Serving Central Oregon since190375
WEDNESDAY December10, 2014
• ..AND HE'SSTILLHITTINGTHESLOPESAT90 • OUTDOORS,D1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
TORTURE REPORT
Holiday safety —Don't
Wyden praises Senate findings
start a fire with that Christmas tree — and a few other things to watch out for.A3
• SNt$
• Oregon's delegation hopes to return to issue in next year's session By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
Geeddye to thegoonWith fewer fights, professional hockey has less of a role for an enforcer.C1
WASHINGTON — The $1.1
trillion deal struckby congressional negotiators Tuesday does not include funding for timber payments to rural counties under the
Secure Rural Schools program,
Plus: Local sports — prep
marking the first time Congress
coverage andthe National Finals Rodeo.C1
has not authorized the payments since theprogram's inception. Last year, Oregon received a total of $107 million in payments under the program, which Con-
Nut rage? —AKoreanAir
Related
D Ore m a pre
• More on the pared statement deal,A2 "I will not stop
gressenacted in 2000 to com- Republicans can try to limit the pensate heavily forested counties implementation o f Pr e sident whose local economies were Barack Obama's recent execudevastated by federal limitations tive action on immigration. placed on logging on public land. Members of Oregon's congresThe large omnibus funding sional delegation promised to bill published Tuesday would work to reinstate Secure Rural largely fund the government Schools funding when the 114th through Sept. 30 of next year, Congress convenes nextyear. "Rural Oregonians deserve thereby avoiding a government
fighting for Oregon's rural counties. I'll be back at it when Congress returns in January." Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood
— Sen. Ron Wyden,
River, indicated that
D-Ore., praised the
had promised to consider extending the program during the
'Itiesday that con-
shutdown. One exception is the
better than to have politics put
first quarter of 2015, and that a
cluded CIA officials
Department of Homeland Security, which would be given a
on hold this essential lifeline for federal forest policy reform bill funding roads, firefighters and would also be a priority. schools," said Sen. Ron Wyden, SeePayments/A5
few months of funding so that
H o u se
Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and other House GOP leaders
executive resigns after a tiff over snack food.AS
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON
release of a Senate Select Committee on Intelligence report repeatedly misled the White House, the
Department of Justice, Congress and the American public about the effectiveness and practices of
Smart skis —Cross-country skiing goes high-tech.D1
e e in oc a
And a Webexclusive
— Activists work to diversify hiring in Silicon Valley. bendbulletin.cnm/extrns
ar i n es
its post-9/11 torture program. The heavily redacted summary of the report — more
than 500 pages long, years in the making and the subject of
intense fighting between the CIA and
its congressional overseers—described numerous
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Creating a privacy
incidents where CIA torture did not pro-
duce unique, actionL
able information that thwarted attacks
D
and saved lives, as defenders of the
agency's "enhanced interrogation" program long claimed.
policy for our cars
SeeSenate/A4
• Claims of deception, abuses;CIA pushesback
By Brian Fung The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — If you
use a road service such as OnStar, you know that your car can track your location
and send an ambulance automatically if you crash. What you might not know is that your car manufacturer stores this location
By Greg Miller,Adam Goldmen endJulie Tate The Washington Post
information, along with the date and time of the incident
and whether the airbags deployed. Little "black boxes" akinto the flight recorders on airplanes monitor your braking habits, whether you use a seatbelt and how fast you go. Your car may be one of millions. But in it is
aunique profile of you and your decisions as a driver. Some fear that this auto-
WASHINGTONAn exhaustive, five-
"lxrm
year Senate inves-
fsp]m
tigation of the CIAs
off event for local current and future Marines, organized by the Patriots of Broken Top group, in front
secret interrogations of terrorism suspects renders a strikingly bleakverdict of a program launched in
of the Marines recruiting office in Bend on Vbesday. Siemens said he ships off to basic training for the
the aftermath of the Sept. 11,2001, attacks,
Marines in July. "This is amazing that these people came out here to do this for Us. It's amazing," he said.
brutality, dishonesty
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Bend resident Jim Siemens walks to his car mth a box of food for himself and his family at a food drop-
describing levels of
motive data could someday be seized by government spy agencies or used against helpless drivers by insurers or worse. How automakers use, store and
protect even the most mundane data collected from
our increasingly smart vehides is goingto become m ore important as cars
start talkingto everything around them — from other cars to sensors embedded
in the road to nearbybusinesses. Manufacturers are taking their first steps to
safeguard this information. But even they acknowledge there's a lot they don't know
howtodo. Last month, two of the
industry's biggest trade groups, the Alliance of Automobile Manufactur-
and seemingly arbitrary violence that at times brought even
A good job oraffordable housing:Pick1 By Josh Boak
ly ample and solid middle-class would like to be homeowners," The Associated Press jobs plentiful. Yet studies and said Nela Richardson, chief W ASHINGTON — I t's t h e government data show that economist at the real estate bronew career trade-off: homes in these areas have be- kerage Redfin. Around the country, areas come prohibitively expensive Roughly 40 percent of housewith the strongest job markets — driven up in part by demand holds in New York, San Francisincreasingly have some of the from the very residents who co, Seattle, parts of Connecticut costliest homes. And areas with find homes there too costly. and Colorado, and Washington, the most affordable homes lack The result is that the dream D.C., earn more than $100,000 a solid base of middle class jobs of homeownership for many annually, compared with 22 that attract workers. is proving frustrating, being percent nationwide, according College graduates and young- deferred or abandoned, even to the Census Bureau. But the er families have been clustering for people with comfortable share of their residents who in coastal cities such as New incomes. own homes has been declining, "This great mismatch is hurt- one reason the national homeYork, San Francisco and Seattle, where incomes are general- ing middle-class people who ownership rate is 64.4 percent,
the lowest since 1995.
Areas that do offer inexpensive housing across the Midwest's industrial corridor — Ak-
ron, Ohio, say, or Fort Wayne, Indiana — l ack t h e s a m e breadth of career possibilities.
"You need a job to even think about living arrangements," said Stan Humphries, chief economist at the real estate
marketplace Zillow.
This trend has likely helped hold back U .S. e conomic growth. SeeHousing/A5
agency employees to moments of anguish. The report by the
Senate Intelligence Committee delivers
new allegations of cruelty in aprogram whose severe tactics
havebeen abundantly documented, revealing that agency medicalpersonnel voiced alarm that waterboardingmethods had deterioratedto"a
series of near drownings" and that agency employees subjected detainees to painful procedures that were
never approved. SeeCIA/A4
ers and the Association of
Global Automakers, settled on a series of privacy commitments designed to make
Americans more comfortable with next-generation vehicles.
SeeCars/A6
TODAY'S WEATHER Some showers High 52, Low38 Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1 6 S rt Ef-6 Dear Abby D6 Ob ituaries B5 N'/Movies
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C1 4 D6
Q i/!/e userecyclednewsprint
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5 sections 0
88 267 0 23 29
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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
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Exam delayS SOughtfOr prOteStS —Minority students at three prestigious law schools say theywant to delay final exams because they've beenbusy protesting grand jury decisions in the deaths of unarmed black menatthe hands of white police officers in New York City andFerguson, Missouri, and haven't had time to study. Student groups at Harvard LawSchool, Georgetown University Law Center and Columbia LawSchool say demonstrations and rallies over the Eric Garner andMichael Brown caseshaveprevented many students from adequately preparing for exams. At Harvard LawSchool, a coalition of student groups representing Asian, black, Native American and other minority students says manystudents have been compelled to takeaction becausethe "national tragedy" implicated a judicial system they had chosen to join by studying law. They criticize administrators for largely staying on the sidelines.
OWI1 E OI'I10W
S U By Ashley Parker and JonathanWeisman
District of Columbia's mari-
juana laws to matters of camNew York Times News Service paign finance. W ASHINGTON — C o n The big spending package, gressional leaders reached a which congressional leaddeal Tuesday on a more than ers had hoped to have ready $1 trillion spending package Monday, did not come until that would fund most of the Tuesday evening. The final federal government through legislation would largely keep the current fiscal year. domestic funding at current But because negotiations levels, while providing more on the p ackage dragged money to fight various crises over policy details, House abroad. lawmakers alsoprepared to The House is expected to move on a short-term spend- vote on the package Thursday ing measure that would avert before sending it to the Sena government shutdown if ate. The short-term measure Congress cannot pass the would provide th e S enate larger bill by Thursday, when cover and avoid a government current funding expires. shutdown if the Senate is un-
many as 5 million unauthorized immigrants. Congressional Republicans plan to take up funding for the agency — which has primary responsibility for carrying out the president's immigration
Nodel prize duyer —A Russian entrepreneur and philanthropist revealed Tuesdaythat he was the winning bidder at the auction of James Watson's1962 Nobel Prize last weekandthat he plannedto return the medal to Watson — "the person whodeserved it." The Nobel was awarded toWatson, now86, Francis Crick and Maurice Wilkins, for their discovery of the double-helix structure of DNA, which revealed howgenetic traits are transmitted through heredity.Thebuyer,AlisherUsmanov,who livesinMoscow,announced through the London public relations firm Finsbury that hewasthe anonymous telephone bidder who paid $4.76 million, including commission, for the medal at aChristie's auction.
directive — early next year, when they will control both
chambers of Congress and believe they will have more leverage. The rush Tuesday to post the legislation underscored
the 113th Congress' dubious recordas one ofthe leastpro-
BOrn in midair —A Southwest Airlines flight landed in Los Angeles with one morepassenger than when it took off. A passenger gave birth shortly after Flight 623 took off from SanFrancisco on Tuesday, and the Phoenix-bound jet diverted to LosAngeles International Airport. The womanwasassisted by the flight crew and a doctor and nurse who wereaboard, airline spokeswoman Emily Samuels said. She said the airline hopes it has anewcustomer for life. Paramedics boarded the aircraft, and the mother andnewborn, whose names have not beenreleased, were taken to a hospital in good condition, Los Angeles Fire Department spokesmanErik Scott said.
ductive in modern history-
governing by deadlines and cliffs of its own making and struggling to pass even some Even w i t h net t l esome able to also pass the bill that of themost pro forma pieces last-minute issues, leaders in day. of legislation. both parties expressed conThe spending bill would The spending bill is geared fidence that they would be fund nearly all of the federal toward combating threats able to keep the government government through Sep- from afar, with roughly $5.4 running. Lawmakers bat- tember 2015, except for the billion in emergency funds to tled behind the scenes over Department o f Ho m e land fight Ebola in West Africa; dozens of additional policy Security, which it would fund roughly $74 billion for wars provisions ranging from the only through February, in re- and other overseas operaEnvironmental Pr o t e ction taliation for President Barack tions; and more than half of Agency's jurisdiction over Obama's unilateral action to the overall package going to some bodies of water to the d efer the deportation of a s military spending.
Fighting the ISlamiCState — Secretary ofState JohnKerry urged Congress onTuesday not to preclude theuseof ground forces to fight the Islamic State aslawmakers consider setting limits on the nature andextent of American involvement in the military campaign against the group. Kerry madehis request in testimony before an unusual session of theSenateForeign Relations Committee at which he underscored that theadministration was prepared to negotiate over a measure authorizing the continuing campaignagainst the Islamic State. Hemadethe casethat anymeasure authorizing the use of force needed greater flexibility than manylawmakers seemedready to allow.
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Spinn I'nfngnnS —The United Nations refugee agency said Tuesday the number of Syrian refugeesaccepted for resettlement in third countries would more than double as a result of commitments given by governments at a "pledging conference" in Geneva.Antonio Guterres, the U.N. high commissioner for refugees, said 28 countries made firm commitments to accept 66,254 Syrian refugeesand 11 other countries said they wereexploring options or preparing to expand programs. That brings the number of resettlement places being offered to more than100,000. Thecommitments, however, do little to ease the strain on countries neighboring Syria. Theyare providing refuge to 3.2 million registered refugeesandhundreds of thousands more who havenot registered.
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FrenCh hnstngn —France's last hostage wasfreed Tuesday after being held for more than threeyears byal-Qaida's North Africa branch — rekindling debate overwhether countries should negotiate with extremists or stick to a muscular, uncompromising policy that runs the risk of a beheading or abotched rescue attempt. French President Francois Hollandeannounced the "happy news" that 51-year-old Serge Lazarevic hadbeenfreed from captivity in Mali, prompting a standing ovation in the National Assembly. "We no longer haveany hostages in any country of the world, and weshould not have any," Hollande said. TVimages hours later showed asmiling Lazarevic — bald, goateedand 40pounds lighter — as hemet with Niger's president. Hewas to fly to Franceearly today.
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Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, andBritain's Prince William are escorted by JoeDaniels, president 8 CEO of the National September11 Memorial 8 Museum, in the Hall of Faces, during their visit to the museum Tuesday. Making their first visit to NewYork, the Dukeand
Zimdadwe shake-np —President Robert Mugabeof Zimba-
Duchess of Cambridge visited its most somber site amid a three-day agendafilled with events linked to their charitable interests in conservation andyouth development, receptions with actors and others in creative and technology fields, and abit of all-American entertainment — anNBAgame.
bwe on Tuesday dismissed his vice president and ordered at least seven Cabinet ministers to leave their posts, according to state news media. The ouster of Vice President Joice Mujuru was the climax of a series of choreographed steps in which Mugabe, 90, seemed to be positioning his wife, Grace Mugabe, 49, for senior office in his party, ZANU-PF.Mugabe, in power for 34 years, has remained at the helm of his landlocked nation through a combination of repression and guile.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:
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Q 27Q 45Q 4sQ s>Q s2
The estimated jackpot is now $102 million.
— From wire reports
onsutanton eat aw re rets'insutin 'remar s By Robert Pear
Act. The ACA is a milestone
New York Times News Service
accomplishment for our na-
WASHINGTON — J o n a- tion that already has providthan Gruber, the health econ- ed millions of A mericans
the October 2013 video. "Lack of transparency is a huge political advantage. And basically, call it the 'stupidity of
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omist whose incendiary com- with health insurance." the American voter' or whatwww.leffelcenter.com ' 541-ass-3006 ments about "the stupidity of The chairman of the com- ever, but basically that was the American voter" have em- mittee, Rep. Darrell Issa, really, really critical to getbarrassed the Obama admin- R-Calif., said supporters of ting the thing to pass." istration, apologized Tuesday the law had passed it and Gruber appeared to squirm for what he described as his sold it to the public with half- Tuesday under questioning "glib, thoughtless and some- truths and deception. He by Republicans who contimes downright insulting said that Gruber and the ad- fronted him with his own past • I comments." ministration had displayed statements. He did not deny "I am not a political adviser "a pattern o f i n t entionally or recant those statements nor a politician," said Gruber, misleading the public about but saidhe regretted some of a professorat the Massachuthe true nature and impact of his impolitic formulations. "I made a series of statesetts Institute of Technology Obamacare." who was a paid consultant to The senior Democrat on ments that were really just f I' I' I the Obama administration in the committee, Rep. Elijah inexcusable," Gruber said to2009-10. Cummings o f M a r y land, ward the end of the four-hour f •• • • Gruber minimized his role, joined in the criticism of Gru- hearing. "It i s n e ver a p propriate saying he had used an "eco- ber. He said the professor's nomic microsimulation mod- comments were "absolutely to try to make oneself seem el" to help the administration stupid" and "incredibly dis- more important or smarter by and Democrats in Congress respectful." Worse, he said, demeaning others," Gruber assess the impact of policies Gruber's statements gave said. "I know better. I knew in the Affordable Care Act. Republicans "a political gift better. Iam embarrassed, and He later defended the law in in the relentless campaign I am sorry." a number of speeches. In one, to tear down the Affordable Gruber infuriated Repubhe said the law had been ad- Care Act." licans on the committee by opted thanks in part to the At the hearing, Issa showed refusing to disclose the tostupidity of voters and a "lack a video in which Gruber sug- tal amount of money he had o f transparency" about i t s gested that supporters of the received in grants and conMake an financing. health law had written it in tracts from the federal govunforgettable Testifying Tuesday before such a way that the Congres- ernment and states for work Holiday Memory! t he House C o mmittee o n sional Budget Office would related to the Affordable Care Take advantage of Oversight and Government not count required premium Act. special tour and Reform, Grubersaid:"I be- payments as tax revenue. He also declined to say if ..overnight packages "This bill was written in a haved badly, and I will have he would provide copies of with the Hilton to live with that, but my own tortured way to m ake sure documents that he had preGarden Innf inexcusablearrogance isnot CBO did not score the man- pared forfederal and state a flaw in the Affordable Care date as taxes," Gruber says in agencies. •
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L f I II I KDGE 4 V I jj t I 0 II I ll C .
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Wednesday, Dec.10, the 344th day of 2014. Thereare 21 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS HOStageS —The last French person held hostage by al-Qaida will fly homeafter his release Tuesday.
HISTORY
Study: Impact from
eWare 0 eSe aZar S meteor might have
urin is oi a season """
than 60 years ago, showed that electrical energy could transResearchers have re-cre- form simple organic molecules ated a split-second impact intoamino acids, researchers of a meteor with primordial have been finding novel and By Geoff reyMohan
Highlight:In1964, Martin Luther King Jr. received his Nobel Peace Prize inOslo, Norway, saying he accepted it"with an abiding faith in America andan audacious faith in the future of mankind." In1520, Martin Luther publicly burned the papal edict demanding that he recant or face excommunication. In1787,ThomasGallaudet, a pioneer of educating the deaf, was born in Philadelphia. In1817,Mississippi was admitted as the 20th state of the Union. In1906, President Theodore Roosevelt becamethe first American to beawarded the Nobel PeacePrize, for helping mediate an end tothe Russo-JapaneseWar. In1931,Jane Addamsbecame the first American womanto be awarded the NobelPeace Prize; the co-recipient was Nicholas Murray Butler. In1948, the U.N.GeneralAssembly adopted its Universal Declaration on HumanRights. In1950, Ralph Bunchewas awarded the NobelPeace Prize, the first black American to receive the award. In1962, "Lawrence of Arabia," David Lean's epic film starring Peter O'Toole asBritish military officer T.E. Lawrence, had its royal gala premiere in London. In1967,singer Otis Redding, 26, and six others were killed when their plane crashed into Wisconsi n' sLakeMonona. In1972,baseball's American Leagueadoptedthedesignated hitter rule on anexperimental basis for three years. In1984, South African Bishop Desmond Tutu received the Nobel PeacePrize. In1994, Yasser Arafat, Shimon Peres andYitzhak Rabin received the NobelPeacePrize, pledging to pursue their mission of healing the anguished Middle East. Ten years ago:President George W. BushpickedSamuel Bodman to beenergy secretary. Bernard Kerik withdrew his name from consideration to be Pres identBush'shomeland security secretary. Sprinter Michelle Collins was suspended for eight years for a doping violation linked to the BALCO scandal. (Collins was reinstated in May 2008.) Five years ago:President Barack Obama acceptedthe Nobel PeacePrize with a humble acknowledgment of his scant accomplishmentsanda robust defense of the U.S.at war. JamesCameron's 3-D film epic "Avatar" had its premiere in London. One year ago:South Africa held a memorial service for Nelson Mandela, during which U.S. President BarackObama energized tens of thousands of spectators and nearly100 visiting heads of state with a plea for the world to emulate "the last great liberator of the
20th century." (The ceremony was marred by the presence of a sign-language interpreter who deaf advocates said was an impostor waving his arms around meaninglessly.) General Motors namedproduct chief Mary Barra its newchief executive officer, making her the first woman to run aU.S. car company.
BIRTHDAYS Soap operacreator Agnes Nixon is 87.Actor Tommy Kirk is 73. Actress Fionnula Flanagan is73. Actress-singer Gloria Loring is 68. Pop-funk musician Walter "Clyde" Orange (TheCommodores) is 68. Actress SusanDeyis 62. Jazz musician PaulHardcastle is 57. Actor-director Kenneth Branagh is 54. Actress NiaPeeplesis 53. TV chefBobbyFlay is 50. Rock musician MegWhite (The White Stripes) is 40.Actress Raven-Symone is29. — From wire reports
Los Ange(es Times
Fires are one of the major risks of holiday cooking and decorating: More than 200 house fires every year are started by Christmas trees alone.
Earth and shown how the Decorating
your Christmas tree with candles
is clearly a fire riskbut electric Christmas lights can
also be hazardous. Avoid stringing too many of them
together. Thimkstock
sophisticated ways to simulate
3.5-megaton collision might or model the so-called spark have reorganized common of life. They have focused on molecules into some of the mimicking the energy providearly building blocks that ed by lightning, hydrothermal led to all life. energy, ultraviolet radiation, The feigned cataclysm nuclear decay and collision tookplace in a lab in Prague with an astronomical object, using a 492-foot laser sys- such as an asteroid or comet. tem to create a high-density Civis is decidedly in the latplasma, with temperatures ter school. But there has been soaring to about 7,640 de- much controversy over the grees Fahrenheit, and ob- years about what molecules are serveitseffectson apoolof likely to have been present in formamide. That chemical, primordial Earth's atmosphere commonly used in making and on its turbulent surface. sulfa drugs, has been identi- One such compound is formafied in the tail of comets and mide, which also happens to around young stars> and have the four elements essensome researchersbelieve it tial to life — carbon, hydrogen, could have been present on oxygen and nitrogen. the early Earth nearly 4 bil-
lionyears ago. In the experiment, the
"It's well-known that forma-
mide exists in space, and it was found in tails of a comet," said
formamide broke down and recombined, forming
Civis. Although that may be so, precursorsto the four basic "There is no known geochembuilding blocks of RNA and ically feasible process for the DNA, the cornerstones of generation of pure formalife, according to the study mide in a plausible primitive published in the journal Earth environment," said JefProceedings of the National frey Bada, a chemist at the Academy of Sciences. University of California, San "If you want to solve Diego/Scripps Institution of a problem of DNA and Oceanography. By Margaret Ely
RNA, first you have to ex-
The Washington Post
fire hazard, according to the to a single electric outlet can NFPA, and December is the cause overheating," Kelly T ake n ote: B e hind t h e peak time for candle fires; said. "The circuit breaker twinkle, sparkle and dazzle these often occur in the bed- trips in order to protect the of the holidays, safety haz- room, after people fall asleep. circuit from overheating and "Fires are a risk in t he causing damage or an electriards lurk. Every year, U.S. firedepartments respond to kitchen year-round, but we're cal fire."
plain where the bases are mide is an inert, transient bycoming from," said chem- product of a simpler reaction. ist Svatopluk Civis of the Although the study's chemistry Czech Academy of Scienc- is "interesting from a straight es, lead investigator of the chemical synthesis point of study. "What we w anted view," Bada said, "the releto simulate was the impact vance of this to the prebiotic of an extraterrestrial body chemistry of the early Earth is
about 230 home fires start-
even more distracted by en-
Older strands are more
ed from Christmas trees, according to a National Fire
tertaining guests and family this time of year," Carli said.
likely to overheat regardless, Kelly said, because they re-
Protection Association study.
