen, 17-25, 25-21, 25-17, 17-25,15-13
Championship Days Creekdef. Reedsport Charter,25-20, 25-16, 25-18 Class1A At RidgeviewHigh School, Redmond Friday's Results Quarterfinals CountryChristiandet. Lowell, 25-19,23-25,25-20,
25-19 Condon/Wheeledet. r PortlandLutheran,25-22, 2518,25-14 Imblerdef. St.Paul,25-22,28 26,25-23 Dufur def. Trinity Lutheran,23-25, 25-11, 25-12, 25-15 Semifinals
St Mary'sMedford1,Riverdale0 OregonEpiscopal4, PortlandChristian0 Riverside4, Banchet Catholic1 Semifinals Tuesday'sGames St. Mary'sMedfordat PortlandAdventist OregonEpiscopalat Riverside
Girls Water Polo Oregon HighSchool Water Polo 6A State Tournament At OsbornAquatic Center in CorvaUis Friday's Results Consolation Sunset14,Lakeridge8 Newberg13,Tigard 7 Semifinals Tualatin17,Reynolds3 Linco n10,Barlow6 Saturday's Results Fifth/Sixth Place Newberg13,Sunset2 Third/Fourth Place Reynolds15, Barlow12 Championship Tualatin 7,Lincoln 5 Oregon HighSchool Water Polo BA State Tournament At OsbornAquatic Center in CorvaUis Friday's Results Semifinals Summit13,Ashland6 WestAlbany8, Parkrose6 Saturday's Results Third/Fourth Place Ash and8,Parkrose7 Championship WestAlbany12,Summit 3
Boys Water Polo Oregon HighSchool Water Polo 6A State Tournament At OsbornAquatic Center in CorvaUis Friday's Results
Consolation
Sunset8,Lincoln 5 Tualatin20,DavidDouglas14 Semifinals Newberg17,SouthEugene4 Southridge20,LakeOswego11
Saturday'sResults
Fifth/Sixth Place Tualatin 8,Sunset6 Third/Fourth Place SouthEugene10,Lake Oswego7 Championship Southridge11,Newberg10 Oregon HighSchool Water Polo BA State Tournament At OsbornAquatic Center in CorvaUis Friday's Results Semifinals MountainView12, Ashland7 Summit8,WestAlbany7(2 OT) Saturday's Results Third/Fourth Place Ashland13,West Albany 10 Championship MountainView15, Summit 6
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AR TimesPOT AMERICANCONFERENCE
East L T Pc f PF PA NewEngland 2 0 .7 7 8 234 175 N.Y.Jets 4 0 .5 5 6 169 231 Miami 4 0 .5 0 0 174 187 Buffalo 6 0 .3 3 3 189 236 South W L T Pc f PF PA Indianapolis 6 2 0 .7 5 0 214 155 Tennessee 4 4 0 .5 0 0 173 167 Houston 2 6 0 .2 5 0 146 221 Jacksonville 0 8 0 .0 0 0 86 264 North W L T Pc f PF PA Cincinnati 6 3 0 .6 6 7 217 166 Cleveand 4 5 0 .4 4 4 172 197 Baltimore 3 5 0 .3 7 5 168 172 Pittsburgh 2 6 0 .2 5 0 156 208 West W L T Pc t PF PA Kansas City 9 0 0 1 . 000215 111 Denver 7 1 0 .8 7 5 343 218 SanDiego 4 4 0 .5 0 0 192 174 Oakland 3 5 0 .37 5 146 199 NATIONALCONFERENCE W 7 5 4 3
Dallas
Philadelphia Washington N.Y.Giants
NewOrleans Carolina Atlanta
TampaBay Detroit
Chicago GreenBay Minnesota Seattle SanFrancisco Arizona St. Louis
East L T 4 0 5 0 6 0 6 0 South W L T 6 2 0 5 3 0 W 5 4 3 2
P c t PF PA .5 5 6 257 209 .4 4 4 225 231 .3 3 3 230 287 .2 5 0 141 223
2 0
P c t PF PA .7 5 0 216 146 .6 2 5 204 106 .2 5 0 176 218 .0 0 0 124 190
6 8
0 0
North W L T P c t PF PA 5 3 0 .6 2 5 217 197 5 3 0 .6 2 5 240 226 5 2
W 8 6 4 3
3 7
0 0
West L 1 2 4 6
T 0 0 0 0
.6 2 5 232 185 .2 2 2 220 279
Pc t .8 8 9 .7 5 0 .5 0 0
PF PA 232 149 218 145 160 174 .3 3 3 186 226
Thursday'sGame Minnesota 34, Washington 27 Today'sGames Detroit atChicago,10a.m. Philadelphiaat GreenBay,10 a.m. Jacksonville atTennessee,10a.m Cincinnati atBaltimore,10a m. St. LouisatIndianapolis, 10a.m. Seattle atAtlanta, 10a.m. Oakland atN.Y.Giants,10a.m. Buffalo atPittsburgh,10a.m. CarolinaatSanFrancisco, 1:05p.m.
Denverat SanDiego,1:25 pm. HoustonatArizona, I:25 p.m. Dallas atNewOrleans, 5:30p.m. Open:Cleveland,KansasCity, N.Y.Jets, NewEngland Monday'sGame Miami atTampaBay,5 40p.m.
College Saturday's Scores
EAST Colgate28, Lafayette24 Dartmouth 34, Cornell 6 Fordham 23,Bucknell 21 Harvard 34, Columbia0 Lehigh34,HolyCross20 Maine33,Albany(NY)27 Monmouth (NJ)23 Wagner 6 Navy42, Hawaii 28 NewHampshire 33,JamesMadison17 Pittsburgh28, NotreDame21 Princeton38, Penn26 Richmond 39, StonyBrook31 RobertMorris54,CCSU21 Sacred Heart10, Duquesne0 St. Francis(Pa.)23, Bryant20 Texas 47, West Virginia 40, OT Villanova45,RhodeIsland0 W. Kentucky 21,Army17 William 8Mary24, Delaware10 Yale24,Brown17 SOUTH Alabama 38, LSU17 Arkansas St.42, Louisiana-Monroe14 Aubum55, Tennessee23 CharlestonSouthem31, Coastal Carolina26 Chattanooga 20,Woford10 Duke38, NCState20 E. Illinois37,MurraySt.17 EastCarolina58, Tulsa 24 FloridaSt. 59,WakeForest3 Furman 35,Samford17 Georgia 45, AppalachianSt.6 Georgia Southern35,W.Carolina19 Hampton 29, NCCentral 21 Howard 42,SavannahSt.14 JacksonSt.26, AlabamaA8M20 JacksonvilleSt.68, E.Kentucky10 Liberty35,Presbyterian14 Louisiana Tech36,Southern Miss.13 MVSU20,TexasSouthern17 Marist 55,Campbell 28 Marshall 56,UAB14 Memphis21,UT-Martin 6 Mercer45,Jacksonwlle42 MiddleTennessee48, FIU0 Mississippi34,Arkansas24 Missouri48,Kentucky17 MorganSt. 24,NCA8T 23 Norfo kSt.27,Bethune-Cookman24 NorthCarolina45, Virginia14 Northwestern St. 37,Lamar 28 SC State25, FloridaABM21 San Diego 56 MoreheadSt. 3 Southem U 31,AlabamaSt. 28 Stetson26,Davidson13 Syracuse 20, Maryand 3 Tennessee St. 31, AustinPeay6 The Citadel35,Elon10 UCF19,Houston14 VMI 27,Gardner-Webb9 Vanderbilt34,Florida17 VirginiaTech42,Miami24 Wesley35,Charlotte 28 MIDWEST Butler 72, Valparaiso12 Cincinnati28, SMU25 Drake36,Dayton10 E.Michigan 35,W.Michigan32,OT Indiana 52, llinois 35 lowa 38,Purdue14 Minnesota 24, PennSt. 10 Missouri St.37, S.Illinois 27 Montana 31, SouthDakota27 N. Dakota St. 28, IIinois St.10 N. Iowa22,YoungstownSt. 20 Nebraska17,Michigan13 NorthDakota24, N.Colorado21 S. Dakota St.29, IndianaSt. 0 TCU21, lowaSt.17 Tennessee Tech41, SEMissouri16 Wisconsin27, BYU17 SOUTHWEST Ark.-PineBluft 45, Grambling St. 42 KansasSt.49, TexasTech26 McNeese St.69,StephenF.Austin 38 NorthTexas41,UTEP7 Oklahoma St. 42, Kansas6 SE Louisiana 58,Cent. Arkansas31 SamHoustonSt.49, Nicholls St. 24 Texas A8M51, Mississippi St.41 UTSA10,Tulane7 FAR WEST ArizonaSt.20, Utah19 BostonCollege48,NewMexicoSt. 34 Cal Poly42,SacramentoSt. 7 ColoradoSt.38,Nevada17 Easte m Oregon38,Southern Oregon37 E.Washington54,MontanaSt.29 FresnoSt.48, Wyoming10 Linfield 79,PugetSound3 Old Dominion59,Idaho38 PortlandSt.38, IdahoSt.31 S. Utah27, Weber St 21 Southem Cal62,California 28 UCLA31,Arizona26 Utah St.28,UNLV24 Washington 59, Colorado 7 WesternOregon32, Central Washington 26 Willamette 21, Pacific17
The APTop25 Fared No.1 Alabama (9-0) beatNo.10LSU38-17. Next: at MississippiState,Saturday. No. 2 Oregon(8-1) lost to No 6 Stanford26-20, ThursdayNext:vs. Utah,Saturday. No. 3FloridaState(9-0) beatWakeForest 59-3. Next: vs. Syracuse, Saturday. No. 4 OhioState(9-0) did not play.Next:at lllinois, Saturday. No. 5 Baylor (8-0) beatNo. 12 Oklahoma41-12, Thurs day.Next:vs.No.25TexasTechatArington, Texas,Saturday.
No. 6Stanford(8-1) beatNo.2Oregon26-20, Thursday Next:atSouthernCal, Saturday. No 7 Auburn(9-1) beatTennessee55-23. Next: vs Georgia,Saturday. No. 8 Clemson(8-1) did notplay.Next:vs. Georgia Tech,Thursday. No. 9 Missouri (9-1) beatKentucky48-17. Next.at Mississippi,Saturday,Nov23 No.10 LSU(7-3) lost to No1Alabama38-17. Next vs. No.11,TexasA8M,Saturday,Nov.23. No.11TexasA8M(8-2) beatMississippi State51-41 Next: atNo. 10LSU,Saturday,Nov.23. No. 12 Oklahoma (7-2) lost to No. 5Baylor 41-12, Thursday.Next: vs. IowaState, Saturday. No. 13SouthCarolina(7-2) didnotplay. Next:vs Florida,Saturday. No. 14Miami(7-2) lost toVirginiaTech42-24. Next: at Duke,Saturday. No. 15Oklahom a State(8-1) beatKansas42-6. Next. at Texas,Saturday. No. 16 UCLA(7-2) beatArizona31-26. Next: vs Washington,Friday. No. 17FresnoState (9-0) beatWyoming 48-10. Next: vs. NewMexico, Saturday, Nov.23. No.18 MichiganState(8-1) didnot play. Next: at Nebraska,Saturday. No. 19 UCF(7-1) beat Houston19-14. Next at TempleSa , turday. No. 20 Louisville (8-1) beatUConn31-10, Friday Next: vs.Houston,Saturday. No. 21 Wisconsin(7-2) beatBYU27-17. Next.vs. Indiana,Saturday No. 22NorthemIlinois (9-0) didnotplay Next:vs Ball State,Wednesday. No. 23ArizonaState (7-2) beatUtah20-19. Next:vs. OregonState,Saturday. No. 24 NotreDame(7-3) lost to Pittsburgh28-21. Next: vs.BYU,Saturday, Nov23 No. 25TexasTech (7-3) lost to KansasState 49-26 Next: vs.No. 5Baylor at Arlington, Texas,Saturday. Pac-12 Standings AR TimesPDT Norlh Stanford Oregon OregonState Washington Washington State Calitornia ArizonaState UCLA USC Arizona Utah Colorado
South
Conf. Overall 6-1 8-1 5-1 4-2 3-3 2-4 0-7
8-1 6-3 6-3 4-5 1-9
Conf. Overall 5-1 4-2 4-2
7-2 7-2 7-3
3-3 1-5 0-6
6-3 4-5 3-6
VCU85, YoungstownSt. 66 SOUTHW EST Baylor110 GramblingSt 55 NorthTexas77, UMKC70 TCU86, Louisiana-Monroe47 FAR WEST ArizonaSt.84, Hawaii 44 NewMexico69,LoyolaMarymount65 Dregon131,CSBakersfie d91 San Diego 69, N.Colorado56 Utah St.103,BlackHills St.46 UtahValley114,WallaWalla27 TOURNAMEN T Emerald Beach Islanders Classic Championship Fairfield 58,TexasABM-CC55 Third Place W.Illinois 71,UAB65 Glass CityTournament First Round Drexel65,Toledo52 Villanova87,MVSU53 lona Tip-Off Tournament Championship BowlingGreen51, lona50 Third Place Michigan73 Arizona71, OT Maggie DixonClassic Championship DePaul88,Duquesne77 Third Place Harvard83,CalPoly76
Women'sPreseasonNIT First Round Louisville101,Loyolaof Chicago54
TENNIS Professional ATP WorldTourFinals Saturday Af 02 Arena London Purse: S6million (Tour Final) Surface: Hard-Indoor RoundRobin x-advanced tosemifinals Singles Group A FinalStandings:x-Nadal3-0(6-1); x-Wawrinka, 21(4-4);Berdych,1-2(4-4); Ferrer,0-3(1-6). Group B RogerFederer(5), Switzerland, def.JuanMartin del Potro (4),Argentina,4-6, 7-6(2), 7-5. NovakDjokovic(2), Serbia,def. RichardGasquet (8), France, 7-6 (5), 4-6,6-3. Standings:x-D)okovic, 3-0 (6-3); x-Federer,2-1 (5-3); dePotro,1-2(4-5); Gasquet,0-3(2-6)
HOCKEY
Saturday'sGames
SouthernCal62, Caifornia28 ArizonaState20, Utah19 Washington59,Colorado7 UCLA31,Arizona26 Friday's Game WashingtonatUCLA, 6p.m Saturday, Nov.16 WashingtonStateatAnzona,11 a.m. Utah atOregon,1p.m. California atColorado,2:30 p.m. Stanfordat USC,5 p.m. OregonStateatArizonaState, 630p.m
NHL NATIONALHOCKEYLEAGUE All Times PDT
Eastern Conference Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA 16 12 4 0 24 54 39 17 11 6 0 22 51 40 18 9 5 4 22 45 48 16 10 5 1 21 45 30 Ottawa 17 7 6 4 18 53 51 Bettindi line Montreal 17 8 8 1 17 44 38 NFC Florida 1 7 3 1 0 4 1 0 34 60 (Hometeamsin CAPS) Buffalo 19 3 1 5 I 7 33 61 Favorite Opening Current Underdog Metropolitan Division Today GP W L OT Pts GF GA TITANS 13 5 1 3 Jagu ars Pittsburgh 1 7 1 1 6 0 22 50 40 PACKE RS 2 PK Eagles Washington 17 9 7 1 19 56 48 Bigs N.Y.Rangers 16 8 STEELR ES 3 3 8 0 16 35 43 Raiders GIANTS 7 7 Carolina 17 6 7 4 16 32 48 10 9.5 Rams N.Y. Islanders 17 6 COLTS 8 3 15 49 56 6.5 45. FAL CONS NewJersey 16 4 Seahawks 7 5 13 30 44 Bengals 1.5 1.5 RAV E NS Columbus 1 6 6 1 0 0 1 2 41 46 BEARS 2.5 (D) 1 Lions P hiladelphia 16 5 1 0 1 1 1 26 44 49ERS 6.5 6 Panthers WesternConference CARDINA LS 2.5 3 Texans Central Division Broncos 7 7 CHARGERS GP W L OT Pts GF GA SAINTS 7 6.5 Cow boys Colorado 15 13 2 0 26 50 27 Monday Chicago 17 11 2 4 26 61 45 Dolphins 3 2.5 BUCCANEER S St. Louis 15 11 2 2 24 52 34 Minnesota 18 10 4 4 24 48 40 Nashville 16 8 6 2 18 37 49 BASKETBALL Dallas 17 8 7 2 18 46 52 Winnipeg 18 7 9 2 16 45 51 Men's college Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Saturday's Scores Anaheim 18 1 4 3 1 29 63 44 East P hoenix 18 1 2 4 2 26 60 56 Columbia73, Md.-EasternShore54 San Jose 1 6 1 0 2 4 24 59 36 Duquesne 94 AbileneChristian 75 Vancouver 19 1 1 6 2 24 53 51 Fairfield67,SacredHeart 54 Los Angel e s 17 11 6 0 2 2 50 41 LIU Brooklyn87, St.Peter's 80 Calgary 17 6 9 2 14 47 61 Manhattan99,LaSalle 90,2OT Edmonton 1 8 4 12 2 10 44 70 NewHampshire94, Suffolk 70 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime PennSt.74, Wagner 62 loss. Quinnipiac82, Hartford77 Saturday's Games RobertMorris86, SavannahSt. 66 Minnesota 3, Carolina 2,SO Saint Joseph's74, Vermont64 Phoenix4, Wa shington 3, SO SetonHall83, Niagara72 Philadelphia4,Edmonton 2 St Bonaventure 68, SouthDakota46 Dttawa 3, Fl o rida 2 Tempe 78,Penn73 Boston 3, Toronto1 Yale93,CCSU77 Tampa Bay3, Detroit 2,OT South Columbus 5, N.Y.Islanders2 Bethune-Cookman 91,Trinity Baptist 74 St. Loui s 2,Pittsburgh1 DelawareSt.107, Phila.Biblical 48 Chicago 5, Dallas2 E Kentucky 68, KennesawSt 60 Los Angele5, s Vancouver1 GeorgiaSt.97, SouthernPolySt. 78 Today'sGames Louisiana-Lafayette101,LouisianaCollege67 N.Y. Isl a nders at Montreal, 3p.m. Louisville 70,Coll. ofCharleston48 Nashville atNewJersey 4p.m. MoreheadSt.107, Mid Continent60 Florida atN.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. NewMexicoSt.70,TennesseeSt. 55 EdmontonatChicago,4:30p.m. SC-Upstate64,Virginia Tech63 SanJoseatWinnipeg5pm SouthCarolina82,Longwood44 Washingtonat Colorado, 5p.m. SouthFlorida72, TennesseeTech62 VancouveratAnaheim, 5 p.m. Winthrop93,Roanoke74 YoungstownSt.74, FIU72,OT Midwest SOCCER BowlingGreen102,Earlham49 Butler 89,Lamar58 MLS ChicagoSt.77, Urbana52 MAJORLEAGUESOCCER ClevelandSt.73,lona69 AU TimesPDT Dayton81, IPFW80 DePaul96,Grambling St. 58 CONFERENCECHAMPIONSHIPS Drake61, I I.-Chicago59 Eastern Conference Evansville87,Martin Methodist69 Leg 1 — Today,Nov9. Sporting KCat Houston, IndianaSt.82, BallSt. 73 11 30a.m. Northwestern72,E.Illinois 55 Leg 2 —Saturday, Nov.23: Houston atSporting KC, Ohio 75,N.Iowa64 4:30 p.m. Ohio St.89, MorganSt.50 Western Conference WichitaSt.93, Emporia St.50 Leg1 —Sunday Nov.10:Portlandat Real Salt Lake, Southwest 6 p.m. N. Arizona74, UTSA63 Leg 2 Sunday,Nov.24:Real Salt LakeatPortland, Rice 69,St Thomas(Texas)60 6pm. UTEP84, LoyolaNO49
Far West Cal St.-Fulerton84, MontanaSt. 55 Gonzaga100,Bryant76 Idaho67,W.Illinois 63 IdahoSt.99, EvergreenSt.62 LongBeachSt.71, Hawaii Pacific 59 LoyolaMarymount98, S.DakotaSt.89 NewMexico88,AlabamaA8M52 Pepperdine81,SanDiegoChristian 68 San Diego70, GrandCanyon 59 Tournament AU-Military Classic Championship VMI 71,Air Force63 Third Place Army84, TheCitadel 69
Women's College Saturday's Scores EAST Bryant82,Vermont71 George Washington101,JacksonSt.73 St. Francis(NY)56,Penn51 Stanford83, BostonColege71 UConn89, Hartford 34 Yale64,Monmouth (NJ) 55 SOUTH Auburn69,Georgia Southern 59 Campbel82, l Erskine56 CoastalCaroina97,Va.Intermont66 N. Kentucky77,Cincinnati 61 Old Dominion97, DelawareSt. 67 Radford74,Emory 8 Henry38 Tennessee Tech94,Tenn.Wesleyan41 UNCAsheville 68,Furman65 VirginiaTech84, Howard 32 W. Kentucky78,Austin Peay75 MIDWEST ChicagoSt. 74,1ndianaTech 51 Dayton89, UCRiverside 54 IUPUI80,Belmont58 Indi ana85,Oakland55 IndianaSt.53, SouthAlabama40 Marquette90,WakeForest71 Minnes ota73,N.Iowa55 NotreDame99,UNCWilmington 50
KyleStanley TrevorImmelman AaronBaddeley StuartAppleby Harris English BenCurtis BooWeekley DavidToms StevenBowditch LucasGlover WoodyAustin MarkWilson MikeWeir Eric Axley SpencerLevin DarrenClarke Troy Matteson Martin Flores DavidHearn RussellKnox Pat Perez AndresRomero J.J. Henry RussellHenley Scott Piercy ChadCampbell DannyLee RorySabbatini CamiloVilegas MichaelPutnam JamesHahn Justin Leonard BlakeAdam s PaulGoydos Y.E.Yang Carl Pettersson Josh Broad away Erik Compton
TampaBay Toronto Detroit Boston
68-71-70—209 67-72-70 209 68-71-70—209 68-70-71—209 68-70-71—209 68-69-72—209 67-69-73—209 68-73-68—209 68-73-68—209 69-72-68—209 68-73-68—209 70-71-68—209 70-71-68—209 71-70 68 209 69-70-71—210 69-70-71—210 71-69-70—210 70-68-72—210 74-66-70—210 70-71 69—210 68-71-72—211 70-69-72—211 67-72-72—211 69-71-71—211 67-73-71—211 70-70-71 211 70-71-70—211 66-73-73—212 66-74-72—212 68-73-72—213 69-72-73—214 71-70-73 214 73-68-73—214 68-71-76—215 68-71-76—215 66-74-75—215 72-68-75—215 68-73-76—217
LPGA Tour Mizuno Classic Saturday At Kintetsu Kashikojima Go If Course Shima, Japan Purse: S1.2million Yardage: 6,506; Par:72 SecondRound(Leading Scores) MamikoHiga 70 66 136 Yukilchinose 70-66—136 68-68—136 ShihoOyam a 70-67—137 AsakoFujimoto BrittanyLincicome 69-68—137 70-68—138 TeresaLu ChellaChoi
69-69—138 69-69—138 69-69—138 74-65—139 73-66—139 71-68—139 71-68—139
Eun-BiJang JunkoOmote YumikoYoshida Miki Saiki
JulietaGranada Ah-Reum Hwang StacyLewis Eun-Hee Ji RikakoMorita Lisa McCloskey GerinaPiler Austin Ernst BrittanyLang Hee-Won Han NatsukaHori HarukyoNomura KumikoKaneda RuiKitada Na-RiLee Jiyai Shin HeeYoungPark
71-68—139 74-66—140 74-66—140 73-67—140 72-68—140 70-70—140 70-70—140 69-71—140 72-69—141 72-69—141 71-70—141 71-70—141 69-72—141
69-72—141 75-67 — 142 73-69—142 73-69—142
YuriFudoh
MinaHarigae
Erika Kikuchi Na RiKim
72-70—142 72-70—142 72-70—142 71-71—142 71-71—142 71-71—142 70-72 142 70-72—142
KarrieWebb VickyHurst CatrionaMatthew So Yeon Ryu EstherLee JenniferRosales Pemilla Lindberg Kaori Nakam ura
69-73 — 142 69-73 — 142
MOTOR SPORTS NHRA NATIONALHOT ROD ASSOCIATION Automobile Club ofSouthern California Pairings Saturday At Auto ClubRacewayat Pomona Pomona,Calif. Pairings based onresults in qualifying, which ended Saturday. DNOs listed below pairings. Top Fuel 1. BrandonBernstein, 3.748 seconds, 325.37 mph vs.16. Billy Torrence, 3903, 305.63. 2 Shawn Langdon,3.750,32703vs 15.SteveTorrence, 3.835, 326.00. 3.ClayMilican,3.761, 324.98vs. 14.Troy Buff ,3.825,310.70.4.Doug Kalitta,3.762,326.08 vs. 13. TonySchumacher, 3.821, 323.81. 5. Antron Brown,3.775,323.74vs. 12. BobVandergriff, 3.815, 322.42. 6.MorganLucas, 3.782, 320.20vs. 11. Terry McMillen, 3.814,324.28. 7. DavidGrubnic, 3.783, 321.88 vs.10.KhalidalBalooshi, 3.806,323.43.8. Brit tanyForce,3.784,323.74vs.9.SpencerMassey, 3.799,32304. DidNotQualify:17. ToddPaton, 4017, 290.63.18.StevenChrisman,7.683, 204.60. FunnyCar 1 John Force,Ford Mustang,3995, 319.37vs. 16. BobBode,ChevyImpaa,4.166,298.34. 2. Matt Hagan,DodgeCharger, 4.014, 320.20vs. 15.Alexis DeJoria,ToyotaCamry, 4.137, 311.13. 3 Courtney Force,Mustang,4.016, 319.07vs. 14. BobTascaIg, Mustang ,4132,309.27.4.DelWorsham,Camry, 4.019,318.69vs 13.GaryDensham, Charger, 4.118, 301.81. 5.Robert Hight, Mustang,4.028, 317.49vs. 12. RonCapps, Charger,4.103, 312.71. 6. CruzPedregon,Camry,4.059, 310.05vs. 11. JackBeckman, Charger,4.077,313.07.7. ChadHead, Camry, 4.065, 314.17 vs.10.Johnny Gray,Charger,4077, 311.20. 8. JeffArend,Charger,4.067, 31185vs. 9. TimWilkerson, Mustang,4.071, 314.31. DidNot Quality: 17. Jeff Diehl, 4.168, 297.09. 18. Phil Burkart, 4.171, 287.47. 19.JoshCrawford, 4.243, 267.80
GOLF PGA Tour McGladreyClassic Saturday AfSea IslandResort(SeasideCourse) Sf. Simons Island, Ga. Purse: $5.5 million yardage: 7,005; Par:70 Third Round
Chns Kirk Briny Baird KevinStadler
BrianGay JohnSenden BrendonTodd Scott Brown JasonKokrak Matt Kuchar
DanielSummerhays Matt Every WebbSimpson CharlesHowell gl Scott Langley BrianHarman Tim Clark RobertGarrigus ZachJohnson BriceGam et George McNeiI TedPotter,Jr. Cameron Tringale CharleyHoffman HeathSlocum RobertKarsson Will Claxton John Rollins Jonathan Byrd KevinChappel BrendondeJonge Kevin Kisner RetiefGoosen D.H. Lee
GregChalmers Seung-YulNoh
66-66-68 —200 63-70-67 —200 68-68-65 —201 63-72-66—201 66-67-68 —201 68-67-67 202 66-68-68—202 69-65-69—203 68-68-68—204 69-66-69—204 67-68-69 —204 65 68-71 204 69-70-66 —205 66-71-68 —205 67-68-70 —205 67-67-71—205 65-74-67—206 70-68 68 206 67-72-67—206 62-76-68 —206 67-67-72 —206 70-69-68 —207 66-73-68—207 67-71-69 207 68-68-71—207 65-71-71 —207 65-76-66 —207 66-69-72 —207 65-68-74—207 67-71-70 208 65-73-70 —208 68-71-69 —208 67-70-71 —208 68-68-72 —208 65-70-73 —208
DEALS
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D3
NBA ROUNDUP
SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY GOLF European Tour, Turkish Airlines Open
Time 12:30 a.m.
PGA Tour, McGladreyClassic
1:30 p.m.
az
TV/Radio Golf Golf
SOCCER
English Premier League, Tottenham Hotspur vs. Newcastle United English Premier League,
4 a.m.
NBCSN
Manchester United FC vs. Arsenal FC
8 a.m.
NBCSN
Women's college, Big East Tournament, teams TBD Women's international friendly, United States vs. Brazil
11 a.m. Fox Sports1 12:30 p.m.
NBC
Women's college, Big 12 Tournament, final, teams TBD MLS, playoffs, Portland at Real Salt Lake MOTOR SPORTS MotoGP, World Championship
1:30 p.m. Fox Sports1 6 p.m. ESPN
NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Advocare 500
11 a.m. 4 p.m.
NHRA, Auto Club Finals TENNIS ATP Tour, World Tour, finals ATP Tour, World Tour, finals FOOTBALL NFL, Cincinnati at Baltimore NFL, Seattle at Atlanta NFL, Denver at San Diego NFL, Dallas at New Orleans FIGURESKATING
5 a.m.
Fox Sports1 ESPN ESPN2
6 a.m. noon
ESPN2 ESPN2
10 a.m.
ISU Grand Prix (taped)
10 a.m. 1:25 p.m. 5:20 p.m.
CBS Fox CBS NBC
10:30 a.m.
NBC
VOLLEYBALL
Women's college, OregonState at USC Women's college, Oregon atUCLA
11 a.m.
1 p.m.
Pac-12 Pac-12
BASKETBALL Men's college, UT-Martin at Colorado 3 p.m. Men's college, Coppin State at Oregon State 5 p.m.
Pac-12 Pac-12
Men's college, Seattle at Washington
7 p.m.
Pac-12
8 p.m.
ESPN2
BOXING
College, ArmedForces Invitational (taped)
MONDAY TENNIS ATP Tour, World Tour, finals BASKETBALL W omen's college, Stanford at UConn Men's college, UMKC at Creighton Men's college, North Texas at Oklahoma
Time noon 4 p.m . 5 p.m.
5 p.m. Women's college,TennesseeatN.Carolina 6p.m. Men's college, LongBeachState at Arizona 7 p.m. 7 p.m. NBA, Detroit at Portland Men's college, BYU at Stanford 8 p.m. Men's college, W. Kentucky at Wichita State 10 p.m. FOOTBALL NFL,Miami atTampa Bay 5:25 p.m. BOXING
Fidel Maldonado Jr. vs. Luis Ramos Jr. 7
p .m .
TV/ Radio ESPN2 ESPN2 Fox Sports1 Root ESPN2 Pac-12 CSNNW 1110-AM ESPN2 ESPN2
a
• Portland tops Sacramento 96-85 to takeboth halves of a home-and-home series The Associated Press SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Even with standout point guard Damian Lillard experiencing a rare off game, the Portland Trail Blazers still had enough offense to beat the Sacramento Kings. LaMarcus Aldridge had 22 points and 14 rebounds,Wesley Matthews scored 21 points, and the Blazers beat the Kings 9685 on Saturday night for their fourth win in five games. Lillard, last year's rookie of the year, had four points on I-of-15 shooting. He did contribute six rebounds and six assists. "It will happen occasionally, it was one of those nights when the shots didn't go in," said Lillard, who scored 22 points in Friday's win at home against the Kings. "We have a deeperteam this year and guys can pick up the slack. That's what makes usa betterteam." Portland's offense flowed well enough that it seemed at times that Lillard's scoring wasn't even missed. The Blazers continued their early-season trend of shooting well from long distance, making 9 of 20 attempts from 3-point range and had only 12 turnovers. One of those players making shots was Matthews, who led the Blazers in the third quarter. Matthews made three 3s and had 19 of his 21 points in the second half.
"Wes is playing at a high energy, par-
ticularly on offense," Portland coach Terry Stotts said. "He's shooting the ball well and picking up where he left off last year before he got hurt." Robin Lopez had 12 points and 14 rebounds and Nicolas Batum also scored 12 points to help the Blazers sweep the home-and-home series with the Kings. Portland beat the Kings at home, 104-91 on Friday night. It's been a troubling start to the season for the Kings, who have lost five straight sincebeating Denver in the season-opener. The statistic that stood out in the latest loss was getting outrebounded by the
F o x Sports1
Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Au TimespsT
d-Iiidiana
SPORTS IN BRIEF Busch WinS again — An-
other Nationwide Series race, another Kyle Buschwin. Busch picked up his12th win of the
6, 7-6 (2), 7-5 to reach the semifinals for the11th time. The Swiss earned a chance to prove that
— despite his aging legs, aching back and recent lack of consistency — he can still beat rival
season Saturday at Phoenix International Raceway,leading a race-high169 laps. Now,a
Rafael Nadal, his semifinal opponent. NovakDjokovic,whobeat Richard Gasquet7-6 (6), 4-6, 6-3
year after he went winless in the
in his final round-robin match to
Nationwide Series, Buschcan
extend his winning streak to 20
match his career-best13-win 2010 season with a victory in
matches since his loss to Nadal in the U.S. Open final in Septem-
next week's finale at Homestead.
ber, will face Stanislas Wawrinka
Busch's victory, coupled with Brad Keselowski's19th-place fin-
in the other semifinal.
ish, sliced PenskeRacing's lead in the race for the owner cham-
pionship to four points over Joe GibbsRacing.Keselowski'sday was ruined when contact from Brian Scott sent him spinning into the wall. The battle for the more prolific driver champion-
reSted — Minnesota Vikings wide receiver JeromeSimpson was released from jail Saturday on $12,000 bond, about seven
Dillon finished third to hold an eight-point lead over Sam Hornish Jr.
hours after he was arrested
overnight on suspicion of driving while intoxicated. According to the Minnesota State Patrol,
a trooper responded to areport
LangdoiI WinSNHRAtitle — Shawn Langdon won his first
of a stalled vehicle in the lane on Interstate Highway 394 heading
Top Fuel seasontitle Saturday
west out of downtown Minneap-
in the season-ending Auto Club NHRA Finals in Pomona, Calif.
olis. As Simpson got out of a red
and FunnyCarchampion John Force topped qualifying with
a track-record time. Langdon, a Southern California native, earned the title in front of a large
contingent of familyand friends by qualifying second for today's eliminations. His closest challenger, Antron Brown, was fifth,
Dodge Charger, the trooper observed him with watery eyesand slightly slurred speech. Simpson said he was at the Pour House,
a popular bar nearby, but denied that he'd been drinking. Simpson leads the Vikings with 491 yards
on Saturday, amajor calendar
qualifying and Hector Arana Jr. led the Pro Stock Motorcycle field.
milestone for the 2016 games.
OLYMPICS countdown to the Rio de Janeiro Olympics reached1,000 days
Cariocas — asRio residents are known — celebrated thedate with various activities scattered
the back of apoor season, the 17-time Grand Slam winner overcame a 3-0 deficit in the third set to beat Juan Martin del Potro 4-
Blazers 52-33. DeMarcus Cousins had 15 of his 33 points in the fourth quarter and also grabbed 12 rebounds to lead the Kings. Cousins had 35 points in Friday night's game in Portland. Ben McLemore scored 13 points and Isaiah Thomas had 12 points for t he Kings, who had only 54 points through three quarters before outscoring Portland 31-27 in the fourth. Kings rookie head c oach M i chael Malone has bemoaned the team's lack of defensive effort this season and pointed to rebounding as a key element in yet another loss. Malone said after the game that lineup changes could take place for Wednesday's game against Brooklyn. "I'm embarrassed. Every night it's the same thing," Malone said. "We finally get a night where we defend at a decent level, but we can't rebound. We got outworked on the glass. I think we've got a lot of guys who just care about themselves on this team. Changes will be made before we
Milwaukee Washington
Brooklyn
W 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 1 1 0
L 1 t 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 5 7
Western Conference
d-sanAntonio d-Oklahoma City d-Phoenix Minnesota Portland L.A. Clippers Houston GoldenState Dallas NewOrleans Memphis r A. Lakers Denver Sacramento d-division leader
Saturday's Games Toronto 05, Utah91 Indiana96, Brooklyn91 Clevelartd127,PhIladelphia125,20T Boston111, Miami 110 Atlanta104,Orlando94
L.A. c ippers107,Houston94 Memphis108, GoldenState 90 Dallas 9uMilwaukee83 Portland96, Sacramento 85 Today's Games saii AntonioatNewYork, 9 a.m. Washington at OklahomaCity, 4p.m. NewOrleansat Phoenix 5 p.m. Minnes otaatLA.Lakers,6:30p.m. Monday'sGames Sair AntonioatPhiladelphia, 4 p.m.