• Stay in the kitchen when
quire more electricity.
And Thanksgiving, Christ-
cooking, and always keep an Another hazard'? Some eye on the stove, oven or grill. types of older bulbs can crack rank as the peak days for • Keep oven m itts, d ish but stay lighted, exposing the kitchen fires. towels and other flammable heated wire, Kelly said. Lorraine Carli, vice pres- items away from heating ele• Inspect your lights before ident of outreach and advo- ments and open flames. hanging them. If they look cacy for the NFPA, said that • Keep an eye on candles worn (frayed wires, loose or although Christmas tree fires and fireplace fires, and be cracked bulbs), don't hesimas Eve and Christmas Day
are notcommon, they can be
sure to extinguish them be-
deadly. fore going to bed or leaving Even hanging decorations the house. • Have your c h imney can pose a risk that lead to injuries and emergency room cleaned annually. After a fire, visits, she said.
dispose of ashes in a metal
Being aware of common safety measures during this busy and frequently stressful time of the year is key, Carli said, whether it's the simple act of unplugging your tree lights or keeping an eye on your stove while cooking a big meal. "It's really, really important just to be vigilant this time of year," Carli said. Here are tips from the NFPA and Pepco electric company to give yourself the best chance of having a safe holiday.
container, away from flammable material.
tate to replace them. Switch t o LEDs, which ar e m o r e
e nergy-efficient and cooler
incandescents. • If you're stringing lights outside,make sure they are for outdoor use.
• Keep children at l e ast
• D o n o t at t a ch m o r e
than three strings of lights together. • Al ways u nplug your lights and decorations before going to bed or leaving the
Lighting
Christmas trees
Whenitcomestoweathering torically been on reproductive competition and hierarchical
geousfortune, male macaques get by with a little help from their fellow dudes, according to newresearch. After getting the stink-eye
status," wrote lead study author Christopher Young, a primate researcher at George-August Universityin Germany. The researchers found that
macaques who spent time regor freezing their tail fur off in ularly with several fellow male a coldcedar forest,m ale Bar- macaques — either grooming bary macaques who bonded each other or sitting in dose with longtime male associates proximity or in contact with appeared to suffer less sttess each other — had evidence of than their loner counterparts, lower levels of stress hormones according to a paper in the than less social monkeys, parstare from a dominant male
and-befri end" coping mechanisms havebeen documented in female primates and among mothers and offspring, but not strictly in groups of males. "Because most males com-
experiment would work with
gether through massive col- other molecules. "Maybeyou can do additionlisions of debris surrounding the sun. A common model al experiments, for example, of this "late heavy bombard- with formaldehyde," he said. ment" period suggests early "Formaldehyde was the first Earth was hit with a billion molecule found in space." tons of material per year, At least, Civis said, the laser each typically speeding experiment demonstrates that through its thin atmosphere a high-energy impact could at more than 2,000mph, reg- convertinert organicmolecules ularly creating impact cra- into "informational" molecules tersseveralhundred feetin that form the code of living diameter. Itwouldhavebeen things. "It looks like it is possiboth a disastrous and fortu- ble," he said. itous time for early "biological" molecules, which could HEARING AIDS be annihilated and reformed
ratory experiments, more
dried-outtrees are a greater fire hazard than trees that
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investigating correlates of male physiologlcal sttess have his-
the slings and arrows of outra-
journal PNAS. Such " tend-
as we know them came to-
Since the earliest labo-
• Water your tree daily;
questionable."
atmosphere." Civis and his co-authors The impact mimics those maintain that formamide could t hat likely o~ duri n g have persisted on early Earth theearlyformationof the so- or been carried by a comet. lar system, when the planets Regardless, Civis believes their
many times over, according to researchers.
house.
Monkeystyl e'bromance' helps macaquescope By Monte Mortn
burn
co n v entional
three feet from fireplaces. • Check your smoke detectors. "This is a g iven," Carli said. "They should be checked once a month."
Holiday lighting poses the risk of overdrawing power and creating a fire hazard, Pepco's Sean Kelly said. This is especially true of older lights. "Stringing more than three strands of Christmas lights Fires together, especially o lder Cooking is the No. I home ones, and connecting them
Los Angeles Times
than
into the early stage of the
At best, said Bada, forma-
ticularly after stressful events. "Here we show that in the
wild, and similarto females, the social bonds that males form
with same-sex group members provide them with a buffer against both naturally occur-
pete for opportunities to fertil- ring social and environmental ize females, the focus of studies stressors," authors wrote.
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
CIA Continued from A1 The 500-plus-page document catalogs dozens of cases in which CIA officials allegedly deceived their superiors at
the White House, members of Congressand even sometimes their peers about how the in-
terrogation program was being run and what it had achieved. In one case, an internal CIA
memo relays instructions from the White House to keep the program secret from then-Sec-
retary of State Colin Powell out of concern that he would "blow his stack ifhe were to be briefed
on what'sbeen goingon." A dedassified summary of the committee's work disdos-
es for the first time a complete J. Scott Applewhite/The Associated Press
Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. speaks to reporters Tuesday
roster of all 119 prisoners held in CIA custody and indicates
on Capitol Hill in Washington, as she leaves the Senate chamber after releasing a report on the CIA's harsh interrogation techniques. Feinstein branded the findings a "stain on the nation's histo-
that at least 26 were held be-
ry." President Barack Obama, however, did not speak publicly about the report, instead releasing a
bad intelligence. The publidy released summary is drawn from a longer, classified study that exceeds 6,000 pages. The report's central conclu-
written statement.
White House tries to steer away from torture debate By Steven Mufson The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — In the
spring of his first year in office, President Barack Obama
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.,
ten statement issued moments
had calle d fora truth and rec- after the reports was made onciliation commission, like public, he said, "One of the the one that exposed police strengths that makes America abuses in South Africa after exceptional is our willingness apartheid. But some White to openly confront our past, House officials suggested a face ourimperfections, make more novel option: a Penta- changes and dobetter." gon-style after-action report, similar to the 9/11 Commission, which could dear the
Obama has tried to walk a fine line on the brutal in-
terrogation techniques that air without public hearings he eventually came to call and without setting up pros- torture, though he refrained ecutions. Aides even floated T uesday from d oing s o the idea of making former Su- directly. preme Court Justice Sandra In his first week in office, Day O'Connor the commis- Obama had ordered an end sion's head. Obama compli- to torture. And in May 2009, mented the suggestions — and before rejecting the idea of setthen rejected them all. ting up a commission, Obama Nearly six years later, the condemned harsh techniques president is embroiled in the in a soaring speech in Washissues he was weighing then. ington at the National ArThe Senate Select Committee
on Intelligence did Tuesday
chives. In that speech, he never directly branded the "so-
called enhanced interrogation delivering a stinging indict- techniques" as torture but he ment of harsh interrogations, condemned torture in general the people who oversaw them and remarked that "we went and the lies told to Congress to off course." conceal them. At the same time, Obama The Senate report revived wanted to avoid distracting instantly the central elements and divisive criminal prosecuof the debate over America's tions or hearings. He believed response to the Sept 11, 2001, any inquiry of his would look terrorist attacks, imperiling like an attack on his predeObama's hoped-for legacy as cessor, President George W. the president who moved the Bush, and dispel any hope of country beyond 9/11 and what bringing a bipartisan spirit to he has called its excesses. The government. And he feared reportdrew fresh call s forCIA that the intelligence services, what he chose not to do then,
Senate
• CIA officials involved in the program deceived the White House, Congress and even others within the agency: In briefings to the president and other senior officials, the agency attributed the disruption of significant plots and the capture of major terrorist suspects to the use ofharsh interrogation techniques. TheSenate report said those claims don't withstand close scrutiny. • The CIA's use of harsh interrogation techniques was sometimes more brutal than previously known: Eventhough the CIA had prescribed protocols on how to usewaterboarding, the agency's own medical personnel found that in practice the method became "a series of near drownings." • The CIA held more detainees than was previously known: The agency held119 detainees at its secret prisons overseasover the life of its interrogation program, about two dozenmorethan were previously known. • Witnessing the brutal treatment of detainees had a profound emotional effect on some CIAoperatives: "Several on the team profoundly affected," one agencyemployee wrote after the interrogation of AbuZubaida (who was born Zayn al-Abidin Muhammed Hussein), "some to the point of tears andchoking up." • The program was often chaotically managed: Within days of the Sept.11 attacks, President George W.Bush signed asecret memorandum giving the CIAnewauthority to hunt terrorists. But the memo made noreference to interrogations. The actual protocols at the sites werenot always coordinated amongheadquarters and station chiefs. — The Washington Post
sion is that harsh interrogation
ability for what was done, including a 9/11 type commis-
measures,deemed torture by months and seized control of program critics induding Pres- terri tory across Iraq and Syrident Barack Obama, did not ia. Fears that the report could work. The panel deconstructs ignite new overseas violence prominent claims about the val- against A m erican i n terests ue of the "enhanced" measures, prompted Secretary of State induding that they produced John Kerry to appeal to Sen. breakthrough intelligence in Dianne Feinstein, D - Calif., the hunt for Osama bin Lad- the chairwoman of the Senate en, and dismisses them all as committee, to consider a delay. exaggerated if not utterly false The report has also been at the — assertions that the CIA and center of intense bureaucratic former officers involved in the and political fights that eruptprogram vehemently dispute. ed this year in accusations that I n a s t atement from t h e the CIA surreptitiously monWhite House, Obama said the itored the computers used by Senate report "documents a committee aides involved in the troubling program" and "rein- investigation. forces my long-held view that Many of the most haunting these harsh methods were not sections of the Senate doconly inconsistent with our val- ument are passages taken ues as (a) nation, they did not from internal CIA memos and serve our broader counterter- emails as agency employees rorism efforts or our national described their visceral reacsecurity interests." Obama tions to searing interrogation praised the CIA's work to de- scenes. At one point in 2002, grade al-Qaida over the past CIA employees at a secret site 13 years but said the agency's in Thailand broke down emointerrogation program "did tionally after witnessing the significant damage to Amer- harrowing treatment of Abu ica's standing in the world Zubaida, a high-profile facilitaand made it harder to pursue tor for al-Qaida.
sion. And without his support,
our interests with allies and
it wasn't going anywhere." With the publication Tuesday of the declassified summary of t h e i n telligence committee's report, Obama is again trying to find a middleroad.The report' s central conclusion is that the interro-
partners." foundlyaff ected," one agency The ciasavedlives.com webThe CIA issued a 112-page employee wrote at the time, site was organized by Bill Har-
gation measures didn't work, and that the best and most
delivered critical intelligence.
prosecutions — dismissed by whose career rank-and-file Obama years ago as counter- members had followed guideproductive — and accusations lines handed down from that the president has encour- above, would feel they had aged terrorism by supporting been abandoned by a new
talked to senior Cabinet and the report's publication. White House officials about Obama didnotspeak puboptions for dealing with the licly Tuesday about the findpast excesses of the CIA's an- ings, a tacit acknowledgment ti-terrorism detention and in- of how fraught his place in the terrogation program. debate remains. But in a writ-
cause of mistaken identities or
5major takeawaysfrom the CIAreport
administration. That's what made the mere use of the word "torture"
tricky. Torture is a felony and a violation of i nternational law. Aware of that, Eric Hold-
er, before his confirmation hearings for attorney general, had checked with the White
House before usingthe word. David Cole, a professor at
Georgetown University Law Center, said that Obama "has been relatively consistent in
basically saying what the CIA did was unacceptable." But Cole added Obama has "said that we should look forward
not backward and he is opposed to any formal account-
reliable intelligence was obtained through other, legal means. And it presents a dismal litany of brutality in that program. But CI A
D i r ector J ohn
response tothe Senate report,
"Several on the team pro"... some to the point of tears
acknowledging failings in the and choking up." The passage interrogation program but de- is contrasted with dosed-door nying that it intentionally mis- testimony from high-ranking led the public or policymakers CIA officials, including thenabout an effort that it maintains
CIA Director Michael Hayden, who when asked by a senator
and save lives," he said. The releaseof the report
in 2007 whether agency personnel had expressed reservations replied: 'Tm not aware of any. These guys are more experienced. No." Even as the report was released Tuesday, the agency had its defenders. As Feinstein was still speaking on the Senate floor 'Dresday morning about
came at an unnerving time
the report, a new website went
CIA Director John Brennan, who was a senior officer at the
agency when it set up secret prisons for al-Qaida suspects, said in a written statement that
the program "did produce intelligence that helped thwart
Brennan on Monday defended the agency's actions, saying that the controversial program produced evidence that
attack plans, capture terrorists,
helped avert strikes against the United States and that
in the country's conflict with live. Its name was self-explanaal-Qaida and its offshoots. tory: ciasavedlives.com. The Islamic State has beheadThe site, created by a dozen ed three Americans in recent
agency officials did not intentionallymislead Congress.
ganizational problems" under called the abuse and decepthe rug instead of addressing tion detailed in the report "appalling." Continued from A1 them. "CIA officials repeatedly "Too often,these top offi"We can and must keep represented to the public, to cials, not the rank and file, say America safe while protectthe Congress, to the White one thing in public and quite ing American values," he said House, to the Justice Depart- another in pr ivate," he told in a prepared statement. "The ment, these techniques were The Bulletin. "What we did, American people deserve to safe, they were only used and why it's such an import- know the dark details conagainst high-level terrorist ant report, is we took what tained in this report so that we captives and that their use CIA officials told the public can ensure we never repeat provided unique, otherwise and the Congress, and with this chapter in our national unavailable intelligence that documentation,we compared history." saved lives," said Wyden, who that with what they were sayWith the impending retirehas served on the Intelligence ing to each other." ment of Georgia Republican Committee since 2001, during Wyden declined to discuss Saxby Chambliss, Sen. Richa speech on the Senate floor. whether he thought CIA inter- ard Burr, R-N.C., is poised to "After five long years of inves- rogators or those who autho- become the Intelligence Comtigation, our committee found rized the torture should face mittee chairman in January that none of these claims holds prosecution, saying only that as Republicans retake control up. current CIA D i r ector John of the Senate. In a prepared Wyden decried what he Brennan "ought to get into the statement, Burr criticized the called "an alarming culture fence-mending business" with release of details about couno f mi sinformation" a t t h e regards to the agency's con- tries that partnered with the CIA. With the release of the gressional overseers. U.S. as hosts of black sites. "I fear t h e r a m ifications report, the American public In a prepared statement, can draw its own conclusions Brennan conceded that while for our national security and about whether the program, the agency "made mistakes" global partnerships, and I which involved the rendition as it carried out a program stand by my a ssertion that of terrorist suspects to secret determined by the Depart- this report is flawed, biased, prisons or "black sites" in for- ment of Justice to be legal at and political in nature. What eign countries, was justified, the time, it did not "systemat- was released today by the he said. ically and intentionally" mis- C ommittee D e m ocrats i s "Today, all Americans fi- lead Congress, the Executive largelyalready known by the nally have access to the facts Branch or the public about its vast majority of A m ericans — what was new in the report so that they can make up their effectiveness. "Our review indicates that was the dangerous inclusion own minds. Personally, I hope this report closes the door on interrogations of detainees of information about counthe possibility of our coun- on whom E ITs w ere used tries and other partners who try ever resorting to torture did produce intelligence that aided the United States' intelagain," Wyden said. helped thwart attack plans, ligence community," he said. While the program was ac- capture terrorists,and save Speaking on the Senate tive during the Bush adminis- lives," Brennan said. "The floor, outgoing Intelligence tration, agency leaders during intelligence gained from the C ommittee chairman S e n. the Obama a d m inistration program was critical to our Dianne Feinstein, D - Calif., have resisted the committee's understanding of a l -Qaida disputed the assertion that efforts to publish the report. and continues to inform our torture was necessary toget Wyden has concluded that c ounterterrorism efforts t o detainees to provide key inforthe CIA's leadership would this day." mation and to bring detainees prefer to sweep its "serious orSen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., to a "state of compliance" in
which they would cooperate
former top officials of the Cen-
tral Intelligence Agency, was one element in a broad counterattack against the long-awaited
Senate report. The program's outspoken d efenders say the CIA w a s
advised that its methods were not torture, that the program
played a critical role in dismantling al-Qaida and that the interrogatorsdeserve praise, not vilification.
"As lamentable as the inac-
curacies of the majority doc-
ument are — and the impact they will have on the public's understanding of the program some consequences are alarming," wrote three former CIA directors and three former
deputy directors in a lengthy op-ed essay for The Wall Street Journal.
They said the Senate report not only distorted the facts but would also force CIA officers
to worry about shifting political winds, make foreign intelligence agencies wary of helping the CIA and give terrorists "yet another valuable recruiting tool." low, the CIA's director of public
affairs from 1997 to 2004, who still acts as a spokesman for George Tenet, the CIA director
when the interrogation program began. "Our concern is that right
now peopleare reporting the Feinstein report as if it's true," Harlow said. "We don't think it's true." — The New York Times contributed to this report.
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and provide information. "At no time did the CIA's
coercive interrogation techniques lead to the collection
of intelligence on an imminent threat that many believe was the justification for the
use of these techniques. The c ommittee never found a n
example of this hypothetical 'ticking time bomb' scenario," she said. In fact, detainees often told their tormentors what they wanted to hear, she noted. "Sometimes, the CIA knew
detainees were lying. 0ther times, the CIA acted on
false information, diverting resources and leading officers orcontractors to falsely
believe they were acquiring unique or actionable intelligence and that its interroga-
tions were working when they were not," she said. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
who was tortured as a prisoner during the Vietnam War, gave an impassioned speech in support of the report's release. Speaking from personal experience, he said that abus-
ing prisoners produces more bad than good intelligence. "Most of all, I know the use
of torture compromises that which most distinguishes us from our enemies, our belief
that all people, even captured enemies,possess basic human
rights, which are protected by international conventions the
U.S. not only joined, but for the most part authored," he
said. "Our enemies act without conscience. We must not." — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletirt.com
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TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
Texan held inIsrael mayhavesought to attack Islamicsites
Cars Continued from A1 T he agreement will t a k e effect Jan. 2, 2016 — in time
for the 2017 model year. It outlines basic steps, such as
updating owners' manuals, that each manufacturer will take to inform car buyers of
the data their vehicles will be collecting. Think of it as a privacy policy for your Passat. "There's a recognition in the industry that privacy is
By Isabel Kershner
territories. There, the Israeli
New York Times News Service
including against I slamic former member of the Navy holy sites, Israeli officials said SEALs, engaged in other JERUSALEM — An Amer- 'Ibesday. acts of fraud and was found ican man has been charged The man, Adam Livix, 30, in possession of explosives in an Israeli court with illegal of Texas, was arrested Nov. 19 stolen from the Israeli milipossession ofweapons after after living illegally in Israel tary. The police said he was a he admitted under question- for 18 months, according to a Christian. ing that he had considered police statement. It said that He previously spent sever-
police said, a Palestinian ac-
carrying out terrorist attacks,
Livix had pretended to be a
of consumers for new technologies," said Christopher Wolf, a privacy lawyer who helped draft the principles. "The sooner the industry can be seen as taking privacy seriously, the better off consum-
tivist proposed getting him a that his case was being hansniper rifle to use to assassi- dled in cooperation with the nate President Barack Obama during his 2013 visit to the
•
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FBI.
Israeli media reports said Livix was undergoing psychi-
region, but Livix rejected that offer. The police said that Liv-
al months in the Palestinian
essential for gaining the trust
ix was wanted in the United States on drug violations and
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atric evaluation at the request
of his lawyer.
C
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ers will be — and the better off the industry will be, because
a
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there'll be trust." With little more than a year
until the self-imposed deadline, the auto industry is moving speedily to implement the agreement. Manufacturers will be setting up websites informing users of the data
collection and linking directly to the privacy policies of
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third-party commercial part-
ners. Toyota, for instance, works with OpenTable to let
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g
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drivers make dinner reservations from their vehicle's in-
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)
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dashtouchscreens,so inform-
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ing consumers how those ser-
vices may use their data only makes sense. The privacy principles cover other in-car data, too, such as information collected when a d r iver
•
r o u tinely b r a kes
hard at stop ights or in traffic to avoid rear-ending others. They also stipulate that man-
ufacturers will not reveal a customer's location data to law enforcement without a
warrant, which has drawn applause from privacy experts. Few other forms of
d i gital
information are protected to such a standard. T he c o m m itments a r e
"strong out of the gate," said Joseph Lorenzo Hall,chief technologist at the Center for
Democracy and Technology. But, he added, "it could use some additional work."
One ishow long car manufacturers should hang on to user i n formation before
purging it from their logs. The
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or the process that turns spe-
cific information about you and your vehicle into anonymous statistics. Policy ana-
lysts are calling for the auto
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modify data points in a statistically insignificant way to
P
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behaviors to specific drivers. Other policy analysts argue that what carmakers can do with the data is described
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too broadly in the privacy principles. Man u f acturers that commit to the voluntary
•
agreement vow to use customer information for "legitimate
business practices" only, but that's a phrase New America Foundation scholar Michael
Calabresesays would permit anything that wasn't outright illegal. The auto industry says these principles are only a baseline and that many indi-
vidual companies will compete to provide the strongest protections on t h e
m a rket.
For example, Toyota said this week that it might seek to determine consumer demand for
a "private driving mode" that
turns off driver tracking in
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OFF
much the same way that private browsing modes on Web browsers temporarily stop recording a user's Internet history.
Also excludes: Everyday Values (EDVI, speci als,superbuys,furniture,mattresses, floor coverings,rugs, electrics/electronics, cosmeti cs/fragrances,athleticshoesforhim, her 5 kids, DallasCowboys merchandise, gift cards,jewelry trunk shows, NewEra, Nike on Field,previouspurchases,special orders, selec ted licensed depts.,specialpurchases, servi ces, macys.com.Cannot be combined with anysavingspass/coupon,extradiscount or credit offer,exceptopening a newMacy's account Dollar savings are allocated as
discou ntsoffeacheligibleitem,asshawnon receipt When youretum an item, youforfeit the savingsallocated tothat item. Thiscoupon VALID 12/9 'TIL 2PM OR12/10/14 'TIL2PM hasnocashvalueandmaynotberedeemed LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER. forcash,usedtopurchasegiftcardsorapplied
YOUR PURCHASE OF $50 OR MORE.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIII 00034402100318085115
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
•
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'* ITGCyS WOWI $20 OFF
acmsnt. Dollar savings are allocated as
' YOUR PURCHASE OF $25 OR MORE.