Memphisat Indiana,4 p.m. Atlanta atCharlotte, 4 p.m.
pct ce 833 800 667 667 667
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571 1r/z 571 1 t/r 571 t r/t 571 t tir
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Summaries Saturday's Summaries
Trail Blazers 96, Kings 85 PORTLAND (96) Battrm4-9 2-212, Aldridge10-192-4 22, Lopez 4-10 4-612, Lillard 1-152-4 4,Matthews8-0 2-2 21, Williams3-5 e-0 8, Wright 3 5 0 08, Freelarrd 2-5 0-0 4, Robinson1-33-4 5. Totals 36-82 1522 96.
SACRAMENTO (85) Salmons 0-2 0-00,Patterson3-70-06,Cousins 13-24 7-0 33, Vasquez3-5 0-0 6, Thornton2-9 0-0 4, Thompson S-e 1-1 7, Thomas6-10 0-0 12, McLemore4-8 2-2 13,Fredette 2-6 e-0 4,Outlaw 0-00-00, Hayes0-1e-00,MbahaMotite0-00-00 Totals 36-78 10-14 85. Portland 21 24 24 27 — 96 Sacramento 18 20 16 31 — 85 3-Point Goal— s Portland 9-20 IMatthews3-5, Wright 2-3, Williams2-3, Batum2-4, Lillard e-l), Sacramento 3-12 (McLemore3-3, Vasqttez 0-1, Thomas0-1, Salmons0-2, Patterson0-2, Thorntori 0-3). FouedOut—None. Rebounds—Portarid 59 (Aldridge 14), Sacramento 40 (Cortsins 12i. Assists Portland 25 (Lillard 6), Sacramento17 (vasqttez5).Total Fouls—portland 17,sacramento 20. A—15,482(17,317).
Celtics111, Heat110 BOSTON (111) Green8-163-5 24, Bass3-7 0-0 6, Olynyk3-9 e-0 7, crawford6-10r-015, Bradley 8-14 e-0 17, WallaceS-s 0-06, Sul irtger5-9 2-212, Humphries 3-5 3-3 9,pressey3-91-27,Faverani 1-1e-02,Lee 3-4 e-0 6.Totals 46-89 9-12111. MIAMI (110) James9-13 79 25,Battier1-2 e-0 3,Bosh7-12 e-e 20, Chalmers3-6 2-2 10,Wade7-14 4-8 1B, Allen 2-41-1 5, Lewis1-41-2 4,Artderseri 4-5 2-4 10, Cole2-40-0 5, Beasley5-70-010. Totals 4171 23-34 110. Boston 25 35 20 31 — 111 Miami 31 28 23 28 — 110
Pacers 96, Nets 91
around several daysandvarious cities. Gamesofficials opened an observation platform at the Olympic Park, which will be the
center of the games inthree years. Construction has barely begun on many ofthesports venues, and onSaturday the area was only a barren, 291-acre (118 hectares) mud flat. — From wire reports
play on Wednesday." Portland had a 22-point lead early in the fourth quarter. However, Sacramento rallied as a three-point play by Cousins and a fast-break layup by Jimmer Fredette cut the deficit to 85-77 with 4:29 remaining. Batum ended a string of bad possessions by the Blazers, hitting a 3-pointer with I:36 left to push the lead to 92-82. Also on Saturday: Pacers 96, Nets 91: NEW YORK — Paul George scored 24 points and Indiana improved the NBA's only undefeated record and the best start in franchise history to 70 by beating Brooklyn. David West added 18 points and hit the clinching free throws for the Pacers, who had won their first six games in 1970-71, when they played in the ABA. Celtics 111, Heat 110: MIAMI — Jeff Green hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer and Boston beat Miami for its third straight win. Green finished with 24 points and was 5 of 8 on 3-pointers. LeBron James led Miami with 25 points and 10 assists. Cavaliers 127, 76ers 125: CLEVELAND — Kyrie Irving scored a season-high 39 points and hit the winning layup with 0.6 seconds remaining in the second overtime to lift Cleveland over Philadelphia. Clippers 107, Rockets 94: HOUSTON — Blake Griffin and J.J. Redick scored 22 points apiece and Los Angeles used an 18-0 run in the second half to rally for the victory over Houston. Raptors 115, Jazz 91: TORONTO — Tyler Hansbrough scored a season-high 23 points, DeMar DeRozan added 18 and Toronto snapped a seven-game home losing streak against Utah. Hawks 104, Magic 94: ATLANTA — Jeff Teague had 19 points and 13 assists and Paul Millsap scored 18 points with 11 rebounds to lead Atlanta past Orlando. Mavericks 91, Bucks 83: MILWAUKEE — Monta Ellis got the best of his former team, shaking off boos from the crowd while contributing 18 points and five assists to help Dallas hold off Milwaukee. Grizzlies 108, Warriors 90: MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Zach Randolph had 23 points and 11 rebounds, and six Memphis players reached double figures in the rout of Golden State.
INDIANA(96)
George8-14 5-5 24,West7-15 3-418, Hibbert 7-171-215, G.Hill 1-e4-5 6, stephertson7-120-1 15, Watson2-50-06, S.Hill0-00-00, Scola2-62-3 6, O.Johnson 2-4 0-04, Mahinmi 1-10-0 Z Totals 37-80 15-20 96. BR00KLYNI91) Pierce5-122-215, Gamett3-70-06, Lopez6-13 4-416, Williams7n4 2-2 17,J.Johrrson6n0 2-2 17, Blatche3-71-2 7,Anderson1-11-3 4, Livingston 1-3 1-1 3,plumlees-s 0-0 6,Terry0-4 e-0 0. Totals 35-7613-16 91. Indiana 23 21 28 24 — 96 Brooklyn 21 25 21 24 — 91
5-10 3-4 13,Irving15-334-5 39, Waiters 9-t 9s-e 24, Zeller0-0e-00,Jack7-14 3-420, Miles2-80-0 6, Dellavedova 0-1 e-0 0, Bennett0-1 0-0 0,sims t-e 2-2 4.Totals 46-102 22-29 127. Philadel phia 27 21 37 22 9 9 — 125 Cleveland 30 2322 32 9 11 — 127
Grizzlies 108, Warriors 90
GOLDENSTATE(90) Igttodala8-10 1-519, Lee4-8 5-6 13,Bogut 0-3 1-41, Curry 7-184-4 22,Thompson5-13 e-012, Barnes 2-70-04,O'Neal1-4e-02,Speights2-30-0 4, Douglas1-20-03,Green2-61-26, Bazemore1-3 t-z 3, Kuzmie-0 c 0-10, Nedovic 0-1 1-21. Totals Hawks104, Magic 94 33-78 14-26 90. MEMPHIS (108) ORLANDO (94) Prince 3-74-410, Randolph9-195-7 23, Gasol Harkless3-50-06, Maxiei 6-0 0-012, vucevic 3-101-2 7, Ne soii 4-92-2 13, Aelalo8-16 2-421, 8-15 2-218, cortley 9 111-1 20,Allen 4-64-712, O'Quinn4-6 4-0 8, Nicholson5-9 3-5 13, Oladipo Miller 4-7 3-415, calathes1-e e-0 2, Kotrfos4-7 2-80-25, Price1-30-02, Moorez-52-37. Totals 0-0 8, Porrtjexter0-00-0 0 Franklin0-1 0-00,Davis e-ee-00. TotaIs 42-7919-25108. 38-82 10-18 94. Golden State 29 2 1 27 13 — 90 ATLANTAI104) 32 22 36 18 — 108 Carroll550212, Millsap816241B, Horford Memphis 7-141-215, Teague 6-15e-e 19, Korver6-100-0 14, Antic 1-4 0 0 2, Martin 3-7 n1 7, Scott 7-11 Clippers 107, Rockets 94 2-217,Schroder0-8e-00, Mack0-00-00. Totals 43-90 12-17 104. LA. CLIPPERS(107) Orlando 22 23 26 23 — 94 Dudley4-6 0-19, Gritfin 9-163-e 22,Jordan6-8 Atlanta 28 18 26 32 — 104 0312, Paril 5-13 33 14,RedickB15 33 22 Bullock 0-3 0-00, Crawford6-152-316, Collisoii 3-10 3-410, Mullens0-0 e-00, Green1-20-0 2. Totals Mavericks 91, Bucks83 42-88 14-23 107. H0UsTQN (94I DALLAS (91) Parsons9-153-3 23,HowardB-145-11 21, Asik Marion6-120-014 Nowitzki5-156-616, Dalembert 3-e0-06, calderon3-80-09, Ellis 6-146-718, 3-31-4 7, Beverley6-13 4-419, Harden4-15 3-3 Carter 4-114-413, Bair S-s 1-27, Crowder2-5 0-0 12, Lin 3-7e-06, casspi1-5 e-0 3,Garcia1-6 1-2 a Totals 35-7817-27 94. 4,Mekel1-2 2-24.Totals33-7819-21 91. LA. Clippers 22 2 4 27 34 — 107 MILWAUKEE (83) 26 29 16 23 — 94 Butler 7-192-3 19,Heitsons-e 2-4 8, pachtrlia Houston 1-6 2-3 4,Wolters2-61-2 5, Mayo11-202-2 28, Neal 2-e1-2 7,udohe-30-0 0, Knight3-7 e-0 6, Raplors 115, Jazz 91 Middl eton2-ee-06.Totals 31-8110-1683. Dallas 34 21 13 23 — 91 UTAH(91I Milwaukee 19 21 24 19 — 83 Jefferson3-80-0 6, Favors6-145-8 17, Kanter 5-12 4-414, tinsley r-0 0-0 0,Hayward10-18 4-4 24, Gojtert 1-3 0-0 2, Burks4-10 r-817, Wil iams Cavaliers127, 76ers125 0-30-00, Lrtcas11 11-30-03, Harris3-40-06, Clark f-z e-0 2.Totals 34-77 20-2491. (2 OTj TORONTO (115) PHILADELPHIA(125) Gay5-0 e-011, Johnson3-90-07, Valarrciurtas s-s 0-0 9, DeRozan 5-147-718, Young 11-18 5-e 29, Turner 9-23 0-13 31, e-8 2-214, Lowry Hawes6-13 0-013, Carter-Williams 9-17 e-0 21, Fields 1-42-2 4,Hansbroughe-e11-1323, Novak Anderson2-50-05, Allen 3-e0-06, Wroten1-72-2 0-20-00,Btrycks1-30-02, Ross4-90-09,Acys-5 4, Morris 5-70-0 12,Davies1-32-2 4. Totals 471-29 stone2-22-37,Augustin 1-2r-02. Totals 99 20-23 125. 40-83 25-29 115. CLEVELAND (127) utatr Gee1-30-tj 2, T.Thom pson6-10r-e19, varejao Toronto
Kirk, Baird tied for lead at McGladrey Classic ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — Making par from a tough lie in the bunker saved Briny Baird's round. Closing with three straight birdies gave him a share of the lead. None of that will make today any easier for a 41-year-old who has never won in 364 tries on the PGA Tour. Baird and Chris Kirk each made birdie on the final hole Saturday to separate themselves — but not my much — in the McGladrey Classic. They were one shot clear of three others, with a dozen players separated by 12 shots going into the final round at Sea Island.
Mike Edwards toppedProStock
reach the semifinals in the ATP World Tour Finals in London. On
Chicago NewYork
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Rio1,000 dayS aWay — The
Federer fought backSaturday to
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W 7 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2
not scored a touchdown.
with a maximum of100 points availabl e today.Langdon had a run of 3.750 seconds at 327.03 mph. Brandon Bernstein topped qualifying with a 3.748 at 325.37.
Federer adVanCeS —Roger
Rich Pedroncelli/The Associated Press
Portland center LaMarcus Aldridge, left, protects the ball from Sacramento forward Jason Thompson during the first quarter of Saturday night's game in Sacramento, Calif.
Orlandoat Boston, 4:30p.m Clevelandat Chicago,5 p.m. TorontoatHouston,5 P.m. Denverat Utah,6 p.m. Detroit atPortland,7 p.m. Minnesotaat I. AClippers 730 pm
receiving this season, but he has
giving Langdon a104-point lead
TENNIS
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Baird has company in lacking experience winning. The top eight players have combined forseven career wins on the PGA Tour, and that includes four by Brian Gay. Baird at least has given himself a shot, though he had no idea what it would take to win except for having a score that is "one less than the next best guy." "If I knew what to do tomorrow, shoot, I'd have won plenty of times," Baird said
GOLF ROUNDUP
champion who won last month in Las
Vegas. after a 3-under 67. "I've always said Tiger Woods wasn't 80 PGA Tour wins physically better than me. It's just not possible to be 80 wins better physically, so obviously there's some mental in there — more than some. It's mostly mental, I would say." Even on a day when the wind was slightly more manageable, the mind was tested. Kirk had a birdie putt on every hole and still was 2 over for his round and losing ground. He finally hit one close on the 13th, the start of three straight birdies, and capped off his round with a 25-foot birdie putt onthe 18thfor a 68. Kirk and Baird were at 10-under 200. They were one shot ahead of Gay (66), Kevin Stadler (65) and John Senden (68). Twelve playerswere separated by four shots going into today, a group that includes Sea Island resident Matt Kuchar and Webb Simpson, the former U.S. Open
Also on Saturday: Woods in mix in Turkey: ANTALAYA, Turkey — Victor Dubuisson of France opened up a five-shot lead after the third round at the Turkish Airlines Open on Saturday, while Tiger Woods kept himself in the mix despite three bogeys on the back nine. Dubuisson opened with four straight birdies and added five more in a bogey-free9-under 63. He moved to 21-under 195 to distance himself from the field. Ian Poulter was alone in second after a 68, while Woods and Henrik Stens-
son (69) were among four players sitting another shot back. Three tied in Japan: SHIMA, JapanYuki Ichinose of Japan shot a 6-under 66 to finish in a three-way tie for the lead after the second round of the Mizuno Classic on Saturday. Ichinose carded seven birdies against a lone bogey at Kintetsu Kashikojima to finish at 8-under 136 with compatriots Mamiko Higa.
D4 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 20'I3
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Crook County Continued from D1 "Crook County's been to (eight) finals in a row,n Cascade coach Christina Williams said. "That's a definite advantage. My girls looked timid out there at times." Troutman was the cause for most of the Cougars' discomfort. The senior outside hitter booked seven kills in the Cowgirls' opening-game win, looking every bit like the four-year varsity player she is. "She's a powerhouse," Crook County coach Rosie Honl said of Troutman, who was the Cowgirls' player of the match as voted on by Oregon School Activities Association officials. "Serving, defense, serve receive. Everything.... And
she brought all these young girls along." Amazingly, Crook County continued its state title streak, which dates back to the 2006 season, with
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five freshmen all seeing time on the court Saturday night. Among the freshmen, Smith led the team with 18 digs, Roth had three kills and an ace, and Aspen Christiansen registered an ace and three digs. Hailey Nelson led Cascade with 11 kills, and Mariah Bartlett ended the match with 21 assists. The closest Cascade came to
Above, the Crook County Cowgirls celebrate with their trophy after winning the Class 4A state volleyball championship at Lane Community College in Eugene on Saturday night. It was the eighth straight state title for Crook County. Below, the Cowgirls react after scoring the winning point against Cascade. Photos by Eugene Johnson/For The Bulletin JMe
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along with 28 digs.
challenging the Cowgirls was in the second game after the Cougars won six of eight points to tie the set 9-9. Crook County responded by winning the next eight points — seven of which were served by Smith — and the shellshocked Oregon West Conference champions never recovered.
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"We'vegotso many good play-
ers coming up, o said Troutman, who is looking to play volleyball and throw the javelin at Oregon State after graduation. "Honestly, this (the streak) could go forever."
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— Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbultetin.com.
isersan ummi 0 Sa vanCe Bulletin staff report MILTON-FREEWATER — Coming from behind in a soccer match is difficult. Doing it three times to win is even more challenging. That is exactly what Sisters (15-1-1 overall) did Saturday in its dramatic 4-3 win over McLoughlin in a Class 4A boys soccer state quarterfinal matchup. "That was essentially the championship game for us,o Outlaws coach Rob Jensen said, referring M to the intensity of Saturday's contest. It was the best soccer game I've ever seen." The victory sends the Outlaws, No. 7 in the 16team bracket, into the semifinal round, where they will play at home against 11th-seeded Philomath on Tuesday. At the end of the first half, Sisters was down by one after McLoughlin scored in the 39th minute. But Sisters forward Jake McAllister retaliated with an unassisted goal in the 58th minute to tie it up 1-1. The contest remained tied until the Pioneers scored off a penalty kick in the 75th minute. One minute later, McAllister netted a goal on a penalty kick after a handball violation was called on
Water polo Continued from D1 "The first thing I did was turn to my assistant coach, Dean Nakadate, (and) there was no words," Mountain View coach Ryan Duffy said. "It's all about the kids. We can do as much as we can (as coaches) on the pool deck, but it all happens in the water." Noah Cox posted four goals and five steals for Mountain View, which fell to Summit in the thirdplace game at last year's state tournament. Nate Cox finished with three goals, five steals and one assist, and Joseph Murphy recorded three goals and two steals. Tim Gorman was credited with seven assists and two takeaways, while Tracy Pitcher collected 13 saves in goal to go along with three steals. M We only had one goal this year," Duffy said. MIt was to win a state championship. And they did it.
n
PREP SOCCER: STATE ROUNDUP McLoughlin. That left the score deadlocked at 2-2 at the end of regulation. Seven minutes into overtime, the Pioneers scored on a breakaway, but the Outlaws again answered when Justin Harrer scored in the final minute of overtime. With the score tied 3-3, Sisters and McLoughlin went into a penalty shootout. McLoughlin scored on its first and second attempts, then Sisters goalkeeper Keenan O'Hern saved the next three shots. Evan Rickards and Jardon Weems scored for the Outlaws in the shootout round. In the sudden-death round, Colton Mannhalter made the first goal for Sisters followed by Jadon Bachtold, Billy Biggers, and the eventual winning goal by Trent Marks just before McLoughlin's final shot failed. "They played great," Jensen said. MWe overcame being down by one (goal) three times, and we were still able to win." In other Saturday action: BOYS SOCCER
T ommy Brewer p a ced t h e Storm with four goals, while Eli Abraham and Jack Butler each scored once. Kyle Alhart finished with eight saves in goal. M I can't say enough for what
Summit 1, Marist 0: The Storm dominated in their Class 5A state quarterfinal matchup against the Spartans from Eugene. Eli Warmenhoven logged the lone goal of the game for Summit off an assist from Alex Bowlin in the 32nd minute. M It was a game that I think we controlled a lot of possessions," Summit coach Ron Kidder said. M But a 1-0 game is always a tough one." Kidder said Alex Arnis and Luca Chiletti were key in keeping the ball in Marist's territory. Summit will play Wilsonville at home in a semifinal match on Tuesday. GIRLS SOCCER Bend 2, Willamette1: In the quarterfinals of the 2012 Class 5A state playoffs, the Lava Bears lost at home to Willamette on penalty kicks. This time around was different. With Tayla Wheeler netting a goal in the 22nd minute and Alex Howard scoring in the 58th, the fourth-seeded Lava Bears withstood a late rally by the No. 5 Wolverines to secure a quarterfinal win at 15th Street Field and advance to the semifinals. Hannah Cockrum and Amidee Colleknon were each credited with an assist for Bend (11-2-2), which will visit crosstown rival Summit in the semifinals on Tuesday.
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(Summit coach) Jay (Soles) has done for water polo in Central Oregon, for what he's done for that Summit team," Duffy said. "He's a phenomenal coach and a phenomn enal guy. In a rematch of last season's 5A girls state championship, Summit once again fell to West Albany, which claimed its third straight state title. The Bulldogs won by a score of 12-3.
Er,
Sydney Goodman logged 12 savesforSummit, which recorded its best season in the program's four-year history after winningthe 5A North division and finishing runner-up at state for the second straight season. Laura Robson, Kaylin Ivy and Vanessa Rodgers each scoredonce forthe Storm.
Bulletin staff report EUGENE — Following its quarterfinal loss to Crook County on F riday, Ridgeview moved to t h e consolation bracket and went on to place fourth overall at the Class 4A volleyball state tournament at Lane Community College on Saturday. The Ravens faced La Grande in the consolation quarterfinals, winning 27-25, 25-18, 23-25, 25-19. Katrina Johnson led Ridgeview with 14 kills, five blocks and six digs, and Brianna Yeakey tallied 11 kills, one block and nine digs. Rhian Sage went 26 for 27 from the service line with five aces, while Katie Nurge went 17 for 18 serving with two aces In the c onsolation final, R i dgeview defeated Banks 29-27, 21-25, 25-20, 25-12. Sage led the Ravens against the Lady Braves with 20 assists, four digs, four kills and three aces. She was also 17 for 17 serving. Nurge set aschool record with 39 digs, Kaci Sage racked up 14 digs and was 12 for 13 on the service line with an ace, and Johnson had 15 kills. In other Saturday action: VOLLEYBALL Lava Bears lose in five: HILLSBORO — Bend High fell to Churchill of Eugene 22-25, 25-21, 25-15, 23-25, 18-16 to finish fifth overall at the Class 5A state championship tournament at Liberty High School. Alicia Todd led the Lava Bears with 17 kills, 10 digs and two aces, and Cassidy Wheeler racked up 10 kills, 19 digs and four aces. Callie Kruska tallied 12 kills and three blocks, and Lexi Ostrander finished with 52 assists. MI couldn'thave been more proud of the girls," Bend coach Kristin Cooper said. "After the second two games they could have given up, but they kept battling." Sisters tops Hidden Valley for third: EUGENE — Despite seeing their two-set lead disappear, the Outlaws held tough to defeat Hidden Valley of Grants Pass 25-9, 25-17, 20-25, 23-25, 15-7 and take third place at the Class 4A state tournament at Lane Community College. Isabelle Tara led Sisters with 20 kills, Allie Spear had 17 kills, and Alex Hartford finished with 28 assists. Katelyn Meeter had 19 assists, Savannah Spear posted a strong passing night, and the Outlaws secured their best finish at state taking second in 2008. Bulldogs finish third: REDMOND — Coming off a loss in the Class 2A state semifinals on Friday at Ridgeview High, Culver made quick work of Weston-McEwen Saturday. The Bulldogs won in three games over the Tigerscots 25-22, 25-22, 25-21 for third place in the tournament. "It's hard to come off a loss M like (Friday), Culver coach Randi Viggiano said. "Then to come back and win against a No. I seed takes a lot of guts and courage." Gabrielle Alley led the second-seeded Bulldogs with 16 kills and 18 digs, while Shealene Little tallied 16 kills and 10 digs. Libero Emma Hoke had 17 digs, Lynze Schonneker was credited with 35 assists, and Kaylee Aldrich led the serving for Culver with three aces. Saints swept i n con s olation: REDMOND — T r i n ity L u theran battled to stay competitive in a 2519, 25-16, 25-17 loss to St. Paul in a Class IA state consolation quarterfinal match at Ridgeview High. "We pretty much started off in a hole in every game," said Saints coach Greg Clift. "We fought for every single point, just clawing and scraping and
keeping our chin up. The girls were Submitted photo
The Mountain View boys water polo team, which includes two girls on its roster, celebrates its state title on Saturday in Corvallis. The Cougars defeated Summit 15-6 in the 5A final.
amazing. I'm very proud of them." Taylor McCabe led Trinity Lutheran in hitting percentage, while Emily Eidler had 16 service points and Katie Murphy posted seven digs.
Bmins get past Maple Leafs on Bergeron's late power-play goal The Associated Press BOSTON — Patrice Bergeron scored a power-play goal early i n t h e t h ir d p eriod and Tuukka Rask stopped 33 shots, lifting the Boston Bruins to a 3-1 win over Toronto on Saturday night in the teams' first meeting since their playoff series last spring. Bergeron also added an empty-netter with 22 seconds to play, and Zdeno Chara also had a power-play goal for Boston. The Bruins won for only the third time in seven games. Joffrey Lupul scored for the Maple Leafs, w ho lost for j ust th e second time i n s i x
games.
NHL ROUNDUP Also on Saturday: Kings 5, Canucks 1: LOS ANGELES — Tyler Toffoli had two goals and an assist in his third game back from the minors, and Mike Richards had a goal and two assists in Los Angeles' victory over Vancouver. Blues 2, Penguins 1: ST. LOUIS — Kevin Shattenkirk's first goal of the season midway through the third period sent St. Louis over Pittsburgh. Lightning 4, Red Wings 3: DETROIT — Ted-
dy Purcell's goal at 3:51 of overtime gave Tampa Bay a win over Detroit. Blackhawks 5, Stars 2: DALLAS — Marian Hossa scored two goals and Chicago defeated Dallas. Senators 3, Panthers 2: OTTAWA — Kyle Turris had a goal and an assist to help Ottawa beat Florida, spoiling Peter Horachek's debut as the Panthers' coach. Coyotes 4, Capitals 3: GLENDALE, Ariz. — Shane Doan scored his second goal to cap a rally late in regulation and Phoenix scored on both attempts in the shootout to end Washington's five-game winning streak.
Wild 3, Hurricanes 2: RALEIGH, N.C. — Jason Pominville scored a goal in regulation and the game-winner in the shootout to lift Minnesota over Carolina. Flyers 4, Oilers 2: PHILADELPHIA — Philadelphia captain Claude Giroux ended his 21-game goal drought and Jay Rosehill, Scott Hartnell and Vinny Lecavalier also scored in a win over Edmonton. Blue Jackets 5, Islanders 2: COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ryan Johansen and Brandon Dubinsky each had a goal and two assists, and Columbus beat New York to snap a five-game losing streak.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
a amaoverw ems 0. The Associated Press TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — For the first time in two months, an opponent was standing up to Alabama. The top-ranked Crimson Tide flashed its overwhelming punching power to knockout No. 10 LSU in Saturday night's 38-17 victory Saturday, scoring the final 21 points in punishing fashion. AJ McCarron threw three touchdown passes, T.J. Yeldon ran for 133 yards and two scores and the Tide (9-0, 6-0 Southeastern Conference) turned to s mash-you-in-themouth football to take control of a game that was tied early in the third quarter. Yeldon carried 18 times in the second half, 25 overall. And down went LSU (7-3,
COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
He didn't need to put up big numbers toimprove his career mark to 34-2. LSU's Zach Mettenberger completed 16 of 23 passes for 241yards and a touchdown but was also sacked four times. It was the most points Alabama has scored against LSU since a 41-12 victory in 1947. LSU had won five of the last six meetings in Tuscaloosa, but lost fumbles on its first two possessions, including one on the goal line. The Tigers, who came in averaging 40.2 points, couldn't regain the lost momentum and managed just 52 yards in the second half and minus-9 in the final quarter. 3-3). Also on Saturday: "I think we probably played No. 3 Florida State 59, Wake our best half of football," Tide Forest 3:WINSTON-SALEM, coach Nick Saban said. "We N.C. — Jameis Winston threw didn't play great in the first two touchdown passes, and half, but man I tell you what, a Florida State tied a school relot of character out there in the cord with six interceptions as it clinched an ACC championsecond half." Yeldon and McCarron had ship berth. Nate Andrews took hooked up for the game-win- an interception 56 yards for a ning touchdown pass in the touchdown and Jalen Ramsey final minute of last season's returned afumble 23 yards for meeting with the Tigers. This a score on consecutive plays one had no such d ramatic for the Seminoles (9-0, 7-0), who claimed the inside track finish. Two-time defending nation- to a BCS title game berth with al champion Alabamabrushed No. 2 Oregon's loss Thursday. No. 7 Auburn 55, Tennesaside its first challenge since Game 2 against Texas A8 M. It see 23: KNOXVILLE, Tenn. was a dominant performance — Nick Marshall gained 214 two days after one contender, of Auburn's 444 yards rushNo. 2 Oregon, fell to another, ing and the Tigers scored on a No. 6 Stanford. punt return and kickoff return McCarron was a workman- against Tennessee. Marshall like 14-of-20 passing for 179 ran for two touchdowns on yards, letting Yeldon, Kenyan just 14 carries and threw for a Drake and their blockers as- third score. Tre Mason rushed sert control. He did hit speedy for 117 yards and three touchfreshman tight end O.J. How- downs as Auburn (9-1, 5-1 ard for a 52-yard touchdown SEC) earned its sixth straight and overtook John P arker victory and averaged 8.4 yards Wilson to become Alabama's per carry. top career passer. No. 9 Missouri 48, Kentucky "All he does is win and does 17:LEXINGTON, Ky. — Maty what his team needs for him to Mauk threw five touchdown do," Saban said of his senior passes, four to Dorial Greenquarterback. "I think the guy Beckham, and Missouri (9-1, is the best quarterback in the 5-1 Southeastern Conference) cruised past Kentucky. country."
Incognito
aggressive defense for most of
Dave Martin/The Associated Press
three quarters, Kelly helped keep the Sun Devils (7-2, 5-1 Pac-12) in the driver's seat for the Pac-12 South title. Utah (4-5, 1-5 Pac-12) led 19-7 in the third quarter. Pittsburgh 28, No. 24 Notre Dame 21: PITT S BURGH — James Conner ran for two short touchdowns, including the go-ahead score with 9:36 remaining as Pittsburgh upset
The Associated Press L OUISVILLE, Ky. — Preseason All-America Russ Smith had 21 points and five assists and No. 3 Louisville outscored College of C h arleston 22-3 over the final 6:41 on Saturday to pull away to a 70-48 victory in the first game of its national championship defense. Smith's new backcourtmate, Chris Jones. added 12 points and five assists. Charleston trailed just 4 8-45 with j ust 6 :55 t o play. Then Smith asserted h imself, hitting two f r ee throws and driving to find forwards Montrezl Harrell and Wayne Blackshear for easy baskets that gave the Cardinals a 54-45 lead with 5:05 left. Charleston scored again with 2:42 remaining, making it 61-47 and ending a 13-0 Louisville run. Also on Saturday: No. 11 Ohio State 89, Morgan State 50: COLUMBUS, Ohio — Shannon Scott scored a c a reer-high 16 points for Ohio State. No. 15 Gonzaga 100, Bryant 76: SPOKANE, Wash. S am Dower ha d 2 1 points and a career-high 17 rebounds to lead Gonzaga past Bryant in the season opener for both teams. No. 16 Wichita St. 93, Emporia State 50: WICHITA, Kan. — Cleanthony Early scored 21 points to lead Wichita State in it s f i rst game since its Final Four appearance. No. 23 New Mexico 88, Alabama A&M 52: ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Came ron B a irstow h a d 2 2 points and 11 rebounds for New Mexico.
Notre Dame (7-3). No. 11 Texas A&M 51, Mississippi State 41: COLLEGE STATION, Texas — Johnny Manziel threw for 446 yards and tied a career-high with five touchdown passes to lead Texas A8 M to a win in what could be the Heisman Trophy winner's last home game. The crowd chanted "One m ore year! One more year!" late in the game for Manziel, who is eligible for the draft after this season. Mississippi State cut the lead to 10 points early in the fourth quarter, but Manziel threw his fifthtouchdown pass to make it 44-27 for AkM (8-2, 4-2 Southeastern Conference). Virginia Tech 42, No.14 Miami 24: MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Trey Edmunds ran for four touchdowns, the first three of them set up by Miami specialteams miscues, and Virginia Tech knocked off the Hurricanes (7-2, 3-2 Atlantic Coast
yards on six carries, including a 66-yard touchdown run to help UCLA win. On defense, Jack had eight tackles and recovered Ka'Deem Carey's f umble i n t h e U C L A e n d zone. Brett Hundley passed for two touchdowns and ran for another as UCLA (7-2, 4-2
Pac-12) stayed a game behind
first-place Arizona State in the Pac-12 South. No. 17 Fresno State 48, Wyoming 10: LA R AMIE, W y o . — Derek Carr threw for 366 yards and four touchdowns, and Josh Quezada rushed for 105 yards and a score as Fresno State (9-0, 6-0 Mountain West) remained one of five Top 25 teams that are undefeated. No. 19 UCF 19, Houston 14: ORLANDO, Fla. — William Stanback scored two touchdowns and U C F ( 7-1, 4-0 American A t hletic C o nference) held off a late Houston Conference). Logan Thomas threat to keep first place in the completed 25 of 31 passes for AAC all to itself. 366 yards for the Hokies (7-3, No. 21 Wisconsin 27, BYU 4-2). 17: MADISON, Wis. — James No. 15 Oklahoma State 42, White ran f o r t w o t o u chKansas 6: STI L L WATER, downs and caught a pass for Okla. — Clint Chelf completed another score, and Wisconsin 19 of 37 passes for 265 yards (7-2) stalled BYU's fast-paced and three touchdowns to lead offense. Oklahoma State (8-1, 5-1 Big No. 23 Arizona State 20, utah 19: SALT LAKE CITY — Tay12) to victory. No. 16 UCLA 31, Arizona 26: lor Kelly ran for a touchdown TUCSON, Ariz. — Freshman and threw for another in the linebacker MylesJack played fourth quarter and A r izona offense, too, rushing for 120 State came from behind to
a threat against his sister. He blamed Dolphins teammates, Continued from D1 but he did not single out IncogBut whatever trouble Incog- nito. Martin, who reportedly nito encountered — and there has kept a menacing and racwere numerous scrapes with ist voice mail from Incognito, the law, with coaches and with is cooperating with an N FL teammates from New York to investigation. A definitive, full Oregon — there was always account of the dealings bea football team that wanted tween Martin and Incognito him in its uniform. In a game may not be forthcoming until in which intimidation rules, the NFL inquiry is complete, or coaches at all levels mostly perhaps not until subsequent prized Incognito's aggression legal matters are resolved. and were willing to overlook At the center of it all is Incoghis other problems. nito, 30, who has spent virtually But how did Incognito, who his entire adult life struggling looks plump-cheeked and boy- to keep his behavior within acish even in his college photo, cepted limits of propriety. transform into a m a n s u sIf that was a challenge, it pected of terrorizing his own could be because his uncomt eammate, referring to h i m promising aggression and notpublicly as the Big Weirdo? It ed mean streak have so often would be simplistic to point to been openly prized in footbalL a childhood fistfight as a turnIn 2005, less than a year after ing point in a person's life, but off-field transgressions ended people from Incognito's past his coll ege career at Nebraska still remember the teasing he and Oregon in the same sumendured as a kid, and the re- mer, Incognito was selected by sponse he delivered. the St. Louis Rams in the third The fight "sent the right mes- round of the NFL draft. sage to the town," said Seth Mike M a rtz, t h e R a m s' Bendian, who gave Incognito coach then, said the team wantprivate baseball i n struction ed players with attitude. "Because that's the way the for several years in the early 1990s. "And Richie remained a game is played in the NFL, nice, quiet kid." obviously," Martz said. "That Incognito became more and nastiness is evident, especially more aggressivein piecemeal in Incognito." This week, one of his teamsteps as his career developed until he landed in Miami, which mates and friends from ¹ had a locker room culture that braska and the Rams, kicker s eemed unchecked and a l Josh Brown, assessed Incoglowed the more domineering nito differently. "There were rumors that personalities l ik e I n c ognito to define acceptable behavior. he would barricade himself in Glimpses of that world that his room,signs of depression," have emerged in recent days B rovm, now w ith t h e N ew have ignited a national debate York Giants, said. "There was over the fuzzy area between fighting and outbursts." camaraderie and bullying. Brown shook his head. Martin's lawyer said Thurs"I know that's not the whole day that Martin had endured Richie," he said. "That's what's more than a year of physical sad. But it's in there." In 1995, just as Richie was and verbal abuse, including
turning 12, t h e I n cognitos moved from Bogota, N.J., to Glendale, Ariz. At Mountain Ridge High School, Incognito, once teased for his size, quickly became the school's featured athlete. Richie worked hard, but he did lead the team in penalties, according to Jim Ewan, the coach. "The first red flag is whatever happened at Nebraska," Ewan said. A lot happened at Nebraska. As an 18-year-old redshirt freshman, Incognito warred with the older starters in practice, often fighting after the whistle was blown. The coaches punished him for the tussles, but at least one coach said he admired Incognito's spunk. In 2002, Incognito became a starter for the Cornhuskers at left tackle, an important position usually reserved for one of the best linemen. In his second game, he was accused of spitting on a Troy State linebacker. In his fourth game, he threw multiple punches at a Penn State defensive end until he was ejected. In the secondto-last game, which was on national television, he received a personal foul in a pivotal moment, contributing to a l o ss against Colorado. After a whistle at one practice that season, he hit a backup lineman, Jack Limbaugh, from behind. It was the kind of cheap shot that usually led to a
treats psychiatric and behavioral problems. He was reinstated and was named an AllBig 12 Conference All-Star. But before the 2004 season, Incognito was found guilty on a misdemeanor assault charge stemming from a n i n cident that occurred at an off-campus party. He was still on the roster until he fought a teammate in the locker room that summer. The new Nebraska coach, Bill Callahan, dismissed him. He was quickly accepted into Oregon with the help of the football office in late August. Mike Bellotti, then the Oregon coach, said Incognito was welcome as long as he sought anger managementtherapy. Incognito's stay at Oregon was less than two weeks, not long enough to even participate in a full practice. He never registered for any courses, according to the registrar's office. Incognito then signed with an agent, who helped support him until the 2005 NFL draft. He was a f i rst-round talent, but he fell to the third round because of his history of unruliness. Incognito was a mainstay on the Rams' offensive line for five turbulent seasons during which he clashed with opponents, teammates, coaches, referees, and even fans who booed a losing team. He committed 38 penalties in that pe-
fight.
seven personal fouls. For the 2010 season, the Dolphins gave Incognito a oneyear contract. He vowed he would be a changed man and embarked on a makeover that included yoga, meditation and counseling. He told NFL.com that he began taking the drug Paxil, which can be used for conditions like depression and social-anxiety disorders.