•
as paymentorcredit to your account. Purchase
mustbe 550 ormore,exclusiveoftax and deliveryfees.
But there are few existing
guidelines from consumers, regulators or other industries for how carmakers should ad-
dress the gaps highlighted by the privacy experts, said Toyota's director of technology,
Hilary Cain. "We're grasping at straws here," Cain told analysts and
industry officials at a recent dinner in Washington. Whee Buyers And Sellers Meet
CBssifieds
' •
•
sss
m
tHOW IT WORKS:For any single in-store transaction*of $50 or moreyou makefrom 12/9-12/14/14, we'll giveyou a $10 (spend $50-74.99), $15 (spend $75-9999), $20 (spend $100-149.99), $30 (spend $15019999)or $40 (spend $200 or more) Macy's Money Reward Card at the register. *EXCLUDES THE FOLLOWING PURCHASES:gift cards, macys.com,Buy Online Pick Upin-Store, services & fees, sales tax, macybed, furniture phonesales, leasedepts, Espot, restaurants. USE YOURMACY'5 MONEY REWARDCARD frorn 12/16-12/18/14. MAY NOT BE:redeemed for cash, used to purchase Macy's gift cards or applied as paymentor credit to your credit card account. For rnore information, go to macys.comlmacysmoney
Fine jewelryspecials available only at stores that carry fine jewelry. W REG. & ORIG. PRICES ARE OFFERING PRICES AND SAVINGS MAY NOT BE BASED ON ACTUAL SALES. SOME ORIG. PRICES NOT IN EFFECT DURING THE PAST 90 DAYS. ONE DAY SALE PRICES IN EFFECT 12/9 & 12/10/2014. MERCHANDISE WILL BE ON SALE AT THESE & OTHER SALE PRICES NOW THROUGH 1/3/15, EXCEPT AS NOTED. *Intermediateprice reductions m ay have been taken.>All carat weights(ct. t.w) are approximate;variance may be.05 carat. Jewelry photos may be enlarged or enhanced to show detail. Fine jewelry at select stores; log on to macys.comfor locations. Almost all gemstones have been treated to enhancetheir beauty & require special care, log on to macys.comlgemstones orask your sales professional. Extra savingstaken off already reduced prices, "special" prices reflectextra savings. Doorbuster itemsare available while supplies last. Advertised merchandise may not be carried atyour local Macy's 8cselection may vary by store. Prices & merchandisemaydiffer at macys com. Electric itemsshown carry mfrs'warranties; to see a mfr'swarrsnty at no charge before purchasing, visit a store or write to: Macy's Warranty Dept., Po Box1026, Maryland Heights, MO S3043, attn:ConsumerWarranties N4111219.
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
BRIEFING School to use portadle toilets Students at Bend's Juniper Elementary School will use portable
Pac ic Crestvs. Bri e Creek inname runo By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Pacific Crest and Bridge
board meeting Tuesday night. Pacific Crest,areferenceto
more options.
the National Scenic Trail that
system is cleared, according to Alandra Johnson, Bend-La Pine Schoolscommunications specialist. Johnson said tree roots grew into a sewer pipe serving the school, causing a blockage. Crews temporarily cleared the blockage Monday. Around midmorning Tuesday, another stoppageoccurred, at which point crews sent a camera through the sewer line to determine the cause. Ten portable toilets, including hand-washing stations, will be set up outside the school to meet bathroom needs. Students may drink from water fountains and wash their handsat sinks inside the school, Johnson said. Breakfasts and lunches will be delivered from the Bend-La Pine Schools production kitchen to students, according to a notification from the school. The work could take acouple of days, depending on what crews find, the notification said.
to bethe name ofBend-La
runs from Mexico to Canada, was the committee's top
Pine Schools' new middle
choice, Superintendent Ron
school. The district's board will in January, but a committee including the school's princi-
Wilkinson said. The committee had earlier suggestedfournames for the new school near Summit High School, including Bridge
pal presented six names at the
Creek, but the board asked for
Bendmannamed to council
supplements the official census
A Bend laborleader has beenappointed to serve on theOregon Council on Civil Rights by Oregon Labor Commissioner BradAvakian, according to a news release from the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries. Yaju Dharmarajah, a staff representative with Oregon Council 75 of the Association of Federal, State, County and Municipal Employees, will becomepart of a council that advises the labor commissioner and the bureau oncivil rights issues andenforcement. Dharmarajah will take on his newrole as the council prepares to address pay inequality in Oregon, said BOLI Communications Director Charlie Burr. Dharmaraiah is chairman of Central Oregon Jobs with Justice, a workers' rights organization, and afounding member of the Central Oregon Social Justice Center, which houses several community
between 2009 and 2013 are
toilets until its sewer
gl'OUPS. — Bulletin Staff reports
Creek are the front-runners
make a motion on the name
first time she could remember
Juba apologized for seeming to "discredit the work" of the
Arntson reported on the district's progress educating English-language learners. The district met targets
committee during the previ-
mandated by the state and
on state tests failed to meet a
ous discussion, saying he now better appreciates how district policyencourages theuseof names tied to locations, flora and fauna.
stated target. She said districts identified
In other news, Director
federal government for the percentage of students on track to achieve English proficiency, the percent reaching proficiency within five years and beyond five years.
of Federal Programs Dana
Arntson said this was the
Board co-Chairman Nori
CENTRAL OREGON
the district meeting all three
of those goals, though the performance of English learners
as similar to Bend-La Pine,
including Eugene and Beaverton, also failed to meet that target. SeeSchool /B5
REDMOND
ensusrevea s c a en es ace oun wor ers
City wants to partner with UO By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Recentlyreleased U.S. Census data on Americans
betweenthe ages of 18 and 34 paint a challengingpicture for young workers in Central Oregon, with inflation-adjusted wages dropping well below
"In agricultural and rural communities, there's onlyso manyjobs that can be replaced,"he said. "You might havea decent-sized family, four kids, but only one kid is going to take over the farmso what are the other three going to do?"
count, which is held every 10 years. Survey data gathered compared against official census findings collected in 1980, 1990 and 2000.
Due to limited sample sizes, the margin of error on some
findings is significant. While
last few decades have been
particularly difficult for rural communities. Younger people w ho move away togotocollege or find employment often never return, he said, triggering a — Roger Lee, executive director of Economic Development self-sustaining cycle of ecofor Central Oregon nomic contraction.
1980 levels.
The findings were collected through the American Comm unity Survey,an ongoing random sampling conducted bythe U.S. Census Bureau that
tor of Economic Development for Central Oregon, said the
The industries that sustain rural communities are often the survey found, for instance,
Where in 1980the median
that 11.9 percent of Jefferson
income foryoung workers in
County residents 18 to 34 have
all three counties was above
at least abachelor's degree, the margin of error on the question is 3.7percent — placing the actual figure likely somewhere between 8.2 and 15.6percent.
the national average, all three now come in below the national average. The steepest fall was in Crook County, where inflation-adjusted incomes for young people have slipped 32 percent since 1980,andtheem ployment rate has fallen from
Economic data collected
through the survey show a significant decline in living standards for young people in Central Oregon since 1980.
71.6 to 53 percent.
unabletoaccommodate a growing population of workers, Lee said. "In agricultural and rural communities, there's only
so manyjobsthatcan bereplaced," he said. "You might have a decent-sized family, four
kids, but only one kid is going to take over the farm — so what are the other three going to do?"
Roger Lee, executive direc-
SeeCensus/B5
REDMOND — Red-
mond could be in for a blast of collegiate ingenuity next fall.
The Redmond City Council enthusiastically pledged its support Tuesday night during a special meeting for a proposed partnership with the
University of Oregon's Sustainable City Year Program (SCYP). Redmond city staff plans on submitting an application to the UO pro-
gram, which partners students across multiple disciplines with Oregon communities looking at incorporating more sustainable practices. If Redmond is
selected as the school's partner community for the 2015-16 school year-
the application process is competitive — SCYP Di-
Youngworkerscensusdata
18-TO 34-YEAR-OLDS EMPLQYED
AVERAGEINCOME OF18-TO34-YEAR-OLDS
rector Marc Schlossberg said the city could expect approximately 500 stu-
Data collected intheAmerican Community Survey,an ongoing random samplingconductedbytheU.S.Census Bureau,showvarious statisticsforyoung workers in Central Oregon.Thesurvey data collected between2009 and 2013of18-to 34-yearolds is comparedwith official census datacollectedeachdecade.
80%
40K
60%
30K
80,000 work hours to a list
40%
20K
of Redmond-area projects. "We're taking the re-
~
20%
10K
De schutes County ~
~ J
e fferson county
~
Cr ook County
~
Ore g on
dents devoting 60,000 to
sources of the university and helping communities," said Schlossberg, who presented the City
u , s, I980
18-TO 34-YEAR-OLDS IN POVERTY
19 9 0
2000
200 9-13
1980
30%
20%
20%
2000
200 9-13
18-TO 34-YEAR-OLDS WITH DEGREES
POPULATIONAGES 18-34
30%
19 9 0
year. The SCYP has
20%
worked with Gresham, Salem and Springfield and this year is collaborat-
15%
ing with Medford. "We're excited to help the community with projects they might have been working on for a while and some
10% 5%
1980
19 9 0
2000
200 9-13
source: U.s. census Bureau
0
1980
19 9 0
2000
200 9-13
overview of the program, which is now in its fifth
25%
10% 10%
Council with a 20-minute
1980
1990
20 0 0
20 0 9-13
Carli Krueger/The Bulletin
they didn't even know
existed." SeeRedmond/B5
StudentscomeUpwith ideaof 'Changefor a Change'
HaVe a StOry idea
or sudmission? Contact us!
By Jasmine Rockow
parents
The Bulletin
pitched the idea
The Bulletin
The sound of coins clanking into jars filled the hallway at Rimrock Expedi-
to White. "I never
tionary Alternative Learning Middle
know whether
Call a reporter
Bend ......................541-e33-21eo Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine...................541-e17-7831 sunriver.................541-617-7831 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347 D.c....................... 202-662-7456
Business...............541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Publicsafety.........541-383-0376
Submissions • Letters andopinions: Email: letters@bendbulletim.com Mail:My NickersWorth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" in thesubject, andincludeacontact name and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354
School on Tuesday morning, as packs of kids romped past Director Roger
and
a student will
OUR SCHOOLS, follow through, PUR gTUPENT$ but she seemed
White on their way to class. Three students, Maya Gritzner, 11,
pretty committ ed," h e s a i d
Scout Gesuale, 12, and Hannah Pa-
Educational newsand T uesday M y activities, and local kids p h t I o s o p h y andtheirachievements. s that I s u p • Schoolnotesand p ort t h em but submissioninfo,B3 I don't do the
lubeski, 11, recently started a holiday
fundraiser for Heifer International, a global nonprofit that provides self-sustaining income opportunities, mainly in the form of livestock, for needy families in developing countries. The girls are calling the project "Change for a Change," encouraging each student crew to collect spare coins from
It's really their idea."
work for them.
After a period of research and working with White to find the right
dryers, couches and pockets. The crew
approach, the girls presented their
that collects the most money gets hot
fundraiser to the entire school during
chocolate and cookies after the holiday
Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin
break. Depending on how much mon- Hannah Palubeski, from left, Maya Gritzner andScoutGesuale have organized a holey is earned, they may also get to de- iday charity drive for Heifer International at Rimrock Expeditionary Learning Middle cide what type of animal is given. School (REALMS) to help purchase a livestock animal for a family ln another country. There are six crews at REALMS.
a community meeting Friday. They made posters and created a prominent display near the school's entrance.
The drive got off to a slow start Monday, with only a few students dropping
Each is a group of sixth-, seventh- and
change into the buckets. But by Tues-
nonprofit's model of giving is based on are required to pay it forward by giving a week and works together on projects the proverb, "Give a man a fish and you the first female animal offspring to anthroughoutthe year.They are "much feed him for a day, teach a man to fish other family in need. "They had this gift ark for $5,000, like houses in the Harry Potter series," and you feed him for a lifetime." DonaMaya said in an email. tions indude a flock of chickens, goats, where they send two of each animal Maya thought of the idea for a fund- cows, waterbuffalo, bees and even out, and I'm wondering how on earth raiser in October, after receiving a Heif- classes in managing a small business. anyone wouldhave that much money," er International catalog in the mail. The Families that receive a gift from Heifer Maya said Tuesday. She talked to her
day morning, things had begun to turn around.
eighth-graders that meets three times
"I've seen lots of people, whether be-
fore lunch or between classes, crowding around it and looking in trying to see who has the most money," Scout
said. See REALMS/B3
B2
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
E VENT TODAY
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vpvpvp.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE SANTALAND DIARIES": A performance of the one-man, oneact play based on aDavid Sedaris
www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE SANTALANDDIARIES": A performance of the one-man, oneact play based on aDavid Sedaris essay; $10 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. WEST AFRICANDRUMAND DANCE:Featuring Kerfala "Fana" Bangoura, West African Master Drummer and dancer, with Bend's Fe Fanyi West African Drum and Dance Troupe; free; 8:45-10 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.tinyurl.com/westafricandance or 541-760-3204.
ddranch.net, info©ddranch.net or 541-548-1432.
Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at11:01 a.m.Dec.6,in the900 block of NW Canal Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:21 p.m. Dec. 6, in the 1700 block of SWJuniper Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 9:33 p.m. Dec. 6, in the 1300 block of NW Canyon Drive. Unauthorized use —A vehicle was reported stolen at10:37 p.m.Dec.6,inthe2400 block of NW Dogwood Avenue. DUII —Jacob Edward Glatz, 18, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:25 a.m. Dec. 7, in the area of SW 15th Street and SWHighland Avenue. DUII —Jennifer Laurel Fox, 44, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:53 p.m. Dec. 7, in the 1500 block of NW TeakAvenue. Vehicle «rash —An accident was reported at 9:45 p.m. Dec. 7, in the 1500 block of NWTeak Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:45 p.m. Dec. 7, in the 1500 block of NW TeakAvenue.
9:43p.m.— Chimney or flue fire, 1229 NE Hollinshead Drive. 25 —Medical aid calls.
SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children'sactivities, Tree of Joyand more; free admission, additional essay; $10plus fees in advance; cost for take-home photos, $5 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, donation for children's activities; 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 www.volcanictheatrepub.com or SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. 541-312-0131. ZEPPARELLA: The San Fransisco THE BELLS:A holiday performance indoor andoutdoor scenes;free; 6-8 by the hand-bells group from p.m.; Highland Baptist Church,3100 rock and roll band performs, with Sunriver; 11 a.m.; Sunriver Area SW Highland Ave., Redmond; www. Groovy Wallpaper and Daniele Gottardo; $20 plus fees in advance, Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; hbcredmond.org or 541-548-4161. $25 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, www.deschuteslibrary.org/sunriver/, "THE VATICANMUSEUMS3D": 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. tinad©deschuteslibrary.org or Take a tour through the Vatican belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. 541-312-1034. Submitted photo Museums and the Sistine Chapel; IS DIRTY: The psychClinton Clark will return to the role of Crumpet the Elf in "The SanTHE CLARIONCALL:Openm icfor $12.50, $15 for 3-D showing; 7 p.m.; EVERYONE rock band performs, with Problem Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, taland Diaries," a one-man show opening Thursday at 2nd Street all Central Oregon youth through Stick; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Volcanic high school students; free;12-3 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; Theater. Clark, 27, starred in the one-act comedy in local producTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, SATURDAY 541-312-2901. tions in 2011 and 2012. p.m., sign-up at noon; Kelly D's, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com 1012 SE Cleveland Ave., Bend; or 541-323-1881. FATHER CHRISTMAS FORSPECIAL thudson@bendbroadband.com or THURSDAY NEEDS KIDS:Featuring a quiet time "ALMOST, MAINE":Play about GOSPEL CHOIRCHRISTMAS 541-390-0921. for children with special needs to a small town and the citizens' CONCERT: Featuring the Gospel FRIDAY CASCADEHORIZON BAND "ALMOST,MAINE":Playabout visit Father Christmas before the tales of love, presented by the Choir of the Cascades; free, HOLIDAYCONCERT:The band plays a small town and the citizens' museum opens to the public; free; SANTALAND AT THE OLD MILL RedmondProficiencyAcademy; donations accepted;7-8 p.m.; holiday melodies; free, donations tales of love, presented by the 9-10 a.m.; High Desert Museum, DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, Eastmont Church,62425 Eagle $8, $5 for students with ID; 7 accepted;1:30 p.m.; Bend Senior RedmondProficiency Academy; 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; children'sactivities, Tree of Joyand Road, Bend; www.eastmontchurch. p.m.; The Printing Post, 639 SW Center, 1600 SEReed Market Road; $8, $5 for students with ID; 2 and www.highdesertmuseum.org, more; free admission, additional com or 541-390-2441. Forest Avenue, Redmond; www. www.cascadehorizonband.org or 7 p.m.; The Printing Post, 639 SW info©highdesertmuseum.org or cost for take-home photos, $5 rpacademy.org, tori miller© 541-815-3767. HOLIDAYCONCERT:Featuring Forest Avenue, Redmond; www. 541-382-4754. donation for children's activities; rpacademy.org or 541-526-0882. Sisters High Desert Chorale, Bell rpacademy.org, tori miller© LIVING NATIVITY:Live tableau 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 HOLIDAYHOMETOUR: Featuring Choir and Children's Choir; free; 7 "THE HOBBIT":A production of the rpacademy.org or 541-526-0882. representing the birth of Jesus, with SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; potholders for sale, quilts from classic J.R.R.Tolkien bookby Bend p.m.; Sisters Community Church, indoor and outdoor scenes; free; 6-8 541-312-0131. "THE HOBBIT":A production of Quilts of Valor will be on display, Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 1300 W. McKenzie Highway; www. p.m.; Highland Baptist Church,3100 CHRISTMAS LIGHTSKAYAK: the classic J.R.R. Tolkien book by signings by Bob Maxwell, the for students18 and younger; 7 p.m.; sisterschurch.com or 541-549-1037. nation's oldest Medal of Honor SW Highland Ave., Redmond; www. Kayaks and canoes decorated with Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, hbcredmond.org or 541-548-4161. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette JOHN CRAIGIE:The folk singer $10 for students18 and younger; recipient, to benefit Bend Heroes lights paddle around the Deschutes Ave., Bend; www.tickettails.com or performs, with Brad Tisdel; $10 plus Foundation's"Honor Flight of 2 and 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, TODD HAABY: Theflamenco River; free; 3:30 p.m. participants 541-419-5558. fees in advance, $12 at the door; 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www. guitarist performs with his group Eastern Oregon" program; $5, gather, 4 p.m. float; Tumalo 7-11 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main SolaVia;$28-$38 plusfees;7 p.m .; Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 SW CASCADEBRASSQUINTET donations accepted;10 a.m .-4 p.m .; tickettails.com or 541-419-5558. Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents. Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Private Residence, 21131 Clairaway CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; www. HOLIDAYCONCERT:Featuring com or 541-815-9122. Bend; www.towertheatre.org or tumalocreek.com or 541-317-9407. holiday music, with Michelle Ave., Bend; 541-480-5560. MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the 541-317-0700. "HUMBUG":A modern-day VanHandel; free, donations CHRISTMASTREELANE:Visit Cowboy Carriage, located between DIRKSENDERBYKICKOFF PARTY: "HUMBUG":A modern-day accepted; 7-9 p.m.; First twist on the Christmas classic "A Featuring live music by StealHead, Santa and shop for a Christmas tree, Ben 8 Jerry's and Francesca's; Christmas Carol" about Wall Street twist on the Christmas classic "A a silentauction, a raffle and more to United Methodist Church, 680 with complimentary face painting, proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; NW Bond St., Bend; www. Christmas Carol" about Wall Street executive Eleanor Scrooge; $20, hay rides, pony rides, petting zoo weather dependent; donations benefit Tyler Eklund; $5 suggested cascadebrassquintet.com, executive EleanorScrooge; $20, donation; 6-11 p.m.; Midtown $16 for seniors, $13 for students; and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-3 accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, bobshimekmusic©bendbroadband. 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Ballroom, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., p.m.; DD Ranch,3836 NE Smith 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, Bend;541-408-4329. com or 541-420-5503. 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; Rock Way, Terrebonne; www. 541-312-0131. EAT, DRINK 8tALLTHATJAZZ: Featuring a silent auction, live music and more to benefit the Summit High School Boosters; free; 5-9 p.m.; Cafe Sintra, 1024 NWBond St., Bend; www.cafesintra.com or 541-382-8004. LIVING NATIVITY:Live tableau representing the birth of Jesus, with
1VEWSOF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 2:40 p.m. Dec. 6, in the1300 block of NW Union Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:47 p.m. Dec. 6, in the1100 block of NE Ulysses Drive. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 3:09 p.m. Dec. 6, in the1400 block of NE First Street. DUII —Lorissa Olivia Marlene Quinn, 20, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:33 a.m. Dec. 7, in the area of SEFifth Street and SE Reed Market Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:34 p.m. Dec. 7, in the 300 block of SW Century Drive. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 4:13 p.m. Dec. 7, inthe1000 block of NW Galveston Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:45 a.m.Dec.8,inthe 2700 blockofNE 27th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:58 a.m.Dec.3,inthe 2200 blockofNE Second Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at10:35a.m. Dec. 5,nithe300 blockofSELogsden Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 4:42 p.m. Dec. 4 in the 19700 block of Mt. Bachelor Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:59 p.m. Dec. 5, in the 2100 block of NE Fourth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:28 p.m. Dec. 6, in the1400 block of NE Purcell Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:01 p.m. Dec.6, intheareaof NE Patterson Circle. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:23 p.m.Nov.24,inthe 900 block ofNW Wall Street. Unauthorized use — Avehicle was reported stolen at11:57 a.m. Dec. 3, in the 63300 block of N. U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 2 a.m. Dec. 4, in the 300 block of SE Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:33 a.m. Dec. 4, in the 800 block of NE Third Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8 p.m. Dec. 4, in the100 block of NW Oregon Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 6:08 p.m. Dec. 5, in the1000 block of NWLexington Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 9:30 p.m. Dec. 5, in the 2500 block of NEU.S. Highway 20. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 8:13 a.m. Dec. 6, in the1200 block of NW Galveston Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at11:21 a.m. Dec. 6, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook
Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:27 a.m. Dec. 6, in the 19600 block of Poplar Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at12:14 p.m. Dec. 6, in the1300 block of NE Third Street. DUII —Alyssa Andrea Galloway, 25, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:54 p.m. Dec. 6, in the 300 block of NE Greenwood Avenue.
DUII —Shauna Marie Hoffman, 29, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at4:22 p.m. Dec.1, in the2200 block of SWCanal Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 6:05 p.m. Dec. 1, in the 500 block of SWBluff Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at7:55a.m .Dec.2,inthe 300 blockofNW Oak Tree Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at9:27a.m.Dec.2,in the 500 REDMOND POLICE block of SW Rimrock Way. DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 11:05 a.m. Dec. 2, in the 300 Burglary —A burglary, theft blockofNW Oak Tree Lane. and an act of criminal mischief Criminal mischief —An act of was reported and an arrest was criminal mischief was reported made at 9:29 p.m.Nov.28,in the at2:32p.m.Dec.2,inthe400 3500 block of NW 21st Place. block of SW Ninth Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:17 a.m. Dec. 1, Theft —A theft was reported at2:33p.m. Dec.2,in the 400 in the 2800 block of SW24th Street. block of SWSixth Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 8:37 a.m. Dec. 1, in Theft —A theft was reported and the 2100 block of W. Antler Avenue. an arrest made at1:05 p.m. Dec. 3, in the300 blockofNW OakTree Lane. Vehicle crash —An accident Theft —A theft was reported was reported at10:23 a.m. Dec. at 1:12 p.m. Dec. 3, in the 300 1, in the area of SWSixth Street blockofNW Oak Tree Lane. and SW Black Butte Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported Theft —A theft and an act of at2:48p.m. Dec.3,in the900 criminal mischief were reported block of SWVeterans Way. and an arrest was madeat 11:15 a.m. Dec. 1, in the 300 Theft —A theft was reported blockofNW Oak Tree Lane. at 3:46 p.m. Dec. 3, in the 2700 SW Umatilla Court. Burglary —A burglary was reported at11:35 a.m. Dec. 1, in the Theft —A theft was reported 900 block ofNW PoplarAvenue. and an arrest was madeat
4:14 p.m. Dec. 3, in the 300 block ofNW Oak Tree Lane. DUII —Karl Wayne Odoms, 45, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:51 a.m. Dec. 4, in the 1700 block of S. U.S. Highway 97. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 2:40 a.m. Dec. 4, in the 300 block ofNW Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at1:22 p.m. Dec. 4, in the 100 block of SW12th Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 4:52 p.m. Dec. 4, in the 300 block of NW Fir Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:56 p.m. Dec. 4, in the 1700 block of S. U.S. Highway 97. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 8 a.m. Dec. 5, in the 1300 block of SWObsidian Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at1:14 p.m. Dec. 5, in the 500 block of SWFifth Street. DUII —Laurie L. O'Neal-Kilby, 51, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:17 p.m. Dec. 5, in the area of SWKalama Avenue and SWVeterans Way. DUII —Savannah Wagner Mills, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:54 p.m. Dec. 5, in the 1800 block of W. Antler Avenue.
BEND FIRE RUNS Monday 6:37p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 557 NW Utica Avenue.
REDMOND FIRE RUNS Dec. 1 9:25a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 1025 SWGlacier Avenue. 10:04 a.m.— Motor vehicle accident, 7777 S. U.S.Highway 97. 11:19 a.m.—Motor vehicle accident, in the area of SW 67th Street. 9 — Medical aid calls. Dec. 2 10 —Medical aid calls. Dec. 3 4:08 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, in the area of SWUmatilla Avenue. 5:14p.m. — Authorized controlled burning, 655 SW11th Street. 7 — Medical aid calls. Thursday 12 —Medical aid calls. Friday 7:23 a.m.— Motor vehicle accident, 300 N. U.S. Highway 97. 11 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 12:07 p.m.— Building fire, 3791 N. U.S. Highway 97. 10 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 9 — Medical aid calls.
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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
u somers e in e ar 8 oll roce s oresB e • There is norequirement saying inspection reports must bemadereadily available By Tracy Loew The (Salem) Statesman Journal
SALEM — I n
search fee plus copying costs. The system is in stark con-
C i ncinnati, trast t o
r e staurant i n spec-
Chicago or Washington, D.C., tions, which a r e a v ailable grocery store customers can online in Marion and the go online to check their fa- state's other most-populous vorite stores' latest inspection counties. report. The Statesman Journal At least eight states and paid $109.50 for copies of many counties and cities i nspection reports for t h e across the country post full largest stores in Salem and copies of retail food inspec- Keizer. tions online. Many other So how did they fare? states and municipalities offer The answer is complicated. online access to, at a miniStores get separate inspecmum, an establishment's last tions of their retail sections, inspection date and score. bakeriesand meat operations. But in Oregon, customers Under new federal recomare left in the dark. mendations, violations are Oregon adopted the FDA categorized as priority — or Food Code, which recom- having a d i rect connection mends inspection reports be to food-borne illness; priorpublic documents. But there ity foundation — equipment is no requirement that they be or procedures fail to control publicly posted or made easi- food-borne illness risk; or core — regarding general ly available. This year, the Oregon De- good practices. partment of Agriculture creViolations previously were ated a database to track food categorized as CDC risk facinspections and results. But tor; critical; or noncritical. the system was designed for Unlike some states, Oreinternal use only, said Mark gon doesn't assign a score Stuller, an ODA information or grade to inspections, like systems specialist. those used for restaurants. Downloading th e d a t a, "We just go in there and stored in t h e F i l eMaker look at things, and then we Pro program, would take a deal with the issues the in$30-an-hour analyst at least spector comes up with," Barfour hours, Stuller said, as cellos said. w ould d ownloading a n y If the restaurant scoring updates. system were imposed on groOregon officials haven't cery stores, eight, or more discussed putting the da- than a quarter, of Salem-area tabase online or otherwise stores would have received making it accessible to con- failing grades. Follow-up insumers,said Frank Barcellos, spections were scheduled for an ODA food safety program three of those and have been manager. completed for two. To get a paper copy of an None of Salem's and Keizinspection report, customers er's 606 r estaurants failed must file a formal request un- their last inspection. der Oregon's public records State officials say they law and pay a minimum $15 don't analyze their inspection
database to determine which ing stuffed mushrooms, cut violations grocery s t ores melons and bean dips at interstruggle with most frequent- nal temperatures up to 53 dely, or which stores or chains grees. The juice and almond have the most problems. milk display case was holding "We don't follow them that keep-refri gerated product at way," Barcellos said. "We're internal temperatures of up to so involved in so many differ- 52 degrees." ent aspects. Sometimes (inAt Fred Meyer on Comspections) are reviewed by su- mercial Street SE, "Breadpervisors, sometimes they're ing used for fried chicken is not." stored at room temperature In Salem and Keizer, the from approximately 8 a.m. to overwhelming majority of vi- 6:30p.m.,"an inspector wrote. olations had to do with foods "The breading contains moist being offered for sale past clumps and dried bits in it their expiration date: that were not removed after "In th e s andwich i sland the last batch of chicken was area, chopped chicken and breaded." country gravy were lacking Area grocery stores also dates," an inspector found at struggled w it h c l e aning, the Winco o n C o mmercial maintaining their physical Street SE. "Breaded chopped facilities and protecting food chicken and a l f redo sauce from contamination "Bakery pans are encrustwere not date marked correctly. Items moved from the ed with old food debris and deli to the sandwich prep are stacked upon each other area are dated with the date
without cleaning to be reused
moved. Staff unable to de-
over and over," an inspector found at the Safeway on
termine when it needs to be
discarded."
Commercial Street SE. "Do-
At the Keizer Albertson's, "Slicedmeats are given from 8
nut pans are sitting in old grease and have a thick layer
to 22 days . no documentation is available to show safety of
of grease on the bottom half of the stack."
sliced meats past a total of 7
"Bread slicer in bakery is
days. Sliced cheeses are given s tored in c ontact w it h t h e 60 days once open and sliced. towel dispenser so when you No documentation is available wash your hands, then reach onsite to show the safety of for the towel dispenser you the cheeses past seven days." drip onto the area where the That was followed closely bread sits prior to slicing," by food being held at unsafe inspectors found at the Fred temperatures (cold food must Meyer on Market Street NE. be held below 41 degrees Oregon has the authority Fahrenheit; hot food above to impose civil penalties on 135 degrees): stores that routinely violate "Display c ase h o l ding food safety rules, but the state grilled chicken, fried chicken, never has done so, Barcellos kids snack packs, assorted said. "We try not to go that far. cheeses, hummus, assorted salads and bratwurst was We try to work with everycold holding items at inter- one at the front end of this," n al temperatures up t o 5 2 he said. "Most of them are degrees," an inspector found willing to work with us. They at th e K e izer A l b ertson's. want to provide a good whole"The produce department some product for the public cold holding unit was hold- out there."
State oo in or u er or E iott orest The Associated Press
Bob Ragon of Douglas Tim- fit within his group's vision for the forest, decoupling it from egon is looking for an unusual Curtis said a purchase propos- appointed the board did not the Common School Fund buyer for Elliott State Forest al could be ready in time for endorse aproposal from his while maintaining conserva— someone willing to pay a the board's June meeting. organization that would keep tion value. He said a potential good price, respect the needs The board — comprising the forest as a Common School buyer could be a public land of threatened fish and wildlife thegovernor,secretary ofstate Fund asset while seeking trust — a nonprofit organizaand leave areas open to hikers and state treasurer — is look- someone to manage it to pro- tion that raises money to buy and hunters. ing for a way to maximize for- duce timber for sale and meet property then turns it over to a At a meeting Tuesday, the est revenue to benefit schools. environmental laws. public entity. "It could take them a long "I think they have come to State Land Board directed its But court rulings upholding staff to develop a proposal to protections f o r t h r e atened time to get that sorted out," he the realization that clear-cutelicit offers from public or pub- birds and salmon have sty- said about the board decision t ing o lder f o rest t o fu n d lic-private entities to buy the mied timber sales. to sell the forest. "I don't know schoolchildren doesn't work 90,000-acreforest in the Coast Elliott State Forest once how much time they really any longer," Laughlin said. "They need to get creative to Range. contributedrevenue up to $8 have." Parties could include the million a year for schools, but Josh Laughlin of the conser- meet their fiduciary mandate federal government, a tribe, it has turned into a $3 million vation group Cascadia Wild- and work within the public a state agency or a l ocal annualexpense. lands said the board's choice interest." SALEM — The state of Or-
government.
Board spokeswoman Julie
REALMS
ScHooL XOTEs
Continued from B1 Maya calls Heifer's gift ark
INVENTERPRISE their "ultimate, almost nearly WIMNERS impossible goal." They would be equally happy earning $120, The following Central Oregon which would allow them to buy students were named winners a goat for a family in another in lnventerprise 2014, an annual country.
ber Operators said he was dis-
science problem-solving contest
REALMS just finished a big sponsored by BendResearch:
Summit High School senior Annie Jarvisand Summit likes to see students looking High School juniorTristan Fischertied for first place. outside of themselves and rais- Jarvis proposed legislation ing money for others in need, to encourage the planting too. of wildflower groves to help "Middle school kids are ca- support bee populations. pable of a lot more than we Fischer proposed promoting think they are," he said. "They the ancient grains quinoa and wreath fundraiser that benefited the school. White said he
teff in drought-hit regions of Africa. Summit High School sophomoreQuintin McCoytook
second place for a slow-release, biodegradable fertilizer cube that retains water. Culver High School freshmenKyle Caldwell and Chris Castellanosreceived honorable mention. In the middle school division, grandprize winners wereAnna Marie Covlin, Peter Davioand Jason Thompson,all students of St. Francis of Assisi Catholic School. The annual contest challenges Central Oregon students grade K-12 to invent ways to improve agricultural equipment, systems
and processes.
VFW ESSAY WINMER Emily Osborne,an eighth grade student at Elton Gregory Middle School in Redmond, was named first-place winner of the 2014-15 VFW Patriot's Pen essay contest for the VFW District10. She wrote her essaybased onthetheme, "W hy I Appreciate America's Veterans." Benjamin SaitoandAlexis Calavan, also eighth-grade students at Elton Gregory Middle School, tied for
second place.
are capable of thoughtful work and service to their community
through their schools or other organizations. It's great for folks to remember that middle
How to submit
Story ideas
school is not a holding tank. It's a place for really cool things to happen." Anyone inspired by the girls'
Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.) Contact: 541-383-0358, youth@bendbulletin.com
School briefs:Items andannouncements of general interest.
project can donate to Heifer International online, or support
the school's donation by dropping off spare change at the school by Dec. 19, White said. — Reporter,541-383-0354, jrockow@bendbulletin.com
Mail:P.O. Box 6020,Bend,OR 97708
Phone: 541-633-2161
Email: news©bendbulletin.com Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story?
Other schoolnotes:College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion Phone: 541-383-0354 announcements. Email: mkehoe©bendbulletin.com Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
AROUND THE STATE MeaSure 92 —Supporters of Oregon's measure to require labeling of genetically modified foods havelost a court fight they hoped would help themgarner enough votes to pass the measure in an ongoing recount of ballots. Supporters of Measure 92argued that about 4,600 ballots rejected because of signature problems should be counted. OnMonday,they asked ajudge for a temporary restraining order to stop certification of the recount so they could argue that the signatures beaccepted. But Multnomah County judge Henry Kantor on Tuesdaydenied their request, saying he did not find the state's rules on matching ballot signatures to beunreasonable or illegal. Measure 92 lost by a little more than 800votes, triggering an automatic recount. Themargin has changed little since the recount began last week. MOunt HOOdSearCh — Searchers have begunlooking for a 31-year-old Milwaukie manwhosefamily believes is missing on a camping trip near Mount Hood. KATU-TVreports that Gerren Kirk's car has beenfound, giving searchers an idea of where to look. Wasco County Sheriff's Sgt. Scott Williams said Kirk wassupposed to return from a camping trip Saturday. Williams said the man is likely prepared for the weather. Searchers reportedly are looking in the area near Frog Lake, south of Mount Hood. Venue Change —A lawsuit in which Portland leaders are asking a judge to order Uber to ceaseoperations in the city has been moved to federal court at the request of the online ridesharing business. The Oregonian reports that movecameTuesday. TheSan Francisco-based company argued incourtdocumentsthatthecompany stood to lose morethan $100,000 in profits if required to follow the city's regulation process for taxis. Uber spokeswomanEvaBehrend said the companywill continue to operate in Portland. Thecity filed its lawsuit Monday in MultnomahCounty Circuit Court. Uber launched its ride-sharing appFriday in Portland. City Commissioner Steve Novick has threatened to "throw the book" at the companyfor violating rides-for-hire regulations. Uber hassaid it isn't bound by rules governing traditional taxi companies. Uber's drivers are independent contractors, and the companytakes acut of fares. — From wire reports
As str ike continues,
board irks UO faculg The Associated Press
from the jurisdiction of the
state Board of Higher Educaing graduate teaching assis- tion and governed by aboard tants bargain with Universi- appointed by the governor. ty of Oregon administrators, The new board took over at faculty members are protest- midyear. It's to take up the ing the way grades are being language on its powers at a handled during the walk- meeting Thursday. out and say the university's T ensions between t he board of trustees is trying to administration an d f a c ulusurp their authority over ac- ty have come to a head as ademic matters. the strike by the Graduate The graduate assistants Teaching Fellows Federation reported Tuesday that talks stretched into finals week, lasting until 2 a .m. hadn't with hundreds of tests and produced an agreement. The papers to be graded. two sides are divided over Some faculty and d ewages and the teaching as- partment heads said their sistants' proposal for paid authority to grade students medical and maternity leave. has in some cases been Bargaining resumed lat- abruptly withdrawn by the er Tuesday morning, and administration. EUGENE — While strik-
there was no word about the results.
T he administration r e moved Bonnie Mann, chair-
Meanwhile, the executive woman of the philosophy department, as one of the Senate convened an emer- i nstructors o f r e c ord f o r gency meeting Monday seven classes, with a comnight over a proposed policy bined 226 students who had declaring that the trustees' been taught by graduate decisions supersede "all re- assistants. lated and existing universiThe university required ty authorities, policies and Mann and other department procedures." heads toeither enter grades Faculty members said that for thestudents based on would supersede the UO work done before Dec. 1, or constitution, usurp faculty else hire somebody else to do authority over academic mat- the grading. ters and even repeal part of Mann said she couldn't the university's 1876 charter. do a responsible job of gradThe university's interim ing the students and hiring president, Scott Coltrane, wasn't practical "since we said the board didn't intend don't have alot of people with any of those things, but he Ph.D.s in philosophy running acknowledged communi- around Eugene." cation failures and said he W. Andrew Marcus, interwould convey the message im dean of arts and sciences, that there's mistrust and fear said the graduate assistants of a power grab. were expected to leave be"We are in a broken place, hind grades for the papers, a place where things aren't tests and performance of stugoing very well," he said. dents up to the day the strike "The board is trying to figure began lastweek. One of the this out. They're learning as options after that point, he theygo." said, was for those assigned Last y ear, p r ominent as teachersof record to enter alumni led a successful move provisional grades that could to get the school removed be modified later. committee of the University
Mother in bridgedeath researchedinsanity pleas The Associated Press
34-year-old woman's lawyers
P r osecu- earlier asked the court to detors have told a judge that a termine if she was mentally woman accused of throwing fit to stand trial. NEWPORT —
her 6-year-old autistic son off Police say a woman called a bridge on the Oregon coast 911 on the night of Nov. 3 had done Internet research
to report she had thrown
on the terms "guilty but in- her son off the Yaquina Bay sane" and "not guilty by rea- Bridge. son of insanity." Emergency crews and the K ATU-TV r e ports t h a t Coast Guard searched for the judge at Tuesday's hear- hours before London Mcing in Newport said Jillian Cabe's bodywas found. McCabe's defense team can Jillian McCabe has been attend her mental health eval- indicted on charges of aggrauation at the state mental hos- vated murder, murder and pital in Salem. That's expect- manslaughter. Her next court ed to happen this month. The appearance is set for Dec. 22.
B4 T H E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
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he Bend Police Department is experimenting with wearable cameras for its police officers. It's certainly a good idea to test them. Chief Jim Porter has legitimate reasons to want them. But there is also a downside. Porter believes from talking to his colleagues around the country that if he can get cameras he is satisfied with, it will be better for the department. Having the video and audio from an incident could provide valuable evidence. It could help quickly clear up what happened. It could resolve an issue with a suspect as much as it could an issue with an officer. And as we all know, when people know theyare being watched or recorded, they can behave better. That could provide protection for officers and the public. There are, of course, going to be costsfor adding the cameras and maintaining them. Porter is concerned models may have problems with the cold. The department will also have to ask for perhaps another employee to spend half his or her time dealing with requests for the recordings.
T he department has not f i nalized all the policies for the cameras. But Porter said there would be some incidents when it would be up to the officer's discretion whether or not to turn the camera on. In others, it would be mandatory. That is likely to create complications. It's easy to imagine all sorts of scenarios. Officers may forget in the heat of the moment to turn a camera on, and that might be viewed as a deliberate attempt to conceal what happened. As much as the cameras may provide more information about an incident, we can't get over that the perceived need for them somehow implies that police cannot be trusted. We believe the Bend department has earned the public's trust. And if it had not, cameras would not fix it.
The numbers can be auurate and misleading t's true. As both The Oregonian and The Washington Post have reported in the last few months, Deschutes County has more licensed gun dealers than it does public libraries or museums. That said, the figures aren't what they seem. Deschutes County does have more than 100 licensed dealers, according to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms registry. A licensed dealer, by the way, is a person or business trying to make a living selling guns who has the appropriate license. It isn't your cousin who has decided to get rid of his deer rifle and a pistol. But there are Dealers and then there are dealers. Sportsmans Warehouse is a licensed dealer, but so, too, is Joe down the street who works tomake money buying and selling guns from his home. While anyone may walk into the former without invitation, look around and purchase a gun — assuming he or she can pass the background check — that's not likely to be true of the home-based gun dealer. Deschutes County has about 110 licensed dealers. That number includes a handful of other sporting goods stores that
t
carry firearms, plus six pawnbrokers and two importers of firearms. We also have seven manufacturers of them. Each must have a federal license to operate. NeitherThe Oregonian nor The Washington Post d i stinguishes among the types of what both call "retailers" of firearms in the county. Nor, apparently, are literally dozens of newspapers, television stations and others around the nation who picked up The Washington Post piece, which also refers to the county's licensed dealers as "stores." And, although this county may have more than 100 licensed dealers, that's peanuts compared with the number of licensed dealers in the state as a whole, saysone ATF agent. Oregon, he notes, has "several thousand" licensed dealers. The real lesson here is a cautionary one. Numbers, even accurate,impressive-sounding government numbers,can be misleading unless you know what they mean. What's worse, linking together two arbitrary numbers mislead-
ingly implies meaning. That practice belongs on the scrap heap with other beguiling and harmful beliefs.
Drone ban not the answer By VIvek Wadhwa
model airplanes and helicopters that hobbyists have flown happily and relatively safely for many years'? The drone encounter that Feinstein cited
Special to The Washington Post
e Federal Aviation Administration recently released a
report detailing more than 190 safety incidents involving drones and commercial aircraft. In response, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., has vowed to push legislation that would crack down on the commercial use of drones, also called Unmanned Aircraft Systems
(UAS). India's Directorate General for Civil Aviation has already
in a Senate Commerce Committee
sands of pounds and carried serious computational and sensor firepower. Yet they could barely navigate barren wastelands without flipping themselves over or running into a
hearingasa reason toregulatecommercial drone flights was reportedly just a pink toy helicopter. Then there is the practicality of
wall. So how will a drone the size of
the police buy high-performance
A ssuming w e ha v e co l l ision-avoidance systems in place,
a shoebox carry enough intelligence to avoid hitting a building, a person,
a car, a power line or, worst case, a enforcement. If t h e g o vernment commercial aircraft'? It's a wondershould institute restrictions and pen- ful engineering challenge and worth alties, who will enforce them'? Will the focus of some of our best minds. drones to shoot down illicit drones?