Storm
with a total of 26 shots — 17 on goal — and converted more than enough of those shots to dispatch ninth-seeded Putnam
seed in the 16-team bracket. She also assisted on Edwards' Continued from D1 goal to keep the season alive "It was r e ally a s y stem for the Storm (15-0-2) in their thing," she added. "We needed quest for a s econd straight to play (the ball) out, and then state championship. "I think we just had that play it out again so that it forces another player to open up a sense of urgency, like it was spot. We made some system just 1-0 and we have to get a adjustments, they listened to couple more in," Plummer said it, and it worked in that second of the difference between the half." first and second halves. "Then Plummer finished with three it just kind of clicked." goals for Summit, the No. 1 All told, Summit finished
No. 3 Cards win to open title defense
beat Utah. Sun Devils Al lAmerica defensive tackle Will Sutton sealed the victory with an interception at the line of scrimmage with 1:01 left at the Utah 25. Stifled by Utah's
Alabama running back T.J. Yeldon, right, pulls LSU safety Craig Loston as he runs during the second half of Saturday night's game in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
"He did that kind of thing to a lot of his teammates," Limbaugh said. "I just walked off the field. A fight is what he wanted, but I w a sn't going there." After Incognito was suspended for fighting in practice during spring 2003, Nebraska sent him t o t h e M enninger Clinic in Topeka, Kan., which
(7-5-4) and earn an all-Central Oregon home semifinal matchup against No. 4 Bend. The Lava Bears defeated Willamette of Eugene 2-1 in another 5A quarterfinal on Saturday afternoon. For most teams, Brock said, all that matters during the state playoffs is moving on,
riod, including a league-high
winning by any means necessary and by whatever score. But for Summit, there is a little more to it than that. "For us ... we need to play our best any given game," Brock said."Sometimes we get caught up too much in what's beyond and not what's happening right now. For us, it's, 'Hey, this game is the final game.' It truly is. If you're out, you're out." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.com.
DS
Kansas State 49, No. 25 Texas Tech 26: LUBBOCK, TexasJake Waters and Daniel Sams each ran for two touchdowns to lead Kansas State past Tex-
as Tech (7-3, 4-3 Big 12). USC 62 , C a lifornia 2 8: BERKELEY, Calif. — Nelson Agholor had two of Southern California's NCA A - record tying three punt returns for touchdowns and Javorius Allen scored three times to help the Trojans beat California for the 10th straight time. Agholor started the scoring for USC (73, 4-2 Pac-12) with a 75-yard return and added a 93-yarder late in the second quarter to help USC win for the fourth time in five games under interim coach Ed Orgeron.
Washington 59, Colorado 7: SEATTLE — Keith Price threw for two touchdowns and ran for one as part of a huge first half where Washington racked up nearly 500 yards on offense, and the Huskies (6-3, 3-3 Pac-12) routed Colorado to become bowl eligible for the fourth straight season. Portland State 38, I daho State 31: POCATELLO, Idaho — DJ Adams rushed for 201 yards and tw o t ouchdowns as Portland State won. Collin Ramirez added 117 yards and two touchdowns for the Vi-
kings (6-4, 3-3 Big Sky). Portland State finished with 395 yards rushing and 539 yards total offense.
Before the 2011 season, the Dolphins gave I ncognito a three-year, $13 million contract with a $3.25 million guaranteed signing bonus. There were fewer documented incidents of misbehavior,but he received a trespassing warning after a suspected bar fight in Miami Beach this year. He declared himself a new man. And then Martin came forward with accusations of workplace abuse. Since Incognito's suspension from the Dolphins, other allegations have surfaced, including a report that the police in Florida in May investigated an accusation of molestation made by a female volunteer at a Dolphins charity golf tournament. Incognito was not charged. Incognito and his agent have declined interview r equests since his suspension.
While Incognito has been widely villainized, several of his teammates have supported him. Quarterback Ryan Tannehill called him the "best teammate I've ever had." He said Incognito was Martin's best friend on the Dolphins. Meanwhile, back in Incognito's hometown, Bogota, people struggled to connect the pudgy Little Leaguer with the man now accused of bullying. "My kids were Richie's babysitters," said Nick Barese, president of Incognito's youth baseball league. "Things couldn't have been more normal. I don't know what happened." +FekN<
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TItis periodical is intended to present information we feel is vaiuable to our customers. Articles are in no way to be used as a prescription for any specific person or condition; consult a qualified health practitioner for advice. 'Ihe articles appearing in Health Hotline' are either original articles written for our use by doctors and experts in the field of nutrition, or are reprinted by permission from reputable sources. Articles may be excerpted due Eo this newsletter's editorial space limitations. If you would like Eo be added or removed from the Health Hotline Mailing List or have a change of address, please call 303-986-4600 or online at wsysy.ttaturalgroceys.com/health-hotline/subscribe. Pricing and availability may vary by store location. All prices and otTers are subject to change. Not responsible for typographic or photographic errors.
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he world o f n u t r ition i s d y n amic — new discoveries are always being made, while old ideas are thrown to the wayside. Everybody has an opinion, and the popularity of specific diets and certain nutrients continually ebb and flow. However, in this changing tide of nutrition knowledge, there are certain nutrients that are infallible — nutrients that are absolutely fundamental to good health. The fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K are a perfect example.
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Both Omega-3 Fish Oils and Vitamin D Might Help Prevent Alzheimer's Disease The reigning stars of nutrition continue to be the omega-3 fish oils and vitamin D, mainly because of the vast amount of research supporting their health benefits. Now, two new studies point to the possible role of these
Vitamins are classified as either water soluble or fat soluble. The water-soluble vitamins include all of the B vitamins and vitamin C. These vitamins dissolve in water and are not stored by the bodyany excess is flushed out. Fat-soluble vitamins — A, D, E, and K — must be dissolved in fat before they enter the bloodstream and any excess is stored by the body in the liver and fat tissue; they are released as needed. Because the body has the ability to store the fat-soluble vitamins, it is erroneously assumed that we get plenty from our diet, thus there is no need to supplement and that supplementation could be toxic. However, for most people, this is simply not true. Case in point: vitamin D. Even though it is a fat-soluble vitamin and can be stored by the body (and can even be made by the body), most people are lacking optimal levels and many are downright deficient.
• • ElHKB meats, eggs from pastured hens, and full-fat dairy from grass fed cows. For most Americans, these foods rarely, if ever, make an appearance at mealtimes. This is especially true if you follow a low-fat, vegetarian, or vegan diet.
reproductive health; it is necessary to maintain the health of the skin and the mucous membranes that line the airways, the urinary tract, and the digestive tract; it is crucial for immune function; it is vital for eye health, including the proper development of the retina; it plays an important role in bone health; and it is important in healthy cell differentiation, the process in which stem cells mature into specific types of cells/tissue. Note: Because of the risk of birth defects at high doses, women of childbearing age should consume no more than 5,000 IU of vitamin A daily.
Why is it important to maintain optimal levels of the fat-soluble vitamins? Unlike the watersoluble vitamins, which act as "helper" molecules, or cofactors, to th e p roteins responsible for biochemical activity in the body, the fat-soluble vitamins act in a more fundamental way, actually influencing the production and activation of these proteins. Vitamins A and D s pecifically play important roles in gene expression, promoting the synthesis of certain proteins, while vitamin K's role is to activate specific proteins.i ii In other words, other vitamins and minerals have nothing to work with if the fat-soluble vitamins are lacking.
Vitamin K Like vitamin A, vitamin K is not a single vitamin, but a group of structurally similar, fat-soluble vitamins that are necessary to activate proteins in the body that are essential for blood coagulation and calcium metabolism (directing calcium to the bones and teeth and away from soft tissues). For this reason, vitamin K plays a tremendous role in cardiovascular and bone health; it is also important in reproductive health; dental health; cancer prevention; and insulin regulation.
Vitamin D Chances are you've heard of at least some of the many health benefits of vitamin D. There are vitamin D receptors in almost every tissue in the human body,affecting the health of every body system. Vitamin D has been shown to play a role in bone and muscle health; cardiovascular health; brain health; and in a healthy immune response. High levels of vitamin D are also associated with a lower risk of a number of cancers, including breast, ovarian, prostate, colon, and lung. And low levels have been associated with everything from autoimmune diseases to dementia. Vitamin D has proven to be invaluable to good health.
The best sources of the fat-soluble vitamins (with the exception of vitamin E) are animal foods, especially fatty fish (and fish liver oils), organ
nutrients in reducing the risk ofAlzheimer's disease.
Vitamin E Like its cousins A and K, vitamin E is actually a group of fat-soluble nutrients including tocopherols and tocotrienols. But unlike the other fat-soluble vitamins, vitamin E's primary role is that of an antioxidant. Considered to be the most potent fatsoluble antioxidant, vitamin E maintains the health of the cells by protecting polyunsaturated fatty acids in the cell membranes from oxidative damage. Vitamin E also plays a crucial role in reproductive health, influencing the release of the reproductive hormones from th e p i tuitary gland, including follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH), which control the menstrual cycle and ovulation in women and sperm production in men. There is preliminary evidence that suggests vitamin E also affects gene expression, including genes involved in immunity.
Vitamin A Vitamin A is an umbrella term for a family of related compounds, the most common including retinol, retinal, and retinoic acid. There is a longheld misconception that beta carotene, found in vegetables, is the same as vitamin A. It is not. Beta carotene is the precursor to vitamin A. In a perfectly healthy body, some beta carotene can be converted to vitamin A, but very little, and the conversion is highly variable from person to person, with factors such as gut integrity, nutritional status, fat intake, disease states, and genetic variances influencing the conversion.
Alzheimer's disease is caused in large part by deposits of beta-amyloid protein in the brain, which interferes with how brain cells communicate with each other. Because it's not usually feasible to measure beta-amyloid in the brains of living people, Nicklaos Scarmeas, MD, of the Columbia University Medical Center, New York, and his colleagues analyzed
blood levels of the substance and the dietary habits of 1,219 "cognitively healthy" people over the age of 65 years. In addition, Scarmeas looked specifically at 10 nutrients to see which were associated with beta-amyloid and Alzheimer's disease. He and his colleagues reported that only one nutrient the omega-3s stood out as being significantly protective.
A sort of unsung hero in the nutrient world, vitamin A is responsible for so much (like vitamin D, there are vitamin A receptors in almost all tissues in the body), yet often left out of a good supplement routine. It is essential for fetal development and
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Peoplewho consumed one extra gram of omega-3s— above and beyond the average amount consumed by people in this study had 20 to 30 percent lower levels of beta-amyloid in their blood. The finding would suggest that they also have lower levels ofbeta-amyloid in their brains and are at a lower risk of developing Alzheimer's disease.
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The fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K have a uniquely synergistic relationship, balancing and enhancing each other, and as a group, they have a profound influence on human health.When you take more of one fat-soluble vitamin you create a greaterneed for the others. While there are no established guidelines for an optimal ratio of these important nutrients, the best approach is to take them in a healthy balance, through both a nutrient-dense traditional foods diet and smart supplementation.4
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Meanwhile Cedric Annweiler, MD, PhD, of Angers University Hospital, France, and his colleagues tracked 498 people with an average age of 80 years. Their vitamin D intake was estimated based on a food-consumption questionnaire, and none had been taking vitamin D supplements.
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Overall, people with the highest intake of vitamin D were 77 percent less likely to develop Alzheimer's disease. In addition, women who consumed the least vitamin D had a higher risk of Alzheimer's disease. There was no difference in vitamin D intake between people who developed nonAlzheimer's dementia and those free of any type of dementia.
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Reference: Gu Y, Schupf N, Cosentino SA, et at Nutrient intake and plasma b-amyloid. Neurology, 201Z epub ahead of print Annweiler C, Rolland Y, Schott AM, et al Higher vitamin D dietary intake is associated with 10wer risk of Alzhetmer's disease: a 7-year follow-up. 'I'lscJournaL» of ry'eronyolorcr, .'Senas A, Byologrcal .'y'crcnces and Metrrccrl Sciences,2012: doi ut 1093/geronalgls107.
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"Brokenbrains"go by m any names— depression,anxiety,m emory loss, brain fog, attention deficit disorder, autism, and dementia, to name a few — and show up in radically different ways from person to person, making each seem like aseparate problem. But the truth is that these "diagnoses" are all the result of a few basic problems with our biology. Pinpoint these biological problems, fix them, and let your body's natural healing intelligence takeover to repair your brain. The VltraMind Solution showsyou how to correct the imbalances in your brain —most caused by nutritional deficiencies, allergens, infections, toxins, and stress — to achieve optimum mental health without drugs or psychotherapy.
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© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
Pricing pressure at Whole Foods
• As the city prepares for the 3-month closureof its mainstreet, businessowners areexpressing a mixof concernand optimismabout the impact the project will haveduring construction — andafter it's complete
By Lydia DePillis
Workplace bullying is tough to
find, stop By Diane Stafford The Kansas City Star
At more than 300 pounds each, offensive line mates Richie Incognito and Jonathan Martin of the Miami Dolphins aren't your typical bully and victim. But it takes something out of the ordinary — the • How to spotlight of blow the p r o f essional whistle on sports or a unethical noisy lawsuit behavior, — for bullyE2 ing among adults to get the same sort of attention paid to kids' harassment at school. Incognito, known for questionable behavior even in his violent sport, was sus-
pended Nov. I for allegedly being the ringleader in the systematic bullying of Martin. Martin left the team in the face of the harassment, and the National Football League is investigating. Workplace consultant Leigh Branham of Overland Park, Kan., understands why Martin left but worries that the bullying took too long to be recognized and controlled by the Dolphins. "The incident just reminded me that it's the tip of the iceberg that goes on in the workplace every day," said Branham, an author and managing principal at Keeping the People. See Bullying/E2
still king in real estate
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Whole Foods Market, historically, has not competed on price. That's been a successfulstrategy because its educated, affluent shoppers assume that quality must just come at a premium. They're willing to shell out significantly more forpesticide-free pears and artisanal cheese than they might for groceries at the Kroger or Safeway down the road. The price isn't simply a function of the cost of goods, though. Whole Foods' profit margins have been significantly fatter than the supermarket industry's notoriously slim margins for years now, at around 3.8 percent compared to the average of 0.7 percent. Investors have rewarded this: Whole Foods' stock trades at about twice the price of its rivals'. Some of that comes from a product mix that skews more toward prepared foods, which command higher prices, but the chain also benefits from a squishy perception cushion that prevents customers from comparison-shopping quite as ruthlessly. "I think that the conditioning, right or wrong, may be that organic product costs more than genetically modified product," says Joe Feldman, a grocery analyst at Telsey Advisory Group. That perception game has stopped working, though. And Whole Foods is trying to figure out if it can adapt. See Whole Foods/E5
Cash
HIGHWAY 20 THROUGH SISTERS
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Money talks, but cash shouts in the real estate market. An unprecedented number of home buyers
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SISTERS — While business owners agree Sisters needs new sidewalks and roads downtown, some worry the upcoming construction on U.S. Highway 20 could hurt their businesses. The impact so far has been minimal because construction has occurred at night, said John Cheatham, owner of Sundance Shoes on Cascade Avenue, the name of Highway 20 in Sisters. But come March, when segments of the street start closing to vehicle traffic forthree months, he said, it might not be business as usual. "When Cascade closes, that's where everybody is worried about how big of an impact it is going to be," Cheatham said. Sisters isn't the first community to undergo construction on its primary downtown street. And it isn't the first Central Oregon communityto have concerned business owners during times of road construction.
Business ownersworry that shutting down Highway20for three months beginning in March will hurt sales. The city of Sisters and the Oregon Department of Transportation will direct cars and small trucks onto Hood and Main avenues temporarily and semitrucks to Barclay Drive permanently. 1
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Construction on Sixth Street in Redmond was completed last month, said Mike Caccavano, Redmond city engineer. The construction was the final piece of a four-phase project that included rerouting U.S. Highway 97 around downtown and rebuilding streets and sidewalks downtown. Throughout the nineyear process, he said, business owners expressed a lot of
concern about road closures, construction equipment and detours. So did those on the east side of Bend during the widening of Highway 20 east of Pilot Butte, according to The Bulletin's archives. Worries about losing business to fix the Highway 20 bottleneck that occurs in Sistersand backs up traffic for miles each summer have been
expressed for more than 20 years. But Sisters City Manager Andrew Gorayeb said he hopes the latest project will finally help ease summer congestion by showing semitrucks a way around downtown. Highway 20 in the Western-themed town serves as both a main street that supports the restaurants, gift shops and other businesses that line both sides of the road and part of the National Highway System and regional freight route, according to the Oregon Departmentof Transportation. The $6.6 million project, which began in early August, includes a complete rebuild of the road surface between Pine and Locust streets, a new stormwater system, new curbs, crosswalks, wider sidewalks, as well as new landscaping and light posts. Paving on Cascade Avenue and stormwater construction on side streets have started, with work being done during the night. SeeSisters/E5
Nearly half of all U.S. buyers during September paid cash, compared with 30 percent last year, according to RealtyTrac. "Cash is king," said Dave Delgado, co-owner of a medical supply company in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. He recently paid cash for a couple of suburban rental houses. "It's hard to say how the stock market will do, so we feel more confident and comfortable in the real estate market." Delgado and other investors are spending billions on real estate, signaling a deepening confidence in the housing recovery and a steadfast belief that demand for rentals will remain strong. Yet the cash trend is creating unwelcome competition for those who can't afford to buy a home without financing. With low appraisals still scuttling deals and mortgage approvals more difficult to come by, sellers often favor cash buyers even if they don't have the highest offer. This leaves sellers with less profit, can hold back home prices and puts buyers back on the house hunt. "The housing market continues to skew in favor of investors, particularly deep-pocketed institutional investors, and other buyers paying with cash," said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. The trend presents opportunities as well as challenges. Though home sales are onthe rise,mortgage originations have fallen, in part because more buyers are paying cash. Last month, Wells Fargo Home Mortgage announced a fourth round of layoffs, citing a falloff in mortgage originations. Nationwide, the Mortgage Bankers Association expects a 32 percent decline in mortgage originations in 2014, suggesting that more layoffs are on the horizon. Home values are also at risk, ascash offers often go for less than ones made with the backing of a mortgage. For sellers, it's a simple decision: Go with a cash offerthat' s sure to close instead of a bid that could end up falling through if the appraisal isn't high enough. SeeCash /E3
Choosing acharity wisely
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can tell you whether your donation will mostly be spent on a charity's Donating to charities this time of mission and not peripheral activities. year used to be relatively efficient These days you have to use your head a nd painless. After w a tching t h e far more than your heart to see that Macy's Thanksgiving Day Payour charitable dollars are well rade, you plunked some money spent on causes you care about. into a Salvation Army bucket, • Keeping Ther e ar e services and stratcharity wrote some checks, contributed egies that you can use to make some household items and were d i n ner an informed decision. Most of events done. them can help you determine fresh,E3 whe t h er your dollars will reach Yet with charities increasingly involved i n a w a reness the charity's "mission" — and c ampaigns, complex n etworks o f whether a nonprofit organization is cause marketing and often exorbitant effective in what it is striving to do. overhead, donating to the most efCharities are w i tnessing greater fectivecharity has never been more selectivity among donors, probably challeng>ng. driven by th e pinch of a s l uggish If you are a discriminating giver, economy. you will need a set of guidelines that SeeCharity/E3 New York Times News Service
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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 20'I3
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 daysbefore publication date tobusiness@bendbulletin.com or click on"Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
TUESDAY PROFESSIONALENRICHMENT SERIES,STRESS ANO TIME MANAGEMENT:Learn how to create a time and task management system that works for you, ways to make time for health and well-being, achieving long-term goals, registration required; $20 for chamber members; 7:30a.m.;VolcanicTheatrePub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.bendchamber.org/. ORGANIZINGWITH OUTLOOK 2010 FOR BUSYPEOPLE:Learn how to integrate all components of Outlook to be more productive, registration required; $80; 8-10 a.m.; webinar; info@simplifynw.com. WHAT SHOULD BEIN YOUR NEW HOME WARRANTY?:Discuss what shouldbe included in warranties that contractors are required to offer to new home buyers, registration required; $20 or free for COBA members; 8-10 a.m.; COBA,1051 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-1058 or www.coba.org. MEMBERSHIP101 — DRIVING YOUR MEMBERSHIP: Connect with new members and reconnect with current members of the Chamber, registration required; free;10 a.m.; BendChamberofCommerce,777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541-3823221, shelley@bendchamber.org or www.bendchamber.org/. SERIOUSSUCCESS, MOTIVATIONALSERIES FOR WOMEN:Spendanafternoon focused on communication, registration required; free; noon-1 p.m.; East BendPublic Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 541330-3760 or www.facebook.com/ events/1427038530849250/?ref dashboard filter= upcoming. CLOSINGTHE DEAL, YOU ARE IN THE DOOR, NOW WHAT?: Learn how to improve your sales, tools to build trust, credibility and authority, registration requested; $20 or free for COBAmembers;1-3 p.m.; COBA, 1051 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-
1058, gretchenp©coba.org or www. coba.org. TWITTERFORBUSINESS: Explore how to effectively useTwitter to market andadvertise your small- to medium-sized business, find out how to create anonline brand using this social media site, registration required; $49; 1-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way,Bend; 541-383-7270.
WEDNESDAY ECONOMICFORECAST BREAKFAST: State of the Market and Beyond, join a panel discussion of business, real estate and economic investment managers, registration required; 7 a.m.; TheRiverhouseConvention Center, 2850 N.W.Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-389-3111 or www. bendchamber.org/. HOMEOWNER SEMINAR: Ownership seminar discussing the advantages ofhomeownership, what the market is doing and what it means, steps in the buying and selling process, understanding the costs, information on construction and remodeling, mortgage loan basics and more, registration required; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Association of Realtors, 2112 N.E.Fourth St., Bend; 541-382-6027 or info@coar.com.
THURSDAY CENTRALOREGONREAL ESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB: Forthe purpose of education and networking, topic of discussion will be depreciation; 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Windermere Real Estate, 1020 S.W.Indian Ave., Redmond; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. HIDEC 2013ANNUALCONFERENCE: Learn core processes to improve your business, followed by anetworking hour, registration required; $35 for HiDECmembers, $79 for nonmembers;1-5 p.m.; EagleCrest Resort, Conference Center,1522 Cline
Falls Road, Redmond; 541-388-3236, nate@hidec.org or www.eventbrite. com/event/9003139633. HOMEOWNER SEMINAR: Ownership seminar discussing the advantages ofhomeownership, what the market is doing and what it means, steps in the buying and selling process, understanding the costs, information on construction and remodeling, mortgage loan basics and more, registration required; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Association of Realtors,2112 N.E.Fourth St., Bend; 541-382-6027 or info©coar.com. FALL LECTURE SERIES, PARKING PLAYS ABIGPART:Rick Wiliams will present, discussion of creating great business districts; free; 6:30 p.m.; Discovery Park Lodge, 2868 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-312-9940. BNI CHAPTEROESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERS: 7 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-610-9125.
FRIDAY HOW TOQUALIFY FOR A HABITAT FOR HUMANITYHOME ANO HOW WE CANHELP HUMANITY: Environmental Protection and updates in Central Oregon, 8:45 a.m. Networking and Breakfast, RSVPto phyllis.mageau@gmail.com; $15 for first time guests and members, $20 for nonmembers; 9:15-10:30a.m.; St. Charles Bendconference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321.
SATURDAY Nov. 16 OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER TRAINING:Getyour OLCCAlcohol Service permit, must be18years of age, class is followed by exam, registration required; $39; 8 a.m.-1 p.m.; CascadeCulinary Institute, 2555 N.W.Campus Village Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
DEEDS Deschutes County • Lori Hamilton to Barbara D. Allen, Tollgate, Sixth Addition, Lot288, $230,000 • Mark P. andGloria S. Wardlow, trustees for the Wardlow Family 2008 Revocable Trust, to RalphandVicki L.F. Corbett, Parksat Broken Top, Phase 2, Lot 93, $369,000 • PNC Bank N.A. to Secretary of HousingandUrban Development, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 35, Block J, $197,489.73 • Glen O. andChristie S. Graham to Linda C. Carstens, Hawks Ridge, Phase1, Lot10, $685,000 • James H. andKayM. McGrath to Lon D. and Lori A. Brown, View Ridge, Lot 2, $269,000 • Jennifer M. Bartosekto Trevor L. Lugersand Jessica L. Leblanc, Township17, Range11, Section14, $485,000 • Evelyn R. Dahlund, trustee for the Evelyn R. DahlundRevocable Living Trust, to Paul T.and Mildred A. Curley, Stonebrook, Phase 2,Lot 9, Block 3, $260,000 • George J. andMichelle B. Gregurich and Kenneth H. and Linda R.Rayto Charles F.and Kathleen S.Conrad, First Addition to River Forest Acres, Lot 11, Block 2, $150,000 • Central Oregon Investments LLC to Alfred A. Dolezal, also known asAlfred E. Dolezal, and Patricia B. Dolezal, Tetherow Crossing, Phase 7, Lots 9 and10, Block 2, $160,000 • Michael Beard and Leigh Schwarz to RichardW .Davisand Suzanne M. Teutschel-Davis, Overlook Park, Lot 2, Block 7, $215,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Jason Pattison, South Point, Lot 23, $228,062 • Eugene and Christina Horvath to Steven D.and Shonna M.Pease, Timber Creek 2, Phase 3,Lot 21, $200,000 • John J. and Melanie L. Alkire, individually and astrustees for the Alkire Family Revocable Trust, to Cesilie I. Cocks, AwbreyVillage, Phase 3, Lot178, $498,000 • Roy A. Scurlock to Daniel E. and Virginia L. Green, Circle C Acres, Lot 4, Block 3, $215,000 • Luke and Martinique Pickerill to Sabio Investments LLC, Madison Park, Lot16, $223,700 •StevenW .andNancyCameronto Mid Oregon Federal Credit Union, Summit Acres, Lot 9, Block 2, $184,399.02 • FC FundLLCto GWLand Acquisitions LLC, Eagles Landing, Phase 2, Lots11-5, 7-10,16, 43, 6166, 82 and 83, $1,377,500 • Michael Mastrangelo Jr. and Mary K. Mastrangelo to Michael andKeela Stumpf, Awbrey Village, Phase1, Lot 35, $485,000 • Sonata WayLLCto Simon C. and Greta A. Elston, Sugar Pine Subdivision, Lot11, $236,900 • Pamela A. Welch andStephen C. Voorhees to Jackie H.Tozer and Arlyn M. Cimock, Ski House III Condominium Section Mt. Bachelor Village, Unit 252, $ l55,000 • Michael Gemperleto Jeff Katz, Knoll Heights Lot 3, Block1, $200,000 • Patricia D.B. Hansen, trustee for the Babcock Family Trust, and Kevin Hansen, trustee for the HansenFamily Trust, to Joshua D.and Michelle Walker, Windsong, Lot22, $194,500 • Donna S. Hill, trustee for the Donna Sue Hill Revocable Trust, to Melinda S. Street, Oregon Water Wonderland, Unit No. 2, Lot 43, Block 31, $300,000 • Wolfbuild LLC to Jeffrey A. Tygart,
Sierra Vista, Phase 2,Lot 39, $186,000 • Heritage N.W. Properties LLC to Homequest lnvestment Fund LLC, Davidson Addition to Sisters, Lots 510, Block 9, $915,000 • John E. Gilmore to Charles and Audrey Belden, DeerPointe Village, Phase 3, Lot 20, $251,000 • Judith A. Jones andPatricia A. MacKinnon to Jeanne E. Alan, First Addition to Woodland Park Homesites, Lot 2, Block 2, $217,500 • Linda Hurd, as trustee for the Linda L. Hurd Living Trust and co-trustee for the Gary L. Slusser Living Trust, and Gary L. Slusser, trustee for the Gary L. Slusser Living Trust, to Diane L. McClelland, DeerPark1, Lot1, Block 2, $280,000 • Henry R. and Mitzi L. Kennedy, trustees for the KennedyLiving Trust, to John A. andJoan H. Collins, Crescent Creek, Lot 37, $154,000 • Brooks Resources Corporation to Greg WelchConstruction lnc., NorthWest Crossing, Phase18, Lot 667, $221,000 • Deschutes Mobile HomePark LLC to Birdnest Mobile Estate LLC, Deschutes River Woods, Lots1 and 88-92, BlockS, $1,050,000 • Hannah K. Nagelto ToddG. Galewski, Monarch Estates, First Addition, Lot 3, Block 2, $380,900 • Anne L. Brutsche, trustee for the Brutsche Family Revocable Trust - Survivors Trust, to Timothy E.Toth and Ruth E.Palmer,Village at Cold Springs, Lot 33, $209,000 • Michael D. Klautzsch and Nohemi E. Davil-Klautzsch to GuangyuSunand Dan Xue,Westbrook Meadows RU.D., Phase 3, Lot12, $347,900 • Hayden Homes LLC to Thomas M. and Mary L. Burau, South Point, Lot 21, $215,371 •ThomasL.andJeannieH.Kinley, trustees for the Kinley Family Revocable Trust, to Trinity O. Lind and Kimberly L. Coleman, trustees for the Trinity 0. Lind Daughter's Trust, Braeburn, Phase 3,Lot 39, $430,600 •GordonBozeman toLinda M.and David M. Gaudette, Rivers Edge Village, Phase 7,Lot 58, $715,700 •James R.GergentoJoshuaM.and Hilary L. Wyma, Homestead, Third Phase, Lot4, Block 6, $234,900 • Robert and Ashley Strauch to Rhonda F.and Stephen N. Farnum, Shevli n Commons P U.D.,Phase l-3, Lot18, $1,190,000 • Gabriel Lanning to Andrew T. Tasler and Sasha L.Sulia, Selken Subdivision, First Addition, Lot 4, Block 4, $299,000 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC, who acquired titleasWoodhill Enterprises LLC, to Paul F. and Jody L. Prusi, Northwest Townsite COSSecond Addition to Bend, Lot12, Block44, $549,950 • Markian B. and Kateryna H. Hawryluk to Mary A. Jacobs, SummerMeadows Estates, Phase 2, Lot 31, $240,000 • Boyer Properties LLC to David Boyer, Chamberlain Condominium, Unit 2, $200,000 • Steven H. andTheresa C.Blackto Daniel D. and Kristine L. Callahan, South Heights, Lot15, Block4, $324,900 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Richard J. and Damova L. LeSage,Renaissance at Shevlin Park, Lot 37, $466,975 • Kimberli S. Kennedyto Michael G. and Judith G. Patterson, Sun Meadow, Lot15, $162,000 • Roger and Kate Hiddleston to Joseph and Debra A.Vasquez,Timber Ridge, Lots 2 and 3, Block 3, $225,000
• David and Sally J. Davidsonto Jennifer Woodruff and Ellie Larson, Hollygrape Subdivision, Lot 9, $329,000 • Maria Simonton, formerly known as Maria Taddonio, andReid S.Simonton to Carol J. Edmunds, trustee for the Carol J. EdmundsTrust, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 4, Lot 317,$394,000 • Robert J. and Patricia A. Crever, trustees for the Crever1994 Revocable Trust, to Matthew A. and Shari A. Carey,Township18, Range 12, Section 2, $195,000 • Stephen C. andJudith E. Neville, trustees for the Neville Family Trust, to Brent D. andKirsten A. Force, Oregon Water Wonderland, Unit 2, Lot1, Block 23, $219,000 • Tennant Investors to RedWine U.S.A. Investments LLC, NorthWest Crossing, Phases 9and10, Lot 434, $399,000 • Gregory L. and Sandra C. Stumpf to Kibby RoadLLC,Cascade Vista P.U.D., Lot 52, $176,000 • Ronald C. andCheryl A. Ellson to Wendi E. Green,Rivers EdgeVillage, Phase 2, Lot 22, Block1, $450,000 Crook County • Arland T. and lma JeanKeeton to Gary and Virginia Cutler, Brasada Ranch 1, Lot 34, $150,000 • Robert J. and Nancy J. Sorenson to Maggie K. Akerberg, Quail Valley Park, Unit 2, Phase1, Lot 34, $220,000 • Steven K. andRobin R. Chappell to David P. Wickersheim, Valley View Subdivision, Lot11, Block5, $225,000 • BrasadaRanchDevelopment LLC to Stone Bridge HomesLLC,Brasada Ranch No. 4, Lots 392, 456-460, 464, 468, 469 and 471, $400,000 • Lorraine Tognoli, as trustee of the Lorraine Tognoli Revocable Trust, to Sigman Ranch LLC,Prineville Ranch Subdivision, Phase 2, Portions of Lots 29, 31, 32, $1,100,000 Jefferson County • Robert J. and Kristi K. Lorsung to Gladys L. Broussard, CrookedRiver Ranch No. 8, Lot17, $248,000 • Ty C. and Kristie R. Merrill to JPMorgan ChaseBank N.A., Palisades Estates, Phase 3, Lot 50, $168,454.90 • Thomas F.and Megan M.Summers to Federal National Mortgage Association, Herzberg Heights Subdivision, Lot 2, Block1, $160,500 • Jim Adkins, Sheriff of Jefferson County, to Wells Fargo BankN.A., Crooked River Ranch No. 7,Lot 215, $176,599.06 • Jefferson County Sheriff to Federal National Mortgage Association, Culver Heights No. 3, Lot 63, $164,814.87 • Sybil M. Forsman to Leslie K. and Leroy K. Chu,Crooked River Ranch No. 6, Lot 24, $178,000 • Mardelle R. Mauck, personal representative for the Estate of Paloma D.West, to Hold-C Properties LLC, Palmain, Lots10-12, Block 23, $250,000 •JaneCannonto KellyG.and Kyle P. Devine, Township10, Range,14 Section18, $225,000 • Barbara F.French, assuccessor trustee of the Jack R.FrenchTrust and astrustee of the Barbara J.French Trust, to Thomas F. and Colleen L. Laszlo, $160,000 • Steve Martin to Wade L. andMykle L. Whiting, Country View Estates, Phase 2, Lot 5, $200,000 • John A. and DonnaM.Fisher to Pacific Continental Bank, Shamrock Estates, Lot 7, Block1, $302,700 • Scott A. and Theresa R.Cravensto Michelle M. Huebner, Crooked River Ranch No. 3, Lot 411, $178,000
Bullying
Blowthewhistle withoutdlowingyourcareer
Continued from E1 Though Martin was able to leave the team, leaving a more typical workplace often is not an option for people who need their paychecks. And bullies often aren't stopped.
Someone youwork with is
trouble for each other.
doing something unethical. What do you do about it?
Notwithstanding the con-
sequences, we're encouraged to speak up — to theoffender
If you're like most work-
A lthough bull y i ng among the young gets widespread attention, the details of repeated and incessant harassment among adults at work often don't emerge outside of l e gal
proceedings.
ers, you'll ignore it about half the time. That's what Joseph
first — when we see wrongdo-
Grenny, co-author of "Crucial
to "blow the whistle without
Accountability," found when he surveyed workers for his
blowing your career":
research.
up whatyou thinkyou saw or
It's possible there's a general decline in ethics or such
know. • Confront the individual,
antipathy toward employers
directly but respectfully. Say
that employees don't care. But Grenny found these top
you have good intentions. Tell the offender you're not
ing. Here areGrenny's tips • Gather information to back
reasons why workers said they questioning motives or au-
But workplaces are petri dishes to grow an imbalance of power that leads to
haven't blown the whistle on
thority, but you want to stop
wrongdoing:
a perceived problem before it worsens.
• It would have made the offender harder to work with. • I was concerned it would
psychological and sometimes physical d a mage.
Such grown-up bullying
• Tell the facts you've seen.
Don't state your judgments or accusations. Beopen to hear-
damage mycareer.
— as childish as sandbox behavior — occurs when co-workers haze newbies and when bosses single out
• I didn't think it would be
ing an explanation or getting more information from the
taken seriously. • I wasn't sure how to bring up my concerns.
employees. B ranham, l i k e o t h e r management consultants, finds that there are "really insecure types that have to have power, and they d on't know any w a y t o get it except through bully behavior." Some bullies are truly racist or sexist, but not all. Some simply don't know how to exert authority or act in a group. Gary N a mie, d i rector of the Workplace Bullying Institute, has a no-holdsbarred assessment ofwhat bullying is and the damage it causes. It's a "systematic, laserfocused campaign of interpersonal destruction," Namie says — a "unilaterally declared war" by the bully against the victim. W hether s p arked b y j ealousy, inferiority or a misguided attempt to elevate oneself in others' eyes, the bully often carries on unimpeded because others fear to get involved. That's especially true when the bully outranks the victim, as in a workplace, where a boss targetsan employee and co-workers keep quiet to protect their jobs. It's also true in organizations where people keep quiet for the sake of camaraderie or tradition. In the Miami Dolphins case, Incognito was a 30year-old veteran and Martin a second-year player. Branham said he finds workplaces where the attitude is that the new guy needs to be taught how to behave or toe the line for a while. It usually passes. When it doesn't, or when a particular worker is singled out for abuse, that's when long-lasting p roblems occur. SuEllen Fried of Kansas City, who f ormed BullySafeUSA and has earned n ational acclaim for h er anti-bullying efforts, takes care to point out that three people (or more) are usually involved in bullying: the bully, the target (a term she prefers to victim) and the witness. Although some cyberbullying and other closeted bullying may occur unknown to others, Fried "motivatt eaches t h a t ing witnesses to take action is key" to halting the harassment. Authorities agree that tacit acceptance of bullying
offender to makesure your interpretation is correct. • Not satisfied or more troubled? Take it up the ladder
The fact that offending the
offender was a big concern interpersonal relationships at work. People who get along
to bosses, human resources,a lawyer or regulatory agency. • And, always, seek help
are more likely to support
from security, human re-
each other, get good raises, assignments and promo-
sources or a lawyer if you fear for your safety.
speaks to the importance of
tions. People who don't get
— Diane Stafford, The KansasCity Star
along are more likelyto cause — whether by fellow athletes or co-workers — allows unwanted, intimidating behavior to continue. "There'sa fairly high percentage of people who dread going into work," Branham said. "They're anxious, depressed, angry. They n eed their bullies to be confronted. But often there's denial or lack of awareness at the top that it's going on, and others lack the courage to step in." A particular nuance about workplace bullying is that it can be triggered by the victim's poor performance. For the victim to go public about the bullying would r equire admitting his or her poor per-
such repeated, intentional efforts to demean or harm someone usually need interference by others to stop. That's partly because s om e a u t h orities think that some bullies don't even realize their actions are hurtful, that t h ey're acting out their own inner demons without regard to the effect on others. The U.S. Office for Civil Rights and the Justice Department consider bullying a form of harassment with legal consequences if it is tied to race, color, national origin, sex or disability. What's important to remember, Namie advises, is that these atypical incidents aren't conflicts between two equally
formance,and many people don't want to do that, Branham noted. T hat's w hy, w h ether a t work, on a football team or on a school bus, others need to have courage to step in. According to the National Bullying Prevention Center,
powered people. A bully usually has the upper hand in size, tenure or authority. The danger, he says, is letting the power imbalance go on because it's "just a management style" or c o mmon practice.
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
in in
e inner aa
By Phyllis Korkki New York Times News Service
The three-course dinners. The auctions and raffles. The speeches from sponsors. The requestsfor donations. These are the ingredients of many a charity event, and they have stood the test of time. But nonprofit groups that are planning events this sea-
son — especially recurring ones — may want to consider whether it is t ime to shake things up. The last thing a fundraiser needs is a guest who is bored, or annoyed, or doesn't show up at all. "How are they coming back year after year if you haven't made this night special?" said Ginger Berman, president of Events With Ginger & C o ., in Westfield, N.J. She has helped plan five "chef's table" events in New York for Autism Speaks, a research and advocacy organization. At the event, a collection of chefs (more than 90 at last month's g athering) d o nate their time and food to cook tableside meals for groups of 10. Although the basic structure of th e A u tism Speaks eventshas remained the same since they began in 2007, organizers add variety by inviting different chefs to participate and switching up the entertainment each year,Berman said. Past events have featured
Charity Continued from E1 According to The Chronicle of Philanthropy, a trade newspaper for the nonprofit sector, donations to the top 400 fundraising charities are slowing this year after having gained 4 percent in 2012. Last year, the top nonprofits took in about $81 billion. Although such things are hard to measure, it is possible thatdonors have become more sophisticated in their giving as useful information on charities has become more detailed. Yet it is easy to get distracted by ubiquitous causes that blanket everycorner of society. Here, a guide to navigating the thicket.
The major services One of the f irst stops in searching for charities is GuideStar, which contains records from 1.8 million nonprofits registered with the I nternal Revenue Service. The free component of the GuideStar website provides access toeach organization's Form 990, the basic IRS filing document for nonprofits. That is useful on the front end if you want basic information on a charity's income, spending, mission and executive salaries. As with the other services, you can also pay for "premium" services from GuideStar that provide more financial a nalysis and a c cess t o a nonprofit's contractors. This would help if you wanted to perform d e tailed c o mparisons of charities or to explore their financial ratios or executive compensation in greater depth. What GuideStar does not do is give a qualified rating of a charity. It tries to remain neutral and "is not a charity evaluator," says Lindsay J.K. Nichols, a spokeswoman. For more intensive evaluations, you need to go to the BBB Wise Giving Alliance or Charity Navigator. The BBB Wise Giving Alliance, affiliated with the Council of Better Business Bureaus, has free reviews of 1,300 national charities; local BBBs have evaluations on an additional 10,000. The group applies 20 "accountability" standards — governance, oversight, effectiveness and the like — once every two years at no charge to the charities, but it does not explicitly rate them using a star or letter system. The alliance will specify if a charity does not meet BBB standards or " did not d i sclose the requested information." About 40 percent of the charities evaluated meet all 20 benchmarks; ones that do are designated a "BBB Accredited Charity." To customize a search and get charity-specific r atings, Charity Navigator, which evaluates about7,000 nonprofits, has an easy-to-use interface to find charities that match do-
Tina Fineberg / New York Times News Service
Franklin Becker and assistant Vincent Petrillo, right, prepare food tableside at an Autism Speaks event in New York. Inviting different chefs each year helps keep the event fresh. celebrities like Harry Connick Jr., while this year the chief entertainment was a y oung singer with a u tism, Talina Toscano. Adding new elements and extra pizazzto events can be
tions, and some can become formulaic, she says. When clients want a formal dinner to serve as the center of a function, she often tries to talk them out of it, she said. Even if food is served buffet-style, challenging if the organiz- people still end up sitting with ers are nonprofitemployees the same few other guests for who have other job duties as almost the whole night, she well. But Berman, along with said. Cassie Brown of TCG Events, One reason to attend these in Charlotte, N.C., says a little events is to socialize, and they creativity can go a long way. can be excellent networking At th e s ame t i me, t hey o pportunities, so f ood a n d warn, event planners should drink setups should encournever lose sight of expenses age mingling and can be prefand logistics. erable, she said. Brown has attended her A danger of fundraisers is share of d i nners and auc- that they can turn into "talk-
nors' interests. Focusing on fin a n c ial h ealth, a ccountability a n d transparency, Charity Navigator applies an analysis to each of its charities to come up with its star ratings (with four stars as the highest rank). It examines federalForm 990s to see how much of a charity's income goes toward programs and what percentage is spent on administration and fundraising. Of the three major services, Charity Navigator is the easiest to use. Generally, a good benchmark for a worthwhile charity is having at least 75 percent of income spent on programs, or the nonprofit's mission, according to Sandra Miniutti, a spokeswoman for Charity Navigator. Aside from vetting a charity's financials, Miniutti suggests, donors should "understand the charity's mission — pick just a few, do your research and stick with them over time."
Getting granular Want to dig deeper and go beyond the charity information services? You can use them to find basic information on revenue, fundraising and spending, but you will need to go several layers deeper if you want additional scrutiny. Here aresome major issues to consider: • Have you compared the charity's Form 990 with its annual report and audited financial statements? The 990 can often be opaque and may not tell you particulars on an organization's specific programs. You may need an accountant or f i n ancial adviser acquainted with nonprofit accounting to r eview these documents; the audited financials contain much more detail. • Does the charity practice "joint cost allocation?" This is accounting jargon for lumping in fundraising or solicitation with the charity's program expenses. According to the BBB Wise Giving Alliance, morethan 20 percent of nationally solicited charities it reviews employ this practice, which could muddy the waters in gauging how much is really being spent on the charity's mission. To get a clearer picture, you will need to identify the charity' sprimary purpose. If it is mainly a grass-roots lobbying or public awareness organization (which means that you may not be able to deduct your donation), then joint cost allocation may make sense. If it devotes its efforts to financing research, then the allocation may be a red flag. • How does the charity evaluate its effectiveness'? You should be able to see some examples in its annual reports. Also, ask the charity directly about its successes. Does the organization use independent auditors to benchmark its performance? Where has it failed? A transparent
E3
charity should provide this information along with progress reports. Eric Friedman, author of "Reinventing P h i lanthropy" (Potomac Books, 2013), says charities that cannot gauge their effectiveness through benchmarks "may haveeffective programs, but it's hard for donors to understand how effectiveor compare them to other options. I've stopped focusing on financial measures, which can be misleading." • Is the mission supported by academic research? Organizations m a y b e funding ineffective ways of addressing their mission. A boutique charity information service like GiveWell recommends only three organizations a year out of the hundreds ithas considered since its founding in 2007. GiveWell performs extensive research to show that recommended charitiesare "proven, cost-effective, scalable and transparent," said Alexander Berger, its senior research analyst. "Because we're aiming to find the best giving opportunities possible — not to rate every charity — we don't research charities that are unlikely to excel on our criteria." • Watch out for red flags. Because nonprofit accounting and reporting can be incomplete, suspicious activity can be hidden. Daniel Borochoff, president of C harityW atch, formerly k nown a s the American Institute of Philanthropy, rates 600 charities with a grading system from A to F — and takes a watchdog approach that tries to expose nonprofit abuses. "There's a lot
I
ing head shows," Brown said. Understandably, n o n profits want to honor the people who have contributed to their success. Unfortunately, some speakers go on longer than planned. Then, very o f ten, comes "the ask" — the request for donations. That may not go down so well if the prelude to it has been mismanaged — attendees may evenslip out early, Brown said. She suggests several ways to avoid these pitfalls. • Invest in a short, professionally made video that includes major sponsors, and play it on a big screen during the event. Reducing speeches makes t i m e ma n agement much easier. • Do not wait to f eed the g uests. Front-loading w i t h speeches and entertainment can leave attendees hungry and less receptive to donating money. • Make your request for donations at the beginning or the middle of an event rather than at the end. Once guests have fulfilled the purpose of the evening, they can enjoy themselves. • Consider a nontraditional room setup, such as moving the stage to the center of the site. Sometimes when a stage is in the front, guests in the back can feel farremoved, Brown said.
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RtchardTsong-Taatarii/(Minneapolis) Star Tribune
Jeremy Rupp, left, is a real estate investor who pays cash for his houses, primarily because of the advantage it offers him during negotiation. Here, he works with carpenter Mark Hefner during the rehab of a property.
Cash Continued from E1 Jeremy Rupp, a full-time real estate investor and frequent cash buyer, said most sellers are willing to take a quick-close cash offer over one that has a financing or inspection contingency.
"It gives us a way bigger
competitive adva n tage," he said. "Trade a little bit of profit for the certainty of a
closing." Rupp and h i s p a r tners plan to buy at least 40 houses this year. Some will be fixed up and resold while others will become rentals. In most cases, using cash a l lows him to pay less than the asking price, then after the deal
closes,he gets a mortgage on the home to free up more cash to keep buying. Corporate investors represent a rising share of cash offers. A recent report by Goldman Sachs said cash deals have represented more than half of all sales during the past 18 months, with giant private-equity firms ac-
the charity is putting its cash to good useor reserving itfor some other purpose. According to Wise Giving Alliance standards, "the charity's unrestricted net assets available for use should not be more than three times the size of the past year's expenses or three times the size of the current year's budget, whichever is higher." This is something you may need an experienced accountant to evaluate. The bottom line: As a donor, you need to know whether your money will be put to work immediately or sidelined.
counting for a growing share of cash deals. D uring S eptember, t h e number of institutional investors nationwide rose to a new high, accounting for 14 percent of all sales, RealtyTrac said. That includes entities that have acquired at least ten or more properties during the past 12 months. Blomquist said that while cash purchases have peaked in some markets,other areas, such a s M i n nesota's
Twin Cities, could see an increase. That's because large investors are likely to seek new ground as they exhaust options in other parts of the country. "These institutional investors have an insatiable appetite," Blomquist said. "Once they pick one market clean of all properties that make sense for them, they move on to other markets." These private equity firms, hedge funds andreal estate investment trusts, or REITs, have funneled an estimated $20 billion into the housing market, acquiring more than 200,000 houses intended for rentals. Patrick Ruble, business development director at Century 21 Jay Blank Realty, said a survey ofclosings in hisoffice shows that about 30 percent of all deals over the past year were cash, of which a third came from investors. Chris Willette, a short-sale expert with E dina Realty, is also seeing the phenomenon. He said there is strong demand for fixer-uppers in communities with top-notch schools and ar e c lose to downtown Minneapolis and St. Paul. Last week, he listed a short sale in Edina, Minn., a nd within 24 h ours t h e home received eight offers, including seven that were cash. "There are cash buyers at every level who don't mind taking a gamble," Willette said. "In 18 years of selling realestate,Ihave never seen so many cash buyers."
Matthew Hand Hand In Hand Productions
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of sneaky reporting going on," Borochoff said. He said chicanery could often be found in "gifts in kind," where donations may be overvalued, or in organizations with emotional appeals — some charities involving a n i mals, c h i ldren, first responders and veterans. They may be little more than a ggressive fundraising o p erations that do little for their missions, or funds that are diverted to officers or other
purposes. • Do you need comprehensive advice? If you are also concerned about tax or estate planning considerations, it would make sense to work with a wealth manager, est a t e-planning lawyer or certified financial planner. Many advisers also have insights into nonprofit accounting that can help you vet a charity on a deeper level. Robert DiQuollo, chief executive of Brinton Eaton Wealth Advisors in Madison, N.J., said he could scrutinize nonprofit line items like executive salaries and program-relatedexpenses. "We always approach the charity directly," DIQuollo said, "to make sure that the charity is spending money on what the donor wants." • Is the charity sitting on too much cash'? You need to know whether
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Sisters Continued from E1 It's scheduled to stop Nov. 15-Jan. 2 for the holiday season, said Ann Fisher, community liaison for ODOT. When C a scade A v enue closes in March, Fisher said, semitrucks and other vehicles hauling freight will be directed onto Barclay Drive, north of Highway 20. But other traffic will be routed onto Hood and Main avenues. New signs will be installed, and a walking map with business locations will be available to help get people downtown and intobusinesses, she said. Gorayeb said after the Cascade Avenue remodel, Barclay Drive will continue to serve as a freight reroute, but signs identifying it that way will be taken down. ODOT has resurfaced Barclayand widened the intersection at Locust to make the turn radius easier on semitrucks, he said. The city and ODOT hope to build two roundabouts on the highway — one at Barclay and the other at Locust — which he said would make it easier for trucks to get on and off Highway 20 and make theintersections safer. But, he said, whether or not those projects come to fruition depends on funding. "I've heard concerns from business owners, both about the construction project and about rerouting traffic around town," Gorayeb said. "I don't
Whole Foods Continued from E1 Other grocers, especially in the u rban m arkets that Whole Foods has started to saturate — even convenience stores! — are getting on the local and natural bandwagon. Economies ofscale are bringing down the cost of organics, which might lead consumers to adjust their expectations about how much they should
pay And yet, Whole Foods continues to go head to head with other grocers. As a case in point, it just announced plans to open a store in Washington, D.C., blocks away from a brand-new Giant and not much farther from a high-end
OntheWed
"We need to do a good job of communicating with visitor traffic and compel them to stop and
For more information
visit Sisters and get a hamburger, ice cream
on the U.S. Highway 20/ in Sisters, visit www. oregon.gov/ODOT/HWY/ REGION4/pages/us20
Rob Kerrr The Bulletin
Brad Smith, owner of Paulina Springs Books in Sisters and Redmond, believes the reconstruction of U.S. Highway 20 is long overdue. His Redmond store survived the rerouting of U.S. Highway 97. agree with big elaborate reroutes around communities. I think it can harm a downtown. But, if we can get the trucks off Cascade, great." Cheatham, the shoe store owner, worries that once motorists get trained to travel on the reroutes, they'll possibly continue to use them and drive around town. He said there's a chance he could lose potential customers during the construction, but said regardless of the risks Sisters is in need of improvements. Healso noted businesses have been working closely with the city and ODOT to minimize the impact. "I think once they get these six blocks redone, sidewalks
up and going, I think some of the trucks will do the reroute, but I believe and hope traffic will flow back to normal back through Cascade," Cheatham said. Brad Smith, owner of Paulina Springs Books in Redmond and Sisters, agreed a change in Sisters is long overdue. "In the summer when the traffic becomes much more serious here, it's stop-and-go traffic," he said. "It's very slow for people to travel through Sisters. In my opinion, (the traffic congestion) makes it so people are less likely to want to stop because they just want to get through." For decades, traffic through the tourist town has been an is-
Wal-Mart. For a w h ile now, Whole Foods has been trying to strategically lower prices to match those at surrounding competitors — "price investments," in industry jargon — which reduces profits in certain stores. It's also opening new stores in low-income parts of Detroit and New Orleans with fewer employees, more frozen and packaged foods and a n ew message: This stuff doesn't have to cost quite as much. Profit margins continued to do well for a while as the company found ways to economize by reducing "shrinkage," or spoiled food. But the strategy is finally taking a toll on sales growth, which slowed over the past quarter even as
the company added stores at a quick clip. On the company's earnings call last week, analysts wanted to know why lower prices hadn't led to more sales, as they're supposed to; executives chalked it up to a challenging m acroeconomic environment and cannibalization from new Whole Foods outlets that have opened close to each other. Long term, Whole Foods thinks it can bend the cost curve through growth. Thus far, it's managed to have a nationwide footprint with only 367 stores by sourcing locally rather than having the massive centralized distribution centers that feed regional supermarkets. It aims to get to 1,000 stores, and adding more
after the Redmond reroute in Redmond, downtown has construction, said the impact experienced business turnin Sisters will depend on the over, said Heather Richards, business and its location. Redmond community devel"It will be good, but it will opment director. However, she sue. An average of 11,000 cars be painful for some more than said, the reroute opened durpass through Sisters daily, others," he said. "Businesses ing The Great Recession. "There has been impact," Gorayeb said. And during quilt that have a little more destinashow and rodeo weekends, tion orientation to them will Richards said. "I can't say traffic heading west on High- fare better than the ones that whether it was attributable to way 20 can back up more than are stores people discover by the reroute or the economy." 3 miles east of Sisters, accord- walking by." In retrospect, she said, the ing to The Bulletin's archives. While there's not as much community wishes it had done "Yes, there's a s e n sitiv- truck traffic flowing through a better job o f a d vertising ity to keeping traffic flowing Sisters as there was in down- Redmond off the reroute to enthrough Sisters to continue to town Redmond, he said, it still courage people to not just pass promote commerce in Sisters," makes it a l ess pedestrian- through, but stop in the city. Gorayeb said. friendly environment. However, she said, trucks now " That's critical to a t o w n While the signs will be takuse the bypass. "My advice to Sisters would en down when construction such as Sisters that has a touris complete, he said, the inten- ist-based economy because be work in partnership with tion is trucks will continue to (tourists) want a more pleasant ODOT to create the signage use Barclay. experience to be able to wan- at gateways to make sure you "We need to do a good job der around without having to aren't losing Sisters in t h is of communicating with visidodge traffic," he said. project," she said. tor traffic and compel them to In the five years since the — Reporter: 541-617-7818, stop and visit Sisters and get Highway 97 reroute opened rrees@bendbulletin.com a hamburger, ice cream cone and buy something," he said. "Bottom line, we just need to engage these people, and we are pursuing a number of • Trained Professionals • Free Quotes strategies to engage the traffic • No"Hidden" Costs • On Time • Guaranteed Work ...and convert that traffic into 4 revenue." Central Oregon's ONLY IICRC Certi hed Master Cleaners Smith, who operated his lt, Redmond store during and Residential & Commercial Carpet Cleaning • Upholstery Cleaning Oriental & Area Rug Cleaning Pet Odor Removal All Work Performed to Industry Standards in certain markets — like it's d oing i n W a s hington a n d Boston — would allow it to Askaboutour,, achieve the same efficiencies as its competitors on nonper"CLEAN FORLIFE" ishable stuff. Planned A nd competition i s o n l y Maintenance Program growing. Natural and gourmet foods retailers Sprouts and Fairway went public this year, giving them the capital to go national. Wegmans is experimenting with smaller, urban-format stores. S erving Bend Licensed Bonded At this point, the fact that Insured for 25 Years! Whole Foods has gotten away with sky-high margins for so long may be working in its favor. If it has to make less money to retain customers, well, it's only a recognition that it's www.cleaningclinicinc.com in thesame business as every20664 Carmen Loop, ¹4, Bend, OR 97702
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458 companies rose. But who are those left behind? Thisscreen showsthe 10 worst stocks in the S8 P 500 this year, and some of the names are familiar. J.C. Penney is this year's worststock with a 58.8 percentloss, and it was the third-worst last year when it lost 43.9 percent. The retailer has been CLOSE
J. C. Penney(JCP) Newmont Mining(NEM) Abercrombie & Fitch(ANF) Cliffs Natural Resources(CLF) Teradata(TDC) Edwards Lifesciences(EW) Peabody Energy(BTU) lntuitive Surgical(ISRG) Broadcom(BRCM) CenturyLink(CTL)
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Innerworkings Inc
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YTD
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Curis Inc
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$23
M/A-COM Technology Solutions agreed to buy the company for $5.05 per share in cash, or 66 percent more than thestock's price before the announcement.
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This year ison pace to be one the best of the decade forstocks, and most everyone is participating in the rally. Of thestocks in the Standard & Poor's 500 index, 448 were up for 2013 through Thursday. If that number holds, it would be the most broadbased year of gains for the index since 2003, when
Mindspeed Tech. MSPD
3Z1 Wk. vol.: 26.0m (1.2x avg.) PE:15.3 Mkt. Cap:$19.37 b Yield : 1.9% 41 1
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS TSLA
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Gap Inc
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15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
Gap
Icahn Enterp LP
Tesla Motors Inc
— Andrew Gorayeb, Sisters City Manager
cascadeimprovements sisters/us20 cascade improvements sisters.aspx.
15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS TICKER
cone and buy something."
CascadeAvenueproject
Weekly Stock Winners and Losers COMPANY
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GlobalMarkets INDEX
s&p 500 Frankfurt OAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng paris CAC-40 Tokyo Nikkei 225 SOUTHAMERICA/CANAOA Buenos Aires Merval Mexico City Bolsa
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
UNDAY DRIVER 2013 NISSAN SENTRA
Evenin
t ues,coorit ei e
Erratic Focusbaffles owner,mechanics
By John Pearley Huffman New Yorh Times News Service
If the redesigned 2013 Sentra has hit its target, what was Nissan aiming at'? The car does everything its competitors in th e compact sedan class do, but it doesn't do anything better than any of them. It's styled to mimic its bigger brother, the
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By Brad Bergholdt McClatchy-Tribune News Service
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c u r v y new Al-
tima, but somehow m a n ages to look frumpy anyway. And while it seems ruggedly built, there'sno surface the driver touches that feels as if it's of superior quality. The new Sentra is relentlessly and c omprehensively
average. A verage w a s p er h a p s enough when the Sentra faced only halfhearted U.S. competition, Korean cars were awful and the only real alternatives were the generic Toyota Corolla and Honda's perennially excellent Civic. Today, though, Ford's Focus is great, Chevrolet has stepped way up with the Cruze, and Hyundai and Kia have developed solid compact cars to go with their extended warranties and keen pricing. And if you really want a small car that drives well, you skip over Honda and Toyota altogether and go out and get a Mazda 3. Unlike many so-called redesigns, which are actually updates of existing models, this Sentra is built on new vehicle architecture that, Nissan says, is 150 pounds lighter than the outgoing model's while also m arginally larger than t h e car thatcame before. There's nothing radical about this new platform — like virtually every compact sedan, it is a frontdrive car with a MacPherson strut front suspension and a simple torsion-beam axle in the back — but its newness does have advantages. Besides the weight loss, this new Sentra is noticeably stiffer than the previous car. And when a door is slammed shut, there's a slightly tinny thump instead of a profoundly tinny twang. The wheelbase now stretches out 106.3 inches, which is 0.6 inch longer than the 2012 model's, but also 1.2 inches longer than the Honda Civic sedan's and exactly the same as the redesigned 2014 Toyota Corolla's. So, not surprisingly, Nissan's claim of 37.4 inches of rear legroom is exactly 1.2 inches greater than what Honda states for the Civic. Still, Toyota asserts that the Corolla's rear legroom stretches out another 4 inches beyond that, to 41.4 inches. Go figure. Even more surprising, Nissan says the larger Altima midsize sedan, with a wheelbase of 109.3 inches, has only 36.1 inches of rear legroom.
So, again, go figure. But the new platform has also allowed Nissan to lower the beltline, which runs across the base of the windows. This means there's more glass along the sides, and this produces an a i rier cabin t h at seems roomier. And the cockpit is, while short of luxurious in the top-of-the-line SL trim grade that I drove, attractive. The seats are squishy and not particularly supportive, but
they look good. The dash looks something like a wave that builds from the right to the left where it crests over the instrumentation. And those instruments exist on a single plane, are easily read and glow with a particular brilliance at night. Like many of today's cars, the Sentra SL now starts with the push of a button that glows orange in anticipation when the key fob is detected nearby. Like every m anufacturer, Nissan is obsessed with integrating its onboard entertainment systems with whatever digital doodad the driver carries on board. The system in the Sentra nicely plucked music out of my iPhone 4S via Bluetooth, neatly d i splayed the songs it was playing on the available 5.8-inch touch screen in the center of t he dash and sounded great. And
Nissan North Amesca via New York Times NewsService
NIssan's redesIgned 2013 Sentra rIdes on an all-new vehicle platform.
2013 Nissan Sentra
there are five less ritzy trim levels. Prices start at $16,800 for th e S entra S s t r i pper Base price:$16,800 m odel, proceed up t o t h e mainstream SV a t $ 1 8,200 As tested:$22,250 and reach $20,550 for the SL Engine:1.8-liter doublebefore options. The tested SL overhead-cam fourcarried a navigation system cylinder engine with and premium package that continuously variable knocked the price to $22,250. timing on the intakeand Adding leather seats would exhaust valves cost another $1,030. Mileage:30 mpg city, Powering all Sentras is a 39 mpg highway 1.8-liter double-overhead-cam f our-cylinder e n g in e w i t h c ontinuously v a r iable t i m if the touch screen is too much ing on the intake and exhaust of a reach, there are redundant valves. Rated at a modest 130 audio controls on the steering horsepower, the engine comes wheel. hooked to a s t a ndard sixNaturally Pandora, satellite speed manual t r ansmission radio and every known com- in the Sentra S. All other Senmunications systemmoremod- tras come with a continuously ern than the semaphore can be variable transmission without plumbed into the system. the discretegears of a convenThere's even a feature that tional automatic. allows voice control over text Nissan has embraced CVTs messaging with some phones, m ore enthusiastically t h a n which I wasn't able to test only a ny other c a r maker, a n d because no one texts me. Ev- these have steadily become eryone I know prefers to yell better through the years. But in my face. while the CVT in the Sentra The a v a i lable n a v i g a- is among the best that Nissan tion system — a $650 option has built, when the accelerator — works well and displays pedal is thumped to the floor in 3-D graphics if so desired. it still lets the engine rev up to That's cheap compared with, near its torque peak of 3,600 say, the $1,500 premium that rpm and stay there as the car Honda asks for a Civic with accelerates. That still results a navigation system. But it's in an irritating drone and not still expensive compared with much speed. the $180 that Best Buy norEdmunds.com m e a sured mally charges for a Garmin the Sentra accelerating to 2555LMT — and was on sale 60 mph in a leisurely 9.4 seclast week for $160. onds and trotting through the If the SL is too indulgent, quarter-mile in 17.4 seconds
at 79.8 mph. Under part-throttle acceleration — where most people drive most of the time — the CVT is relatively easygoing. And partly because the gearbox is simple and efficient, the Sentra carries a solid federal
economy rating of 30 mpg in the city and 39 on the highway. But considering how crisply the six-speed automatics in cars like the Focus and Hyundai Elantra perform, the Sentra's CVT feels wilted. That same unmoored feel is present in the electrically assisted power steering. The 17inch tires on aluminum wheels suggest a solid footprint on the road, but t here's never any sense of that connection. In compensation, the Sentra does ride well and handles itself with dignity (and minimal initial impact harshness) over most bumps. Ultimately, the Sentra seems unambitious, as if it were engineered as a p l ace holder instead of as a robust competitor in its market segment. It's hard to see where the Sentra's advantages lie. The Sentra has been around since 1982, and this new car representsits seventh generation. Perhaps the only remarkable thing about the Sentra is how consistent its character has been through those 32 years. Like all those other Sentras — with the notable exception of the 1991-4 SE-R — this one is simple, straightforward, unassuming and boring.
Every year Mary Kittelson and her sister go on an adventure. But in 2002 she was diagnosed with breast cancer and it looked as if their annual trek would be postponed. After a mastectomy, Mary was told that she could keep her plans to hike South Sister — as Iong as someone else carried her pack. Through programs at St. Charles Cancer center IIke DEFEAT Cancer, a survivor writing course and other support groups, Mary was connected to other survivors. She created and led a local support group and to this day, contInues to help other survivors. Once, someone carried Mary's burden for her. And now through her ongoing work with cancer patients, Mary bravely carries the load for other women faced with a cancer diagnosis. St. Charles Gancer Center, honored to be part of your story in the fight against the Big C.
ar es CANCER CENTER StCharlesHealthCare.org/cancer SB
V
• Brad, we have a 2005 • Ford F o cus s t a tion wagon. About tw o y e a rs ago, some of the warning lights would flash on and off fora fraction of a second, about every two weeks or so. It then started doing it to all of the warning lights. Then one day we went into a food store, on the w ay there everything was normal. When we came out, the door would not unlock, and we had to use the key. Everything was dead, and t he car w o ul d n o t e v e n turn over. I c h ecked the battery connections; they were clean and tight. I then figured I had an open circuit in the battery. I called AAA and was told that it would take about an hour for someone tocome. After about 40 minutes, the radio started to play and the car started like normal. I got a new battery, and after a few months it started to act up again. The engine would cut out for a second or so every now and then, and warning lights would flash on and off. I took it to a dealer, and i t w a s no r m a l dr i v i n g there. They could not find anything wrong, except a ground that had a little corrosion on it. There were no faults on the computer, so they flashed the computer anyway. It was OK for several months. Then on Oct. 22 w h en I was going to get gas, it started again. The engine would cut out for a fraction of a second, warning lights would flash, and the radio stations would c hange. I filled up the tank and got in the car, and everything was completely dead. I checked the b attery c o n nections, and they were all OK. I got back in the car, and everything was normal. I took the car to the Ford dealer. Again they checked it out , d r ov e i t a r o u nd, checked the computer, no faults. Since they could not see the problem, they could not correct it. What could cause this?
situation has to A •• Your be v e ry f r u s trating, but it does differ from Linda's Lucerne problem last week, as you can play detective to a much greater degree. Your Focus clearly has an intermittent open/high resistance electrical f ault near the trunk of the tree — battery, terminal c onnections, cables, and battery junction box. You can aid the diagnostic process or possibly solve the issue yourself with some simple tests. Start by obtaining an inexpensive digital m u ltimeter, such as Sears Craftsman DMM model MN16A, which you can find for less than $30. Next, be sure both battery terminals and battery posts are shiny-clean and tight. Next time the Focus acts up, immediately check for available voltage of about 12.6 volts across the battery terminals. I'm guessing this will be good — if not, it's a second devil-battery. Then touch any of the fuses within the battery junction box, in the left rear corner of the engine compartment, with the redlead.Your black meter lead is connected to the negative battery terminal. Again, check for available voltage. If this test fails, the fault is b etween the battery's positive terminal and the junction box. If this tests OK, turn on the headlights and touch the red meter lead to the battery negative terminal post, and the black lead to shiny engine metal. If the meter reads a value that's not very close to zero, the ground connection between the battery and powertrain/body is faulty. These tests can also be tried when the car is behav-
ing, as you wiggle cables and connections — look closely for an abrupt downward or upward change in the meter r eadings. This will be easy to fix, once the measurements suggest the path. — Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@ earthlinlz.net.