Can we scramble the Air Force to try — even for civilian purposes. blow a flock of $300 quadcopters out There are valid concerns that the of the sky? Let's first acknowledge that proliferation of drones will endanger commercial flights and cause drones will be common in our skies serious accidents. The U.S. military and that they will play an integral is rightfully worried that drones will role in our economy and society. We be weaponized as killing machines know that drones are saving monand become autonomous flying ey and improving safety on many IEDs (improvised explosive devices) types of remote inspection such that target a specific individual by as that of distant pipelines and tall means of facial recognition. broadcast towers. Documentary Banning commercial drone use filmmakers use drones to get aerial will not solve these problems; it will shots that are not affordable with a just give us a false sense of comfort regular plane or helicopter. Then, and kick the can further down the of course, companies such as Gooroad. gle and Amazon are developing About two years ago, I wrote a drone delivery services that provide Washington Post column in which I within-the-hour delivery of ordered argued that we need to prepare our- goods. selves for the "drone age." It isn't just So if we don't ban the drones, the United States that is developing what can we do to prepare for drone capabilities; governments and them and weave their capabilities DIYers all over the world are doing into a broader picture of economic the same, particularly the Chinese. development? This isn't all bad; there are many First,there needs to be a core good uses for drone technologies. technology framework for collision To start with, there isn't yet a clear avoidance. This is no small problem. consensus on what a drone is. Is it Even the best computer-vision algosomething that flies and is remote- rithms struggle to navigate complex controlled'? If that is the case, should cityscapes. The vehicles in NASA's the FAA also ban remote-controlled DARPA challenge weighed thoubanned all use of drones in the coun-
how can w e b u ild a s y stem of d istributed air-traffic control f or
drones? It would obviously need to be computer-driven and automatic,
and to include safety measures and emergency kill switches or other mechanisms to bring down a drone that is malfunctioning or poses a danger. Beyond the technical issues, we
need to debate what is socially acceptable and to create legal frameworks. Should the cameras of deliv-
ery drones be recording and saving all video footage as they enter into the airspace of a customer's home?
For that matter, should drones be allowed to fly over private property at all — or should they be limited to
public roads between droneports? Should we have the right to shoot down unauthorized drones on our
property'? These are issues we need to tackle — and soon. The drones
are coming, whether we are ready or not. — VivekWadhwa is afellow at Rock Center for Corporate Governance at Stanford University, director of Research at Duke University and distinguished scholar at Singularity and Emory universities.
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It must be easier for health care workers to volunteer By Helen Ouyang For The Los Angeles Times
I am an emergency room doctor and aid worker who has worked in
Liberia as well as in other developing countries. I have epidemic exal health care workers will be perience, having worked to control needed during the coming months cholera outbreaks. And so it was only in West Africa to fight the Ebola natural I would volunteer to go to outbreak. But where they will come West Africa to help treat Ebola. from is not entirely clear. As World For most of August, my schedule Bank President Jim Yong Kim re(and I) were a wreck, as I filed and cently stated, "Right now, I'm very refiled vacation requests, found colmuch worried about where we will leagues to cover for me and booked find those health care workers." and changed plane tickets. I empaAid agencies have openly ex- thized with the aid agencies I was pressed concern t hat m a ndatory working with — they were trying to quarantines for returning healthcare manage extremely difficult logistics workers could affect the number — but as time dragged on, I couldn't of volunteers. Health professionals wait any longer for an assignment at academic institutions have com- and so went to Rwanda instead to plained that their universities some- teach ultrasound skills to doctors. times make it difficult for them to volWould-be volunteer health profesunteer. And some doctors with crisis sionals encounter different hurdles
T
he United Nations estimates that 5,000 more internation-
experience who have tried to volunteer have given up because of the bar-
with different organizations. Some
experience of this.
for many health workers. Others
require at least eight weeks' commitriers they encounter. I have firsthand ment — obviously, tough to arrange
keep doctors on hold as they wait for funding to come through or treat-
month, a doctor friend of mine tried
agenciesmay also need to be more to respond to Ebola with an aid agen- flexible. To get 5,000 more health ment units to be constructed. cy she has worked with in the past, care workers, they may need to take There is also the issue of stan- but it took so long to determine how volunteers for a few weeks at a time. dards. Of course each organization best to deploy her that she had to re- The work is physically exhausting wants toscreen thedoctorsand nurs- turn to her hospital duties before the and emotionally draining, and ales it sends, because not every would- logistics could be resolved. lowing a greater range of volunteer be volunteer is suited to the chalThe work these organizations are options might help fill the enormous lenge.As Margaret Aguirre, head doing in West Africa is vital and im- need. of Global Initiatives at International pressive. But they are overwhelmed President Obama recently noted Medical Corps, explains, the group and can't keep pace with the out- that it's "critically important" that requires that even experienced doc- break, and it's unclear how they will "all the t alent, skill, compassion, tors who have worked with other aid be able to if they keep losing potential professionalism, dedication and exagencies"go through the screening health care workers who are ready, perienceofourfolks here can be deprocessfor us,because we are still willing and able to go. ployed to help those countries deal our own organization with our own Under the current system, most aid with this outbreak at the source." principles." Tim Shenk, press officer agencies maintain individual emer- Let's do this in an orchestrated, exfor Doctors Without Borders, adds gency rosters, but they are quickly pedited fashion and harness all the that "due to our stringent require- exhausted in times like these. Health potential volunteers out there — not ments for staff working with Ebola, care workers may have signed up only for this Ebola outbreak but also very few new applicants are placed in with an agency that doesn't need for future emergencies that will inevEbola assignments." them, while others are short of vol- itably come. Often, it is easier and faster if a unteers. A better solution would be to — Helen Ouyang is a physician and an medical volunteer has worked for create a central repository of volun- assistantprofessorofem ergency medicine an organization previously, but even teers to be used in extreme emergenat Columbia University Medical Center. this is not always the case. Just last ciessuch as thisEbola response.A id She wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
3 nights of protests exact a toll on Berkeley By Carol Pogash
with probably the strongest supportersis being trashed," Tom Bates, Berkeley's longtime mayor, said in a telephone
New York Times News Service
DEATH NOTICES Kevin Carllton Orrick, of Bend May 20, 1965 - Dec. 4, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: Celebration of Life will be held at Cascade Village Clubhouse, Sunday, December 14, 2014, 1:00 P.M., 63700 Cascade Village Drive, Bend, Oregon 97702.
Susan B. Hamilton, of Bend Dec. 15, 1950 - Dec. 3, 2014
Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at Partners In
Care Hospice on
Saturday, December 20, 2014, at 4:00 PM. Contributionsmay be made to: Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Aiberto Gonzalez Sr., of Bend Mar. 15, 1927 - Nov. 30, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Memorial Mass at the Historic St. Francis Catholic Church, Bend OR at noon on 12/12/14.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Nathaniel Branden,84: Writ-
er Ayn Rand's former devotee, lover and intellectual heir,
who, after a bitter schism, moved to Los Angeles and became a bestselling author on
self-esteem. He died Dec. 3 at his home in Los Angeles after a lengthy illness, said James Peron, a close friend. — From wire reports
BERKELEY, Calif. — Two nights of violent demonstrations over the killings of black men by the police left workers cleaning up downtown Berkeley on Monday, sweeping up broken glass from bank windows and a few shops. The glass doors of City Hall had been shattered, and six people had been arrested.
interview. "What we have are
a lot of people who are outside agitators who want to disrupt
® . <irr!tT T r
that "what could have been peaceful deteriorated into people attackingthe police and doingdamage." The demonstrations were
*
Tjg//jroB, Jjj/EQ
Tim Lennoa,a maintenance
' "~'PVr.rr/ g~+
mechanic for the city, examined the plywood placed over
f //I//s
tq
the doors of City Hall, known
s mall, amounting to a
here asthe Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center, and shook his head. "I agree with them," he said
hundred people. Many participants appeared not to be
of the demonstrators who for two nights have protested de-
black kerchiefs over their nos-
cisions not to indict police officers in the killings of Michael
identities; they have become a familiar presence at Bay Area
es and mouths to hide their
Brown and Eric Garner. "But
demonstrations.
this," he said of the boarded-up doors and windows, "I don't
few
students. A few of the demonstrators in the crowd wore
Noah Berger /The Associated Press
A protester blocks an Amtrak passenger train in Berkeley, California, on Monday. Hundreds of peo-
agree with." ple marched through downtown Berkeley on Monday in reaction to the grand jury decisions not to On one step leading to the indict white police officers in the deaths of two unarmed black men. building's entrance, someone had scrawled in pink chalk, "Black Lives Matter," on the marched through streets that black students, for black bodOn Saturdaynight,demonnext step, "Hands up, Don't held many UC Berkeley living ies. If they want to take the strators clashed with the poShoot," and on a nother, "I quarters. Both the size of the lead, let them take the lead." lice, who used tear gas on the Can't Breathe." crowd, estimated at as many The speakers from By Any crowds, drawing criticism for Lennoa said he hoped the as 1,500 people, and the police Means Necessary were not tactics seen as heavy-handcity would not immediately presence seemed larger than African-American. ed. On Sunday night,the replace the glass, because he previous nights. The p r otesters c hanted, police held back while some thought th e d e monstrators Several students took the "Hands up, don't shoot," and peopleset garbage fires and were likely to return. megaphonefrom theBy Any others now familiar chants in smashed windows at Wells Peaceful protesters did re- Means Necessary organizer, a the nationwide protests. Fargo, Chase, Citibank and turn Monday night, but this woman in her 40s, to say they Then the crowd wound other buildings, primarily crowd appeared to consist soughtpeaceful protests. through a UC Berkeley dor- ones occupied bybig corporate "I want to tell you this is a mitory complex and chanted, tenants. The vast majority of mostly of students, unlike Saturday and Sunday nights. peaceful protest," said Nisa "Out of the dorms, into the shops along Shattuck Avenue, They started at th e i conic Dang, an African-American streets." It marched along Uni- the main shopping district, Sproul Plaza, birthplace of the student at UC Berkeley. "I want versity Avenue and tried to get were leftuntouched. "It's ironic that the place free speech movement, and to also say this is a protest for onto Interstate 80.
Redmond
School
Sunday night's damage seemed to have been strategic: mostly corporate outlets.
By contrast, when protesters smashed the windows of Miss-
ing Link Bicyde Cooperative, Marian Hunting, an employee who was working at II p.m. Sunday, grabbed her keys and cellphone and was ready to escape out the back when she
saw a line of protesters form to protect the entry. They yelled, "They're locally owned!" and "They're the nicest people!" The shop was spared theft and additional damage. "That was h eartening," Hunting said Monday morning. She said she empathized with the demonstrators. "Glass
can be replaced," she said. "You can't bring back a life."
Some of the project ideas McPherson. "I love the idea of that were proposed for the students working with us." Continued from B1 SCYP application included a The program would cost Applications for the pro- feasibility study of a Redmond the city $250,000 to $300,000, gram, which incorporates sports complex, the possibility according to Redmond Comstudents from various majors of extending Centennial Park, munity Development Director
Continued from B1 and the Bend Park & RecreAt the beginning of the ation District. "We're in the business of meeting, six visitors made comments questioning the educating students and doing
and courses, are due Jan. 30.
the possible need for a down-
district's decision to sell Troy
the best we can," High said.
A community or municipal group will be selected in February, according to Schlossberg, after which UO and the chosen applicant will start the process of figuring out which projects to tadde in the coming school year.
town parking and design and ing to Richards, most of the marketing ideas for the Red- proposed projects are expect-
Field, a small downtownpark. After a public hearing, the
rate entity and responsible for
mond A i r port.
board voted in late October to
The selection for the pro-
HeatherRichards.Butaccord-
In other news, the council
voted unanimously to extend
city councilor-elect, said she
f und th e
that number is whittled down
to about 18 that are actually
the Forked Horn Butte Road reimbursement district for another six months.
gram should be announced in for e v eryone i n volved," April. said Councilwoman Ginny
— Reporter:541-383-0305, beastesibendbulletin.com
up to his neck and made to
program in 2013. "I went,
New York Times News Service
face what turned out to be a mock firing squad. He tried
'Wow,'" he added. "It was such an emotional moment for me."
working for the CIA endured to escape three times, he said. nearly eight years of torture Then he was transferred to during the Vietnam War, first the prison camp in Hanoi that in bamboo cages, then at the American prisoners called the
T hat year, B race w a s awarded the Prisoner of War Medal and two Purple Hearts.
Brace had earlier served in the Marine Corps, flying At one point he heard a tap- 100 combat missions during ping sound coming from the the Korean War. He was shot adjacent cell and soon realized down over the Sea of Japan 83 and said to have been the that the taps were code for let- and aw arded t h e D i s t inlongest-serving American ci- ters of the alphabet. The pris- guished Flying Cross. vilian prisoner of war in that oner next door was a downed But he was later "punitively" conflict. Navy flier, Lt. Cmdr. John Mc- dismissed from the Marines His son Michael said the Cain, the future senator and on charges of faking his death cause was a p u l monary presidential candidate. They in a plane crash near Camembolism. became vital to each other's bridge, Maryland, as part of As a pilot for Bird & Son, a survival, providing comrade- a scheme toescape gambling private company that was un- ship and communicating in debts and enable his family to der contract to fly missions for code, despite never seeing collect on a $50,000 life insurthe CIA, Brace had just deliv- each other's face. ance policy. ered passengers and cargo to In a statement in The ConBrace, who was a Marine an airstrip in northern Laos gressionalRecord lastyear, captain then, crashed his in May 1965 when small-arms McCain said, "Amidst the pain $142,000 government aircraft fire erupted. and cruelty of our time togeth- on a routine training flight in The plane was so damaged er, I also vividly remember our January 1961. that it could not take off, and conversations, Sunday night He had tossed his parachute Brace was captured by Lao- storytelling sessions, and how into a river, hid his flight suit, tian Communist rebels, who we kept each other's spirits up hitched a ride to Baltimore handed him over t o N o rth during those dark days when and apparently played dead. Vietnamese troops. our hope never wavered." A week later, after his flight They treated him as a prisBrace and McCain didnot suit had been found, he turned oner of war despite his civilian meet until May 1973, months himself in. status. For 3t/2years, by his acafter they were released. The A federal grand jury found count, he was mostly confined occasion was a White House that the cause of the crash to a bamboo cage so small that reception held by President could not be conclusively dewhen his captors occasionally Richard Nixon. termined and did not return "A guy came up to me, and an indictment. But the Malet him out for brief periods, he was temporarily unable to I looked at him, and he said, rine Corps c o urt-martialed 'I'm Ernie Brace,'" McCain walk. Brace, finding him guilty of He was violently interro- said in an interview for a Na- desertion and concealing his gated, buried in the ground tional Geographic television whereabouts. That ended his
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paidadvertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information onany of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
c o nstruction o f
"really liked having that open schools. The property will be space downtown" and en- listed for sale by the end of the joyed watching her nephews week. play soccer there. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, Board member Andy High tleeds@bendbulletin.com
Census
By Douglas Martin
plantation or the Hanoi Hilton.
"The park district is a sepa-
open spaces." The district has said the sale of Troy Field could help
16 generalbudget.
worked on. "I think this is a win-win
said the district offered the
property to the city of Bend
list the property for sale. Barb Campbell, who is a
A p p licants ed to be induded in the 2015-
usually submit 20 to 25 project ideas, Schlossberg noted, and
iviian i ot e as P W in Vietnam prison camp known as t he Hanoi Hilton in a c ell next to John McCain's, died Friday in Klamath Falls. He was
police." Bates said he was "totally devastated and disappointed"
FEATUREDOBITUARY
Ernest Brace, who as a pilot
and cause violence with the
P4Arr
military career. In 1974, President Gerald
Ford granted Brace a full pardon and an honorable discharge from the Marine Corps in recognition of his long imprisonment.
After leaving the Marines, he was a test pilot for North American Aviation before be-
coming a pilot for Bird & Son in Southeast Asia. Ernest Cary Brace was born in Detroit on Aug. 15, 1931,
and he joined the Marines at 16. After his release from the Hanoi Hilton, he worked for
Sikorsky Aircraft as international marketing manager. While Brace was in captivity, his wife, the former Patricia Emmons, thought he was
dead and remarried. During his recuperation at the Naval Medical Center San Diego, he met a nurse, Nancy Rusth, and married her. She survives him. Besides his son Michael, he is
survived by three other sons, Ernest, Patrick and Cary; and
eight grandchildren. He lived in Klamath Falls. During his seven years, 10 months, seven days of incarceration, Brace wrote a poem. It began with these lines:
I'm just a prisoner in a cage I have no name, I have no
age. The guards don't even know what I've done
All they know, I'm a captured one.
Deadlines: Death Notices areaccepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
have the resources to move anywhere." Continued from B1 Central Oregon CommuLee said organizations nity College spokesman such as his are looking to Ron Paradis said the college recruit new kinds of compa- was looking to lower those nies to the region, to diversi- kinds of barriers when it fy theeconomy beyond the opened campuses in Maagricultural and extractive dras and Prineville three industries. He said increas- years ago. "We know we have not ingly, he hears stories of mill workers and others in had as many students from traditional rural industries those areas, and part of d iscouraging their c h i l - that's accessibility," he said. dren from following in their "It's very easy for somefootsteps. body from Bend to take "It's old-school thinking classes here, not so easy for to think we're just going to somebody from Madras or have these jobs waiting here Prineville." for these kids," Lee said. Paradis said over the last "More and more,it' s creat- 10 to 15 years, COCC has ing an environment where shifted its course offerings they can create their own from general education toemployment." ward career certifications A sluggish economy can for jobs in areas such as often make it difficult for criminal justice, manufacyoung people of l i mited turing, pharmacy and masmeans and education to get sage therapy. their first job, said Laura While the career certifiHandy, executive director cations are an attractive opof Heart of Oregon Corps. tion for many young people, The Bend-based nonprof- accessibility is still an issue, it provides employment to P aradis said, w i t h m o s t roughly 250 Central Ore- courses still available only gonians ranging from their on the Bend and Redmond midteens to their late 20s, COCC campuses. offering jobs in f orestry, Noneconomic su b j ects construction and environ- examined in the census surmental projects. Employees vey showed young adults in can earn a modest wage Central Oregon largely in and, in some cases, scholar- line with trends observed ship funds to attend college. nationally. Young people Handy said young peo- are roughly half as likely ple entering the workforce to have ever been married without prior employment than they were three defaceconsiderablebarriers. cades ago, and almost twice " A lot o f t i mes a n e n - as likely to report living try-level job, it's still posted with, 'You need two years'
experience and a college degree,'" she said. "It's a job that in previous generations would have been considered an entry-level job." Leaving a rural area for the employment opportunities available in larger cities simply is not an option for everyone, Handy said. " It's d efinitely
a mid-
dle-class, or upper middle-class ideal, 'If you can't
find a job, just move,'" she said. "If your whole family comes from generations of poverty, you may not
with a parent, both nation-
wide and in Central Oregon. Like much of the rest of the country, Central Oregon has become less white over
the last 30 years. In Jefferson County, the most racially diverse county in the state,
55.5 percent of residents report their race or ethnicity as something other than
white. The survey found 15.8 percent of Deschutes Coun-
ty residents stating a nonwhite racial background, and 14.1 percent of Crook
County residents. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers®bendbulletin.com
B6
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014
I
I
i
I
'
TODAY
rI
TONIGHT
HIGH 52'
ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 61' in 1 9 90 -20'in 1972
PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" 0.95"in 2004 Record Month to date (normal) 0.3 7 " (0.66") Year to date(normal) 8.98 " (9.82") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 3"
SUN ANDMOON
Tigamo
CENTRAL:Patchy
morning fog; otherwise, mostly cloudy andbecoming breezy todaywith an afternoon shower.
/4
iQ
High: 65
at Roseburg Low: 31' THE PLANETS at Rome T he Planets R i se Set Mercury 7:43 a.m. 4: 2 4 p.m. Venus 8:27 a.m. 5 : 0 9 p.m. 0 ' Mars 10:37 a.m. 7 : 5 5 p.m. Jupiter 9:27 p.m. 1 1:32 a.m. D e c28 Ja n d
57/48
•~ t
andy •
Sale
57/49
Occasional rain
7/47
58/49
57/48
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The highertheAccuW esther.cemIV Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyesndskin prctsdicn. 0-2 Lcw, 34 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10VeryHigh; II+ Exireme.
ROAD CONDITONS
5 /40
• +®
Camp Sh man Red n 51/37
•
• •
4/43 • Mitch 8 52/41
• Prineville
• Eugene
48/3'7
Josueph
Grande • Granitee 47/35
'Baker C 48/38
• John uu Day /33 53 / 4 0
tario
53/42
Klamath
• Ashl nd • FaNS 56/
59/51
51/41
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Le/W Astcris 61/57/0.25 58/48/r 55/42/r Baker City 51/38/0.00 48/38/c 48/35/r srcckings 60/58/0.59 59/51/r 55/46/r Sums 50/31/Tr 5 0/35/c 49/32/r Eugene 62/52/0.10 56/45/r 52/39/r Klsmsth Falls 53/38/0.02 51/41/c 46/32/r Lekeview 48/37/0.00 53/40/c 46/34/r
C ity Ls Grande Ls Pine Me d fcr d Ne w port No r th Bend On t ario Pe n dleton
• Lakeview
McDermi
53/40
53/38
Yesterday Today Thursday Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
city
Yesterday Today Thursday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Le/W Hi/Lo/W
52/ 46/0.00 52/44/c 53/38/r 49/40/0.00 49/36/c 44/32/r 60/4 5 /0.01 57/46/c 52/40/r 59/5 5 /0.40 58/49/r 5 4/44/r 61 / 59/0.38 60/50/r 55/44/r 48/35/Tr 46/42/pc 53/42/r 59/ 3 5/0.03 56/48/c 58/40/r
Portland Prineviiie Redmond Roseburg Salem Sisters The Oalles
52/4 6/0.2757/48/r 54/41/r 57/ 4 9/0.0053/40/c 44/31/r 57/ 46/0.0056/40/c 49/30/r 64/ 5 3/0.0757/47/r 52/40/r 63/54/0.24 59/48/r 53/39/r 59/35/0.03 56/39/c 49/32/c 4 6 / 40/0.10 49/44/c 55/38/r
Weether(W):s-sunny,pc-pertlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstcrms,r-rsin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwI-ice,Tr-trece,Yesterday data sscf 5 p.m. yesterday
I44 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly cloudytoday. Slower travel tonight with gustywinds andrain. NATIONAL WEATHER US 20 atSantiamPass:Windyat times today; rain, mainly this afternoon. tos ~o s ~ os ~ t o s ~ 2 0 8 ~ 3 0 8 ~ 4 0 8 ~ 5 08 ~ 6 08 ~ 7 0 8 ~ 8 08 ~ 9 08 ~t oos ~ttos ~ ' US 26 atGov'tCamp: Mostlycloudy and bed d d * * coming windytoday; rain, mainly this aftemoon. NATIONAL ove c o o 45/37 • i uiPe9 Tvbuder aay d d d d US 26 atDchocoDivide: Mostly doudy today;a EXTREMES i se/47 d 29 1 sg *' d . d d d dd few showerswill move inthis aftemoon. YESTERDAY (for the Bismarck d d d DRE 58 at Wigamette Pass:Windy at times 48 contiguousstates) d d d , '37/48 41/21 yd d 'k Minnes o s s s « • Billings today; somerain, mainlythis aftemoon. Rain, o mo + + National high: 84 dddd dd 2 31/22 aois 53/35 4 4 4 4 4 4 heavy at timestonight. P d d d d at Thermal, CA • se/42 • il al ' uke +4. 55/3 DRE138 at Diamond Lake: Mostly doudytos National low: -5' 3 /2 day; a fewshowerswill move in late in the day. at Willow City, ND ity s oi s Che n 54 41/28 Precipitation: 3.79" 55/3 C iceg • 3 at Beverly, MA u hclsco SKI REPORT Omah 3 /23 In inches escf 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base AnthonyLakes Mtn:est.opening Dec.12 Hoodoo SkiArea: est, opening Dec.12 Mt.Ashland:est.opening Dec.12 Mt. Bachelor 0 29-5 4 8-9 Mt. Hood Meadows 1 Mt. HoodSki Bowl: est opening Dec.13 0 9-12 Timberline Lodge Willamette Pass:est. opening Dec.12 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 14-26 Vail, CO 0 20-2 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 18-22 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-1 8 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 26-26 Sun Valley, ID 0 14-3 7 Source: OuTheSncw.ccm
2 1'
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39' 24 '
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Yesterday Today Thursday
49/38
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• 56/ 49/44 • He ppner Gove nt • upi Condon Cam 50 46/
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2 p.m. 4 p.m.