INSIDE: BOOICSW Editorials, F2
Commentary, F3 O» www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
" ~IJ JOHN COSTA
SUNDAY READER
Capitalize on the future ne of the lost topics in the seemingly unquenchable debate about growth is infrastructure. It comes in many forms, but the one most folks argue about is the kind that can be seen or felt. Are the roads in good shape? Is sewage being treated? Does the drinking water flow sufficiently? All good questions, but perhaps they are not the most important. Some time ago, one of the stalwarts of the community asked a very significant question. Do we have the public intellectual infrastructure to guide the inexorable growth of Central Oregon? In other words, do our school leaders, city and county administrations and, particularly, zoning officials, plannersand inspectors have the wherewithal to thoughtfully guide the developments of our communities? Is there a community dialogue about growth that gives off more light than heat? Do we have the political leadership to lead that conversation'? Those were questions that were easy to put on the back burner during the last fewyears of teeth-rattling recession. Any thought of renewed growth seemedlikea romantic dream. But that is changing. In fact, it's changing so rapidly that it is hard not to consider Bend and Central Oregon the most dynamic city and region in the state. Just consider the recent developments. A university is being built here. Land for it is being purchased and new facilities are on the horizon. A community college is rapidly expanding. Not just in Bend, but construction for COCC's expansion is underway in Redmond. New hotels are either being constructed or are planned in or near the Old Mill District. A whitewater recreation facility, a tourism driver of the first order, is headed for Bend. A new high school opened in Redmond and two new schools are planned for Bend. Bend Research announced a $20 million expansion of its facilities and product development in Bend. The Bank of the Cascades, whose life was threatened during the downturn, rebounded and expanded with the purchase of another bank corporation, making it one of the largest community banking companies in the Northwest. Health care continues to grow in the area, including a new cancer center under construction at St. Charles Bend. This surge has not been lost on outside observers. Oregon Public Broadcasting recently reported that cities in the state are showing renewed economic vibrancy. John Lehner of The Oregon Office of Economic Analysis said, according to OPB, that the housing industry is no longeran economic drag in Bend and Medford, the cities with the most employment growth recently. Lehner said, "Bend and Medford; their private sectors are growing at the fastest rate of all the different regions of the state. Portland is growing pretty steadily at a good rate, but these have now surpassed them in terms of growth rates." Like it or not, this is going to continue. So long as no one moves the mountains or diverts the river, Bend and Central Oregon are going to be extraordinarily attractive to anyone considering relocation. And with our expanding educational array, the workforce will become, if it is not already, as attractive as any natural feature. You can view this as a pretty rosy prospect for our area. But the concern it raises is whether our body politic, which struggles to amiably, thoughtfully and efficiently keep water flowing to the city of Bend or maintain an iconic pond, will be able to capitalize on the future. That may be the most important question we face. — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcostaC<bendbulletin.com
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By Jane E. Brody»New York Times News Service
arijuana has been used medically, recreationally and spiritually for about 5,000 years. Medical marijuana clinics operate in 20 states and the District of Columbia, and its recreational use is now legal in Colorado and Washington. A Gallup poll conducted last month found that 58 percent of Americans support the legalization of marijuana. Known botanically as cannabis, it has been called a "crude drug": Marijuana contains more than 400 chemicals from 18 chemical families. More than 2,000 compounds are released when it is smoked, and as with tobacco, there are dangers in smoking it. Yet researchers have been able to do relatively little to test its most promising ingredients for biological activity, safety and side effects. The main reason is marijuana's classification by Congress in 1970 as an illegal Schedule I drug, defined as having a potential for abuse and addiction and no medical value. U.S. scientists seeking clarification of marijuana's medical usefulness have long been stymied by this draconian classification, usually reserved for street drugs like heroin with a high potential for abuse. Dr. J. Michael Bostwick, a psychiay ' a»
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trist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., said the classification was primarily political and ignored more than 40 years of scientific research, which has shown that cellular receptors for marijuana's active ingredients are present throughout the body. Natural substances called cannabinoids bind to them to influence a wide range of body processes. In a lengthy report titled "Blurred Boundaries: The Therapeutics and Politics of Medical Marijuana," published last year in Mayo Clinic Proceedings, Bostwick noted that the so-called endocannabinoid system has an impact on the "autonomic nervous system, immune system, gastrointestinal tract, reproductivesystem, cardiovascular system and endocrine network." There is evidence that several common disorders, including epilepsy,
alcoholism and post-traumatic stress disorder, involve disruptions in the endocannabinoid system, suggesting that those patients might benefit from marijuana or its ingredients. The strongest evidence forthe health benefits of medical marijuana or its derivatives involves the treatment of chronic neuropathic pain and the spasticity caused by multiple sclerosis. Medical marijuana is widely recognized as effective against nausea and appetite loss caused by chemotherapy, although better treatments are now available. But preliminary research and anecdotal reports have suggested that marijuana might be useful in treating a number of other conditions, including irritable bowel syndrome, glaucoma, abnormal heart rhythms and sleep apnea. SeeMarijuana/F6
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
BETSYMccooc
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regon's coordinated care organizations, the state's new gamble on delivering health care to the poor, are, at first blush, doing well. That's the good news. The better news will come if they can sustain the progress they've made in their first year. Coordinated care organizations, 16 of them, were formed around to state in August 2012 to deliver physical, mental and dental health care to Oregonians who qualify for the Oregon Health Plan. The idea is that with coordination will come big savings and better health for those on the plan. The first year's results are encouraging, according to the Oregon Health Authority's report, released Wednesday. Among the findings: • Per capita spending on Medicaid has dipped by more than 1 percentin the pastyear,and emergency room visits by CCO clients has fallen by 9 percent. • H ospitalizations f o r suc h things as asthma in adults, chronic obstructive pulmonary d i sease and congestive heart failure all are down. Meanwhile, rehospitalization of Medicaid patients has fallen by 12 percent. • Primary care doctors are seeing more Medicaid patients on an outpatient basis, and while spending on them is up, it has not risen as
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much as the number of outpatient visits has risen. The stakes in continuing the early trends are huge. The federal government lent Oregon $1.9 billion, to be paid out over five years, to get the CCOs up and running. In return, the state must slow Medicaid spending 2 percent more thanthe nationalaverage over 10 years or the money disappears, according to The Washington Post. That would have truly ugly results. In the past Oregon has kept its Medicaid spending in checkby raising copay rates for such things as emergency room and hospital visits and by cutting what it was willing to pay doctors. The result was that between February and December of 2003, forexample, O regon'sMedicaid population dropped by 46 percent, and most of those lost likely were without any health insurance. As the OHA's report shows, Oregon's new Medicaid model is off to a good start. The question remains, however: Will early results be sustainable?
Scores showneed for a consist entnationaltest regon's fourth- and eighthgraders earned scores similar to the national average in reading and math test results announced Thursday. That's disappointing in a state with high ambitions and relatively small percentages of the racial and ethnic groups that have traditionally scored lower on the tests. Worse, the National Assessment of Education Progress shows only about 35 to 40 percent of Oregon students ranking "proficient," compared with roughly 70 percent who achieve benchmarks on the state's own achievement tests. That disparityserves as a reminder of the critical importance of having a test that compares Oregon students across the nation, not just within the state's own boundaries. Until the new Common Core tests come into use in spring 2015, the NAEP is one of few opportunities to look at how students in one state compare nationally. Called the Nation's Report Card, it was given to representative samples of fourth- and eighth-graders. Oregon educationchief Nancy Golden said the results were partly the result of budget cutbacks and larger class sizes, according to The Oregonian, but she also cited
the needfor better teacher preparation and the need for "elevating best practices and committing to finding innovative ways to support each and every student." Rob Saxton, the state's deputy superintendent of education, said in a news release that the NAEP results suggest the state will see "a dramatic shift in test results" when the Common Core tests are implemented and fewer students meet benchmarks. Although most states have signed upfor the Common Core standards, the promise of a comparable test across the nation is threatened. The country is already split between two testing groups, and more fracturing is threatened as some states pull out, citing the tests' high expense. Other less costly options are being offered, and some states are considering producing tests of their own. Although we fully support finding the most economical way to do the testing, the benefit of having just one or two tests would be significant in providing a more thorough comparison than t he NAEP can offer. As the most recent NAEP results show, having a consistent test across the nation provides a more realistic view of achievement, and a better path to improvement.
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THANK. A REAL HER(3 T(3DAY.
M Nickel's Worth 'Nudge'or shove?
ers,those responsible forthe fl ow of the river, say nothing was done difWhat is with The Bulletin's fasci- ferently in the reduction of river flows nation with Cass Sunstein? Is it that than in the past. However, in previous he is a verbose professor and is good years there were not fish kills of this space filler when needed? magnitude. In a February 2010 keynote adFish need clean, cold water to surdress at the American University's vive.Many conservation groups have Washington College of Law, Sunstein worked diligently to improve the said that "Some of the nation's most health of our streams and rivers. Cliimportant policies are implemented mate change will adversely impact through regulation. In domains as stream flows in the future, as will efdiverse as energy efficiency, envi- forts by the city of Bend to take surronmental protection, health care, face water instead of ground water. occupational safety, civil r i g hts, Our rivers, and the fish and wildcommunications, homeland security life that inhabit them, are what make and many more, the government at- Oregon a special place to live and rectempts to protect its citizens through reate.Therefore, every effort should regulations." In other words, to pro- be made to protectand enhance these tect usfrom ourselves because we ecosystems. Unfortunately the Desare too stupid to make decisions for chutes has been managed primarily ourselves and will not make the same as an irrigation ditch. decisions that Sunstein prescribes. Hopefully, this fish kill will be a If one reads his book "Nudge" he wake-up call to those in charge to describes his society in which social manage the Deschutes in a more norms need to be standardized in or- balanced and responsible way. This der forpeople to be controlled more tragedy was completely avoidable. efficiently. Sunstein's approach is The city of Bend's choice to take surthe soft and gentle road to slavery. It facewater from Bridge Creek (which requires your acquiescence and par- provides essential cold, clean water ticipation. He makes the case that hu- to the Deschutes) is also avoidable, man beings really don't know what's and unnecessary. best for them. Sunstein's true beliefs Jeff Boyer are social engineering at its best. We Bend are now past the nudge stage, have gone through the push stage and are Juniper Ridge a better site now being shoved. for campus I would suggest that after reading "Nudge" read "The Road to Serfdom" There is something about having by Friedrichvon Hayek to compare a college campus pretty much all in and contrast. one place. Seems to me that nearly all Carol Orr campuses usethistechnique to make Crooked River Ranch things easier for the students, faculty and community. I attended a meeting Fish kill isdeplorable long ago where a well-paid-for company proposed the use of the Juniper The recent fish kill on the upper Ridge as a campus location. It was DeschutesRiver is deplorable.Thou- a beautiful campus with room for sands of fish, including large brown everything you would need to start trout, rainbow trout and other spe- off andthen expand. Even a stream cies died due to poor water-manage- from the canal running through the ment practices. State water manag- campus with a waterfalL Then there
would be room for commercial businessesto open up there from barber shops to Starbucks. And wouldn't it be wonderful if something happened on the east side of U.S. Highway 97 for a change instead of cramping in more goodies on the west side? And golly, no pumice pit. Anybody listening?
Ernie Giipin Bend
Bruckner isright on Mirror Pond As frequent visitors and lovers of Bend we were impressed with Allan Bruckner's commentary. In fact "your endorsements" should include keeping Mirror Pond as it has been for years. We do agree with the various improvements planned for the Colorado Avenue area of the river, but feel that Mirror Pond is a very strong attraction to visitors to Bend. Some of your readers might not think of it as art, but we want to say that Bend is a piece of art that needs to be treated as such. Mirror Pond is the first thing about Bend that comes up in a conversation about Bend. The statement (in The Source) that skaters enjoy the
"magical feeling of gliding across the
ice"can be compared to the magical feeling of canoeing or kayaking the length of Mirror Pond. My wife and I travel quite a bit, and whenever Bend is mentioned across the States, the first thing mentioned is how impressedthey are with "Mirror Pond in Drake Park." Then of course Bend has nature's gifts of Mt. Bachelor where "Pole Pedal Paddle" begins and so much more of nature to enjoy, but please remember that "Bend" is the heart of this "Piece of Art." P.S. It is too bad Allan Bruckner wasn't hired as "The Consultant."
Ralph andMarguerite Hergenrader Marana, Ariz.
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Cline Falls: Nature and history aren't mutually exclusive By Dennis Dietrich ccording to the Merriam-Webster online d i ctionary, t h e word "should" is a verbal auxiliary with several uses. One of the most common usages is to "express obligation, propriety, or expediency." We use it often in our daily speech when expressing our own values to others, to convince them to alter their behavior or views on a subject. The Bulletin's Oct. 24 editorial on the historic Cline Falls Power Plant issue used the word 11 times, including in the headline. The editorial identified several important issues, such as the cost of maintaining a historical site, and that the preserved history needs to be useful. But other than that, the reader is left to wonder just why the site "should" be returned to a natural state. Apparently that some-
how meets the writer's personal value system, but unfortunately the writer fails to explain what those values are, or why it would be in the overall best public interest to return the site to "a more natural state." Nor was the cost of "returning" the area to a more natural state addressed. That cost would be substantial, and would necessarily require funding from somewhere. Nature and history are not necessarily mutually exclusive. A visit to White River Falls State Park just north of Maupin and west of the Deschutes River would give the visitor an excellent sense of this compatibility. According to OregonStateParks. org, the White River Falls "historic hydroelectric power plant at the base of the ... falls ... supplied electricity to Wasco and Sherman Counties from 1910 until the completion of The
IN MY VIEW Dalles Dam in 1960.n Additionally, "the hydroelectric plant at the bottom tells the story of human ingenuity and persistence as we turned the Pacific Northwest's abundant natural energy into electricity." White River Falls State Park has been nicely developed, and has very interesting interpretive displays. The very pleasant day-use area makes for a thoroughly enjoyable visit. Many of the old administrative and maintenance buildings and residences have been removed, but the power plant itself and several other structures remain to make the history of the site come alive. This combination of history and scenic beauty blends together very nicely to offer the visitor an educational as well as an inspira-
tional outdoor experience. The Cline Falls Power Plant site would offer a similar piece of fascinating history on the development of Central Oregon in the last century. Who first owned the land? Who built the power plant'? Where did the power go, and what people or industries did it serve'? It would also offer another location to experiencethe peace and beauty of the Deschutes River. Yes, it would cost money to do something similar to the White River State Park at the Cline Falls Power Plant. If public access were to be allowed, the site would have to be made safe and structurally sound for visitors. It would probably take support by the state of Oregon to both acquire the property and designate it as a park or scenic viewpoint, similar to the Cline Falls Scenic Viewpoint just
south of the historic Cline Falls Power Plant. Yes, getting money out of the state these days would be a difficult task at best. But the option is worth exploring before the county works on the issue with the Central Oregon Irrigation District, which currently owns theproperty.The issue is more than what level of historic designation is appropriate. As The Bulletin said, "What's best for that property'?" Instead of rejecting outright the retention of the area's history in favor of a "more natural" experience at the site, perhaps alternative options of keeping both could be explored. And in the discussion of those options, let's avoid the "should" word as much as possible. That would allow real values and issues to be openly and clearly discussed. — Dennis Dtetrich livesin Bend.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN F 3
OMMENTARY
Seeking a i erentsorto presi ent he second terms of the latest three presidents have not been successful. Bill Clinton was impeached after his infamous lie to Americans, "I did not have sexual relations with that woman." George W. Bush was blamed for the postwar violence in Iraq. Barack Obama's scandals — with his accompanying "limited hangout" denials — are ruining his second term: the growing IRS messes, the Associated Press monitoring, t he NS A e m b a rrassments, t h e Benghazi killings, the Syria bluster and backdown, and, of course, the Obamacare fiasco and the misleading statements about it. What are other common denominators of this collective tenure of our recent presidents? After popular first terms and reelection, they seemed to have lost public confidence and the ability to continue an agenda. Do tw o t e r m s w e a r o u t a president? Maybe the hubris of getting reelectedconvinces our commanders in chief that they are mostly beyond reproach. Overreach ensues. Then the goddess Nemesis descends in destructive fashion to remind them that they are mere mortals. In addition, the more talented Cabinet and staff appointees often bail out near the end of the first term. At best, they burn out from continuous 16-hour-work days. At worst, they flee to leverage their formerly high-profile jobs through
T
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON revolving-door influence-peddling, finding new work in the media, lobbying, consulting and Wall Street. Boredom, both on the part of the president and the public, takes its toll. Clinton was an effective speaker — at first. Near the end of his eight years, the public's eyes rolled when he predictably misled, exaggerated or became petulant. Bush was witty and sincere in repartee and impromptu speaking but often stumbled over the teleprompter. By the end of his eight years, his critics were publishing books of Bush malapropisms. It is hard now t o b elieve that Obama's banal "hope and "change" ever set a nation on fire. Certainly by 2013, we have come to snore when Obama for the nth time laces his teleprompted rhetoric with "make no mistake about it" or "let m e be perfectly clear." O ne-term presidencies — or a constitutional change to a single six-year presidential term — make better sense. A single presidential tenure might curtail an incumbent's customary e x aggerations a bout supposed past achievements and the phony promises about great things to come that are both apparentlynecessary for re-election.
Much of wasteful federal spending and general bad policy derives from the re-election efforts of an incumbent desperate to appease or buy off the electorate. In contrast, our culture's heroes — in literature, film and the military — get things done precisely because they do not care all that much what happens to them as a result of their courageous decisions. In that regard, Calvin Coolidge's decision to seek just one elected term is a far better model than Richard Nixon's two. Age may be also a factor. We are a youth-obsessed Camelot culture that puts far too much stock in goodlooking candidates who act hip, jog or seem robust. Clinton was only 46 when he entered office, Obama just 47,and Jimmy Carter 52. In a time of i ncreased longevity,perhaps we should reconsider the advantages that six decades of experience might offer. Harry Truman (60), Dwight Eisenhower (62),
or in naive fashion boast that they could " f undamentally t r ansform America." Can we also take a breather from the Ivy League? When Obama finishes his term, we will have had 28 consecutive years of presidents with either an undergraduate or graduate degree from Harvard or Yale. We should have learned from chronic deficits, massive debt and Obamacare that the Ivy League's best and brightest are not always either. Truman's higher education came from the school of hard knocks. Ike graduated from West Point and helped win World War II. Reagan slogged it out for years in the cutthroat worlds of Hollywood and television — after graduating from tiny Eureka College. Finally, can our next president have done something for a while other than n o nstop p oliticking'? The press caricatured Ike's garbled speeches and Reagan's B-movie and Ronald Reagan (69) seemed far reruns. But at least they did not go steadier presidents. Their skeptiuninterruptedly from one political cism and perspective may have re- office to the next until being elected sulted from long careers of seeing president. almost everything — in addition to Youthful c h a r isma, t h e Ivy regular afternoon naps. L eague, career p o l iticians a n d The y o u t h fu l 40- s omething two presidential terms in t heory John F. Kennedy was i mpulsive may be fine, but next time around in the same fashion as the reckcan we take a n eeded break in less and similarly i nexperienced 2016 from what have become our Carter, Clinton and Obama. The presidents-as-usual? second time around, presidents in — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist their mid-60s probably would not and historian at the Hoover Institution, be so eagerto paw comely interns Stanford University.
We've entered the golden age of news
THOMAS FRIEDMAN
Too big to breathe? SHANGHAIarrived here on Oct. 19 and was greeted with this news: A combination of cold weather, lack of wind, coal-powered heating and farmers burning of f p o st-harvest debris had created a perfect storm of pollution in the northeastern industrial city of Harbin, home to 10 million people. It was so bad that bus drivers were getting lost because the smog-enveloped roads would only permit them to see a few yards ahead. Harbin's official website rep ortedly warned that " cars w i t h headlights turned on were moving no faster than pedestrians and honking frequently as drivers struggled to see traffic lights meters away." The NASA E a rt h O bservatory declared that some Harbin neighborhoods "experienced concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) as high as 1,000 micrograms per cubic meter.For comparison, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's air quality standards say PM2.5 should remain below 35 micrograms per cubic meter." This means that Harbin w ould needa 97 percent reduction in pollution in order to reach the maximum level our government would recommend. NASA said Harbin hospitals reported "a 30 percent increase in admissions related to respiratory problems, and several Harbin pharmacies were sold out of pollution facemasks." American jazz singer Patti Austin canceled a concert in
t
smoggy Beij ing because of"a severe By Bill Keller New Yorh Times News Service
ver the past 20 y ears, to loud laments from m edia veterans, American n ews organizations have retreated from the costly business of foreign cov-
erage — closingbureaus, slashing space and airtime. Yet for the curious reader with a sense of direction, this is a time of unprecedented bounty. I begin my day with this paper's foreign staff — 75 reporters in 31 bureaus. I'll listen to NPR at the gym, then look at The Wall Street Journal and The Financial Times, peruse the websites of The Guardian and the BBC, check my AP mo-
bile app. Later, I'll visit Al- Jazeera English for its "Syria's War" blog, followed by the "Global" section of The Atlantic, the "Regions" tab at Foreign Affairs and some of the bloggers at Foreign Policy. If my Russian feels up to it today, I'll listen to a feed of the independent Moscow radio station Ekho Moskvy, and I'll probably drop by a feisty news website called The Daily Maverick in another country I follow, South Africa. The ¹Turkey Twitter stream I set up for a reporting trip last summer has gone a little quiet lately, but YouTube has lots of indignant European officials fulminating about American eavesdropping. After all that, if I'm not sated, well, I've bookmarked onlinenewspapers.com, which links to thou-
sands of papers and magazines.
Qo just the loss of experience and wis- o r g a nizations ask independent redom. It's the rise of — and exploi- p o r t ers to pitch completed stories tation of — the Replacements, a le- o r p hotos after the rental cars have gion of freelancers, often untrained b e e n paid for, after the work has and too often unsupported. They b e e n done — after the risks have gravitate to the bang-bang, because b een taken. (And even then, it can that's what editors and broadcast b e a n o r dealtogetpaid.A f reelancproducers willpay for. er in Yemen recently And chances are that started a cam p a ign Wt)ef) to "name and shame" nobody has their backs.
Some of t hem
of
pr a C t igianerS
news
organ i zations
many freelancers turn to self-support networks because they are reluctant to antagonize potential employers. "The only thing worse than being exploited," she said, "is not being exploited at all." My other caveat about this time of abundance is that while it's great for a foreign-news junkie, I'm not sure how well it serves the passive reader. The profusion of unfiltered information can overwhelm without informing. So while it is true that the outside world learned almost instantaneously of the horrific August chemical attack in Syria, the flood of social media was contaminated by misinformation (some of it deliberate) and filled with contradictions — enough to let the regime and its supporters blame the massacre on the rebels with an almost straight face. Even after U.N. inspectors had visited the site and filed a report, they did not resolve the question of culpability. It took an experienced reporter familiar with Syria's civil war, my colleague C.J. Chivers, to dig into t he technical information in t h e U.N. report and spot the evidence — compass bearings for two chemical rockets — that established the attack was launched from a Damascus redoubt of Assad's military. "Social media isn't journalism," Chivers told the Boston conference. " It's information. Journalism i s what you do with it." P eter Goodman, an e d itor a t The Huffington Post — where you might expect to find scant sympathy for the decline of Old Media — cautions against proclaiming a
c ourse, are tremendous- p f ~ / p g g i that stiff journalists.) Yes, there are fewer and fewer ly talented, and many When a f r e elancer l'ePOdfrig get get s i n t o trouble in a golden age. experienced correspondents out prefer freelance work there, but I can now access all of over staff jobs for the ]pge]gef. In a post a few weeks ago, he gS conflict zone, "You just them without leaving m y d e sk, freedom to cover what fall into a black hole," wrote: "Those of us who make our Spme pf US d/Q said Emma B eals, a living producing web-based jourand most of this feast will be free. interests them. But for When auto-translate software gets most of them, I suspect, IB S t We ek fO /' Brit is h j o u r nalist who nalism need to acknowledge this has wor k ed in S yria basic truth: Despite the obvious better, I'll even have access to news it's not a choice. Free- g St j mUlg/jiig sources in Persian and Mandarin. lance work has long a nd has b ecome a n and abundant promises of the web, f Not only that, but since the world been awaytobreakinto advocate for freelanc- and despite the inarguable fact that got connected it'sbecome much the business of interna- th e f u t u l'e Of ers th e re and in other the digital future is now irretrievharder for authoritarian regimes to tional reporting; nowa- f p yejgii f)eVIrS treacherous pl a c e s. ably the present, foreign news is at hide news. ays' >ncreasmg y' > ts She estimates there are a crisis point." t Bo to In 1982, when President Hafez the business. currently 17 kidnapped He went on to point out that there Assad of Syria crushed a rebel upAforeignassignment CO//ege — Oiie fore i gn journalists be- is no substitute for professional forrising by literally flattening the city at a major news orga- qUeStjprI prI i ng held b y v a t l o us eign correspondents who go back of Hama, the story was little more nization has tradition factions in Syria's civil again and again, "having conversathe table iS than a rumor for months; and ac- ally come with t ravelw ar. The majority o f tions that go on longer than needed cording to Thomas Friedman, who ing expenses, medical Wh e t h er, fOr all the m are freelancers. merely to grab a handy quote to covered it for The Times, the only coverage, security and t t)e mpgf) jf)g Frustration and dan- jam in a story." ' ger h a v e inspired some HuffPo, to its credit, is beginning reason Assad eventually let jourfirst-aid training if you " nalists in to see the carnage was to are covering c onflict, efforts t o org a n ize. to build a small foreign staff that give his subjects an object lesson in fixers and t r a nslators enjaying a Beals is part of a group Goodman, a former China correhow troublemakers would be treat- and, in a few instances, go/Qef) gge pf of vo l u nteers that aims spondent, will oversee. ed. Nowadays, we can watch the paid leave for language to provide training, inJoe Kahn, the international ediatrocities perpetrated by A ssad's t raining. It comes with 8 ~ surance, assignments tor of The Times, is a little more son Bashar on YouTube in r e al technicians who make M y OWn VieW and ot h er services for sanguine. "It doesn't quite feel like a time. sure your computer and /S. y eS' QU~ " independent j o u r n al- golden age at the moment (does any When practitioners of global res atellite p hone w o r k . ists. (For Internet bilage feel golden if you're living in porting get together — as some of It comes with lawyers l ionaires s e eking a it'?)," he conceded in an email, "but us did last week for a stimulating in case you get sued good cause, it's called if you had to construct one you'd conference on the future of for- or arrested. It comes with editors t h e Frontline Freelance Register.) probably want some combination eign news at Boston College — one who will tell you not to take foolish The j o u r nalist Sebastian Junger of the traditional, professional jourquestion on the table is whether, for chances, and notify your family if h a ss tarted a program that trains nalism of the postwar era with the all the moaning, we are now enjoy- something bad happens. f reelance combat j o urnalists i n digital free-for-all of the last few ing a golden age of global news. My These days,the disturbing trend emergency medical procedures. years, and with luck that's what we own view is: "yes, but." I've already is to pay freelancers on spec. With- ( I n t ernet b i l lionaires: it's c a lled have." explained the "yes." Now the "but." out even offering a contract or a RIS C , for Reporters Instructed in Yes. But. The problem with the cutbacks in formal assignment, which at least S a v in g C o lleagues.) Lily H i n dy, — Bill Keller is a columnist professional foreign coverage is not implies some responsibility, news d e p uty director of RISC, says that for The New York Times.
asthma attack in combination with respiratory infection," according to her website. It was no wonder that at a gathering of environmental activists in Shanghai I attended, organized by the Joint U.S.-China Collaboration on Clean Energy, or JUCCCE, the conversation was dominated by moms and dads talking about where in China to live, when to send their kids outdoors and what food and water to trust. While swapping notes on China's latest "airpocalypse" a few days later, Hal Harvey, the American chief executive of Energy Innovation, who is working with China's government to try to get its air quality back under control, asked a powerful question: "What if China meets every criteria of economic success except one: You can't live there." Indeed, what good is i t h aving all those sparkling new buildings if you're trapped inside them? What good is it if China's rapid growth has enabled 4 million people in Beijing to own cars, but the traffic never moves'? What good is it if China's per capita incomes have risen to a level affording tens of millions of oncepoor peasants diets rich in milk and meat, but they can't trust the labels? What good is all that rising GDP, if there is no clean air to breathe? China has built amazing hardware in 30 years— modern cities, roads, airports, ports and telecoms — bringing more people out of poverty faster than any country in the history of the world. The Chinese have much to be proud of. Every healthy economy, though, depends on a healthy environment. China will stall if President Xi Jinping and his government do not now build the software — the institutionalized laws, courts and norms — that can ensure that all this growth will not be undermined by an epidemic of despoiled land and dirty air. That is easier said than done. China is a one-party system with multiple, competing interests inside. More enlightened party leaders in Beijing may declare, "We have to clean this up," but they still have to get the local bosses — whose bonuses depend largely o n g e n erating e conomic growth - "to assert environmental interests at least as strongly as economic interests," said Harvey. That requires assigning real value, and giving real institutional power and weight, to those in the system who believe that it is just as important to protect the commons — air, water, land, food safety — as it is to grow the commons, that it is just as important to have decent ingredients in the pie as it is to grow the pie. "At the end of the day," said Harvey, "if the pie's not edible, it doesn't matter how big it is." We can thank our lucky stars that foresighted A m e ricans, s t a rting around 1970, built the institutions to protect our air and water. Next time you hear someone beat up on the EPA, send them to Harbin for a week. — Thomas Friedmanis a columnist for The New York Times.
F4 © www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
Marinatedsnark isa dish bestservedcold
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1."Sycamore Row" byJohn Grisham (Doubleday) 2. "Winners" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) 3. "Doctor Sleep" by StephenKing (Scribner) 4."TheLongestRide"by Nicholas Sparks (GrandCentral) 5. "The Goldfinch" by DonnaTartt (Little, Brown) 6. "Accused" by Lisa Scottoline (St. Martin's) 7. "We AreWater" by Wally Lamb (Harper) 8. "Fifteen Minutes" by Karen Kingsbury (Howard Books) 9. "Gone" Patterson/Ledwidge. (Little, Brown) 10. "Identical" by Scott Turow (Grand Central)
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Morrissey memoir headed to U.S. By Hector Tobar Los Angeles Times
Morrissey fans of America, fear not: The British music star's new memoir will be landing on Americ an shores i n t i m e f o r Christmas. "Autobiography," as Morrissey succinctly titled it, will b e p u b lished in hardcover Dec. 3 by G.P. Putnam's Sons, with a Penguin Classic paperback to follow. The release of the long-anticipated book was nearly canceled this year — apparently in a dispute over whether it would be released as a Penguin Classic. "In the UK 'Autobiography' is currently No.l on the book charts and has become the fastest-selling music memoir of all time, overtaking the record previously held by Keith Richards' 'Life,'" G.P. Putnam said in a release. "Few artists have had the kind of c reative staying power as Morrissey, and we are thrilled to be his American publisher." In Europe, Morrissey's first book signing was not in the U.K. but rather in Sweden. Some fans stood in line for more than 30 hours outside a bookstore in Gothenburg, in what was billed as his only appearance to launch his autobiography in Europe, the Guardian reported. "Itwasadreamcometrue. He has been the soundtrack to my life," David Lewin, 35, told the Guardian through tears after Morrissey signed his arm — and also three copies of "Autobiography." Reviews of " A u tobiography" have been mixed, however. Neil McCormick's review in the Telegraph read like a bit like a Morrissey song. T he singer writes "i n a beautifully measured prose style that combines a lilting, poetic turn of phrase and an acute quality of observation, reveling in a kind of morbid glee at life's injustices with arch, understated humor, a laughter that is a shadow away from depression or anger," McCormick said.
Author Beatrix Potter once lived in Castle Cottage. Marta McDowell's recent book, "Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales," brings to life Potter
as much as her garden.
eatrix otter: ar en i e wit creaturecornorts "Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That
Inspired the Classic Children's Tales" by MartaMcDowell,
4
(Timber Press,$24.95)
•
By Anne Raver New Yorlz Times News Service
G ardeners brought up o n the mishaps of Peter Rabbit can now curl up with "Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales," by Marta McDowell. McDowell, 55, who gardens in Chatham, N.J., and holds a certificate in landscape design from the New York Botanical Garden, likes to explore the horticultural habits of beloved writers. Her 2005 book, "Emily Dickinson's Gardens," weaves the poet's bluebells and cherry trees with her verse and life story. This work brings Potter, as much as her garden, to life, as an energetic, sturdy soul with an uncanny understanding of animals. (The interview has been edited and condensed.) Had you loved Beatrix , Potter's books when you were little? No, I feel like a bit of a • fraud. I'd never read Beatrix Potter as a child. My mother gave me ashiny Golden Book called "Little Peter Cottontail" by Thornton W. Burgess. I was familiar with Bugs Bunny because I watched Looney Tunes on Saturday mornings.
Q
When did you make your • connection? It was random, really. • My husband and I took my parents on a trip to London and Scotland in 1997, and my mother wanted to see the Wordsworth sites in the Lake District, and we had an extra afternoon, so we threw in a visit to Hill Top farm, Beatrix Potter's home in England. It was a magical place. It was high summer and the roses were all blooming, and it was fragrant and sunny. I have no memory of Wordsworth.
A
What were the gardens
Q • Alike? very long entry garden . goes up to her cottage,
a
A rabbit feeds in the garden at Hill Top, one of author Beatrix Potter's homes in England. on an incline. There are roses climbing on a long trellis and gooseberries. There's a walled vegetablegarden, with a warm wall to espalier fruit trees. It was very Arts and Crafts. I liked her garden because it reminded me of mine: a little messy. She loved her plants and talked about them a lot in her letters, but she would say: "My garden is really overgrovtm, I haven't been able to get out there ... the gentians have been crowded out."
They turned it down, but Potter just breezed on to something else. Yes, she was just sort • of trying things. At one point she was going to do illustrations for a scientific journaL Then she wrote a letter with pictures to the son of her lastgoverness, Annie Carter, who suggested she turn it into a book, which became "The Tale of Peter Rabbit and Mr. McGregor's Garden."
A
While it was tragic that
You paint a very Victori• an picture of young Beatrix and her younger brother, Bertram, with wealthy parents in South Kensington, a string of governesseskeeping them in line and a nursery full of critters. They seemed like little Darwinian scientists. Yes, she and Bertram . had quite a menagerie. And therewasn'tthe same sort of feeling at the time that you shouldn't bring a wild animal in. She tamed a little mouse. And it is true that once the animals passed, she and her brother would boil them and rearticulate the skeletons.
Q
Her early drawings, es-
• pecially of h er r a bbit, Q Benjamin Bouncer, are incred-
Q • Potter's first fiance died of leukemia, that's what led her to throw herself into writing and illustrating, building
her garden and even raising prizewinning sheep. It's like all those self-help books that tell women to follow their own star and maybe then they'll meet their true love. Enter her local solicitor, William Heelis. She was 47, Willie was 41. I think they had a blast. • It was a really wonderful relationship. It was something she waited for, to have an intimate.
Dana Goodyear's new book, about being a wallflower at the American food orgy, won me over on its second page. That's where she admits that, as a kid in the back of the family station wagon, she used to nibble on Milk-Bone dog biscuits. I'm not sure why this image lit up my pleasure sensors. These Scooby snacks were, she writes, "tastier than you might expect." Beginnings and endings are important. The last page of Goodyear's book is hard to forget, too. It's an upchuck scene in slow motion, the start of a wet heave. It's as if her psyche and stomach were rebelling, finally, after the onslaught of harrowing
foods (bugs, guts, blood, ox penis) to which she has subjected them. Goodyear is a staff writer for The New Yorker, and a poet, and the possessor of a gentle, almost demure prose style. Today's bestknown food writers tend to be noisy boys; her soothing sentencesare a balm. Like the shy girl in the back of class w hose o c casional whispered utterances are masterpieces of marinated snark, she gets off a lot of vivid observations. Being presented with a plate of food from one carnivorous outlaw chef feels to Goodyear,as ifshe were Little Red Riding Hood in a bib, "like stumbling upon a crime scene whilerunning through the woods." E spresso b r ewed w i t h pig's blood leaves behind "a metallic flavor familiar to anyone who's ever been punched in the nose." Now that's a tasting note. "Anything that Moves" is an eyes-wide-open exploration of the foodie avantgarde; Goodyear sets out to meet the people who are stretching our notions of what is edible. There's a "Caligula"-like decadence to the proceedings. "To look
at the food for sale in our best restaurants, you'd think that our civilization had peaked and collapsed; what we see on our plates is a post-apocalyptic free-for-all of crudity and refinement." The phrase thatcomprises this book's title — anything that moves — used to be an insult when applied to another culture's ostensibly filthy eating habits. "Now it is a foodieto-foodie b r ag," G o o dyear notes, "used to celebrate unchecked appetite." At heart this book is a series of profiles, some of which o riginally appeared in T h e New Yorker. She hangs out with the scruffy Los Angeles food god Jonathan Gold, the first food critic to win a Pulitzer Prize, a Falstaffian biker type who almost single-handedly upended our notions of what tasty means. "He has a lot to do with people eating at restaurants with a C from the health department," one avid eater tells her. She meets raw-dairy dealers, who risk jail time for peddling their stuff. To their plight, she is sympathetic: "Appetites are hard to legislate, and people usually end up doing what they want to do." She attends a "Weed Dinner," in which cannabis is employed in nearly all the dishes. "In 10 years," she is told, "marijuana will be the new
oregano." Goodyear is a good-natured tour guide, and she possesses a
(mostly) strong stomach."My
relationship to food is that of an acrophobe to a bridge," she says. "Unease masks a desire
to jump." I wish the author had a bit more to say about food and class, and about food and gender; gnarly food, like gnarly guitar solos, is an arena for m acho posturing, a s t aging g r ound f o r o m n i vore bromance.
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I had no idea Potter was
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A
• with the Rev. Hardwicke Rawnsley and his wife, Edith, ibly good. So are her paintings got her interested in the presof flowers and ferns and mush- ervation of the landscape of the rooms. By her 20s, she was lakes. Rawnsley became a cosprouting spores, and her uncle, founder of the National Trust, Sir Henry Roscoe, tried to get and when Beatrix died in 1943, her paper on mushrooms pub- she left over 4,000 acres to the lished by the Linnean Society. National Trust.
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Tori Spelling grows up inbook No. 6 "Spelling It Like It Is" by Tori Spelling
memoirs and goes behind the scenes of recent life events, in(Gallery Books) cluding the birth of her third and fourth children, born 10 By Alicia Rancilio months apart. The Associated Press However, readers will noFrom her rocky relation- tice something different this ship with her mother to fall- time around: Spelling seems ing in love with actor Dean to have developed more of a McDermott while they were backbone. married to other people, Tori I n p r evious b o oks, s h e Spelling has no problem shar- wrote about worrying what ing the intimate details of her people think o f h e r . N o w , life in her books. she seems to have more bite. Her anecdotal style of stoS pelling reflects on a t i m e rytelling, humor and "every she had to take vocal lessons girl" demeanor have made for a TV holiday movie and her a best-selling author. ran into Katie Holmes. She In her sixth book, "Spelling made an effort to be friendly It Like It Is," the actress sticks but says she found Holmes to to the formula of her previous be "plastic. In a perfectly po-
lite way." (She says she later feltsorry for Holmes because she seemed tobe "miserable" after her divorcefrom Tom
• g
• l
Cruise.) Spelling also pulls back the curtain on her now-canceled reality show "Tori 8c Dean." She shares ho w c a m eras crossed the line to film the birth of her third baby, Hattie, and how she re-enacted taking a pregnancy test for the cameras. So many celebrities are rehearsed,controlled and repetitive that it can be difficult to get a genuine comment from a star. Spelling doesn't hold back. She's real — and it 's appreciated.
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FS
e ra erso anner ' onnor "A Prayer Journal," by Flannery O'Connor (edited by WA. Sessions; Farrar, Straus and Giroux) In the late 1940s, Flannery O'Connor was in lowa City, where she had gone
By Marian Ryan LucasFilm via McClatchy-Tnbune News Service
Darth Vader appears in a frame from "Return of the Jedi" from the book "Star Wars: Frames."
A look at Star Wars,
frame byframe "Star Wars: Frames" selected by George Lucas
says del Toro. " The introduction to the vol(Abrams,N Y, $150) ume that covers "The Phantom Menace," "Attack of the By Tish Wells Clones" and "Revenge of the McClatchy Washington Bureau Sith" was written by LucasWho hasn't in their lifetime film author J.W. Rinzler who wanted to study a moment in says director George Lucas sat a film, to pause the action and down in 2005 to select frames survey what is going on with- for the original six volume set. out fear that the hold suddenly He calculated that Lucas "had will end? exactly 184,196 images to exFor fans of George Lucas' amine (for the complete Pre"Star Wars" saga, that mo- quel Trilogy, 566,481 images.)" ment has finally come with Despite numerous interrup"Star Wars: Frames." It is all tions for other "Star Wars"-resix of the "Star Wars" trilogy lated projects, Lucas completed "Frames" in 2008. frame-by-frame. In 2011, "Frames" was isRinzler says, "Lucas' reasued in a very limited edition sons for choosing a specific of six volumes, and came in frame can be narrowed down. a hard case adorned with a One motivation was to give Darth Vader medallion. It cost both fans and cinephiles the $3,000. time to examine complex imNow i t ' s b ee n t r i m med ages dogfight scenes, battle down to a two-volume set in scenes, exotic locations, iman elaborate laser-cut slipcase ages that were on screen for box. The cost? $150. only seconds but which had "Frames" is for f ans that 10 months, if not y ears, to know the movies well. There create." are no captions or explanaProgress in film technology tions — just photographs. is clearly shown in the two Film d irector, and " S tar books. The firstthree made Wars" devotee, Guillermo del in the 1970s and early 1980s Toro provides the forward for — "Star Wars," "The Empire the volume that covers "Star Strikes Back" and "Return of Wars," "The Empire Strikes the Jedi" — were all shot on Back" and "Return of the Jedi." film. The three made decades He fell in love with the saga as later used digital technology a young man. pioneered by Lucas' own In"For my generation — for dustrial Light and Magic. me — th e f i rst t w o " S t ar O ne note: "Frames" uses the Wars" films were pillars of "Star Wars" with galactic celnot only entertainment, but of ebrations after the death of the filmic myth-generating and Emperor and the ghostly form mythmaking." of Hayden Christensen (Ana"For the g eneration that kin Skywalker/Darth Vader) immediately followed mine, from the end of "Return of the the third film was that and Jedi" instead of the original Episodes I, II, and III spoke to mask-less Vader, Sebastian each successive generation," Shaw.
CEO'swife blasts book about husbandand site in Amazonreview By Jay Greene
point to his narrative, but he was very secretiveabout the SEATTLE — The new book book and simply chose not to," on Amazon.com by Bloom- Berman wrote. berg Businessweek writer Brad Stone said to the extent there Stone gets one star from MacK- are inaccuracies, he'll correct enzie Bezos. them in the digital version of The wife of Amazon founder the book and in subsequent and Chief Executive Jeff Bezos print editions. In th e book, posted her review Monday on Stone notes that Bezos chose Amazon in which she criticizes not to comment for it, though Stone for "numerous factual in- he did facilitate interviews with accuracies" in "The Everything his parents and a few Amazon Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of executives. "I talked with 300 people to Amazon." She notes an anecdote in get a depiction of a company which Stone describes Bezos that has changed our world as reading Kazuo Ishiguro's and is fairly disruptive," Stone novel "Remains of the Day" said. "There are a wide range just before leaving the D.E. of views. I don't think it was a Shaw hedge fund to launch one-sided portrait." Amazon. In her review, MacKenzie "It's a good beginning, and it Bezos writes that the "Remains weaves in nicely with what's to of the Day" anecdote is just one come," MacKenzie Bezos writes of many inaccuracies, though in her review on the Amazon. she doesn't detail the others. com page selling the book. "But Rather, Bezos writes that the it's not true. Jeff didn't read 'Re- errors underscore a g reater mains of the Day' until a year injustice. "If this were an isolated exafter he started Amazon." Jeff Bezos, who is portrayed ample, it might not matter, but in the book as an often ruth- it's not," she writes. "Everyless leader who treats employ- where I can fact-check from ees as pieces of the machinery p ersonal knowledge, I f i n d used to build A mazon, has way too many inaccuracies, not commented on the book and unfortunately that casts publicly. The book, though, doubt over every episode in the clearlytouched a nerve both book." with MacKenzie Bezos and Bezos is an author herself; Amazon's pub l i c-relations she has two novels available on department. Amazon — "Traps" and "The The company's top spokes- Testing of Luther Albright." Her man, Craig Berman, issued a appraisal of Stone's book instatement accusing Stone of cludes the criticism that it's "full not fact-checking claims from of techniques which stretch the former employees. Berman boundaries ofnon-fiction," such noted that Stone met with more as ignoring accounts of "a supthan halfa dozen Amazon ex- portive and inspiring culture" ecutives during his reporting at Amazon. for the book, and met Berman Her one-star review puts "on at least three occasions," as her at odds with the 43 other well as exchanging "dozens" of Amazon customers who had emails with the PR boss. reviewed the book. Thirty-one "He had every opportunity of them had given the book five to thoroughly fact-check and stars, and 10 had given it four bring a more balanced view- stars. The Seattle Times
Slate
BERLIN — When I was diagnosed with a rare muscle disease a dozen years ago, it hit me that I didn't believe in God. Maybe "hit me" is too strong a way to put it. I just gradually realized that I wasn't praying to God to help me stay well, to understand or a ccept the news, not "offering it
to prepare for a career as a political cartoonist but soon found her way into the Writers Workshop.
up" or asking, Why me?
There was nothing there, merely a nonexistent connection, although I'd been raised by faithful parents and educated for 16 years in Catholic schools. But then my father died, several years later, and I wanted to know that he still somehow continued. He simply could not have been extinguished — that was unthinkable. For a while I went to Masses said in his name, and just recently I b r ought home his old set of rosary beads, o n which the crucifix i s missing — his final set was buried with him. Could he be praying still? I wonder. I envy his devotion. In much the same way, I'm jealous of F l annery O'Connor, t hough s h e's been dead nearly 50 years. I envy her not only because she was brilliant, the maker of astoundingly o r iginal and subversive works of art, but because she believed in God. She believed in the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. She believed in the Redemption, and Life Everlasting. She believed, with an unerring rigor, in the supernatural, and that God's
grace could open up upon us at our most dire moments and,ifwe accepted its gift, make us — fleetingly at least — better beings.
Health problems
her mentor, Paul Engle, could not at first understand a word of her thick Georgia drawl.
Prayerjournal She used the journal (reproduced at the back of the book in facsimile) to chart her own struggles with understanding. In its pages the fledgling writer addressesherselfto God in an intertwined quest to do these things well: pray, write, lovewith love reserved for the Lord. (As for eating, she worries she'sa glutton and berates herself for eating too many Scotch oatmeal cookies.) She wrestles often with her distinctly unCatholic self-regard. "I cannot love Thee the way I want to," she writes. "You are the slim crescent of a moon that I see, and my selfis the earth's shadow that keeps me from seeing all the moon ... what I am afraid of, dear God, is that my self shadow will grow so large that it blocks the whole moon." Her ambition is plain but something she tries to accommodate to God's will. "Please help medear God to be a good writer and to get something else accepted," she implores, but then adding, aware of the sin of pride, "That is so far from what I deserve, of course, that I am naturally struck with the
I may possibly be thinking of floor wax or pigeon eggs, the opening of a beautiful prayer
may come up from my sub-
conscious and lead me to write something exalted." The journal ends abruptly in the fall of 1947, but the faithful reader might infer that her struggles with doubt and longFlannery O'Connor ing for grace were channeled collection / Georgia instead into the morally preCollege Library carious lives of her indelible characters, with her stories and nerve ofit." She questions her novels taking the place of her motives, her honesty and wor- written prayers. ries over her presumption: "I By 1952, ill with lupus, she have not asked You, I feel, in had begun writing the stothe right way. Let me hence- ries for which she's most faforth ask you with resigna- mous, back in G eorgia for tion ... Oh God please make good, where she lived with her my mind clear. Please make it mother in Milledgeville. In "A clean." Good Man Is Hard to Find," the She longed for a spiritual but grandmother's heart opens unvisceral closeness with God, "a expectedly to the killer known warmth of love heating me." In as the Misfit, as Julian's opens the journal she demurs at the when his mother lies lifeless idea of its being "a metaphysi- on a city sidewalk at the end of cal exercise," and later, in her "Everything That Rises Must essays, she would emphasize Converge." The smug Hulga of the importance of the concrete, "Good Country People," who that "fiction begins where hu- proclaims her nonbelief as the man knowledge begins — with mark of a strong mind, is left the senses." The Catholic faith, trembling in the hayloft, eyes with its emphasis on the resur- finally opened to her poverty of rection of the body, and on the spirit after the Bible salesman actual presence ofthe body she hopedtoseduce makes off and blood of Christ in the sac- with her wooden leg. rament of Communion, emThe twinning of the banal braces abstraction far less than and the sublime O'Connor inother denominations. voked in the journal became a hallmark of her fiction. The enSeeking grace tries in the journal, like her stoO 'Connor wa s t h e f o r e- ries, are by turns lyrical, serimost interpreter of herself as a ous,ironic,abrupt.Sh e worries Catholic writer, concerned, she that, surrounded by academfamously wrote in a later es- ics and nonbelievers, she, like say, with "the action of grace Hulga, will be convinced that in territory held largely by the her faith and God himself are devil." In the journal, she asks mere manmade inventions; she frequently for grace — in fact, fears "insidious hands Oh Lord she struggles with the notion of which grope into the darkness asking for it, with having to rec- of my soul."
O 'Connor b elieved i n C atholic doctrine with a confidence that sustained her through battles with lupus, her own debilitating and finally fatal disease, as well as her daily routines: from early morning Mass to the writing desk and through her interchanges with extended family and the clans of peafowl strutting through the yard of her family estate. She was a nchored in a w a y t h at the nonbeliever can never be. In many of her essays about being a C a t holic writer, she wrote that her faith, rather than imposing limits, left her free to observe the ways of the world around her. Did this help her achieve such heights of originality and confidence? In her p o werful s t ories and novels — nearly every one a tour de force — her
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help. With the publication of "A Prayer Journal," we get a startlingly different view of the religious O'Connor. Instead of the cocksure writer we've long known — whose confidence is almost a physical force in her mature fiction and essays on religion and art— here we glimpse an unfinished personality, struggling to maintain belief in her talent and to resist the "intellectual quackery" of the academy that threatens to undo her faith. From early 1946 to the fall of 1947 — from the ages of 20 to 22 — O'Connor wrote in a hardbound, marbled Sterling notebook, which was found by writer, scholar and O 'Connor f riend William Sessions during a visit to her archives in 2002. (Sessions is O'Connor's authorized biographer, but as with a long-planned biographyby the late Sally Fitzgerald, another close friend and editor of O'Connor's posthumous collections of essays and letters, his book has yet to appear.) In these y ears, O'Connor was i n Iowa City, where she had gone to prepare for a career as a political cartoonist but soon found her way into the Writers Workshop, though
oncile her ambition with the religious virtues of patience and passivity. "My dear God," she writes, "how stupid we people are until You give us something ... I would like to write a beautiful prayer but I have nothing to do it from... I cannot do it. Yet at some insipid moment when
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F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013
'Fosse' reveals a showman whose dazzle hid darkness 'Fosse' by Sam Wasson (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 723pgs., $32) By Janet Maslin New York Times News Service
After Bob Fosse won an Os-
car (for directing "Cabaret"), two Tonys (for choreograph-
ing and directing "Pippin") and an Emmy (for directing "Liza With a Z") in 1973, a rare triple coup, he reacted the way any world-class show business depressive would: He decided he had nowhere to go but down. According to "Fosse," Sam Wasson's i n t ensively r esearched new biography, two months after Oscar night, he checked into the Payne Whitney psychiatric clinic. "You spend your whole life trying to get known," he said of his accolades, "and then you spend the rest of it hiding in the toilet."
Self-destructive personalities Wasson is a film fan (and a visiting professor at Wesleyan University) who is drawn to strong and perhaps self-destructive personalities. "A part of me always wished I could inject boiling blood into Astaire's veins," he writes about the placid Fred Astaire. But his superb "Fifth Avenue, 5 A.M.," an anecdotal account of the making of "Breakfast at Tiffany's," was a slender book full of brio and not burdened with excess detail. The opportunity to tell Fosse'sstory offered a very different challenge. That story has been told before, on the page in Martin Gottfried's 1990 "All His Jazz: The Life and Death of Bob Fosse" and on screen in Fosse's scorchingly autobiographical "All That Jazz." But Wasson is a smart and savvy reporter, and his book abounds with colorful firsthand tales. A woman n amed Sherri Kandell tells of being stopped by Fosse on Fifth Avenue because of the spring in her step: "It looks like you're 10 feet taller than everyone around you," he said. Fosse was a great pickup artist in more ways than one: Kandell was ecstatic about being alone in New York that day, and he had read her body lan-
cupboard, doing arabesques as she reached for them. Domestic bliss was lost on Fosse, as anyone who knows his work can clearly see. Wasson, with a graceful turn of phrase, calls the screen version of "Cabaret" "a film about the bejeweling of horror," one that is "coruscated with Fosse's private sequins, the flash he feared made him Fosse." This book seeshim as determinedly unhappy, obsessed with death and doing his utmost to bring it on.
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'Too much' "I drink too much, I smoke too much, I take pills too much, I work too much, I girl around too much, I everything too much," he once told a friend, winking. Wasson adds: "That wink, she thought, sealed his fate." "Fosse" sprawls with details of each production. But it is less successful at conveying what the finished works were like. Its account of the making of "All That Jazz" (1979) offers little sense of that film's searing self-awareness. A tighter book would havebeen welcome, although it might not have had room for the feuding and jealously that Wasson captures so sharply. Dustin Hoffman provides a revealing account of his troubles with Fosse in making "Lenny." ("Limited gains, Bob," Hoffman warned, after Fosse's direction took on a chastising
lil
Ted S. Warren / The Associated Press file photo
Monique Rydberg, left, packages medical marijuana, as Jeff Clark, right, awaits patients at The Joint, a medical marijuana cooperative in Seattle. The legalization of recreational marijuana has provided an impetus to crack down on medical pot and drive people into the market for taxed, regulated marijuana.
Marijuana Continued from F1 Marijuana's best-known ingredient, tet r a hydroc annabinol, or T H C , i s responsible for th e h i gh sought by recreational users. But many people who try smoking marijuana to relieve a health problem are distressed by its psychoactive effects. E xperts b e lieve t h a t s ome people w ould d o better with a d e r ivative of marijuana that offers t herapeutic action w i t h out t h e min d - altering
tone.)
This book has many barbed edges, including references to Fosse's resentment of Michael Bennett (whose obituaryin The New York Times called him "the most influential theater director and c h oreographer of his generation" — ouch!). Fosse's "Chicago" and Bennett's "Chorus Line" arrived almost simultaneously. Stephen Sondheim speaks critically t o W a sson about what, he thinks, was Fosse's misunderstanding o f S o n dheim's "Follies." "He saw the last 20 minutes of 'Follies,'" Sondheim says, "and thought 'Oh boy' ... and made a career out of it. Simple as that." It is left to Wasson to mediate. "Sondheim's vaudeville is abguage perfectly. stract, a metaphoric descripA lithe book full of keys to tion of a nervous breakdown," Fosse's character would have he writes. "Fosse's is represenbeen right up Wasson's alley. tational, a description of corBut he found himself with the rupt America in show-business material for a b i gger, more terms." sprawling biography, and Whoever Fosse was and that's what "Fosse" became. It whatever his w o r k m e ant, introduces little Bobby Fosse Wasson's book i s r e quired as a dancing kid with excep- reading for anyone eager to untional presence and dedication. derstand his brand of — to use ("He'd furrow his little brow a term that appears here conand concentrate," a fellow child stantly, and can't be outdone dancer says. "I think he wanted — razzle-dazzle. And to see to be better than everybody.") through his darkness. A friend It follows him onto the bur- once saw him carrying a copy lesque circuit, where, as a teen- of Elisabeth Kiibler-Ross' "On ager, he developed the fusion of Death and Dying" with a cigaelegance, filth and lady killing rette planted on his lip. "You're carrying that book that would dominate his adult personality. As he once said and smoking?" th e f r i end of his mother: "She thought asked. "Un-huh," Fosse replied. you could send a boy of that age into a roomful of naked women, and it wouldn't bother him — because he was such a good boy. Obviously, she was
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baggage. A more precise dose, free o f u n w anted c ontaminants, would b e safer, and its effects would be reproducible. "We believe that physicians s h o ul d cl e a rly explain to t heir p atients that medical marijuana is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration and that it is not a standardized or purified product," Dr. Herbert Kleber of Columbia U n iversity and Dr. Robert D u pont of Georgetown M e dical School wrote last year in The American Journal of Psychiatry. One vocal proponent of a more scientific approach to medical marijuana is Martin Lee, the author of "Smoke Signals" and director of Project CBD, an acronym for cannabidiol, a compound in marijuana with high therapeutic potential but no psychoactive properties; indeed, it can neutralize the high caused by THC. Lee said in an interview that m edical m a r ijuana clinics "offer a h o d g ep odge" of p r o ducts, in -
cluding many strains of the plant with varying ratios of active ingredients. The more serious ones try to direct consumers to products that best suit their needs, he said. Still, access to purified and well-tested d r ug s d e r i ved from marijuana would be a far better approach. One such drug, Sativex, is currently in Phase 3 trials in the United States for the relief of neuropathic pain. It is a combination of CBD and THC in a ratio that minimizes the appetite stimulation, drowsiness and anxiety induced by THC while magnifying painkilling and anti-tumor p r operties, Lee said. The endocannabinoid system has two types ofrecep-
tors, CBI and CB2, that bind to different components in marijuana. C B I re c e ptors are concentrated in the central nervous system; when a ctivated, they c a n m a k e people feel high. And when THC stimulates CBI receptors governing food intake, the resulting "munchies" can help people whose appetites a re depressed by A ID S o r cancer. T he drugs M a r inol a n d Cesametare THC compounds in pill form, approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat chemotherapyinduced nausea and vomiting and AIDS-related anorexia and wasting. Their a c tion is slowed by having to pass through the digestive system
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before reaching their target. C B2 receptors ar e c o n centrated in th e p eripheral nervous system and immune system. Their s t i m ulation, primarilyby CBD, can relieve pain and increase the body's anti-inflammatory activity. Sativex, t h e T HC - C BD combination, is available in Canada to treat cancer pain and neuropathic pain in multiple sclerosis. It is sprayed under the tongue for quick entry into the bloodstream, as happens when marijuana i s smoked. B o stwick d e scribed the medical potential of marijuana as "incredibly exciting." But, he added, "it is not being realized, because researcherscan't get the material for study."
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wrong." The earlier parts of "Fosse" explain how the budding choreographer's style was formed, with Wasson astute enough to see bits of Jimmy Durante and Charlie Chaplin in the Fosse mix. This book watches the Fosse arrogance take shape, too. When he sees Astaire casually kick a nail "with the force of a rifle shot," it leaves Fosse angry, depressed and determined to match Astaire's prowess. " Dozens of k i c k s later, he was still Bob Fosse," Wasson writes. "Fosse" picks up steam, just as its subject did, when he hits the big time. (His "Steam Heat" dance was an indelible part of "The Pajama Game.") It heats up further when he meets Gwen Verdon, who became his third wife and most stellar dancing partner. Wasson chose his subject too late to talk to either Fosse (who died in 1987) or Verdon (who died in 2000), but he elicits revealing material from Ann Reinking, another sensational dancerlover in Fosse's life, and even from a friend who describes Verdon's way of dancing and cooking.When she made clam sauce for spaghetti, she did it "interrupting stirs with plies." Verdon kept spices high in a
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Aussie AKC male 1 yr. awesome mellow nature, 40 lbs. spayed wants to please, but Harvest Barn Sale still needs work. $200 Crystal Peaks rehoming fee must be Youth Ranch right family & situa19275 Innes Mkt. Rd. tion. Good with kids Bend - Sat. 11/16, 9-4 and elderly with bed, Antiques, handmade crate, bowls, etc. crafts, garage sale trea-
Wanted: $Cash paid for sures, furniture & more! vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for * Country Holiday Gold/Silver.l buy by the Bazaar * Estate, Honest Artist 14 creative cra/fers will Elizabeth,541-633-7006 be sharing in this festive Just bought a new boat? holiday bazaar! Sell your old one in the Nov. 15 8 16, 10-4 both classifieds! Ask about our days - 69427 Crooked Super Seller rates! Horseshoe Rd., Sisters 541-385-5809 (off Camp Polk Rd).
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Central Oregon Saturday Market "where the maker is the seller" is teaming up with the Bend Senior High Orchestra for a b i g Ho l iday Show benefiting their Scholarship Program. Local vendors, musicians, food, and Santa for photos. SUNDAY ONLY Nov. 10 at Bend High School 230 NE 6th 11 am — 5 pm (541) 420-9015
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The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h as- Buy Negg...BuyLocal ing products or serYou Can Bid On: vices from out of the 6 Month Supply of area. Sending cash, Dog Food - Canidae checks, or credit inValue: $330.00 f ormation may b e Quarry Ave. subjected to fraud. Hay 8 Feed For more i nforma(Bidding closes tion about an adverTues., Nov 12, tiser, you may call at 8:00 p.m.) the O r egon State Attorney General's Office C o n sumer B lack Lab AK C p u p pies, Born Aug 18. Protection hotline at $250 541-508-0429 1-877-877-9392.
... A BIG Deal ... VENDORS WANTED for Craft Fair & Bazaar Dec. 7; 9-5 & Dec. 8; 10-3. Booths: $30 crafts / $50 commercial Accepting d o nations Serving Central Oregon c nce fggg f or Rummage S a l e. Donate items through Dec. 6. Receipts available for donations. Say ogoodbuyo TACK & EQUIPMENT, to that unused Blue Tick/Walker 15% Consignment Cross Good Hunting item by placing it in Let us sell your tack & Parents. Ready to equip. For info call The Bulletin Classifieds start training today, 541.548.6088 or kim$250 each. Been berly.griffithsoorwormed healthy, and egonstate.edu 5 41 -385-580 9 eating solid food 541-815-6705 3rd Holiday Fair Coming to Sisters at Adopt a rescued kitten OutlawStationHShopNeed to get an or cat! W i l l m atch ping Center close to shelter fees. F i xed, ad in ASAP? Ray's Food Place, shots, ID chip, tested, You can place it Hwy 20. Open11/29 more! Nonprofit resthru 12/22, Mon. online at: cue at 65480 78th St., Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. Bend, Thurs/Sat/Sun www.bendbulletin.com Sun., 10-6. 1-5, 389-8430; kitten Vendors wanted! foster appts 815-7278 541-385-5809 541-595-6967 www.craftcats.org.
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Chihuahua puppies, teacup, shots & dewormed, $250. 541-420-4403 Chihuahua/Yorkie mix, 2 males, $150. 541-771-2606
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. www.craftcats.org
www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com Rodent issues? Free adult barn/ shop cats, fixed, shots, s o me friendly, some n o t. Will deliver. 389-8420 Shih Tzufemale puppy. $499 for pet companion home. 541-788-0090
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Siberian-Husky pups, G ENERATE SOM E AND Wolf-Husky pups, EXCITEMENT in your $400 ea. 541-977-7019 neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't VETERANS! Adopt a great adult compan- forget to advertise in ion cat, fee waived! classified! Fixed, shots, ID chip, 541-385-5809. tested, more! Sanctu- Just bought a new boat? ary at 65480 78th St., Sell your old one in the Bend, Thurs/Sat/Sun classifieds! Ask about our 1-5, and on Veterans' Super Seller rates! Day by a p pt. C all 541-385-5809 541-389-8430. Hidebed, full-sized, like www.craftcats.org. new, rust brown color, na) $375 obo. 541-408-0846 v King mattress set 2 yrs old like new $300.
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Whoodle puppies, 14 wks, 2nd shots, wormed, 2 males left! Reduced to Aussies, Mini AKC, 2 lit- German Shepherd/Lab, $800 ea. 541-410-1581 ters, parents on site, 1st Yorkie-Mal!ese puppies, perfect mix! Smart, shots / worminq. fun-loving, protective. females, $300; 1 male, 541-598-5314/788-7799 $250. Also Maltese-Shih UTD shots $400. Tzu male puppy, $200. Ready 11/1 3/13 Just bought a new boat? Cash. 541-546-7909 541-350-3025 Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Yorkie mix males, (2), Super Seller rates! $150 each. 541-385-5809 541-771-2606 541-647-7016/389-1807
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g
541-385-5809
Yorkie pup AKC, 1 sweet 8 adorable tiny male left, NEED TO CANCEL potty t r aining, $ 9 50. YOUR AD? Health guar.541-777-7743 The Bulletin has an Y orkie puppy, 8 w k s Classifieds "After Hours" Line cute, playful male. Shots, t aI I d o cked. Call 541-383-2371 24 hrs. to cancel $600. 541-536-3108 your ad! 210
aaew ae&
• aa
Refrig. Whirlpool 9 .7 Furniture & Appliances cu.ft. top-mount white $200 5 4 1 -389-6167 A1 Washers&Dryers
5 41-385 -5 8 0 9 Lab Pups AKC, black & yellow, Master Hunter sired, performance pedigree, OFA cert hips & elbows, 541-771-2330
www.kinnamanretrievers.com
$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355
Bid Now! www.BulletinBidnBuy com aa
Labrador Pups, AKC Chocolate & Yellow. Hips OFA guaranteed. $300- $400. 1-541-954-1727
Lovebird baby hand-fed, s weet, ready in 1 - 2 weeks. $60 taking deposits. 541-279-3578
Buy Negg...elgyLocal
You Can Bid On: Stearns 8 Foster Olga King Bed Retail Value $3,319 Maine Coon k i t tens, M. Jacobs Fine Furniture unique pets, no papers, 2 (Bidding closes girls, 1 boy, 7 wks, $150 ea., obo. 541-389-0322 Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)
P eople g i ving p e t s away are advised to be selective about the new owners. For the protection of the animal, a personal visit to the home is recommended.
The Bulletin Poodle pups, AKC. Toy Also-7mo. M,$200; F, $250. 541-475-3889
W 'iami CONVECTION OVEN
Nice almond glass top, also over-top microwave. $250.00 541-385-5781 or 541-337-6396
GREAT SOFA 9'x28 ah x 37 ad.
Tan, down feather with foam for support. 3 Back & 3 seat loose cushions. Very comfy! $400 OBO 541-504-5224
L ist one It em " i n The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE.
PLUS, your ad appears in P RINT and ON -LIN E at bendbulletin.com
HANCOCK & MOORE SOFA in salmon/coral chenille fabric with diamond pattern. Traditional styling w ith loose pillow back, down-wrapped seat cushions, roll arms, skirt, two matching p illows an d ar m c overs. L i k e n ew condition. $1500.
BSSl 1C S To receive your FREECLASSIFIEDAD, call 385-5809orvisit The Bulletinoffice at: 3777SWChandler Ave.(onBeljd's westside)
541-526-1332
Wing chair Tomato red upholstery, $50 (458) 206-4825
* Offer allowsfor 3 igtes of text only. Excludesall servIce, hay,wood, pels/ammals, plants, IIckels, weapons, rentals andemploymentadveNIsmg,and all commergIalaccounts. Must beanmdIvIdual Itemunder $200.00 and plIce of gtdIvIdual Itemmust be mcludedmthead. Askyour Bulletgt Sales RepresentatIve aboutspecial pncgtg, longer IIgt schedulesandaddIIIonal Iealures. umII I ad per Itemper30 daysto be sold.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 SUNDAY NOVEMB ER 10 2013 •THE BULLETIN
T HE NE W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D STOLEN PRODUCE By Andy Kravis and Victor Barocas / Edited by Will Shortz
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Across
4 0 Serious break , a f t e r 4 8 - A c r os s?
I Winner of t h e 2 0 0 5
and 2007 Grammys for Best Spoken Word Album
42 Author Jo hn Dickson 43 Mao
6 Relief fo r t h e snowbound
46 Harv est s
47 "I don't know why this way"
10 Seal words 15 Put one's hands together
James's "The
51 On the q.t.
American"
53 Sail ex t ender
2 0 Actress Chapli n o f "Game of Thrones"
21 Company whose logo was, appropriately, crooked 22 Burrow, perhaps
23 Many service dogs, after 29- A c r o s s?
68 Potte r' s b a se
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69 Painted crudely
St an le y Gardner
2 8 The Warri o r Princess
74 Cruiser repair site
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I Car w it h a l i g h t n i n g b olt in i t s l o g o
4 5 Poli t i c o K e f a u v e r 48 Hockey fake
2 The Tide
4 9 Phone bu t t o n
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4 Tokyo beauty, maybe 5 Smokestack emission
34 Eighty-sixes
87 Swelled head?
7 Tony winner Lena
35 Foil user's words
88 Ice cream brand
8 All tha t chips
bag of
58 Jackson-toBirmingham dir. 6 0 Earthy p i g m e nt
9 Second word of "A T ale of Tw o C i t i e s " 1 0 "The more th e
91 Shield bo r d er 9 2 Mastodon f e a t u r e s
93 Clobber 9 4 Jet Ski c o m p e t i t o r
9 7 Forces from o f f i c e 9 8 Begins to w a k e
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55 Psychedelic drug 57 Mary Li ncoln, nee
6 Poe poem
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51 "Here's looking at you, kid" a d d r essee 5 2 Mother, e.g.: A b b r .
3 River of P i s a
89 Ice cream treats
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4 4 Tighten one's bel t
8 5 Overf l o w e d
For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
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37 Feds 3 8 Frederic k' s o f H olly w o o d purchases
33 Sees red
39 A/C measures
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32 Buds 33 Ball game
Down
lioness
38 Foreshadows
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81 Circus f o u n ders, after 89-Ac ross? 8 4 "The Lio n K i n g "
3 1 Rapper w it h t h e 2 013 No. I a l b u m "Born Sinner"
38
3 0 They'r e wa y o u t
114 Lee of Marvel Comics
77 List component
G reek restaurant s
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to say
29 They get stuffed at
32
2 4 Book i n w h i c h Moses is born 29 Split the check
1 16 Northeast vacati o n locale, with " t he" 117 "The Lion's Share" author
72 Marx w i t h out much
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1 06 Ulrich of M e t a l l i c a
1 13 Only i n a n i m a t e zodiac sign
7 1 Gulf o f
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115 Beginning
27 French colony until 1953
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112 Guam, e.g.: A bbr.
66 Tart treats
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1 11 Money hol d e r s
25 Roi's wife
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17 Dancer Alvin 18 Iron
56 Greek goddess of
6 0 Legendary Scot t i s h swimmer, after 66Across?
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16 Caterpill ar, for o ne
1 10 Prefix w i t h genarian
w itchcr a f t
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1 01 Wingli k e 102 "The King and I" role
54 She, overseas
5 9 Salinger t i t l e g i r l
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15 Wipes off,say
108 Short- l i v e d pests . .. or an a l t e r n a t i v e title for this puzzle
50 Years, for Ci cero
1 9 Setting fo r H e n r y
1 4 Glenfi d d ic h b o t t l e size
107 Obli t e r ate
48 Schedule planners
8
13 Shape (up)
99 Where Ma r garet T hatcher st u d i e d chemistry, a f t e r
108-Across?
-tung
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I I N.B . A .' s Shaquille a nd Jermai n e
61 Santa 62 Damages 6 3 "Law & O r d e r : SVU" force
12 Psychedelic experiences
6 4 Many a co l l e c t o r ' s resource
6 5 Preacher, for sh o r t 6 7 Fourth - l o n g est r i v e r
of Europe 7 0 Powerful l i n e 73 Puck's master 75 "Over There" soldiers 7 6 Word of w o e 78 Does what George W ashingt o n c ouldn ' t ?
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7 9 Oscar wi n n e r Jannings 8 0 Lead-in fo r p h y s i c s ... and pieman? 8 2 Enthusiasti c r e p l y
9 0 "Ho l i da y I n n " c o -
83 Grease dissolver 85 Casual top 86 Medal awarded to M acArthur in W . W , I and W.W. I I
92 Scrap
8 9 Superlativ e f o r Atlant a I nternati o n a l Airport
9 6 Vessel wit h an ar c h
100 Andrews of Fox Sports
star
9 1 Favored against t h e
field
1 01 Vici n i t y 1 03 Pen point s 104 Great-grandson of M ark An t o n y
94 Perform s unaccompanied
1 05 Quickly, quickl y 108 Org. " protecti n g
95 Perfect
America's
consumers"
97 Some exams
1 09 Marco Ru b i o ' s home: Abbr.
9 8 Drink l o u d l y
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday. . . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500 in total merchandise
... 5:00 pm Fn. ... . Noon Mon. ... Noon Tues. ... Noon Wed. Noon Thurs. ... 11:00am Fri. ... 3:00 pm Fri. ... 5:00 pm Fri.
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place aphotoin your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.