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•
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Lincoln
3: 2 6 p.m. 1: 5 8 a.m.
UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon
Periods of rain
53/40 • Pa lina 42 • Se d Brothers 5038 Valee Su iVere 52/38 • 37 45/39 Nyssa • 50/ Ham ton • La pjne 48/41 Grove Oakridge • Burns Juntura 49/37 58/46 45 60 0 • Fort Rock Riley 50/35 Cresce t • 51/37 51/35 49/36 Bandon Roseburg • Ch ristmas alley Jordany Hey 60/51 Beaver Silver 52/37 Frenchglen 57/47 53/40 Marsh Lake 55/40 49/36 52/38 Gra • Burns Jun tion • Paisley 9/ a 52/43 Chiloqutn Medfo d '51/39 Gold ach 57 Rome
YESTERDAY
5:45 a.m. 1:17 p.m.
•
•
WEST:Windy at the Today Thu. Sunrise 7:29 a.m. 7: 3 0 a.m. coast today with rain, Yach 57/50 Sunset 4:27 p.m. 4: 2 7 p.m. heaviest in the afterMoonrise 8 :52 p.m. 9:50 p.m. noon. Mostly cloudy Floren e Moonset 10: 17 a.m. 1 0 :49 a.m. inland with some rain 57/51 after noon. MOONPHASES Last Ne w Fir s t Full OREGON EXTREMES Co
Saturn Uranus
30'
Rain
SATURDAY
40' 24'
46'
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiga Hood 52/43 RiVer Rufus • ermiston /41 lington 56/46 Pcrtland 48/43 Meac am Lostrne •
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EAST:Patchy morning fog; otherwise, mostly Seasid cloudy today.Plenty 57/48 of clouds tonight with Cannon some rain beginning. 67/49
TEMPERATURE
D ec14 Dec21
FRIDAY
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 39 23'
THURSDAY
LOW 38'
Cloudy; a shower in the afternoon, breezy
I f' I
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Yesterday Today Thursday
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Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 44/34/0.49 40/35/sh 39/34/r 35/23/0.00 40/33/c 47/38/c 36/33/0.09 32/21/pc 37/28/s 68/46/0.00 65/48/pc 68/50/pc 39/38/0.02 38/24/pc 40/25/s 30/16/0.00 43/28/c 48/34/pc 58/39/0.00 48/32/pc 51/42/c 76/54/0.00 73/57/pc 70/57/pc
40/36/Tr 42/28/pc 43/28/s 35/30/0.02 30/18/pc 34/23/pc 51/35/0.00 47/31/s 49/38/pc 69/60/Tr 68/48/s 69/50/s Milwaukee 37/35/Tr 34/23/pc 37/26/s Minneapolis 22/15/0.00 31/22/pc 35/27/pc Nashville 47/41/0.00 44/26/pc 45/27/s New Orleans 68/48/0.00 59/44/s 61/44/pc New YorkCity 42/33/2.54 39/33/sh 38/32/sh Newark, NJ 44/32/1.34 40/33/sh 39/31/sh Norfolk, VA 45/40/0.08 51/33/c 46/32/s OklahomaCity 59/39/0.00 58/45/c 59/49/c Omaha 33/21/0.00 41/29/pc 45/34/pc Orlando 65/51/0.03 62/40/s 63/45/pc Palm Springs 83/60/0.00 76/55/pc 73/52/pc Pecris 37/32/Tr 38/24/pc 39/27/pc Philadelphia 45/33/0.66 40/32/sn 39/30/sn Phoenix 78/54/0.00 76/54/s 76/54/s Pittsburgh 45/32/0.00 37/27/sf 36/29/si Portland, ME 40/20/1.53 42/37/r 44/30/sh Providence 49/26/2.75 46/35/r 43/30/sh Raleigh 45/35/0.54 51/28/pc 49/28/s Rapid City 48/21/0.00 55/31/s 59/36/s neno 49/30/0.00 60/42/c 53/37/r Richmond 46/34/0.03 51/30/c 48/30/s Rochester, NY 46/31/0.00 34/28/sn 31/27/sn Sacramento 60/49/0.00 64/55/c 58/51/r St. Louis 38/34/0.00 41/28/pc 44/34/pc Salt Lake City 52/33/0.00 54/38/pc 62/42/pc Sen Antonio 71/44/0.00 64/56/r 68/59/r Sen Diego 75/57/0.00 70/58/pc 69/59/pc Seu Francisco 63/57/0.00 64/59/c 61/52/r Sen Jose 64/51/0.00 66/56/c 62/50/r santa re 52/31/0.00 57/27/s 56/28/s Savannah 60/45/Tr 59/35/s 58/33/s Seattle 61/50/0.31 59/47/r 53/45/r Sioux Falls 27/19/0.00 39/24/pc 43/29/pc Spokane 48/35/0.17 53/43/c 49/38/r Springfield, Mo 43/30/0.00 47/34/pc 48/39/c Tampa 64/52/0.09 62/44/s 63/47/pc Tucson 74/52/0.00 75/47/s 74/48/s Tulsa 50/34/0.00 54/42/c 56/46/c W ashingt on,OC 45/35/0.33 45/35/sh 45/35/c Wichita 48/31/0.00 48/39/c 56/45/c Yskims 45/39/0.05 49/39/c 50/33/r Yuma 80/58/0.00 77/54/s 78/58/pc r
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 C o l lege football, C4 Sports in brief, C2 College hoops, C4 NBA, C3 Preps, C4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
NFL
Players seekinput on conductpolicy NEW YORK — The
players' union says it has not had input into a revamped personal conduct policy the NFL is preparing. NFL owners are meeting today in Irving, Texas, andareexpected to see a framework for changes to the policy. The union hassought to have any alterations to the policy negotiated. "In the latest of four talks (about the personal conduct policy) they progressively got less interested," NFLPlayers Association President Eric Winston said of the NFL during a conference call Tuesday. "Andwe found out before this
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL
NATIONAL FINALS RODEO
Ravensracepast Cowboysfor win Inside
Bulletin staff report PRINEVILLE — Nathan Co-
vill is well aware of how blessed he and the Ridgeview program are to have had George Mendazona around for three years. On Tuesday night, the junior guard showed why. Mendazona scored 19 points and totaled five re-
bounds, five assists and four steals to lead the Ravens to a 71-49 nonleague boys basketball win over Crook County. "I think we all know George is good," said Covill, the Ridgeview coach. "I think George knows he's good. I think our team knows he's good. And
• Prep roundup,C4 I think our opponents know he's good. "I've coached a lot of good players," Covill continued, pointing out Mendazona's all-around play-making abilities. "He's by far one of the most special players I've coached.... Andhe
fourboards,four assists and two steals.
"Offensively, we're realizing we can do some good things and score points without being in a rush," Covill said, noting the Ravens shot 9 of 15
inside the paint in the second half. "And these kids are really bought into that."
Blake Bartels paced Crook County (0-2) with 16 points,
m akes everybodyelse better." Garrett Albrecht had 16
Seth Kessi had 15 points, but
points, 10 boards and a block for Ridgeview (4-0), Carson Manselle had 14 points and five rebounds, and Tanner
come a 36-15 halftime deficit.
O'Neal hada with 10 points,
the Cowboys could not over"They always play us scrappy," Covill said. "We've never really had an easy game against them."
last meeting that they
were already planning to present it. They basically asked us to ameeting as a farce, to say they met with the players three or four times. "We found out a personal conduct (policy presentation) would be rolled out this weekto the owners." Among the union's aims is to haveCommissioner Roger Goodell's role in handing out discipline reduced or even eliminated. League spokesman Greg Aiello said the union's proposal "would weaken the policy."
place in the world standings Tuesday night with a victory in the sixth round of the National Finals Rodeo,
is out of the competition. Foss currently trails
Central Oregon bareback
riders at the Thomas & Mack Center.
only Utah's Kaycee Feild, the three-time defending
world champion, who tied for sixth place in Tuesday's round and now has $201,806 in winnings for the season.
Foss posted a score of
86.0 on Movie Madness to lead the field and win $19,002.40, his first win of the 10-round NFR and his fourth paycheck. The
Also in the bareback,
Culver's Bobby Mote scored a ride of 83.0 on Turkish Whiskey to finish second, earning the four-time world champion a check for $15,018.03.
Terrebonne cowboy moved
to second in the world standings with winnings of $164,934, passing fellow Central Oregon rider Steven Peebles, of Redmond,
who was injured during
See Rodeo /C2
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Enforcersand fights are slowlyvanishing Inside
By Dan Gelston
• NHL roundup,C3
The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Dave
Schultz would drop his gloves in a flash, his bare fists pummeling away at unprotected faces in fits of fury so ferocious he became
teammatesby bruteforce. Fast-forward 40 years since
the Flyers' last championship and players like Schultz are having a harder time sticking
known as "The Hammer." Schultz was the intimidat-
inthe NHL. The role of the
ing backbone of Philadel-
enforcer is seemingly going
phia's "Broad Street Bullies" teams of the 1970s that
down without a fight as speed
and skill on every line have become the norm.
won a pair of Stanley Cup championships. The Flyers' rugged style of play became their calling card, and by
In a league that is also
facing head injury concerns — and lawsuits — is it finally time to say goodbye to the goon? See Enforcers/C3
the 1980s every team had a
tough guy or two whose primary role was to protect his
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
SOCCER
Bend's Alexa Jackson, left, shoots over Grants Pass' Amanda Tobey to score during the second half TuesdaynightatBend High.Jackson had eightpointsas the Lava Bears won 34-32.
• Bend High holdLady s Caversto just two points in 4th quarter Bulletin staff report Bend High coach Todd Ervin could not quite recall how
many opportunities Grants
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.com/sports
second straight win. Alexa Jackson had eight points for Bend (2-1), and Shelby Olson contributed with six points.
on the defensive end," Ervin
at film and get some stats that they'll have the majority
O
"I'm sure when we look
Pass had to tie or take the
appeared in Tuesday's Bulletin on page C3was inaccurate about the length of Golden State's winning streak. Monday's victory was the Warriors'13th in a row. The Bulletin regrets the error.
Saturday's third round and
highlighting a big night for
—TheAssociated Press
the NBA Roundup that
• Complete results from the sixth round of the National Finals Rodeo. Scoreboard,C2
LAS VEGAS — Austin Foss jumped into second
SAN DIEGO — When Major LeagueBaseball's Chief Baseball Officer, Joe Torre, meets with the 30 managers today, one of his main topics will be replay review. The Hall of Famerwill then gather with the rules committee to further discuss pace of game amongother issues. When the rules committee meets, all sorts of ideas for speeding up the pace will be addressed. One of the most talked about ideas this offseason is a 20-second pitch clock. Torre had achance to see it used during an Arizona Fall Leagueexperiment. "I was never aproponent of introducing the clock in baseball. But I went out there the one afternoon and I was pretty impressed," Torre said. "It was there. But it really wasn't intrusive in any way. I'm not discounting down the road that it may be abenefit, maybesome kindof variation of it."
The headline for
A
Inside
Bulletin staff report
Torre 'impressed' with pitch clock
CORRECTION
Las Vegas on Tuesday night. Fellow Central Oregonian Bobby Mote was runner-up.
a ervi 0
MLB
LaMarcus Aldridge becomes the second-leading scorer in Portland Trail Blazers history in a 98-86 victory over Detroit on Tuesday night. NBA roundup,C3
win the sixth round of bareback at the National Finals Rodeo in
O SS Ll 0
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
—TheAssociated Press
NBA Trail Blazers top Pistons
Boh ClickiFor The Bulletin
Austin Foss, of Terrebonne, scores 86.0 on Movie Madness to
lead on Tuesday night. "Enough to be nervewracking," he said. The visiting Lady Cavers could not, as Ervin described it, "put the pumpkin in the basket," and by limiting Grants Pass to just two points in the fourth quarter, the
that (fourth) quarter. "But any time you hold a
Lava Bears escaped with a
points for Bend, which trailed
34-32 nonconference girls basketball win. "We certainly played hard
Grants Pass 7-2 in the fourth quarter to secure the Bears'
said. "I think we got a little bit of help from the fact that they didn't shoot the ball very well
team to 32, that's a pretty nice
task to accomplish." Sophia Jackson posted 13
of our rebounds and a few
blocks," Ervin said of Sophia and Alexa Jackson. "They sure made adifference for
us. For Grants Pass (0-2), Skylie Brummett had nine points
and Molly Torgerson added 23-21 at the half but outscored eight. The Lava Bears return to action on Friday when they
play host to Springfield.
Hoping to fill gaps,U.S. expandsyouth programs By Billy Witz
don'tseethem anymore?"
New Yorh Times Newsservice
Kh m a rm said the coach as k ed him.
CARSON, Calif. — When Jurgen Klinsmann went to Florida last Decem-
ber and watched the United States under-17 soccer team
thrash its counter-
,
This is the core of a long-running debate ;- in American soccer,
+ —."
'. < ~ .~i
+.'" -.
parts from Brazil, 4-1, a Brazilian coach Klinsmann told him how im-
one that Klinsmann, as
c oach and technical director of the U.S. Soccer Federation, has thrust h i m self into: For all the
promise that American pressed he was with youth teams have occathe American players. But he sionally shown, why has the also had a question. United States produced so "How come once they're fe w world-class players? done with that program, we See Soccer /C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER Europe, Champions League, Roma (Italy) vs. Manchester City (England) Europe, Champions League, Barcelona (Spain) vs PSG (France)
Time TV/Radio 11:30 a.m. FS1 11:30 a.m. FS2
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Columbia at Kentucky Men's college, High Point at Ohio State Men's college, Kansas atGeorgetown Men's college, N.C.Central at Maryland Women's college, Wisconsin at Florida NBA, Portland at Minnesota
4 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. E SPNU 4 p.m. FS1 4 p.m. B i g Ten 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. CSNNW,
KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
NBA, NewOrleans at Dallas Men's college, Wisconsin at Wis.-Milwaukee Men's college, Utah atBYU Men's college, Colorado State atColorado Women's college, Notre Dame at DePaul Men's college,DuquesneatPennState NBA, Miami at Denver Men's college, Washington State atGonzaga Men's college, UCRiverside at UCLA
5 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E SPN2 6 p.m. E SPNU 6 p.m. P a c-12 6 p.m. FS2 6 p.m. B i g Ten 7:30 p.m. ESPN 8 p.m. E SPNU 8 p.m. P a c-12
GOLF
Australian PGAChampionship 5 p.m. Golf Asian Tour, Thailand Championship 1 0 p.m. Go l f EuropeanTour, Alfred Dunhill Championship 4:30 a.m. (Thu.) Golf HOCKEY
NHL, Toronto at Detroit
5 p.m. NBCSN
THURSDAY SOCCER Europa League,Qarabag(Azerbaijan) vs. Inter Milan (Italy) 8:50 a.m. FS2 Europa League,Besiktas (Turkey) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (England) 10 a.m. FS1 Europa League,Sevilla (Spain) vs. Rijeka (Croatia) 11:55a.m. FS2 Europa League,Everton (England) vs. Krasnodar (Russia) noon FS1 GOLF Franklin Templeton Shootout 10 a.m. Golf Australian PGAChampionship 5 p.m. Golf Asian Tour, Thailand Championship 10 p.m. Golf EuropeanTour, Alfred Dunhill Championship 4 :30 a.m. (Fri.) Golf WRESTLING
College, PennState at Maryland
3 p.m.
Big Ten
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Elon at Missouri NBA, Cleveland atOklahoma City Women's college, lowa State at lowa W omen's college, Nebraska Crei at ghton NBA, Houston at Sacramento
4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. TNT 5 p.m. Big Ten 6 p.m . FS1 7:30 p.m. TNT
FOOTBALL
NFL, Arizona atSt. Louis
5 p.m.
NFL
7 p.m.
ESPN2
BOXING
Austin Trout vs. Luis Grajeda
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER TimderS await exPanSiOn draft — After shoring uptheir defense with the acquisition of veteran center backNatBorchers, the Portland Timbers will now wait and seethe outcome of today's MLS Expansion Draft. The trade for Borchers wasone of several player moves the Timbers made onMonday during the league's half-day trade window. Borchers will help aTimbers team that gave up 52 goals in 34 matches last season.eHe'llbring some specific things that we feel are important in adding to our team," coachCalebPorter said Tuesdayduring a conferencecall with reporters.
FOOTBALL NeWtOn injured in Car aCCident —Carolina Panthersquarterback CamNewton was injured in a car accident in downtown Charlotte, North Carolina, on Tuesday,andthe Panthers say he suffered two fractures in his lower back but no other major injuries. According to TheCharlotte Observer, Newton was injured when his car crashed on theChurch Street bridge, just a few blocks from Bank of America Stadium, where the Panthers practice and play. Hewas treated at the scene byemergency personnel and transported to a hospital by ambulance. Former OregonState quarterback DerekAnderson, a Scappoosenative, is the team's backup quarterback and will be first in line to replace Newton if he is unable to play Sunday against TampaBay.
HOCKEY COmmiSSiOner: NO relOCatian PlanS fOrany NHLteamNHL CommissionerGaryBettman is playing downthe possibility of relocating struggling franchises in ArizonaandFlorida. Onedayafter putting the brakes onthe prospect of expansion, Bettman reaffirmed Panthers ownerVinny Viola's commitment to South Florida. Therehad been reports that Panthers ownership wastrying to position the franchise for a moveeither to QuebecCity or Las Vegas, two locales actively pursuing ahockeyteam. Bettman saidTuesdaythat"there's nothing imminent that's happening." Deputy commissioner Bill Daly dismissed the idea altogether, saying ArizonaandFlorida are not moving.
BASEBALL LOSter agreeS to deal With CubS — Pitcher JonLester agreed Tuesday night to a $155million, six-year contract with the Chicago Cubs, a person familiar with the negotiations said, the first big deal of the offseason involving a top-level starting pitcher. Lester's contract, agreed to on thesecondday of baseball's winter meetings, contains an option for 2021 that, if it becomesguaranteed, would makethe deal worth $170 million over sevenseasons. — From wire reports
Rodeo Continued from C1 With $143,581 in winnings through six rounds, Mote re-
mains in fourth place in the world standings. Central Oregon's two entries in team roping, Charly
Crawford, of Prineville, and
Brandon Beers, of Powell Butte, both finished out of the money in team roping. Oregon's lone other contestant at this year's NFR, Mount V e r n on's T r e v or
Knowles, finished out of the money in steer wrestling.
ON DECK Today Wrestling: Bendat LaPine, 7p.m. Thursday Boysbasketball: Ridgeviewvs. Mazamaat Crater Tournament,5:45p.mc Sisters at Lebanon,7 p.m.; CulveratMadrasJV, 6:30p.m. Girls basketball:Ridgeviewvs. Brookings-Harbor at CraterTournament, 7:30 p.mcMadrasJVat Culver,6:30p.m.