A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS B E LOW OVER '500in total merchandise MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 PREPAYMENT as well as any 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6 .00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since 1903 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Garage Sale Special Oregon 97702 (call for commercial line ad rates) 4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00
The Bulletin
C©X
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising based onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central Oregon MarketplaceeachTuesday. 245
I Crafts 8 Hobbies 3rd Holiday Faircoming to Sisters, at OutlawStationrSShopping Center close to Ray'5 Food Place, Hwy 20. Open 11/29 -12/22 Mon.-Thur. 10-4, Fri. Sat. Sun. 10-6. Vendors wanted! 541 -595-6967
I
Bicycles 8 Accessories
Golf Equipment
Health &
CHECK YOUR AD
DON'T MissTHIS DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 54I -385-5009 The Bulletin Classified
Hon-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 ot'
~se eks
20!
Ad must include price of le te of $500 e~
Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing
or less, or multiple items whose total frame (small). F ull does not exceed suspension, Maverick AMMO: 5.56 300 rnds $500. s hock, S RA M X O $ 1 35; 7 . 62x39 3 0 0 drivetrain & shifters, 9 rnds $100; 9mm 400 r nds $110; .2 2 6 0 0 Call Classifieds at speed rear cassette, 541 -385-5809 34-1 1, Avid Juicy disc rnds $65; .45 250 rnds, $85. 541-306-0166 www.bendbulletin.com brakes. Well t a ken care of. $950. 541 -788-6227. Get your GUN SHOW I Exercise Equipment Nordic Trac A2350. Presents beautifully. Hardly used. A perfect holiday gift. $350.00
Cash and carry. 541-390-1 71 3.
Bid Now!
www.eurretine>dneuy.com
business
a ROWI N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Nov. 9th 8 10th Deschutes Fairgrounds
Buy! Sell! Trade! SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 $8 Admission, 12 8 under free! OREGON TRAIL GUN SHOWS, 541 -347-2120
Buy New...auy Local
You Can Bid On: 20 Classes of Hot Yoga Punch Card Value: $1 90.00 Steve'8 Hot Yoga
(Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)
Hot Tubs & Spas •
Northwest Spa Hot Tub, seats 8 people, has cover, $400 or best offer. You haul! 54t -885-0454
TV, Stereo 8 Videog
or 541-404-1 890
Marlin 1895 SS Guide 45/70 ported, ammo, sling, as new $575.
made Brown- 541-815-8345. Proform Crosswalk 380 Belgian CATt SA-22 LR treadmill, like new, $275 ing Audio Interfacew ith n ew Niko n Ruger 10/22 F/S NIB, obo. 54f -408-0846 Fast Track P roStaff Rimf i r e black syn. stk., blued. M-Audio Go digital! Put your $250. Comes w/ ex. 22LR scope. V e ry music onto your Take care of nice condition. $800. t ras C al l o r Te x t computer using a 541 -306-0253 593 7483 your investments M-Audio Fast Track N382, with inputs for Belguim Browning High with the help from Good classified ads tell a microphone and a Power 9mm with exthe essential facts in an The Bulletin'5 guitar or keyboard. tras, $675. interesting Manner. Write 541 -633-9895 $80. "Call A Service from the readers view - nol Call 543-883-0361 Professional" Directory Bend local pays CASH!! the seller's. Convert the for all firearms 8 facts into benefits. Show D irecTV - O v e r 1 4 0 ammo. 541-526-0617 the reader how the item will channels only $29.99 a month. Call Now! help them in someway. I S k i Equipment Triple savings! This Bid Now! $636.00 in Savings, www.eurretineidneuy.com advertising tip Free upgrade to Gebrought to you by Bid Now! nie & 2013 NFL Sunwww.eurretineicrneuy.com The Bulletin day ticket free!! Start saving today!
Qypy~, Buy New...suy Local
Buy New...suy Local
You Can Bid On: Young Adult
You Can Bid On: $200 Gift Certificate X Tactical
(Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)
Season Pass Value: $425.00 Hoodoo Ski Area (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at B:00 p.m.)
CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies.
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through
541 -408-6900.
The Bulletin Classifieds Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds
Double Tap Firearms 2075 NE Hwy. 20 541-977-0202 Buy/Sell/Trade/Consign
255
Computers
Beauty Items
246
2005 Maverick ML7 Mountain Bike, 1 5"
253
TV, Stereo 8 Video
Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items & upscale bamboo fly rods. Call 541 -678-5753,
1 -800-259-5 1 40
(PNDC)
T HE
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
I
Mis c . Items
Bid Now! s
r
Buy New...auy Local
You Can Bid On: Soccer TotsBEARS (Back to Back SessionsAges 5-6 Years Value: $1 60.00 Cascade Indoor Sports (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12,
at 8:00 p.m.)
® ...
a d. Cal l (91 6) 2 88-601 9 o r vis i t Buy New...auy Local www.pnna.com for the You Can Bid On: Pacific Nor t h west One Year School Daily Con n ection. Tuition (PNDC) Retail Value from 541-385-5809 $5,050 to $5,520 SIX DAY VACATION in Morning Star Orlando, Flor i da! Christian School Regularly $1,175.00. (Bidding closes Yours today for only Tues., Nov 12, $389.00! You SAVE at 8:00 p.m.) 6 7 p ercent. P L US One-week car rental WC I W I included. Call for deHave an item to Movie Maker tails. 1 -800-71 2-4838. Package - Canon XL2 (PNDC) sell quick? Canon XL2 Digital Video If it's under Camcorder (mrnr DV) 260 with extra l ithium ion Misc. Items '500 you can place it in battery, charger 8 wall T he Bulletin plug. Package also in- 3 Custom Budget Blinds cludes 1 4 blank 6 0- $1 00 certificates; sell Classifieds for: minute mini DV tapes, a $60 ea. 54t -388-0865 d igital v i d e o hea d '10 - 3 lines, 7 days cleaner, as well as a hard Artificial wreath & garcarrying case. This pro- land with lights, $15. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days sumer camcorder has an 541 -388-0865 (Private Party ads only) i nterchangeable l e ns system. $f 200 Bid Now! 541 -383-0361 Buying Diamonds www.eurretinerdneuy.com /Gold for Cash Saxon'5 Fine Jewelers 541 -389-6655
Rock star microphone - Shure PG58 Shure PG58 microphone with plenty of cable for attaching to your PA system. Rugged mic that is great for lead and backup vocals. $50 541-383-0361
Buy New...suy Local
You Can Bid On: Radiant Division: Rinnai RL 751 Tankless Water Heater Retail Value $2,495 Bend Heating (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)
Tick, Tock Tick, TOCk... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin'5 "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Misc. Items •
www.eurretineidneuy.com
Advertise V A CATION Bid Now! SPECIALS to 3 m i lwww.eurretineidneuy.com lion P acific N o rthwesterners! 29 daily newspapers, six states. 25-word clasI-Year Elementary sified $540 for a 3-day SchoolTuition
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it Find exactly what online at: you are looking for in the www.bendbulletin.com SAVE on Cable TV-InCLASSIFIEDS ternet-Digital Phone541-385-5809 Satellite. You've Got A C hoice! O ptions DISH T V Ret a i ler. from ALL major serSporting Goods Starting at vice providers. Call us - Misc. $19.99/month (for 12 to learn more! CALL mos.) & High Speed Today. 888-757-5943. Cycling jacket, pink/gray, I nternet starting a t Novara women's Ig, worn $1 4.95/month (where (PNDC) 1 x. $69. 54I -81 5-2737 available.) SAVE! Ask Check out the About SAME DAY Inclassifieds online Winter trng pants, Title 9 stallation! CALL Now! www.bendbuttetfn.com women's med. tall, worn 1 -800-308-1 563 Updated daily 1x, $69. 541-815-2737 (PNDC) or 503-351-2746
B U L LETIN r e -
quires computer advertisers with multiple IIO soev Taessll! ad schedules or those selling multiple systemsl software, to disMini DV Deck close the name of the Panasonic AGDV2500 business or the term lets you easily transfer "dealer" in their ads. digital tape recordings to Private party advertisy our computer. C a n ers are d efined as handle professional full- those who sell one size DV and m ini-DV computer. video tapes, providing full-feature video editing. Call The Bulletin At Two-channel (f 6-bit, 48) 541 -385-5809 k Hz s a mpling) a n d Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Four-channel (12-bit, 32 kHz sampling) audio At: www.bendbulletin.com modes. PAL and NTSC 258 playback recording. $600 541-383-0361 Travel/Tickets
•
BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.
Classic Stallion Boots Ladies size 7s/z, seldom worn, Paid $1 100;
selling for $290.
541-480-1199
Misc. Items The Bulletin Offers Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 3 days • Private Party Only • Total of items advertised must equal $200 or Less FOR DETAILS or to PLACE AN AD, Call 542-385-5809 Fax 54t -385-5802
Vacuum: bagged Platinum upright Hoover, with portable canister, like new cond., $100
COWGIRL CASH 541 -548-8895 We buy Jewelry, Boots, Vintage Dresses 8 Wanted- paying cash More. 924 Brooks St. for Hr-fr audio 8 stu54t -678-51 62 dio equip Mclntosh www.getcowgirlcash.com J BL, Marantz, D y Flexible Flyer sled, $25. naco, Heathkit, SanQueen bed-in-a-bag, $20. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Computer desk, $20. TV Call 541-261-1 808 stand, $15. 4 drawer file cabinet, $20. Rose pattern dishes, 45-pc set for Commercial/Qffice 8, new, $20. Wall-mount hand-crank phone, $1 00. Equipment & Fixtures 541-617-3951
Office chairs, 1 blue 1 Foot 8 back massager, brown $50 ea. or both $200. I nverter t b l ., $90. Call 541 -593-7438 $60, Bike trlr, new before 5 p.m. $1 30. To p q u a lity stuff! 541-385-5685
GENERATE SOME EXCITEMENT
IN YOUR NEIGBORHOOD.
Building Materials Bend Habitat RESTORE
Plan a garage sale and Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW don't forget to adverPRICES tise in classified! 541 -385-5809.
740 NE 1st 541 -31 2-6709
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
Open to the public.
Home Security System 2GIG Brand new installed by AbbaJay includes 2 hour installation and one year basic security service. $375.
(Valued at $850) 541 -382-3479
How to avoid scam and fraud attempts
Steel Building Allocated Bargains. 40'x60' on up. We do deals. www.gosteelbuildings.com
Source¹ 1 BX
541-227-692f
Heating & Stoves NOTICE TO
ADVERTISER
Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been c ertified by the O r egon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g e n cy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e identified by its cerlification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not k n owingly accept adverlisi ng for the s ale o f uncertified woodstoves.
BUYING & S E LLING YBe aware of international fraud. Deal loAll gold jewelry, silver cally whenever posand gold coins, bars, sible. rounds, wedding sets, class rings, sterling sil- Y Watch for buyers ver, coin collect, vinwho offer more than tage watches, dental your asking price and gold. Bill Fl e ming, who ask to have 541 -382-941 9. money wired or handed back to them. Fake cashier checks Cemetery plot at and money orders Tumalo cemetery. are common. A bargain at $450. YNever give out per541 -848-7436 sonal financial information. Christmas trees (2), ar- s/Trust your instincts tificial 7' lighted $55 and be wary of each. 541 -420-4279 someone using an escrow service or Need help fixing stuff? agent to pick up your TURN THE PAGE merchandise. Call A Service Professional For More Ads the help you need. Thc Bulletin find The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN•SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013 G3 476
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER O P E L
B A M A
A R N O
M A I S S H E S X J C 0 A R D P O U A N S N I E L N S S Y D P O D B I E D 0 R L D O O D N V S E O T N O
E N G C O M G L E A N O C H R E
C H L A A R UM S S
S O L O S
EA X O A R C T T A
T H A W O O N A R D S H L N A E E B E BO F R C NI I A C N S E L E T E R A S L U B E N A V E Y S B Y E T U O U S E R S I A S E RI L L S N S E T
M E R R I E R
G 0 D U T C R H E L D Y Y N A A N S K T S Y F T C
O N E A L S
T R I P S
T O N E
O N E L I B T C A R D A T E E T K A T E E M O N A D E A R D L A T A N A S S S H S T I A L A R R U I T E R R A P E
C L E E A X N U S R B O S P E D R N I T E E P L E L R S A F L L I A E
L A R V A
A I L E Y
P R E S S
T O R S O
S K I M P
E S T E S
E M I L
M E D T S A C
N I B S
N E R O
A S A P
270
266
Lost 8 Found
Sales Northeast Bend
** FREE **
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,
Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-
The Bulletin
recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'
• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species 8 cost per cord to better serve our customers.
The Bulletin Servwg Central0 egon s nce l903
Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
•
•
Have Gravel, Will Travel! Cinders, topsoil, fill material, etc. Driveway & road work, excavation 8 septic systems. Abbas Construction CCB¹78840 CalI 541-548-6812
For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email Classified©bendbulleun.com
The Bulletin Ser nP Central Oregon s nce l903
Prompt Delivery Rock, Sand & Gravel Multiple Colors, Sizes
Instant Landscaping Co.
541-389-9663
• $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin
REMEMBER: Ifyou have lost an animal, don't forget to check
The Bulletin To Subscribe call
The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882 P e lle
541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
541-447-7178; or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.
Take care of your investments PROMPT D E LIVERY with the help from 541-389-9663 The Bulletin's Free maple leaves for "Call A Service your garden. You bag! Professional" Directory 541-389-1578 •
KIT I NCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs
or 503-805-3833
classified 0 bendbulletin.com
•
Kit FREE!
asked. 541-325-6629
1 cord dry, split Juniper, $200/cord. Multi-cord discounts, & y2 cords available. Immediate Sale - Moderate to delivery! 541-408-6193 Estate high-end antiques. Sun. All Year Dependable only, 9am-4pm. NO Early Firewood: Seasoned birds! 2474 NW HemLodgepole, Split, Del. mingway St. in Bend Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 for $365. Cash, Check Look What I Found! or Credit Card OK. You'll find a little bit of everything in 541-420-3484. The Bulletin's daily LODGEPOLE PINE garage and yard sale Cut, split & delivered, section. From clothes $200/cord to collectibles, from (delivery included) housewares to hard541-604-1925 ware, classified is always the first stop for Need to get an cost-conscious ad in ASAP? consumers. And if you're planning your You can place it own garage or yard online at: sale, look to the claswww.bendbulletin.com sifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place 541-385-5809 for bargains! Call Classifieds: 541-385-5809 or email
BarkTurfsoil.com
rage sale and receive a Garage Sale
Missing: Chihuahua since 8/2 in Crooked River Ranch. Male, 8 rs old, about 6 lbs. here has been a sighting of him with a man in his late 50's with black hair, mustache & glasses in CRR. $5000 cash reward, no questions
Employment Opportunities
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Hay, Grain & Feed
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First quality Orchard/Timothy/Blue Grass mixed hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/tcn. Patterson Ranch Sisters, 541-549-3831
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 bendbuiietin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbuiietin.com
Nursing
Are you the best? lfso, do you want to work for the best?
PacificSource
CAUTION: Ads published in Call 541-480-7823 "Employment Opand tell me portunities" in clude about yourself. employee and independent p o sitions. Ads fo r p o s itions that require a fee or upfront i nvestment must be stated. With What are you any independentjob looking for? opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r You'll find it in oughly. Use e xtra c aution when a p - The Bulletin Classifieds plying for jobs online and never pro541-385-5809 vide personal information to any source Line T e chniyou may not have Heavy cian Needed. researched and Dodge Cummings diedeemed to be repusel tech needed. Work table. Use extreme for the best and busic aution when r e e st d e alership i n s ponding to A N Y Central Oregon. Bring online employment your resume and apad from out-of-state. ply to Don Mueller at We suggest you call Smolich Motors, 1865 the State of Oregon NE Hwy 20, Bend. No Consumer H o tline phone calls please. at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws c o ntact Need to get an ad Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n d ustry, in ASAP? Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764. Fax it to 541-322-7253
The Bulletin 541-385-5809
Accounting Growing CPA firm seeks a CPA or CPA Candidate with 2 to
541-815-0015
5 years public ac-
counting experience. Please visit www.bendcpa.com/ jobs for application information.
Say "goodbuy"
Add your web address to your ad and read-
ers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.
Whispering Winds Retirement is hiring a part-time split-shift Server for our dining room. Position includes evenings 8 weekends. Benefits after 90 days. Must be friendly & enjoy seniors. Please apl~ in person at 2920 C onners Ave., Bend. Pre-employment drug test required.
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
5 41-385-580 9 HOUSEKEEPER Whispering Winds Retirement is seeking a p art-time hous e keeper. Two 7-hour days per week plus on-call as n e eded. Duties include laundry a n d gen e ral cleaning. Must speak clear English, be responsible and enjoy being around senior citizens. Apply in person at 2920 NE Conn ers A v e. , Be n d . Pre-employment drug test required. FIND IT! SUY IT! SELL IT!
The Bulletin Classifieds General
Jefferson Count Job 0 o r tunit Staff Assistant IV - Public Works $3,125.14 to $3,518.60 DOQ Closes November 25th, 2013
F or c o mplete j o b des c ription a n d application form go to www.co.jefferson.or.us; click o n H u man Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to:
Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. Jefferson County is an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
Advertising Account Executive Rewardingnew business development
Senior BusinessSystems Programmer Responsible for programming and maintaining Ellucian Banner enterprise resource planning system, and related College systems. Bach d egree + 1- y r . L i n ux/Unix e xp . r e q . $57,822-$68,836. Ex t e nded close date Nov 11. Dean of Health Sciences Provide leadership and administrative oversight to faculty and staff in Health Careers, Science, and Health & Human Performance programs. Responsible for operational oversight, budget development and management for assigned program areas. Master's degree + 2-yrs exp. req. $78,072-$92,942. Closes Nov 10.
HEALTH PLANS
Help us change healthcare! If you have a broad clinical background a nd would like t o enhance p a t ients' q uality of l ife a nd m aximize hea l t h plan benefits, this position may be the opportunity for you! PacificSource Health Plans is seeking an RN to join our team a s N u rs e Ca s e Manager. The ideal candidate will have a current Oregon RN l icense a n d fi v e years nursing experience with v aried medical e x posure and exp e rience. Case management, u tilization, an d / or health plan experience preferred. Review the full job description and complete the online application at www.pacificsource.
com/careers. EOE
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
thousands of readers! The Bulletin Classifieds Reach Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Ctassifieds Housekeeper - Private homes cleaning team member needed, week days only. No week- Office Specialist ends, eves or holidays.
The Bulletin Central Oregon Community College has openings lis t e d bel o w . Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details 8 apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7 -1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer.
Employment Opportunities
sutter Instaiier
B & R is hiring. Excellent pay and group insurance.
Food ServiceServer
SUPER TOP SOIL Screened, soil & compost m i x ed , no rocks/clods. High humus level, exc. f or flower beds, lawns, gardens, straight Campus Public Safety Officer s creened to p s o i l . ff Full-time, 1 Part-time, 1On-Call) Bark. Clean fill. De- Provide patrol services on COCC campus to liver/you haul. ensure the safety and security of staff, stu541-548-3949. dents, and the public. Responsible for interveningand managing de-escalations, and preparing incident reports. Must be 21 yrs of age Lost & Found with 1-yr. exp. required. POST Test req. $12.38 - $14.74/hr. Closes Nov 11. Found men's bike on Shevlin Park Rd. Call to Program Developer of MATC identify. 541-390-3748 Non-Destructive Test8 Inspection Provide leadership in the development of a Lost Cat, black longnew self-paced manufacturing education prohaired male, "Oliver, gram NDT / NDI. See website for require11/4 near corner of NE Isabella & NE 7th (near ments. Part Time position, temporary Aug Revere). 541-953-7576 2014 until f u ll-time p ositions ar e f i l led. $17.60-$20.95/hr. Closes Nov 21. Lost: DACHSHUND Blk/tan longhaired Temp Hourly Math & CIS Tutor female 20 Ibs on CRR Tutor students in Math or CIS courses to supHorney Hollow area. port instruction. $9.80-$11.39/hr. Par Time, PLEASE help her get position. Work L ocation home!!! Call her mom Non-Benefited Redmond, Madras, Prineville. Op en U ntil at 541-316-8382. Filled. Where can you find a Psychology Teaching Internship helping hand? V iew C O C C em p loyment w e bsite a t From contractors to https://jobs.cocc.edu for Part Time Instructor Internship Program Pragmatics and Requireyard care, it's all here ments. Extended close date Nov 15. in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Part Time Instructors New: Engineering, Developmental Writing, Professional" Directory College Composition, Art-Design 8 Drawing Lost small brown metal Looking for t alented individuals to t e ach suitcase, containing car part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our jack 8 other parts, may- Web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay be downtown near Jack- $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with alope Grill, Sat Oct. 29. additional perks. Reward! 541-389-7329 www.hershe souandbark.com
pp 476
PUZZLE IS ON PAGE GZ Fuel & Wood
Employment Qpportu n IIIes
IEtj[j8llq/iQKA
The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full-time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of m edia sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate. The p o sition i n c ludes a comp etitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Email your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Jay Brandt, Advertising Director brandtObendbulletin.com OI'
drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. No phone inquiries please. EOE / Drug Free Workplace CareerServices Coordinator
Oregon StateUniversity (OSU) - Cascadesin Bend, Oregon isseeking applicants for a 12-month, full-time (LO FTE), professional faculty position as Career Services Coordinator.
The salary range is $39,000 - $46,800. The Career Services Coordinator provides expertise and leadership in career services for studentsand alumni of OSU-Cascades. These services include, but are not limited to, developing and presenting workshops on appropria te topics, working with f a culty i n a l l disciplines, providing relevant testing and career counseling for students and providing the overall leadership for career services delivery for the campus. The coordinator markets career services to new and current students through orientation and classroom presentations and the website. This resource provided by OSU-Cascades contributes to retention and the academic and personal success of students accessing this service. Required qualifications include a m aster's degree in Counseling or related discipline; Experience providing counseling or advising; Experience in career planning, assessment, or vocational counseling; and outstanding oral and written communication skills.
To review posting, additional requirements and apply, g o to htt p ://oregonstate.edu/jobs. Apply to posting ¹0011578. Closing dateis 1 flf8/13. OSU is anAA/EOE.
J J<g,/F~> JIP) JI,J j JlqiJjjJ~ Can be found on these pages: EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - Independent Positions
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
476
Employment Opportunities
FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
Your future isjust apage away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace tohangit, The Bulletin Classified is your bestsource. Every daythousandsof buyers andsellers ofgoods and services dobusinessin these pages.They know you can't beatThe Bulletin Classified Sectionfor selection and convenience - every itemis just a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy to use.Everyitem is categorizedandevery cartegory is indexedonthe section's frontpage. Whether youarelooking for a home orneeda service, your future is inthepagesof The Bulletin Classified.
Pressroom
Night Supervisor The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon, is seeking a night time press supervisor. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon and two in California. Our ideal candidate will manage a small crew of three and must be able t o l e ar n o u r e q uipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for our 3y2 tower KBA press. Prior management/ leadership experience preferred. In addition to our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. Besides a competitive wage and benefit program, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude, are able to manage people
and schedulesand are a team player, we would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great place to live and raise a family, let us hear from you. Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at anelsonOwescompapers.com with your complete r e sume, r e ferences a n d sa l a ry history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
grEs o "z
DESCHUTES COUNTY
The Bulletin
Office Specialist 1 / OS1
Oregon State University - Cascades, Bend has a full time employment opportunity. The Office and Campus Operations Assistant will p rovide support i n t h e G r a duate a n d Research Center and duties include reception, front office support and a ssistance with facilities and operations. Preferred qua l ifications inc l ud e a demonstrated commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity. To review complete position descriptio and apply on-line, go to http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and use posting number 0011542. The closing dateis 1 1/25/13. OSU is an AA/EOE.
Graphic Designer Oregon State University - Cascades, Bend has a full time employment opportunity.
The Graphic Designer provides a full range of graphic artwork for print and digital communications, and related technical assistance at OSU-Cascades. Preferred qualifications include a d e mons trated commitment t o pr o moting a n d enhancing diversity. To review complete position description and apply on-line, go to http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and use posting number 0011544. The closingdateis 12/flf3. OSU is an AA/EOE.
WAREHOUSEMAN Midstate Electric Cooperative, Inc. Iocated in La Pine, OR (30 miles south of Bend) seeks a qualified applicant for the position of Warehouseman: Qualified applicant must have an AA degree or equivalent in the form of at least one year of utility experience or three years of non-utility experience in related position. Must have good mechanical ability, equipment experience and basic computer skills (word pro-
cessing,spreadsheet, database). Must possess or be able to obtain an Oregon Class A CDL (subject to substance abuse testing). Must have ability to communicate orally and in writing with employees and general public in a courteous and effective manner. Must have the physical ability to perform the essential functions, duties and responsibilities of the job, which include, but are not limited to walking, twisting, climbing, bending, lifting and carrying (physical job analysis will be provided). Must reside within 20 miles of headquarters facility and be available via telephone contact. Qualifications include skill, knowledge, ability, problem solving and interpersonal relationship behavior. This is an hourly / non-exempt union positionIBEW Local 125. Submit resume with a cover letter to: Human Resources Midstate Electric Cooperative, Inc. P.O. Box 127, La Pine, OR 97739 Fax¹ 541-536-1423 E-Mail:smiesen I midstateelectric.coo NO TELEPHONE CALLS WILL BE ACCEPTED. All resumes must be received by November 15, 2013. EEOE.
Manager Administrative Services Division Manager
City of Redmond Full Time Exempt, Non-Represented, Management Level Position Provides a variety of routine and complex clerical, administrative, and technical work in the administration of the City government. MANDATORY REQUIREMENTS
Associatesdegree in business management, accounting or a closely related field, and 4 years of related experience; or any equivalent combination of education and progressively responsible experience, with additional work experience substituting for the required education on a year for year basis. DESIRABLE REQUIREMENTS: Bachelor's Degree in public administration, political science, business management, accounting or a closely related field. 4 years experience working in a Municipal Government setting (City /County). Demonstrated experience maintaining/updating websites. Demonstrated experience implementing software.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
ADMINISTRATIVE SUPERVISOR II — DiStriCt Attorney'S OffiCe. Full-time position. Deadline:SUNDAY,11/17/13. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST I-
Case Manager, Child & Family Program. Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY,
11/24/13. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST III, SUPERVISOR — Crisis Team, Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. CLINICAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS ANALYST —Behavioral Health Division. Two full-time POSitiOnS. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. COMMUNITY JUSTICE TECHNICIAN — Juvenile Justice Division. On-call positions. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL A SUFFICIENTPOOL OF APPLICANTS HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED.
DEPUTY SHERIFF (PATROL) 8[ CORREGTIONS DEPUTY (JAIL) —Sherjff's
Office. Full-time positions. Deadline: WEDNESDAY, 01/1 5/1 4. ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II — Public Health Division. Full-time position. Deadline:SUNDAY,11/17/13. HEALTHSERVICESDIREGTOR- Full-time position. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON TUESDAY,01/21/14. PUBLICHEALTH NURSE I-Reproductive Health, Public Health Division. Parttime position, 70% FTE. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON TUESDAY, 11/12/13. QUALITY IMPROVEMENT SPECIALIST — Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. RESERVE DEPUTY SHERIFF - Sherjff's
Office. On-call positions. Deadline:THIS IS ANON-GOING RECRUITMENT. TELEGOMMUNIGATOR I —911 Service District. Full-time positions. Deadline: THIS IS AN ON-GOING RECRUITMENT. TRIAL ASSISTANT I OR II — District Attorney'S OffiCe. Full-time POSitiOn. Deadline:DEADLINE DATEEXTENDEDTO SUNDAY, 11/1 7/13. COMING SOON: COUNTY LEGALCOUNSEL PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER — Child 8 Family
Program. DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONS ONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISITOUR WEBSITE AT www.
deschutes.org/jobs.All candidates will receive anemail response regarding their application status after the recruitment
has closed and appli cations have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates
are sent vja email only. If you need assistance, pleasecontact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 617-4722. DBSChuteS COunty PrOVideS reaSOnable
HOW TO APPLY: R equest application packet from C ity o f Redmond Human Resources Department, via email only brandon.linville@ci.redmond.or.us.
accommodations for persons with
Complete application packets must be submitted by Friday, November 22, 2013, by 5pm.
For hearing impaired, please call TTY/ TDD 711.
d isabilities. This material will
be
furnished jn alternative format jf needed.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G4 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013•THE BULLETIN n
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747 -Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
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Ranch Hand person position available, For info contact
Fax it to 541-322-7253
lob.positionhr@yahoo.com The Bulletin Classifieds
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
528
TRUCK DRIVER
627
Vacation Rentals & Exchanges
763
Commercial for Rent/Lease
Recreational Homes & Property
Fenced storage yard, PRICED REDUCED building and o f fice cabin on year-round trailer for rent. In con- creek. 637 acres sur rounded federal land venient Redmond loFremont Nat'I Forest cation, 205 SE Rail541-480-7215 road Blvd. Reduced to $700/mo. Avail. 10/1. 771 541-923-7343. Lots 693
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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 630
Rooms for Rent Room for rent in Redmond, $350+ utilities. No s moking. Mature, r e sponsible, & stable. Call Jim, 541-419-4513
Office/Retail Space for Rent
541-385-5809
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-9 5cieis
IRP MQ
CHECK YOURAD
Loans & Mortgages
Open 12-3 1900 NW Montery Park Dr. Monterey Mews Condo Cottages Sandy Garner, Broker 541-383-4360
thegarnergroup R lwt t w c 541 383 4360
wwwthegarnergrouncom
634
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 & 3 bdrms w/d hookups, patios or decks. Mountain Glen 541-383-9313
Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
19 9 6
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
, "I4'lII'
(60% Reserve)
744
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
HDFatBo
Open 12-3 2115 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. NorthWest Crossing First Time Shown Janis Grout, Broker 541-948-0140
Sun Forest Construction (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.) 775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
16'9" Larson All American, 1971, V-hull, 120hp I/O, 1 owner, always gaTriumph Day t ona raged, w/trlr, exc cond, 2004, 15 K m i l e s, $2000. 541-788-5456 perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536.
$4995 Dream Car
cruise, S-8521. 2006
75hp. Mercury. Full camping e n c losure. Pop u p cha n ging room/porta-potty, BBQ, swim ladder, all gear. Trailer, 2006 E a syloader gal v a nized. P urchased new, a l l records. 541-706-9977, cell 503-807-1973.
21' Crownline Cuddy Cabin, 1995, only 325 hrs on the boat, 5.7 Merc engine with outdrive. Bimini top
8 moorage cover, $7500 obo. 541-382-2577
Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
21' Sun Tracker Sig. series Fishin' Barge, Tracker 50hp live well fish fndr new int, extras, exc cond, $7900. 541-508-0679
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Meet singles right now! No paid o perators, just real people like you. Browse greet18'Maxum skiboat,2000, ings, exchange mesinboard motor, g r eat sages and connect cond, well maintained, live. Try it free. Call $8995 obo. 541-350-7755
now: 8 7 7-955-5505.
(PNDC)
1991 2 bdrm, 2 bath, well
maintained, landscaped, in Queen's Garden, 55+ Prineville. Reduced to $13,000. 541-233-2007 FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46 500 finished on your site J and M Homes 541-548-5511
LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon 541-548-5511 JandMHomes.com Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC. J and M Homes
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Call 54 I-3855809ttt tramotsyourservice Advertisefor28 ddysstarting dl 'If(I ius tpenoiIxugertut twuiie onwrweittrtef
Handyman
Building/Contracting NOTICE: Oregon state law r equires anyone who con t racts for construction work to be licensed with the Construction Contrac-
tors Board (CCB). An active license means the contractor is bonded 8 insured. Verify the contractor's CCB li c ense at www.hirealicensedcontractor.com
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4~e„ett>euee Handyman/Remodeling Residential/Commercial Small Jobs ln Enri re Room Retuodels Garage Organization Home rnspection Repairs guaftry, Hnnesl Work
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Land s caping/Yard Carel
I DO THAT!