IN THE BLEACHERS In the Bleachers e 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck wwwvgocomics.com/inthebleachers
Friday Boys basketball:Springfield at Bend, 7 p.m.; Dallas atMountainView,7 p.m.; CrookCounty at Redmond, 7p.m.; Ridgeviewat Crater Tournament ,TBD;Summitvs.SandyatSandyTournament,7:30p.mcMadrasat Henley, 7 p.mcLa Pine atDouglasInvite, TBD;Central Christianvs. C.S. LewiAc s ademyat C.S.Lewis AcademyInvitational inNewberg, 8:15p.m. Girls basketball: Springfield atBend,5:15 p.m.; Redmondat Crook County, 7 p.m.; Sisters at Summit, 7p.mcMountainViewat Dallas, 7 p.m.; Ridgeview at Crater Tournament, TBD;Madrasat Henley, 6p.m.;LaPineat DouglasInvite, TBD; Central Christianvs. C.S.LewisAcademy JVat C.S.LewisTournamentinNewberg,6:30 p.m.; Trinity Lutheranvs. Elktonat ElktonTip-Off Classic, 6 p,mc Gilchrist atGilchrist Tournament Wrestling:Ridgeview,Sisters, Gilchrist at Culver Invite, 2 p.mcRedmond, Crook County at North BendCoastClassic, TBD;Mountain Viewat SilyertonDualMeetTournament, TBD Swimming: MountainViewat SwimmingforGiving Meet, 11a.m. Saturday Boys basketball: Springfield at MountainView, 12:45 p.mcDallasatRedmond,2:30p.m.;Ridgeview atCraterTournament, TBD;La Pine at Douglas Invite, TBD;Central Christian at C.S. LewisAcademyInvitational inNewherg, TBD Girls basketball: Mountain Viewat Union(Wash.), 2p.m.;RedmondatDallas,2:30p.mcRidgeview at CraterTournament, TBD;Silverton at Summit, 1:30p.mc La Pineat Douglas Invite, TBD;Central Christian atC.S.LewisTournament in Newherg, TBD; Trinity Lutheranvs. North Douglasat Elkton Tip-OffClassic, 1p.m.; Gilchrist at Gilchrist Tourname nt Wrestling: Ridgeview,Sisters, Gilchrist at Culver Invite,10a.mcRedmond, CrookCountyat North BendCoastClassic, TBD;Bend atSpringfield Invitational,TBD Swimming:Bend,Redm ond, Ridgeview,Summit, Sisters atBendWinter Classic, TBD Nordicskiing: OHSNOclassic at Mt. Bachelor
Tuesday'sGames
TOP 25 No. 3Arizona87, UtahValley 56 No. 4Louisville94,Indiana74 No. 7Vilanova73, llinois 59 No. 11WichitaState77, Seton Hall 68 No.14 lowaState73, UMKC56 No. 25NotreDame93, Mount St.Mary's 67 EAST Bryant80,Army73 Villanova73,fflinois 59 LIU Brooklyn83, Maine70 Navy84,VMI66 Rutgers60, NewHampshire 56 SaintJoseph's68, Loyola(Md.) 42 Harfford79,HolyCross61 NJIT68,St.Francis(NY)66 Penn59,Marist42 Louisville94,Indiana74 SOUTH Winthrop96,MarsHil 51 Evansville65,Belmont62 Louisiana-Monroe 82, Northwestern St.74 MIDWEST Dayton56,Bowling Green52 lowaSt.73, UMKC56 NotreDam e93, MountSt. Mary's 67 WichitaSt.77, Seton Hall 68 Xavier66,IUPUI43 Kansas St. 50,Bradley 47 S. DakotaSt.62,Saint Louis55 lowa67,AlcornSt.44 E. Michigan45,Michigan42 Creighton90, SouthDakota88,2OT SOUTHWE ST TCU80, Furman69 Baylor77,TexasA&M6 FARWEST Arizona87 UtahValley56 Boise St.78,AdamsSt.49 IdahoSt.67,GrandCanyon51 SanJoseSt. 74,Saint Katherine 63 UC Davis80, E.Illinois 70
Wo m e n's college Tuesday'sGames
FOOTBALL merica' s Lin
NFC Arizona (atSt. Louis) Clinches aplayoff spotwith: • Win and Dallas/Philadelphia gamedoes not endin atie OR • Win and Detroit lossandARIclinches strength of victorytiebreakeroverGreenBayOR • Win and Dertoit lossandGreenBaywin or tie GreenBay(at Buffalo) Clinches aplayoff spotwith: • Win and Dallaloss s andGreenBayclinches strengthofvictorytiebreakeroverDalas
Home team in CAPS Open Current 0/U Underdog Thursday RAMS 3 4 39Ht Cards Sunday CHIEFS 10Ht 10 41Ht Raiders RAVEN S 13Ht 13Ht 451/2 Jaguars FALCON S 2Ht 54 Steelers RODEO COLTS 6'/z 6'/z 49'/z Texans HOCKEY Bengal s 1 P K 441/2 B ROW NS Professional PATRIO TS 7Ht Tat 48Ht Dolphins National Finals Rodeo PANTHE RS 5 Bucs NHL GIANTS BHt BHt 46Ht Washington NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Tuesday atThomas& MackCenter,LasVegas Packers 5 5 50/2 BILLS AH TimesPST Sixth Round 7'/z 7' / z 43'/z LIONS Vikings Bareback riding: 1. AustinFoss,Terrehonne, Jets 42'/z PK 1 TITANS EASTERN CONFERENCE Ore., 86 points onBeutler 8 SonRodeo's Movie Broncos 3'/z 4 51 CHARG ERS Atlantic Division Madness ,$19,002;2.BobbyMote,Culver,Ore.,83.0, SEAHA WKS 9Ht 10 38Ht 49ers GP W L DT Pts GF GA $15,018;3. (tie) CalebBennett, Tremonton, Utah, and EAGLES 3Ht 3Ht 55I/2 Cowboys Detroit 2 8 17 6 5 3 9 8 8 7 0 JessyDavis,Power, Mont.; andTilden Hooper, CarMonday Tampa Bay 29 18 8 3 3 9101 77 thage,Texas, 81,$8,071each; 6. (tie) KayceeFeild, Saints 3 3 541/2 BEARS Montreal 3 0 18 10 2 38 77 77 Spanis hFork,Utah,and WillLowe,Canyon,Texas, Toronto 2 7 15 9 3 3 3 9 3 8 0 80, $1,532 each.World standings: 1. KayceeFeild, Boston 28 15 12 1 3 1 72 72 NFL $201,807;2. Austin Foss,3162,408; 3. StevenPeeFlorida 2 6 11 8 7 2 9 5 8 6 8 hles, $145,932;4. BobbyMote, $143,581; 5. Justin Ottawa 27 11 11 5 27 70 74 NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE McDaniel, S121,981; 6. TimO'Connell, S119,900; Buffalo 2 8 10 16 2 2 2 4 8 8 5 AH Times PST 7. Will Lowe,$115,104; 8. RichmondChampion, Metropolitan Division $110,470;9. WinnRatliff, $103,076;10.StevenDent, GP W L DT PIs GF GA AMERICAN CONFERENCE $93,633;11.JakeVold, $92,713; 12. CalebBennet, P ittsburgh 2 7 1 8 6 3 3 9 8 8 6 4 East $92,296;13.TildenHooper, $86,570; 14.JessyDavis, W L T pm pF pA N .Y. Islanders 28 19 9 0 3 8 9 0 7 9 $75,757;15.J.R.Vezain, $70,208. ngton 27 13 10 4 3 0 79 74 10 3 0 769 401 267 Washi Steer wrestling: 1.K.C.Jones, Decatur, Texas, N .Y.Rangers 26 12 10 4 2 8 77 76 7 6 0 538 314 260 NewJersey 29 11 13 5 2 7 68 83 3.5 seconds,S19,002; 2. Wyatt Smith, Rexhurg, Ida7 6 0 538 281 241 P hiladelphia 27 9 1 3 5 2 3 7 0 8 5 ho, 3.6,$15,018;3. ClaytonHass, Terrell, Texas,3.7, 2 11 0 154 214 349 Columbus 27 10 15 2 2 2 64 90 $11,340; 4.Dru Melvin, Hehron,Neh., 4.1,$7,969; South 5. BrayArmes,Ponder, Texas, 4.2, $4,904; 6. (tie) Ty C arolina 27 8 16 3 1 9 5 9 7 6 W L T Pct PF PA Erickson,Helena,Mont., andSethBrockman,WheatWESTERN CONFERENCE Indianapol i s 9 4 0 692 407 307 Central Division land,Wyo.,4.8,$1,532each. World slandings: 1. 7 6 0 538 314 260 GP W L DT Pts GF GA LukeBranquinho,$128,976; 2. NickGuy,$124,341;3. Houston 2 11 0 154 220 374 Chicago 2 8 19 8 1 3 9 8 8 5 5 TrevorKnowles,$123,066;4.CaseyMartin, $102,959; Tennessee 2 11 0 154 199 356 Nashville 2 7 18 7 2 3 8 7 3 5 4 5. K.C.Jones,$101,058;6. Kyle Irwin, $100,653;7. Jacksonvile North St. Loui s 2 8 18 8 2 3 8 8 0 6 5 ClaytonHass,$94,353;8. BrayArmes, $85,153; 9. 2 9 15 9 5 3 5 6 9 6 6 CurtisCassidy,S84,421;10. DruMelvin, $80,399;11. W L T Pct PF PA WInnipeg SethBrockman,$73,468; 12.ColeEdge,$72,424;13. 8 4 1 654 281 289 Minnesota 26 15 10 1 3 1 76 65 Dallas 28 10 13 5 25 81 100 WyattSmith,$72,206;14.DakotaEldridge, $69,452; 8 5 0 615 362 319 2 8 9 13 6 2 4 7 2 9 2 15. TyErickson,$66,568. 8 5 0 615 356 255 Colorado PacificDivision Team roping:1.AaronTsinigine, TubaCity, Ariz/ 7 6 0 538 276 270 GP W L DT Pts GF GA Clay O'Brien Cooper, Gardnervile, Nev.,4.0seconds, West 2 9 18 6 5 4 1 8 5 7 9 $19,002; 2.TurtlePowel, Stephenvile, Texas/Dakota W L T Pct PF PA Anaheim Vancouver 2 9 18 9 2 3 8 8 8 8 1 Kirchenschlager,MorganMill, Texas, 4.2, $15,018; Denver 10 3 0 .769 385 293 Calgary 29 17 10 2 36 90 76 3. Jake Barnes,Scottsdale, Ariz./Junior Nogueira, SanDiego 8 5 0 .615 293 272 SanJose 3 0 15 11 4 34 86 81 ScottsdaleAri , z.,4.4, S11,340;4. ClayTryan,Bilings, KansasCity 7 6 0 .538 291 241 LosAnge l e s 2 8 14 9 5 3 3 7 2 6 0 Mont./JadeCorkill, Fallon, Nev.,5.0, $7,969; 5. Tom Oakland 2 11 0 .154 200 350 Arizona 28 10 15 3 23 66 90 Richards,Hum boldt, Ariz./Cesardela Cruz,Tucson, NATIONAL CONFERENCE Edmonton 2 8 7 16 5 1 9 6 2 96 Ariz., 5.3, $4,904;6. ColemanProctor, Pryor,Okla./ East JakeLong,Coff eyviff e,Kan.,5.5,$3,065.World W L T Pd PF PA Tuesday'sGames standings (beaders): 1. ClayTryan,$147,113; 2. Philadelphia 9 4 0 692 389 309 Chicago3, NewJersey2, SO TrevorBrazile,$129,290;3. Dustin Bird, $124,663; Dallas 9 4 0 692 343 301 Columbus3, Philadelphia2, OT 4. Turtle Poweff,$122,332; 5. ColemanProctor, N.Y.Giants 4 9 0 308 293 326 Buffalo1,LosAngeles0 $116,780;6. RileyMinor,S111,393;7. ErichRogers, Washington 4, Calgary1 3 10 0 231 244 346 Toronto $110,923;8.CharlyCrawford, $99,756;9 JakeBarnes, Montreal3,Vancouver1 South $99,619;10.BrandonBeers, $97,267;11. KalehDrigWashi n g ton5,TampaBay3 W L T Pd PF PA gers, $96,028;12.LukeBrown, $92,065; 13.Aaron 5, N.Y.Islanders4 5 8 0 385 328 342 Minnesota Tsinigine,$87,076;14.NickSartain, $80,028;15. Tom Atlanta 5, Dallas 2 NewOrleans 5 8 0 385 333 359 Winnipeg Richards, $74,713.World standings (beelers):1. Nashvi l le 3, Colorado0 4 8 1 346 269 341 Jade Corkill, $147,113;2. TravisGraves,$129,290; Carolina on2 2 11 0 154 237 348 SanJose5, Edmont 3. PaulEaves,$127,755;4. Dakota Kirchenschlager, TampaBay Today'sGam es North $118,972; 5.JakeLong, 3117,780;6. BradyMinor, TorontoatDetroit, 5 p.m. W L T pm pF pA Edmontonat Anaheim,7p.m. $111,393;7. CoryPetska,S111,270;8. Shay Carroll, 10 3 0 769 423 304 $100,815;9. JimRossCooper, $97,267; 10.Patrick Thursday'sGames 9 4 0 692 265 224 Chicag Smith, $96,028;11.Junior Nogueira,$89,611;12. oatBoston,4p.m. 6 7 0 462 263 281 CalgaryatBufalo, 4 p.m. Kollin VonAhn,$89,065; 13.RichSkelton, $80,028; 14. ClayO'BrienCooper, $79,258; 15. Cesarde la 5 8 0 385 281 378 NewJerseyatPhiladelphia, 4 p.m. Cruz,$66,484. West ColumbusatWashington, 4p.m. Saddle bronc riding:1. JakeWright, Milford, W L T Pct PF PA Los AngelesatOttawa,4:30p.m. Utah, 79 points onPowderRiver Rodeo'sRich N Arizona 10 3 0 769 275 238 Carolinaat TampaBay,4:30p.m. Fancy, $19,002;2.CodyDeMoss,Heflin,La.,78.5, Seattle 9 4 0 692 322 235 N.Y.Islandersat St.Louis, 5p.m. $15,018; 3. (tie) Heith DeMo ss, Heflin, La., and SanFrancisco 7 6 0 538 244 268 WinnipegatColorado,6 p.m. SpencerWright, Milford, Utah,78,S9,654each; 5. St. Louis 6 7 0 462 285 285 NashvilleatArizona,6p.m. Tyler Corrington,Hastings,Minn., 77.5,34,904; 6. Minnes otaatSanJose,7:30p.m. (tie) Cort Scheer,Elsmere, Neb., andDustin FlunThursday's Game AH-StarVoting dra, Pincher Creek,Alberta, 76.5, $1,532each. ArizonaatSt. Louis, 5:25p.m. Announced Dec.9 World standings: 1. HeithDeMoss, $141,766; 2. Sunday'sGames AH-Star Game:Jan.25,Columbus,Ohio TaosMuncy,$141,437;3. CortScheer, $141,031; 4. Oaklandat KansasCity,10 a.m. Goaltenders: Corey Crawford„chicago, CodyWright,$130,394;5.WadeSundeff ,$124,944; Pittsburghat Atlanta,10a.m. 311,166; CareyPrice, Montreal, 298,440; Henrik 6. JacobsCrawley,$120,450; 7. SpencerWright, WashingtonatN.Y.Giants, 10a.m. Lundqvi st, NY Rangers,161,171; Marc-AndreFleury, $110,069; 8.Tyler Corrington,$104,052; 9. Cody Miami atNewEngland,10 a.m. Pittsburgh,156,592; PekkaRinne,Nashvile,138,757; DeMoss,S96,719; 10. JakeWright, $86,767; 11. Houstonat Indianapolis,10 a.m. Jonathan Qu i c k, LosAngeles,107,751; JaroslavHalCole Elshere, $82,449;12. ChadFerley, 381,674;13. Jacksonvilleat Baltimore,10 a.m. a k, NY Isl a nders,100,934; Sergei Bobrovsky, ColumBradley Harter, $77,900;14.JesseWright, $77,495; GreenBayat Buffalo,10a.m. hus,92,765;JonasHiller,Calgary,89,288;Jhonas 15. DustinFlundra,$77,133. Tampa Ba y at C ar ol i n a,10 a. m . Enroth ,Buff alo,89,038. Tie-down roping:1.AdamGray,Seymour,Texas, incinnatiatCleveland,10 a.m. Defensemen: DuncanKeith,Chicago,361,830; 7.3 seconds, $19,002.2. ClintCooper, Decatur, Texas, C Denver at San D ie go,1:05 p. m . P,Kr Subhan, Montreal, 351,726; Brent Seabrook, 7.9, $15,018. 3.ShaneHanchey, Sulphur, La., 8.1, N.Y.Jetsat Tennessee1:05p.m. Chicago,275,990;Kris Letang, Pittsburgh,228,964; $11,3 40.4.CodyOhl,Hico,Texas,8.2,$7,969.5.Tuf SanFranciscoatSeattle, 1:25p.m. Andrel Markov,Montreal, 181,220;MarkGiordano, Cooper ,Decatur,Texas,8.4,$4,904.6.RyanWatkins, Minnesota Calgary, 172,449;SheaWeber, Nashvile, 171,415; at D et r oi t , 1:25 p. m . Bluff Dale,Texas,9.4,$3,065.Worldstandings:1. Dallas atPhiladelphia,5:30p.m. Erik Karlsson,Ottawa,158,119;Zdeno Chara, Boston, Tuf Cooper,$164,652.2. Trevor Brazile, $131,854.3. 152,381;DrewDoughty, LosAngeles,142,873. Monday'sGame Matt Shiozawa, $131,541.4. MarlyYates,$124,257.5. Forwards:Zemgus Gir gensons, Buf falo, Cade Swor,$115,243.6. ShaneHanchey,$104,207.7. NewOrleansatChicago,5:30p.m. 803,805 ;PatrickKane,Chicago,375,758;Jonathan Clint Robinson,$102,137.8. CodyOhl, $100,222.9. Toews, Chicago,367r962; SidneyCrosby, PittsPLAYOFFSCENARIOS HunterHerrin,$99,309.10.ClintCooper,$96,976.11. burgh,353,132;EvgeniMalkin, Pittsburgh,222,791; AdamGray,$88,403. 12.Timber Moore, $85,472.13. Max Pacioretty,Montreal, 189,727;Patrick Sharp, AFC RyanWatkins,$72,283.14.TysonDurfey,$72,209. Chica go,186,198;Steven Stamkos,Tampa Bay, DenverBroncos(at SanDiego) 15. Reese Riemer,$66,317. 160,376;TylerSeguin, Dallas,158,814;Pavel DatClinchesAFCWest division with: Barrel racing:1. Britany Diaz, Solenr N.D., syuk, Detroit, 134,276.TomasPlekanec, Montreal, 13.89 seconds,$19,002;2.KaleyBass,Kissimmee, • Win ortie 133,068;MarianHossa,Chicago,114,473; Vladimir Clinches afirst-round byewith: Fla., 13.90,$15,018; 3.Christy Loflin, Franktown, Tarasenko, St. Louis,100,436; JakuhVoracek, Phil• Win and Indianapolis lossandCincinnati lossand adelphia,89,178;Rick Nash, NYRangers, 88,527; Colo.,13.91,$11,340;4. FaffonTaylor, Whitesboro, Texas,14.08,$7,969; 5. Trula Churchill, Valentine, Pittsburghloss ortie OR JohnTavares,NY Islanders,86,273;AlexOvechkin, Neh., 14.13,$4,904; 6. JanaBean,Fort Hancock, • Win and Indianapolis lossandCincinnati lossand Washington, 83,706; Henrik ZetterIerg, Detroit, Texas,14.18. Worldstandings: 1. Fallon Taylor, Denverclinches strengthof victory tiebreakerover 83,178;Tyler Ennis,Buffalo,82,339; MartlnSt, Lou$203,803; 2.KaleyBass, $175,201; 3. LisaLock- Pittsburgh is, NYRangers, 80,477. hart, S173,261; 4. Michele McLeod, 1134r052; Clinches aplayoffspot with: 5. Britany Diaz, $131,604; 6. KassidyDennison, • Miami lossortie andHoustonloss ortie andCinBASKETBALL $126,072;7.NancyHunter,$122,372;8. SherryCer- cinnati lossandPitsburghloss OR vi, $117,261; 9.Christy Loflin, $107,980;10.Mary • Miami loss ortie andHoustonlossortie andBaltiWalker, $107,681;11. Trula Churchill, S107,136; morelossandClevelandlossortie OR Men's college 12. CarleePierce,$104,529;13. ChristineLaughlin, • Miami loss ortie andHoustonlossortie andBaltiPac-12 $93,135; 14. JanaBean,$86,353; 15. Samantha morelossandPittsburgh win AH TimesPST Lyne,$70,577. New England(vs. Miami) Bull riding:1. AaronPass, Dallas, Texas,83.5 ClinchesAFCEast division with: Tuesday'sGame points onHoneycutt Rodeo's Pair a Dice,S19,002; • Win ortie Arizona87,UtahValley 56 2. SageKimzey,Strong City, Okla., 73.5, $15,018; Today'sGames Clinches a Iirst-round bye wi t h: 3. BeauHill, WestGlacier, Mont., 72,$11,340; 4. • Win and Utah atBYU , 6p.m. dianapolis lossandPittsburghloss ortie (tie) TreyBenton ffl, RockIsland, Texas; CodyTeel, and CincinInnati C olorado St. at C ol orado,6p.m. lossortie OR Kountze, Texas;J.W.Harris, Mullin, Texas; TimBingngtonSt.vs.Gonzaga,8p.m. andIndianapolis lossandPittsburgh loss or Washi ham,Honeyville,Utah;JoshKoschel,Nunn,Colo.; ti•eWin UC RiyersideatUCLA, 8p.m. andDenverloss Reid Barker,Comfort, Texas;JoeFrost, Randlett, WyomingatCalifornia, 8 p.m. Clinches aplayoffspot with: Utah; Brennon Eldred, Sulphur, Okla.; EffiotJacohy, • Buffalo sGames loss ortie andCincinnati lossandPittsburgh PepperdineatAriSaturday' Frederickshurg,Texas; TyWallace, Collbran, Colo.; zonaSt., 11a.m. Tyler Smith,Fruita, Colo.,andJordanSpears, Red- loss andBaltimore lossandHouston lossortie OR Utah atKansas,12:15 p.m. or tie andCincinnati lossandPitsding, Calif.,NS.World slandings:1. SageKimzey, • Buffalo loss MississippiSt.atOregonSt.,1 p.m. 222,546; 2.TreyBenton III, $159,874;3. CodyTeel, burghlossandKansas City lossortie andSanDiego MichiganatArizona,2:15p.m. l o ss OR $128,947; 4. JoeFrost, $123,500; 5.AaronPass, . ColoradoatColorado, 3p.m. • Buffalo loss ortie andHouston lossortie andKan- N $104,550; 6.TimBingham,$100,652; 7. BeauHil, Denverat Stanford, 3p.m. $97,807; 8. J.W.Harris, $93,244; 9. Elliot Jacohy, sas Citylossortie andSanDiegolossandBaltimore Oregon vs.Illinois,4 p.m. PrincetonatCalifornia, 5:30p.m. $80,057;10.TyWallace, $78,917; 11.BrennonEl- loss Indianapolis (vs. Houston) dred, $77,830;12.JordanSpears, $77,043;13. Reid WashingtonSt.at SantaClara, 7p.m. Barker,S76,227;14.Tyler Smith,$73,105; 15.Josh ClinchesAFCSouth division with: GonzagaatUCLA, 7p.m. Koschel$72,837. , • Win ortie Army atSouthern Cal, 7:30 p.m. Favorite
TOP 25 No. 4TexasA&M70,SMU62 EAST Penn65,SaintJoseph's51 Hofstra62,NJIT47 RhodeIsland56, Boston U.48 SetonHall82 lllinois 72 George Washington72,Georgetown60 EastCarolina82Loyola(Md) 33 Fordham 72, CCSU36 Bucknell85,UMBC41 MIDWEST
Evansville 81OaklandCity 40 Princeton85, Michigan55 E.Michigan88,Madonna68 W. Illinois75,Bradley63 SouthDakota81,Valparaiso 62 SOUTHWE ST TexasA&M70,SMU62 FARWEST
BYU64, Weber St.53 SanDiego66, SanDiegoSt.44 SouthernCal85, CSNorthridge74,OT Washin gtonSt.59,Gonzaga58 ColoradoSt.75, S.DakotaTech39
USATodayWomen'sTop25CoachesPoll Record Pts Pvs 1. SouthCarolina(24) 8- 0 792 2 2. Uconn (6) 6-1 7 6 9 3 3.Texas(2) 7-0 725 4 4. NotreDame 8-1 691 1 9-0 68 0 5 5.TexasA&M 8-0 64 6 6 6. NorthCarolina 7. Stanford 5-2 58 4 9 8. Kentucky 8-1 5 5 6 13 9. Baylor 6-1 5 3 0 11 8-1 5 0 4 7 10. Louisville 7-2 4 7 0 10 11. Maryland 12. Duke 5-3 42 8 8 13. Tenne ssee 6-2 4 1 8 14 14. Oregon St. 7-0 33 3 18 15. Nebraska 7-1 3 0 9 15 6-1 2 6 9 17 16. Oklahoma St. 17. California 7-1 26 3 12 18. Georgia 1 0-0 256 2 3 19. Rutgers 7-1 2 3 4 20 20. WestVirginia 6-1 1 8 9 21 5-2 15 8 16 21. MichiganSt. 22. MississippiSt. 8-0 140 25 22. Syracuse 6-1 1 4 0 22 24. Iowa 7-2 10 5 19 25. DePalu 6-2 6 4 24 Others receiving votes: St.John's38, James Madison26,Northwestern14, FloridaSt. 11,Oklahoma11,GreenBay 8, Michigan7, SouthFlorida 7, W.Kentucky7, Seton Hall 6,Washington4, George Washington 3,Dayton2, ArizonaSt, 1, Tulane 1, Washmgton St.1.