Where can you find a or call 503-378-4621. 541-548-5511 The Bulletin recomWARNING helping hand? thegarnergroup mends checking with The Bulletin recomR lEt t L LC From contractors to the CCB prior to con- Dennis 541.317.9768 mends you use cau541 383 4360 r<'ev151573Bnfrdvdllnwred :s. tracting with anyone. yard care, it's all here wwwthegamwgmupcom tion when you proSome other t r ades vide personal in The Bulletin's also req u ire addiinformation to compa"Call A Service tional licenses and Chester Elliot nies offering loans or certifications. Professional" Directory credit, especially Open 12-3 Construction those asking for ad63148 Riverstone Home vance loan fees or Dr. USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI Remodel/Renovate 648 companies from out of Luxury Home Creative Designs state. If you have Houses for View of River 850 Door-to-door selling with MiHwrights - Bright Wood Corp. concerns or quesRob Davis, Rent General Snowmobiles fast results! It's the easiest Handyman Honey-Do's tions, we suggest you Broker Senior & Armed way in the world to sell. We are looking for experienced consult your attorney 541-280-9589 P U BLI SHER'S • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 Services Discount MOULDER OPERATORS 8 SET UP people, or call CONSUMER NOTICE EXT, $1000. The Bulletin Classified as well as entry level stacker positions. HOTLINE, 5 41-4 2 0 - 2 9 8 0 All real estate adver• Yamaha 750 1999 1-877-877-9392. 541-385-5809 tising in this newspaCCB¹ 148659 Mountain Max, SOLD! Entry level positions starting at $10.00 per per is subject to the • Zieman 4-place hour. Moulder/Set Up pay rates up to$16.00 BANK TURNED YOU air H o using A c t trailer, SOLD! DOWN? Private party F depending on experience. Medical, dental, which makes it illegal All in good condition. • De b ris Removal thegarnergroup vision, life insurance and vacation available will loan on real es"any to a d vertise Located in La Pine. R 1EI t L L C tate equity. Credit, no after standard qualification requirements for limitation Call 541-408-6149. 541 3834360 each. Bright Wood is an equal opportunity emproblem, good equity preference, or disc r imination wwwthegarnergroupcom ployer and we p erform our own on-site is all you need. Call based on race, color, 860 pre-employment drug screening. You must Oregon Land MortERIC REEVE religion, sex, handiMotorcycles & Accessories pass a p r e-employment drug screening. gage 541-388-4200. cap, familial status, Tuscany-style singleHANDY Please apply in person in the Personnel Dept. Cut you r S T UDENT marital status or na- level home ont/s acre, to complete an application. Will Haul Away tional origin, or an ink SERVICES J close-in, NE Bend. 2 LOAN payments in FREE HALF or more Even if tention to make any master suites, 2900 sq ft, We are located in the Madras Industrial Park. All Home & pre f e rence, great open floorplan. Late or in Default. Get such Bright Wood Corporation —Personnei Dept., For Salvage h" limitation or discrimiCommercial Repairs Open Sunday 12 noonRelief FAST. Much 335 NH/Hess St., Madras, OR 97741 Any Location Carpentry-Painting LOWER p a yments. nation." Familial sta- 3pm, 21420 Belknap Dr. 2013 Harley .t Removal Honey Do's. $615,000. Call Student Hotline tus includes children Davidson Dyna under the age of 18 MLS¹201309771 Small or large jobs, Press Operator 855-747-7784 Also Cleanups Wide Glide, black, living with parents or Eric Andrews, Principal The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is (PNDC) no problem. a& Cleanouts ~ only 200 miles, legal cus t o dians, Broker, Windermere seeking a night time press operator. We are part Senior Discount brand new, all stock Central Oregon Real pregnant women, and of Western Communications, Inc. which is a LOCAL MONEYrWe buy An work guaranteed. plus after-market people securing cus- Estate, 541-771-1168 small, family owned group consisting of 7 newssecured trust deeds & 541-389-3361 exhaust. Has winter tody of children under papers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our note, some hard money 541-771-4463 745 cover, helmet. 18. This newspaper loans. Call Pat Kellev ideal candidate must be able to l earn our Selling for what I will not knowingly acBonded - Insured 541-382-3099 ext.13. equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style Homes for Sale CCB¹I49468 owe on it: $15,500. cept any advertising is a requirement for our 3 t/~ tower KBA press. In Domestic Services for real estate which is Call anytime, addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS NOTICE 541-554-0384 in violation of the law. All real v have numerous commercial print clients as well. Search the area's most estate adverO ur r e aders ar e In addition to a competitive wage and benefit comprehensive listing of IASSISTIHG tised here in is subhereby informed that program, we also provide potential opportunity classified advertising... Buell 1125R, 2008 15k dwellings adver- ject to t h e F e deral miles, reg. s ervice, 'SEHIORS,. P HIL CHAVEZ ; for advancement. real estate to automotive, all F air H o using A c t , tised in this newspaContracting If you provide dependability combined with a well cared for. factory Assiatlng Senlors merchandise to sporting which makes it illegal positive attitude and are a team player, we goods. Bulletin Classifieds per are available on to advertise any pref- Buell optional fairing ,.:Itf,~vat Homer 'r!t'..y Services an equal opportunity erence, limitation or would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable appear every day in the kit, Michelin 2cc tires, .a% l.Repairs, I. 0 basis. To complain of "',Light housekeeping Home g work environment that provides a great place to will trade for ie: Enprint or on line. based discrimination cal l discrimination y e other sewiozs..A. Remodels, Tile, live and raise a family, let us hear from you. duro DR 650, $5700 on race, color, reliCall 541-385-5809 HUD t o l l-free at Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at www.bendbulletin.com ' Licensed enonded. Carpentry gion, sex, handicap, obo. 541-536-7924. 1-800-877-0246. The anelson@wescom a ers.com with your comFinish work, familial status or na- Harley Davidson 1992 toll f re e t e l ephone plete resume, references and salary history/reMaintenance. The Bulletin origin, or inten- FXRS Super Glide, nice .'~503~7S'6-3S~44 number for the hear- tional serving central0 egon since ew quirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is Honest & Reliable. bike, $6500 obo. ing im p aired is tion to make any such required prior to employment. EOE :.. <Loc'atedzln'Redmond Bonded/Insured. preferences, l i m ita541-460-0494 1-800-927-9275. 573 tions or discrimination. J Phil The Bulletin Business Opportunities Rented your We will not knowingly 541-279-0846 ', accept any advertisProperty? CCB¹168910 WARNING The Bulletin The Bulletin Classifieds ing for r ea l e s tate recommends that you which is in violation of Registered Nurses has an investigate every "After Hours" Line. this law. All persons Landscaping/Yard Care n are hereby informed phase of investment Call 541-383-2371 C ommunity Counseling Solutions i s Health Forces Sale! • Drywall opportunities, espethat all dwellings ad24 Hours to recruiting for Registered Nurses to work Harley Davidson c ially t h os e fr o m vertised are available 2007 c~a cel o a d ,' FLHX Street Glideat Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center out-of-state or offered on an equal opportu- Too extras to list! locatedinJohn Day, OR. by a p e rson doing nity basis. The Bulle- 6-spd,many Zt.,drN'd gaadrip Call a Pro cruise control, stebusiness out of a lotin Classified reo, batt. tender, cover. Zauvr gdfr e t,n. Juniper Ridge is a S e c ure Residential cal motel or hotel. In- Whether you need a Set-up for long haul road Over 30 Years of Treatment Facility providing services to 746 vestment o ff e r ings fence fixed, hedges Managing trips. Dealership svc'd. individuals with a severe mental illness. must b e r e gistered trimmed or a house Fast Reliable Northwest Bend Homes Central Oregon Only 2,000 miles. with the Oregon DePLUS H-D cold weather Landscapes Service built, you'll find These positions provide mental health partment of Finance. Clean 2 bdrm with large gear, rain gear, packs, Since 2006 We suggest you connursing care including medication oversight, helmets, leathers Residentialprofessional help in basement. Spacious 8 much more. $15,000. medication r e lated t r e atment, f o l low sult your attorney or The Bulletin's "Call a attached studio. Dbl Fall Clean Up Commercial call CONS U MER 541-382-3135 after 5pm physician's prescriptions and procedures, garage. Move-in Don't track it in all Winter Service Professional" HOTLINE, ready. Only $338,000. measure and record patient's general P.O. Box 6762, •Leaves 1-503-378-4320, Directory Call Glenn Oseland, •Cones physical condition such as pulse, temperaBend, OR 97708 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. Principal Broker, • Needles ture and r espiration to p r ovide daily 541-385-5809 541-350-7829 • Debris Hauling Cell information, educate and train staff on A Classified ad is an Holiday Realty medication administration, an d e n sure EASY 659 W A Y TO 541-815-4928 Winter Prep documentation is kept according to policies. REACH over 3 million Houses for Rent 750 ccs¹16t st 3 •Pruning Pacific NorthwesternSunriver •Aerating Redmond Homes Harley Davidson This position works with the treatment team ers. $5 4 0 /25-word •Fertilizing 2011 Classic Limto promote recovery from mental illness. c lassified ad i n 2 9 VILLAGE PROPERTIES ited, LOADED, 9500 • Electrical Services This position includes telephone consultadaily newspapers for Sunriver, Three Rivers, Looking for your next miles, custom paint Compost 3-days. Call the Pation and crisis intervention in the facility. emp/oyee? La Pine. Great "Broken Glass" by cific Northwest Daily Selection. Applications Place a Bulletin help Prices range Nicholas Del Drago, (916) Mike Use Less Water Qualified applicants must have a v a lid Connection wanted ad today and $425 - $2000/mo. new condition, 2 88-6019 o r em a i l Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's reach over 60,000 $$$ Save $$$ View our full heated handgrips, elizabeth@cnpa.com readers each week. license at the time of hire, hold a valid inventory online at Improve Plant Health auto cruise control. for more info (PNDC) Electric Your classified ad Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal Village-properfies.com $32,000 in bike,only will also appear on history background check. Wages depen- Extreme Value Adver1-866-931-1061 2014 Maintenance $23,000 obo. • Electrical bendbulletin.com dent upon education and experience, but Packages Available 541-318-6049 tising! 29 Daily newsTroubleshooting which currently re676 will be b e tween $48,000 t o $ 7 2,000. papers $540/25-word ceives over Weekly, Monthly & • Generator Systems Excellent benefit package. Signing bonus classified 3-d a ys. Mobile/Mfd. Space 1.5 million page One Time Service of up to $10,000. Reach 3 million Pa• New panel installations views every month cific Northwesterners. 3 bedroom 2 bath, $675 at no extra cost. • Service Work EXPERIENCED Please visit t h e O r e gon E m ployment For more information month. 541-213-0488 or Bulletin Classifieds 24 years exp. Commercial Department or the Community Counseling call (916) 288-6019 or 541-480-5133 Get Results! email: & Residential Solutions website for an a pplication or Just bought a new boat? Call 385-5809 or Iic. & Bonded ¹r9syzy contact Nina B i sson a t 5 4 1 -676-9161, elizabeth@cnpa.com Sell your old one in the place your ad on-line Harley Davidson SportSenior Discounts for the Pacific North- classifieds! Ask about our ster 2001, 1 200cc, Ceff 5Q3 949 233fy nina.bisson@gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, at 541-390-1466 west Daily ConnecSuper Seller rates! 9,257 miles, $4995. Call Heppner, OR 97836. bendbulletin.com tion. (PNDC) Michael, 541-310-9057 Same Day Response 541-385-5809 Long term full time work. CDL needed; Fax it to 541-322-7253 doubles endorsement & good driving record The Bulletin Classifieds required. Local haul; home every day! Truck leaves & returns to MaROOFERS dras, OR. Call with experience, 541-546-6489 or needed. 541-419-1125. Call River Roofing, 541-316-7663
Sunchaser Pontoon boat - $19,895 20' 2006 Smokercraft
541-383-2847.
M
You Can Bid On: Lot 22 at Yarrow in Madras Retail Value $23,000
632
9769, 541-480-7870
approved plans. More
Buy New...Buy Local
Apt./Multiplex General
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Small studio downtown area, $495 mo. inc. util., $475 d ep. No pets/smking. 541-330-
17,000 Sq.ft. I o t i n Shevlin Ridge w i th
Motorcycles & Accessories Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories j
details and photos on 500 sq. ft. upstairs craigslist. $ 1 75,000. $17,000 office on NE side of 541-389-8614 541-548-4807 town, private bath, all Where can you find a util. paid. $500 month Need to get an helping hand? People Look for Information plus $500 d eposit. ad in ASAP? 541-480-4744 From contractors to About Products and You can place it Services Every Daythrough yard care, it's all here USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI online at: The Bulletin Classifieds in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Door-to-door selling with www.bendbulletin.com Suzuki DRZ400 SM Professional" Directory fast results! It's the easiest 541-385-5809 2007, 14K mi., way in the world to sell. 4 gal. tank, racks, 870 recent tires, The Bulletin Classified Bid Now! $4200 OBO. Boats & Accessories www BulletinBidnBuy.eom
Open Houses
Looking for your next Supervisor employee? Linn County Parks Place a Bulletin help Full-time. Supervise chasing products or I wanted ad today and park ope r ations, services from out of ' reach over 60,000 maintenance 8 con- f the area. Sending readers each week. struction work. Good c ash, c hecks, o r Your classified ad management 8 / credit i n f ormation will also appear on / communication skills ~ may be subjected to ~ bendbulletin.com required. Some FRAUD. which currently summer weekends For more i nformareceives over 1.5 and holidays. Salary tion about an adver- ~ million page views range $ 4 ,493 / tiser, you may call every month at $5,671/mo. Benefit the Oregon State no extra cost. pkg. Job description I Attorney General's Bulletin Classifieds and app available at Office Co n s umer I Get Results! www.co.linn.or.us. Protection hotline at I Call 385-5809 Send com p leted I 1 877 877 9392 I youroradplace application and reon-line at ie Bplletip g sume to: bendbulletin.com gTl Linn County Parks Dept., 3010 Ferry St., SW, Albany, OR 97322. Rmzce Need to get an ad Closes 11/26/1 3 or ® Dzdlzce© until filled. in ASAP? Operations
. 0 0
687
SERVING CENTRAL OREGON
since 2003 nesidential a Commercial
Sprinkler Bfowottts Sprinkler Repair MAINTENANCE a FallClean-up a Weekly Mowing & Edging a ui-Monthiy & Monthly Maintenance a Bark, Rock, Etc.
LANDSCAPING a Landscape Construction a Water Feature Instaiiation/Maint. e Pavers e Renovations a Irrigations Installation
Senior Discounts Bonded and Insured
541-815-4458 Lcstt 8759
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates!
541-385-5809
NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o pe r f orm Landscape Construction which includes: p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be licensed w i t h the Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be i ncluded in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond,insurance and
workers c ompensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909
or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing land scape maintenance do n ot r equire an L C B cense. Painting/Wall Covering
MARTIN JAMES European Professional Painter Repaint Specialist! Oregon License ¹186 147 LLC
541-81 5-2888 Tile/Ceramic
B APT I S T A t ile an d s t o n e
g al l e r y
c •
5-5809
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541 -38
~Boats & Accessories
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVE MBER 10 2013 G5
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers •
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go Fleetwood D i s covery TIFFIN PHAETON QSH 40' 2003, diesel mo- 2007 with 4 slides, CAT to Class 875. 350hp diesel engine, 541-385-5809 torhome w/all options-3 slide outs, $129,900. 30,900 miles, great condition! satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. dishwasher, washer/ dryer, central vac, roof Wintered in h e ated Find exactly what satellite, aluminum shop. $84,900 O.B.O. wheels, 2 full slide-thru you are looking for in the 541-447-8664 basement trays& 3TV's. CLASSIFIEDS Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150
The Bulletin
G ulfstream S u n 30' Class A Beautiful h o u seboat, sport 1988 ne w f r i dge, $85,000. 541-390-4693 TV, solar panel, new www.centraloregon refrigerator, wheelhouseboat.com. c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W Goo d GENERATE SOME ex- g enerator, citement in your neig- condition! $1 2,500 borhood. Plan a ga- obo 541-447-5504 rage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.
The Bulletin
Serving Ceneel Oregon since 1903
I
Wat e rcraft
Ads published in eWatercraft" include: Kay-
aks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
$25,000.
Tioga 24' ClassC 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 8 air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne.
880
COACHMAN 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 Reduced $10k!
Fleetwood Discovery 2008 40X, Corian counters, convection/ micro, 2-door fridge/ freezer, washer/dryer, central vac, new tile 8 carpet, roof sat., 3 TVs, window awnings, levelers, ext'd warranty, multimedia GPS, 350 Cummins diesel, 7.5 gen. Many extras! $119,900. 541-604-4662
Ideal 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? $8700. 541-815-9939
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441
Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 SB, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, 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 541-325-1 956. CHECK YOUR AD
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper
Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft Iong, 2000
8 air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003
Get your business
908
•
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
- • • - jiI
Keystone Raptor, 2007 37' toy hauler,2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system, sleeps 6,many extras. $32,500. In Madras, call 541-771-9607 or 541-475-6265
RV Transport Local or Long Distance: 5th wheels, camp trailers, toy haulers, etc. Ask for Teddy,
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
olid sur-
FeatureS inClude So Unters, 4-dr fridge, o b Uiilt i convection micro, ic ti)e
washer/dryer, ceram floor, TV, I, DVD, satetiite dish, air leveling, p ra anda through storage t y, I - Ittoronly king size I)ed - At $149,000 541-000-000
email 1jetjock©q.com
o
Qoo
Piper A rcher 1 9 80, based in Madras, always hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 total t i me . $6 8 ,500. 541-475-6947, ask for Rob Berg.
bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
•
Just too many collectibles?
t i'
2 0 06 w i th 1 2 '
slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen w alk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside shower. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 541-447-4805
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
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
541-385-5809 1/3 interest i n
882
Fifth Wheels Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear
kitchen, very good condition. Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer. 541-382-2577
541-420-3250
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird
p' et'p
lev
SuperhavvkOnly 1 Share Available
ready, Many up-
916
grade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed Call Dick, sofa, 3 slides, glass 541-480-1687. shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 27 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s c issor stabilizer jacks, 16' Like new! Keystone Challenger awning. 541-419-0566
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance& affordable flying! $6,500. 541-410-6007
)Ilj " ~-
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 & o ut . 27 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5 1/9 years.. No pets, no smoking. High r etail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to
5 1974 Bellanca 1730A
Recreation by Design
2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
( in La Pine )
WILL DELIVER
afirg l
C0 I
COI'Vegt AVert b Ut0 M/I']h
' getSp6 2< ""d j«S m0„d
'o and interest mUCh gun
Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months
Ford 1965 6-yard
dump truck, good paint, recent overhaul, everything works! $3995. 541-815-3636
Say egoodbuyn
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room 5th wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,
see. 541-330-5527.
,~) I
541-447-5184.
Economical flying in your own nanza A36, new 10-550/ IFR equipped prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 Cessna 172/180 HP for only $13,500! New Look at: Garmin Touchscreen Bendhomes.com avionics center stack! Exceptionally clean! for Complete Listings of Hangared at BDN. Area Real Estate for Sale Call 541-728-0773
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.
suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call541-593-6266
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
w e l l-
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at
MONTANA 3585 2008, equipped IFR Beech Bo-
Tow with 1/9-ton. Strong
Keystone Laredo 31' RV
Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearancein good condition. Smoke-free.
I;
Monaco Lakota 2004 cM at3 v 5th Wheel iggrg 34 ft.; 3 s lides; immaculate c o ndition; l arge screen TV w / 1/3 interest in Columbia entertainment center; 400, $150,000 (located reclining chairs; cen- O Bend.) Also: Sunriter kitchen; air; queen ver hangar available for bed; complete hitch sale at $155K, or lease, and new fabric cover. O $400/mo $20,000 OBO. 541-948-2963 (541) 548-5886
541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
4 li~u~
Aircraft, Parts & Service
your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.
that fits 6 3/9'pickup
WEEKEND WARRIOR A
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. eSpellcheckn and human errors do occur. If this happens to
WHEFL)e Rd w'INOC OADED! 2ppir - L~
Dramatic Price Reduction Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd great visibility for aviation business. 541-948-2126 or
541-260-4293
"Little Red CO„
glonaco DYna Y
Aircraft, Parts & Service
•
541-948-2216
Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
slide, Corian surfaces, wood floors (kitchen), Bid Now! 2-dr fridge, convection www.BulilietinBidnBuy.com microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in shower, new queen bed. White leather hide-abed 8 chair, all records, no pets or s moking. Lgtse v ~ . $28,450. Buy New...auy Local Call 541-771-4800 You Can Bid On: 2014 Hideout Check out the 27RBWE Travel classifieds online Trailer. www.bendbullefin.com Retail Value $24,086 Updated daily !70% Reserve) Big CountryRV (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)
Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991-
Fleetwood A m e ricana Williamsburg 2006. Two king tent end beds w/storage t runk b e lo w on e , slideout portable dinette, bench s e at, cassette t o i le t & shower, swing level galley w/ 3 bu r ner 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
Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat
NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1
Fifth Wheels
• lm
y
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
e •eee •• •• ee \e
541-548-5174
Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243
882
vg
• 5JJP)
541-548-0318 (photo above is of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)
881
00k
Ve in g S
jike th;,I
$12,5pp 547 000 000
(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publiCatiOn in The Central OregOn NiCkel AdS With an audienCe Of OVer 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • COntinuOuS liSting With phOtO On Bendbulletin.COm * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.
5 41-385-580 9
Ba
Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp e p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-820-3724
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G6 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2013•THE BULLETIN •
•
•
•
•
•
BOATS &RVs 805 -Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats &Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890 - RVs for Rent
•
•
s
932
Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all.
Atwood Tilt Trailer, 4'2" wide x 7'10 U
long, great condition, $350. 541-389-9844
541-389-7669.
Pickups CRAMPED FOR CASH? Use classified to sell those items you no longer need. Call 541-385-5809
gThe Bu l letin
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Vans
Automobiles
•
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
Dcor-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.
Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades. Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD SLT quad cab, short box, Please call auto, AC, high mileage, 541-389-6998 $12,900. 541-389-7857
541-598-3750
,
oramic moo n roof, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe975 non headlights, tan & Automobiles black leather interior, new front & r ear M brakes O 76K miles, My little red one owner, all records, Coryette n Coupe very clean, $16,900. 541-388-4360
your needs.
Chevy Tahoe 1998,
mi., good c o nd., runs great, w/studded tires on extra factory rims. $3000 OBO. 541-480-8060 Chevy Tahoe 2001, 5.3 V8, leather, air, heated seats, fully loaded, 120K m iles, $ 7 50 0 ob o .
loaded, 21K
Vin ¹103070
New 2013 Wells Cargo lphoto lor illustration only) V-nose car hauler, Bt&' x Dodge Durango 2005, 20', 5200-Ib axles. Price 4WD, VB 5 7L, Tow new is $7288; asking Ford Model A 1930 (photo for illustration only) Coupe, good condition, Ford F350 Super Duty pkg., running boards. $6750. 541-548-3595 row seat, moon$16,000. 541-588-6084 Crew Cab 2004, V10, third roof. Need help fixing stuff? auto, 4WD, tow pkg., Vin¹ 534944 Call A ServiceProfessional alloy wheels, w i de $10,999 find the help you need. tires. VIN ¹A53944 www.bendbulletin.com $9,888 fjtINI S UBAR U. SUBBBUOPSEND COM Price Reduced! ©+ S USUBBBUOPSENDCOM BARU. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 877-266-3821 / Automotive Wanted engine, power every- 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 thing, new paint, 54K DONATE YOUR CARoriginal m i les, runs Dlr ¹0354 FAST FREE TOWgreat, excellent condiING. 24 hr. Response tion in/out. $7500 obo. Tax D e duction. 541-480-3179
Oregon
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
Non-ethanol fuel & synthetic oil only, premium Bose ste-
L'"" '" "
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Corvette 1979
541-923-1781 BMW 525 2002
Dave, 541-350-4077
$11,000.
aged or abused.
$12,900.
Luxury Sport Edition, V-6, automatic, loaded, 18Unew tires, 114k miles. $7 900 obo (541) 419-4152
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin
. SU B A R U .
SUBBRUOPBEND COM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Toyota Avalon Limited 2007, V6, auto, FWD, leather, moon roof, Want to impress the A lloy w h eels. V i n relatives? Remodel ¹178907 your home with the $17,988 help of a professional S UBA RU. from The Bulletin's PUBBRUOlBRNO COM "Call A Service 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Professional" Directory Dlr ¹0354
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
54 1 N385-5809
¹4155624940 for
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super
additional details.) Serious inquiries
away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
ig®
WHEN YOU SEE THIS Have an item to sell quick? ~OO If it's under MorePixatBendbuletio,com On a classified ad '500 you can place it in go to The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com to view additional Classifieds for: Nissan Versa S 2011, photos of the item. Gas saver, auto, air, '10 - 3 lines, 7 days CD, a lloys, Vin ¹397598 '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Looking for your $11,888 next employee? (Private Party ads only) Place a Bulletin help ttrt@ S U B A R U . Toyota Camry CXL 1998, wanted ad today and PUBPBUOPBRNDCOM reach over 60,000 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 70K miles, good cond.
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
G T 2200 4
Sports, G.S. floor
mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.
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
$6000. 541-385-9289
877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
BMW M-Roadster, 2000, w/hardtop. $21,500 57,200 miles, Titanium silver. Not many M-Roadsters available. (See Craigslist posting id
only. 541-480-5348
Vin ¹023839 $13,988
J
SUBPRUOPBRNO COM
L88 - 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-
reo, always garaged,
Toyota Matrix S 2009, FWD, power window, p ower locks, A / C .
tThe Bulletin t
$17,988 Q SUBA R U .
541-460-0494
•
Ltd. 2008, 32k mi, ¹21 0048 $23 , 995. AutoSoune
...don't let time get
1996, 350 auto, 132,000 miles.
Automo b iles
m i les,
Classifieds ~ B
and place an ad today! Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers
2 0 07, 9 9 K GMC 1995 Safari XT, iphoto lor illustration only) miles, premium pack- A/C, seats 8, 4.3L V6, C hevy Malibu L T Z age, heated lumbar studs on rims, $1750 2010, V6, aut o obo. 541-312-6960 supported seats, panw/overdrive, leather,
Call on one of the professionals today!
Automobiles •
Subaru Legacy 3.0 R
Vehicle? Call The Bulletin
BMW X 3
The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting
Au t o mobiles
r-..;„;..;,.a
P
4x4, 5.7L VB, 197K
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
940
P>a ~~
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Antique & Classic Autos
Utility Trailers
935
cyl, 5
speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o n vertible around in this price range, ne w t i r es, wheels, clutch, timThe Bulletin recoml ing belt, plugs, etc. mends extra caution I 111K mi re m a rkp u r chasing ~ able cond. i n side when and out. Fun car to f products or services from out of the area. d rive, M ust S E E ! ash , $5995. R e dmond. J S ending c checks, or credit in541-504-1 993 formation may be I / subject toFRAUD Advertise your car! For more informaAdd A Ptcture! Reach thousands of readers! f tion about an advertiser, you may call Call 541-385-5809 I the Oregon State I Porsche 911 Turbo The Bulletin Classifieds Attorney General's t Office C o n sumer Toyota Corolla CE f Protection hotline at 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
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Buick La Cross CXS 2 005, loaded, n e w Honda Civic EX-L 2012 battery/tires, p e rfect 2-dr, 28,300 mi, 1 owner, $8995. 541-475-6794 infiniti FX35 2012, FWD, snow tires incl. Ford Supercab 1992, Platinum silver, Nav, Bluetooth, AC, pwr brown/tan color with 24,000 miles, with windows, locks & moonSay Ugoodbuy m atching f ul l s i z e factory war r anty, roof, heated front seats, (PNDC) GMC PPa tOn 1971, Only c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 f ully l o aded, A l l to that unused cruise, HD mats & side Wheel Drive, GPS, $19,700! Original low over drive, 135K mi., molding, $16,900. Call item by placing it in 1999, auto., White, mile, exceptional, 3rd full bench rear seat, sunroof, etc. 503-936-3792. 1-877-877-9392. Automotive Parts, 1 owner, 81,700 slide r ea r w i ndow, The Bulletin Classifieds owner. 951-699-7171 $35,500. )' miles, $3900, Service & Accessories bucket seats, power 541-550-7189 Lexus ES 330 2004 541-382-6795 seats w/lumbar, pw, black 79,317 mi. B5809 5 4 1 3 8 5 (4) studded siped snow 2003 6 speed, X50 HD receiver 8 trailer ¹037528 $ 11,888 tires B.F. G oodrich brakes, good t i res. added power pkg., M8 S, P 2 1 5/70R14, 530 HP! Under 10k Good cond i t ion. Cadillac El Dorado PP Oregon 95%+ tread on Nis$4900. 541-389-5341 miles, Arctic silver, 1994 Total Cream Puff! Aulngouroe san 6-hole rims. $50 gray leather interior, Body, paint, trunk as l 541-598-3750 each.503-936-1778 GMC Sierra 1977 short FIND IT/ new quality t i res, showroom, blue www.aaacregonautcI bed, e xlnt o r i ginal and battery, Bose stgv fy leather, $1700 wheels ELK HUNTERS! source.com (4) Studded tires on cond., runs & drives premium sound steSELL IT! Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. w/snow tires although rims from th e T i re great. VB, new paint reo, moon/sunroof, not been wet in owner, 87k only 3k on car8has Factory, 225/60/R16 and tires. $4750 obo. The Bulletin Classifieds years. On trip to car and seat covers. new 258 long block. off Buick, but fits other 541-504-1050 Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., Many extras. GaC lutch p kg , W a r n $4800. GM. 5/16 tread, $250. 541-593-4016.s raged, perfect conhubs. Excellent run541-389-0038 dition $5 9 ,700. ner, very dependable. I Legal Notices • Legal Notices 541-322-9647 4 studded Wintercat tires, Northman 6 t/s' plow, N CHECK YOUR AD mounted on 16 rims, c laims against t h e Warn 6000¹ w i nch. Please check your ad Lincoln LS 2001 4door LEGAL NOTICE 225/70R-16, $300. sport sedan, plus set estate are required to $9500 or best rea- on the first day it runs Storage Auction 541-390-7270 sonable offer. of snow tires. $6000. Porsche Carrera 911 On November 16, 2013 present the same with FORD XLT 1992 to make sure it is cor541-549-6970 or 541-317-0324. 2003 convertible with proper vouchers at 9 00 am a 257 SE 3/4 ton 4x4 rect. Sometimes in4 s tudded W intercat MGA 1959 - $19,999 541-815-8105. hardtop. 50K miles, 2nd Street, Alliance within four (4) months matching canopy, s tructions over t h e tires on 17x7.5 Jeep Convertible. O r iginew factory Porsche S torage, L L C wi l l after the date of first 30k original miles, rims, used 7 seasons, nal body/motor. No are misundermotor 6 mos ago with Jeep Grand Cherokee phone handle the disposition publication to the unpossible trade for rust. 541-549-3838 stood and an e rror $300. 541-383-8935 18 mo factory war1998, 4x4, new tires, of the entire contents dersigned or they may classic car, pickup, ranty remaining. 168K miles. $ 2900. can occur in your ad. of Units ¹ 4 6 A n toi- be barred. Additional 4 Wild Country studded motorcycle, RV If this happens to your Oo 541-390-6210 $37,500. ~ nette Grant-Hayward, i nformation may b e radial RVT tires, $13,500. ad, please contact us 541-322-6928 ¹101 L i lly T r i mble, o btained f ro m t h e 31x10.5R15LT, $150. In La Pine, call M ore P i x a t B e n d b o ll e ti n , c o m the first day your ad (photo forillustration only) 541-550-6328 ¹128 Daniel Harris, court records, the un928-581-9190 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! appears and we will Mercedes-Benz C230 ¹393 James Edward dersigned or the atbe happy to fix it as 2005, V6, auto, RWD, FJ Toyota 4 snow tires The Bulletin Dcor-to-door selling with Subaru Imp r eza M arkham, Jr , ¹ 5 2 3 torney. Date first pubU leather, moon r oof, s oon as w e c a n . on 17 rims, $495 2006, 4 dr., AWD, To Subscribe call J en S nyder, ¹ 5 3 6 lished: November 3, fast results! It's the easiest Deadlines are: Week- alloy wheels. obo. 541-420-3277 au • 2013. JAMES C. OLsilver gray c o lor, T erry Foster, ¹ 5 4 0 541-385-5800 or go to days 12:00 noon for Vin ¹778905. way in the world to sell. ~ auto, real nice car in j azmyne logan t o SON, Personal Repnext day, Sat. 11:00 $9,888 www.bendbulletin.com great shape. $6200. satisfy said lien of the resentative c/o Ronald Les Schwab Mud 8 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. The Bulletin Classified GMC Sierra 2002 SLE L. Bryant, Attorney at S UB A R U . 541-548-3379. above named. Snowblackwall 12:00 for Monday. If Z71 4x4 extended 541-385-5809 Law, Bryant Emerson Murano we can assist you, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. cab, 63K miles, LEGAL NOTICE 8 Fitch, LLP, PO Box P245/50/R-20 102T please call us: $12,500 or best offer. 877-266-3821 The regular meeting 4 57, Redmond O R Observe G02, used 541-389-1473 541-385-5809 Dlr ¹0354 of the Board of Di97756. 1 winter. Pd $1200. The Bulletin Classified rectors of the DesWill take reasonable chutes County Rural offer. 541-306-4915 Mercedes Benz Plymouth B a r racuda Good classified ads tell Need to get an ad Fire Protection DisE500 4-matic 2004 1966, original car! 300 the essential facts in an trict ¹2 will be held on in ASAP? hp, 360 VB, center- I nternational 86,625 miles, sunFla t lphoto for illustration only) interesting Manner. Write Tuesday, November (Photo tor lllustration only) lines, 541-593-2597 roof with a shade, Bed Pickup 1963, 1 Nissan Pathfinder SE from the readers view - nct Subaru Impreza WRX 12, 2013 a t 1 1 : 30 loaded, silver, 2 sets t on dually, 4 s p d. 2005, V6, auto, 4WD, the seller's. Convert the 2006, 4 Cyl., Turbo, 5 a.m. at the North Fire Fax itto 541-322-7253 of tires and a set of trans., great MPG, roof rack, moon roof, facts into benefits. Show spd, AWD, moon roof, Station c o n ference STUDDED USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! chains. $13,500. could be exc. wood t ow pk g . , all o w the reader how the item will leather. Vin ¹508150 room, 63377 Jamison The Bulletin Classifieds SNOW TIRES 541-362-5598 hauler, runs great, Docr-to-dcor selling with wheels. Vin¹722634 $18,888 St., Bend, OR. Items size 225/70-R16 help them in someway. new brakes, $1950. on the a genda i n$12,988 and Hyundai Santa fast results! It's the easiest 541-419-5480. This ttrt @ S U B A R U . PUBLIC NOTICE Mercedes C300 2009 clude: a discussion of PUBPBUOPBRNDCOM Fe wheels, new! way in the world tc sell. advertising tip S UB A R U . 4-door 4-Matic, red, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. a potential levy, a re- The Mirror Pond Ad $600. 541-388-4003 brought to youby Hoc Committee will one owner, loaded. view of District poli877-266-3821 935 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. The Bulletin Classified 29,200 mi. $ 2 4 ,900 cies, an u pdate of meet on Wednesday, 877-266-3821 The Bulletin Dlr ¹0354 541-385-5809 Sport Utility Vehicles November 13, 2013, obo 541-475-3306 Project Wildfire, the Studded tires (4) and Dlr ¹0354 fire department report, in t h e co m munity rims for Ford p/up r oom at t h e B e n d and a discussion of 235/85/1 6, 10- p ly. Project/Restoration '78 Park & R e c reation the managers conNew $970, sell $550. Porsche 924 c oupe 541-923-8202 $1400; '72 Datsun tract. The meeting lo- D istrict Office, 7 9 9 5 10 w a gon $ 3 5 0 . cation is accessible to SW Columbia, Bend, Age n d a TIRES: (4) 265/70-17 Both good bodies, will persons with disabili- O regon. items include a report on 6-hole Ford alloy run. 541-598-2729 ties. A request for inSUBARU OUTBACK rims, $200; (4) Ford terpreter for the hear- by committee repreLTD 2006 - $13,495 Subaru Baja Tu r bo sentatives on a 5 -hole a l lo y ri m s i ng impaired or f o r Sport 2005, Auto, tow One owner, Immacu$150. 541-480-9277 a 4NQ> An important premise upon which the principle of other a c c ommoda- meeting with Pacific late 2.5i AWD runs and pkg., two tone, moon Power, and discustions for person with roof, alloys. looks like new with a democracy is based is thatinformation about Toyo mud/snow tires (4) disabilities should be sion and appointment 8„ Vin¹103619 sun/moonroof, leather 2 25/60R-16/98H, o n government activities must be accessible in order made at least 48 hrs. of public members to $15,999 heated seats, 6 d i sc Subaru rims, $350. before the meeting to: the ad hoc committee. CD, 100k c h eckup, for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. 541-923-8226. VW Bug Sedan, 1969, new belts, timing belt, 4g~bSUBARU. Tom Fay The agenda is posted fully restored, 2 owners water pump, transmisSUBPRUOPBBND COM 5 41-318-0459. T T Y on the district's webPublic notices provide this sort of accessibility to 932 with 73,000 total miles, site: www.bendpark800-735-2900. sion fluid 8 filter. Auto. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. citizens who want to know more about government Antique & $10,000. 541-382-5127 trans. with sport shifter. sandrec.org. For more 877-266-3821 LEGAL NOTICE information call Dlr ¹0354 activities. Classic Autos 541-549-6028. The undersigned has 541-706-6100. 933 been appointed perSubaru Outback 2011 Pickups Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin Want to impress the sonal representative What are you 53k mi., ¹339328 of the Estate of HArelatives? Remodel classifieds or go to vtrvvvtr.bendbullefin.comand $17,995 Chevy 1986, long bed, looking for? ZEL JEAN OLSON, your home with the 1921 Model T four spd., 350 VB reclick on "Classi%ed Adsu Deceased, by the DeYou'll find it in built, custom paint, help of a professional Delivery Truck Oregon schutes County Cirgreat ti r e s and Autogourre Restored & Runs from The Bulletin's The Bulletin Classifieds cuit Court of the State w heels, ne w t a g s , 541-598-3750 "Call A Service $9000. of Oregon, probate $5000 obo. www.aaaoregonauto541-389-8963 number 1 3 P B0121. Professional" Directory 541-389-3026 source.com All persons having 541-385-5809 U NITED
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~ E P U B LI C NDTICES I MPO RTA N T
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The Bulletin
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SUN 1PM - 4PM Attatd Winning builder, StruCture
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inside 8 out that is rare for this price range. The exterior featurrDa barn wood front. coveredfront porch, 8 courtyard for comfortableindoor/outdoor 6152G Alstrup Road living. The interior open floor Directionst,3rd 5)reet, east on plan features laminatefloors. fi on A/strup. Onyxcounters9' ceilings, anda Brosterhottt, /e mastersuite thatyou will love. Hosted Saturday byl
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SAT 1PM - 4PM
SATURDAY I% SUNDAY 1-4:00 The SttatfOrdbOaStD2000 Sq. ft, of qualityconstruction hotit
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$279,000
Development trr) Great Roomwith extensive Use of hardwood floors, built-ins, ) sided fireplacebetween dining area.Kitchen with qsattz slab Slanti S commerciastyl l Utznge/hoot!.
2506 NW Floyd Lane VtiVatr maSter Suite Onmain flOOr. Master hath with walk-in tile NhotPer, Directions: t)yest on Sky/inert tile cosntett S floor Bedroom/den Road, right on PVV PLemhi Pass into s full bath on main floor. Bonus MV Crossing. Right on Floyd Lane. room.2 hedtoomt rc bath upstairs. Amazing detail throughout!
$6i4,S00
LINDA WILLIAMS Brokccr
Listed and Hosted )tyl
541-241-8880
CINDY BERG-WAGNER
Hostod Sunday by.
NANCY HOOVER Broker
541-815-2425
HOIII5MR AT.
Bro/t'er
541-280-2580
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