DEALS Transactions BASEBA LL
AmericanLeague BALTIMORE ORIOLES— AssignedINFSteveLomhardozzi andLHPPat Mccoyoutright toNorfolk(IL). BOSTONRED SOX — Assigned INF/OF Jemile Weeks outright to Pawtucket (IL). CHICAG OWHITESOX—Traded RHPChris Bassitt, C JoshPhegleyandINFsRangelRaveloandMarcus Semiento Oaklandfor RHPs Jef Samardzia andMichaelYnoa. CLEVELANDINDIANS — DesignatedRHPBryan Priceforassignment. OAKLANDATHLETICS— DesignatedRHPJorgede Leonforassignment. National League CHICAGO CUBS— Traded RHPs Jeferson Meia andZackGodleytoArizonafor CMiguel Montero. LOSANGELESDODGERS— TradedCDrewButera to theL.A.Angelsforaplayer to henamedorcashconsiderations. SANDIEG OPADRES—Agreedto termswith INF Clint Barmes onaone-year contract. WASHINGTONNATIONALS — Named Tommy Shieldsco-minorleaguefield coordinator. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NBA — FinedUtahCEnesKanter $25,000 for throwinghis mouthpieceinto the spectator stands duringMonday's game. FOOTBL AL National Football League BUFFALO BILLS—SignedWRTohaisPalmer tothe practicesquad. CINCINN ATI BENGALS— PlacedLBVontazeBurfict oninjuredreserve.Activated QBA.J. Mccarronfrom the non-foothalin l jurylist. CLEVELANDBROWNS — Released DLChristian Tupoufromthe practicesquad.SignedDBKendall James to thepracticesquad. MIAMIDOLPHINS— Placed S Louis Delmason injuredreserve.SignedLBJakeKnottfromthepractice squad. NEWORLE ANS SAINTS— ReleasedWRJoeMorgan. OAKLANDRAIDERS— WaivedLBJamarChaney. SANDIEG OCHARGERS—SignedPMat McBriar. Re-signedCJeffBacatothepractice squad. SANFRANCISCO49ERS— PlacedTEVanceMcDonald oninjuredreserve. ActiatedLBNaVorro BowmanfromthePUPlist. TENNE SSEETITANS—Placed CBBlidi Wreh-Wilson oninjured reserve. SignedOLJamonMeredith. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — ReleasedLBsSteve BeauharnaisandEverette Brownadn CBGreg Ducre. SignedLBTrevardo Wiliams fromthe practice squad, LB Ja'Gared Davis from Kansas City's practicesquad and RB Michael Hil andLBJustin Jacksontothepractice squad. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL —SuspendedWinnipegFEvander Kanetwo gamesfor hoardingduring Sunday's game. Fined N.Y. IslandersFAnders Lee$2,286.29 forelbowing during Saturday'sgame. ANAHEIM DUCKS—Agreed to termswith Gffya Bryzgaloon v aone-yearcontract. CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS — AssignedFJoakim Nordstrom to Rockford (AHL). ActivatedFPatrick Sharp from injured reserve. NEWJERSEYDEVILS— Placed F Patrik Eliason injured reserve,retroactiveto Dec. 6. Recalled GKeith KinkaidandFReid Boucher from Albany(AHL). AssignedGScott Clemmensento A
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
NBAROUNDUP
C3
NHL ROUNDUP
Toews, Kanesmre in shootout to lift 'Hawks The Associated Press The Associated Press A UBURN H I L LS ,
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— LaMarcus Aldridge might never become the leading scorer in Portland Trail Blaz-
ers history. He's got a real chance to put second place out of reach, though. Aldridge scored 23 points
Sabres 1, Kings 0: BUF-
NEWARK, N.J. — Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane scored in a shootout,
FALO, NY. — Tyler Ennis'
and the Chicago Blackhawks rallied late to earn
m ade 34 saves for his first shutout since April 13,2013. Capitals 5, Lightning 3:
their seventh straight victory with a 3-2 win over the New
third-period, power-play goal lifted Buffalo. Jhonas Enroth
TAMPA, Fla. — Braden Holt-
Jersey Devils on Tuesday by made 33 saves and Alex night. Ovechkin scored twice as Bryan Bickell and Duncan Washington beat Tampa Bay. Keith had goals in regulation Jets 5, Stars 2: DALLAS for the Blackhawks, whose — Winnipeg rookieAdam winning streak matches the Lowry scored twice in the NHL high for this season. second period to lead WinScott Darling made 22 saves, nipeg over Dallas. Mathieu including two stops in the Perreault, Blake W h eeler shootout. and Michael Frolik also
in Portland's 98-86 victory over the Detroit Pistons on
Tuesday night, including a crucial pair of baskets to end Detroit's
fourth-quarter rally. He
The loss spoiled the first
scored for the Jets.
now
has
NHL start for Devils goalie
Maple Leafs 4, Flames 1:
1 1,347
ca-
NeXtuy
Keith Kincaid, who made 37 saves.
TORONTO — Jonathan Bernier stopped 32 shots, James
Portland at Terry Porter. Minnesota
Jordin Tootoo and Stephen Gionta scored for New
van Riemsdyk scored the winning goal early in the
reer points, 17 more than
"It's a bi g honor to
pass Terry, because he
y i l hen:
5 p.m. today Ty.CSNNW Radie:
c hise a n d KRCQ AM690 a b i g -time player in this league," Aldridge said after helping Portland win its fifth straight. "He means a lot to the city of Portland, and to
hard work is paying off. "It also means I've been with this franchise for a long time."
At 29, Aldridge isn't likely to pick up the 6,693 points he
needs to catch Clyde Drexler, so he's settling on short-term goals. "Right now, I'm just focused on getting these wins on the
Van Gundy said. "We need some serious adjustments into in 1993-94. Those were both the way we play and who we aging teams, with the second play. When you've lost 13 in a group marking the end of the row, everyone and everything Bad Boys era at the Palace. is on the table." The current Pistons haven't The pattern of the game had a winning season or won was established early, as a playoff game in seven years. Portland was able to convert "I'm not a patient, under- most possessions into good standing man, and I've never scoring opportunities, while been in this situation," said the Pistons struggled to finish
Washington d-Cleveland Chicago Milwaukee Miami Brooklyn Orlando Boston Indiana Charlotte NewYork Detroit Philadelphia
Western Conference W L 18 2 17 4 17 4 16 4 15 5 15 6 16 7 12 11 Sacrame nto 11 I1 NewOrleans 10 10 Denver 9 12 Oklahoma City 8 I3 LA. Lakers 6 16 Utah 6 16 Minnesota 4 16 d-diViSIOlle t ader
d-Golden State d-Memphis d-Portland Houston LA. Clippers SanAntonio Dallas Phoenix
Tttes day' sGames Clevelartd105,Torortto101 Portland 98, Detroit 86 NewOrleans104,NewYork93 Oklahoma City 114, Milwaukee101 Memphis114,Dalas105 Miami103,Phoenix 97 Utah100,SartAntonio 96 LA. LakeIs 98, Sacramento 95
Today'sGames
WashingtonatOrlando, 4p.m. LA. Clippers atIndiana,4p.m. Bostonal Charlotte, 4 p.m. Philadelphia atAtlanta, 4:30 p.m. BrooklynatChicago, 5p.m. NewOrleansatDallas, 5 p.m. Portlandat Minnesota, 5p.m. NewYorkatSart Antonio, 5:30p.m. Houstonat GoldenState, 7:30p.m. Miami atDenver, 7:30p.m.
ThItrsday'sGames
ClevelandatOklahomaCity, 5p.m. Housto natSacramento,7:30p.m.
Trail Blazers 98, Pistons 86
900 810 t'/z 810 1'/z 800 2 750 3 714 3'/z 696 3'/r 522 7yr 500 8 500 8 429 9yt 381 IO'/z 273 13 273 13 200 14
set.
PORTLAND (98) Batum3-7e-08,Aldridge8-216-623,Lopez3-9 0-0 6, Lillard 6-141-2 14, Matthews8-12 0-0 19, Blake2-30-05, Kama n 7-10 0-014, Crabbe4-50-0 9, Freeland 0-30-00. Totals 41-847-8 98. DETROIT (86) Singler3-70-08, Smith4-102-2 10, Drumm ond 3-12 4-710,Jennings0-5 1-11, Caldwell-Pope4-7 2-2I1,Monroe10-222-222,Mart in0-20-00,Augustin 2-80-0 5, Butler 6-141-t 13, Dinwiddie1-6 1-1 3,Jerebko1-40-03. Totals 34-9713-1686. Porlland 33 22 21 22 — 98 Detroit 22 24 16 24 — 86 3-PointGoals—Portland9-21(Matthews3-6, Batum 2-6,Aldridget-t, Blake 1-1, Crabbe1-2, Lilard 1-5), Detroit 5-22(Singler2-4, Caldwell-Pope1-2, Jerebko1-2,Augustitt1-3, Martin0-1, Jennings0-2, Dinwiddie0-4, Butler0-4). Fouledout—None. Rebounds —Portland53(Aldridge, Lopez11), Detroit 57 (Drummond 15). Assists—Portland25(Lilard, Blake 6), Detroit 23(Jertnittgs, Augustitt 6).Total FoulsPorlland12,Detroit 8.Technicals—Portland defensive threesecond.A—12,813(22,076).
Cavaliers105, Raptors101 TORONTO(101)
Ross8-131-118,AJohltson 5-100-010, Valartciunas6-76-618, Lowry6-182-216, Fields2-20-0 4, Patterson5-7 0-012,Wiliams2-81-1 6,Vasquez 1-3 0-03, Hayes 1-1 0-02, J.Johnson6-130-01z Totals 42-8210-10101.
CLEVELAND (105) James12-219-9 35,Love6-15 4-417, vareiao 4-10 e-0 8, Irving5-122-2 13, Marion0-0 0-00, Waiters 7-101-2 18,Thompson 3-5 2-4 8, Dellavedova2-4 0-0 6,Jones0-2 0-0 0. Totals 39-79 18-21 105. Toronto 33 30 25 13 — 101 Cleveland 26 29 26 24 — 105
Enforcers
like Gretzky said, we want guys to be able to protect us," Continued from C1 Schultz said. "(Sidney) Cros"They just wanted to take by doesn't want to be protectfighting out of the game," ed. By the league, yes. But
Lillard rattled home a 3-point-
NEW ORLEANS — Tyreke
Schultz said. " It's not t he
er to keep the Pistons at bay. "It was disappointing that Detroit made that run at the end, but I liked the way we
Evans scored 27 points and
same game."
Anthony Davis had 18 as New
B ut no t
finished the game and took care of our business," said Trail B lazers coach Terry Stotts.
Jazz100, Spurs 96
Orleans handed reeling New York its ninth straight loss. Thunder 114, Bucks 101:
worse one. The true signal that the
TV broadcasts, was known as "The Grim Reaper" with
OKLAHOMA CITY — Kevin
changed comes from Schul-
Durant scored 23 points in his first home game of the sea-
Heat103, Suns97
MIAMI (103) Dertg9-122-423,McRoberts4-50-010, Bosh14-21 2-2 34,Cole5-90-0 10,Wade7-15 2-416, Chalmers 26 H 4, Williams 00 H 0, Napier03 000, JErtttis 1-22-24, Haslem I-70-OZTalals43-808-12103. UTAH (100) PHOENIX (97) Hayward 7-136-920, Favors10-20t-t 21, Kanter Mark.Morris6-114-5 17,Plum6-90-012,Burke3-91-28, Burks5-0 3-414,Booker leeTucker1-40-03, I-30-02, Bl e dsoe 2-u 0-04, e.eragic7-150-1 3-50-06, Hood 2-53-47, Exum2-50-06, Gobert2-2 16, Marc.uorris 10-130-0 25, Green6-11 2-3 19, 2-26, Ingles 0-10 00. Totals40-801622100. 0-2 0-0 0,Tolliver 3-60-0 9, T.Enrtis1-1 0-02. SanAntonio 22 2 1 29 24 — 96 LelI 37-776-9 97. utsh 21 23 34 22 — 100 Totals Miami 28 18 27 30 — 103 Phoenix 25 26 21 25 — 97
Lakers 98, Kings 95
Pelicans104, Knicks 93 NEWYORK(93) Anthony6-113-317, Acy2-3I-0 4, Stoudemire u-t8 4-626, calderon 3-50-08, shumpert 1-6 0-0 2, Aldrich1-20-02, Jasmit2-40-04, h J Smith6-18 3-417, Prigioni 2-30-0 6,Hardaway Jr 2-5 0-0 5, Dalembert1-30-0 z Totals 37-7810-13 93. NEw ORLE ANSI104) Babbit2-6 t 0-06,Davis 6-146-91I, Asik 7-102-4 16, Holiday6-10 1-1 13,Evans11-15 4-4 27,Anderson
Leaders Through Tuesday's Games
Bryant,LAL Harden,HOU Davis,NOR James,CLE Griffin, LAC Curry,GO L Anthony,NYK Aldridge,PO R Bosh,MIA Butler,CHI Gay,SAC
Thompson, GOL Irving,CLE Ellis, DAL
LowIy,TOR
Jordan,LAC Gasol,CHI Drummond,DET 0 5H0, Aiinca 1-12 24. Totals 40802026104. New York 27 25 21 20 — 93 Chandler,DAL New Orleans 28 2 6 23 27 — 104 Vucevic,ORL Randolph,MEM Asik, NOR Thunder 114, Bucks101 Grizzlies114, Mavericks105 Davis,NOR Duncan,SAN MILWAUKEE (101) DALLAS (105} Antetokoultmpo 4-118-1t 17, Parker7-13t-215, Parsons10-184-5 30, Nowilzki 4-17 3-3 11, Love,CLE Sanders 2-72-2 6,Knight 2-103-49, Mayo6-13 6-6 Chandler0-10-00, Nelson6-92-218, Ellis 1-110-0 18, Pachulia3-51-t 7, Dudley4-9 0-08, Middleton 2, Wright2-21-2 5,Harris2-41-2 6, Crowder5-60-0 2-7 3-4 7,Bayless3-6 5-5 11,Marshall 1-3 0-03. t3, Barea7-16 0-017, VilanuevaI-1 0-0 3,Smith Rondo,BO S Wall, WAS Totals 34-8429-35101. 0-00-00. Totals38-85tt-t4105. LawsonDEN OKLAHOMA CITY (114) MEMPHIS(114) Duran t7-u 8-823,Ibaka5-55-5I5,Adams2-5 Allen 5-8 3-313, Randolph6-18 5-6 17, Gasol Paul, LAC 0-04, Westbrook8-1612-1528,Roberson1-30-02, 9-1412-1330, Conley9-132-2 22, Lee2-5 0-0 4, James,CLE Lamb2-72-2 6,Jones2-6 0-05, Perkins2-91-2 5, Prince4-91-1 11,Leuer 1-40-03, Udrih4-71-210, Curry,GO L Morrow3-50-06, Jackson8-14t-018, Thoma s0-0 Carter1-70-03, Koufos0-01-21, Calathes0-0 0-0 Lowry,TOR 0-00, Smith1-I 0-2 z Totals41-8228-34114. 0. Totals 41-8525-29 t14. Teague,ATL Milwaukee 31 21 26 23 — 101 Dallas 37 25 17 26 — 105 Williams,MIN oklahomacity 2 6 35 26 27 — 114 Memphis 34 22 36 22 — 114 Holiday,NOR 1-92-24, Rivers4-60-09,Cuttttingham243-47,Mekel
Stu Grimson, the color analyst on Nashville Predators'
SAN ANTO NIO(96) Leonard7-132-5 I6, Duncan10-163-4 23,Bonner 2-70-05,Joseph3-6 1-27, Green6-10 0-013, Ginobili 3-17 3-510,Diaw2-5 2-2 7, Belinelli 5-9 3-513, Baynes 1-10-0z Totals 39-8414-23 96.
SACRAME NTO(95) Gay7-187-823, Thompson1-5345, Evans3-32-2 8, Collisott11-182-826,McLemore3-76-715, Wiliams 2-42-66, Landry2-30-04,Stauskas2-7H4, Hollins 0-1 2-22,Sessions1-40-02. Totals32-7024-3795. LA. LAKERS (98) Johnson 3-u 2-210,Davis 5-51-4 11,Hil 3-80-0 6, Price1-5 0-02, Bryant0-27 8-8 32,Boozer6-13 3-615, Lin1-51-23, Young5-131-112, Sacre 2-3 0 04, Ellington1-61-23.Totals3896172598. Sacramento 29 2 6 26 14 — 95 L.A. Lakers 24 22 32 20 — 98
not by one of his teammates."
n e cessarily a
at the rim. Detroit, one of the
Summaries
Pct GB
bounced back from a loss at
Wild
straight baskets and Damian
to play, but Aldridge hit two
NBA SCOREBOARD
Pct GB 727 700 t 700 t 650 2 600 3 478 5yr 476 5'/z 421 6'/r 391 7'/r 368 7'/z 333 8'/r 250 10 174 I2'/z 136 13 100 13
b y M i nnesota. The
as Utah snapped a nine-game losing streak. Pelicans 104, Knicks 93:
troit within 81-77 with 7:12
Cavaliers 105, Raptors 101: son, leading Oklahoma City dy, who has never had a los- worst teams at scoring inside CLEVELAND LeBron to the victory. ing season or missed the play- despitethe presence of Josh James scored 35 points, inHeat 103, Suns 97: PHOEoffs in his NBA coaching ca- Smith, A n dr e D r u m mond cluding a tiebreaking 3-point- NIX — Chris Bosh scored 10 reer. "But I have to try to be a and Monroe, shot 44 percent er with 48 seconds remaining of his 34 points in the fourth little understanding, because in the paint in the first half. as Cleveland rallied to beat quarter, i n cluding s even most of these guys have nevPortland's defense slowly Toronto. straight down the stretch, as er been in a situation like this, took control in the third quarGrizzlies 114, Mavericks Miami snapped a four-game either. Confidence is low right ter, holding the Pistons to 22 105: MEMPHIS, Tenn. losing streak. now and getting worse every percent shooting (4 for 18) Marc Gasol scored 30 points Lakers 98, Kings 95: LOS game." and expanding the lead to as and Mike Conley added 22 as ANGELES — Kobe Bryant Greg Monroe had 22 points many as 17 points. It was 76- Memphis withstood 18 Dallas scored nine of his 32 points in and 10 rebounds for Detroit, 62 going into the fourth, but 3-pointers. the final 3:14, leading Los Anwhich only got 40 points from the Pistons finally put togethJazz 100, Spurs 96: SALT geles' fourth-quarter comeits starting lineup. er enough baskets and stops LAKE CITY — Derrick Fa- back. Carlos Boozer added "We've got two days off, to make a run. vors scored 21 points and 15 points for the Lakers, who and a lot of assessing to do," Monroe's layup pulled De- Gordon Hayward added 20 snapped a three-game skid.
W L t6 6 14 6 14 6 13 1 12 8 11 12 10 I1 8 11 9 14 7 I2 7 14 5 15 4 I9 3 19 2 18
Vancouver. Brendan G al-
Paul Sancya / The Associated Press
Detroit lost its 13th in a row, one short of the franchise record set in 1979-80 and tied
d-Toroltto d-Atlanta
T omas
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Kevin Connauton scored his first
intermission.
one of our tougher road trips, Portland's Robin Lopez shoots over Detroit's Andre Drummond on Tuesday night in Auburn Hills, and the next one is tough as Michigan. Lopez had 11 rebounds in the Trail Blazers' 98-86 victory. well."
Eastern Conference
Plekanec scored the goahead goal late in the third period to lead Montreal over
C anucks
trailed 3-0 after the first pe- Edmonton to win the back riod and 4-1 at the second end ofthe home-and-home
road," he said. "This has been
All TimesPST
back to back wins.
Canadiens 3, 1: MONTREAL —
lagher and Max Pacioretty goal of the season at 1:58 of also scored for the Canaovertime to l if t C olumbus diens, who snapped a threeto its fourth straight win. game losing streak. Boone Jenner scored in his Predators 3, Avalanche 0: career-best fourth straight DENVER — Filip Forsberg game, and Scott Hartnell scored 2:23 in and added a also had a goal. Sergei Bo- late assist, and Pekka Rinne brovsky made 19 saves. earned hi s t h i r d s h utout Wild 5, Islanders 4: ST. of the season as Nashville PAUL, Minn. — Nino Nie- blanked Colorado. derreiter tapped in the goSharks 5, Oilers 2: SAN ahead goal with 4:33 left and JOSE, Calif. — Joe Pavelski capped a furious comeback scored two goals as San Jose
pass him means that all the
Standings
second for Toronto.
Also on Tuesday: Blue Jackets 3, Flyers 2:
1110, FM-100.1;
Pistons coach Stan Van Gun-
Jersey. and Steve Bernier added two assists for the Devils, who were trying for
Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG 22 192 146 562 25.5
20 143 172 503 25.2 20 194 108 496 24.8 20 172 120 495 24.8 20 185 104 480 24.0 20 160 83 462 23.1 2I 180 89 480 2z9 20 173 89 446 2z3 21 166 96 460 21.9 18 126 123 391 217 20 150 114 432 21.6 19 140 67 402 21.2 20 142 93 416 20.8 23 184 77 468 20.3 22 148 112 443 20.1 Rebouttds G OFF DEF TOT AVG 20 67 I79 246 1Z3 17 41 162 203 11.9 22 94 166 260 11.8 23 99 171 270 u .7 19 64 159 223 11.7 2I 79 I53 232 0.0 16 65 106 171 10.7 20 56 156 212 10.6 19 54 I46 200 10.5 20 38 162 200 10.0
Assists
G
18 20 20 20 20 20 22 20 16 20
AST AVG 195 10.8 208 10.4 207 10.4 197 9.9 154 1.7 154 7 . 7 165 7.5 142 7.1 107 6 . 7 132 6.6
c ulture i n
t h e N H L h a s 2,113 career penalty minutes in his NHL career. He said tz's old haunt. For the first fighting still has a role in the time since the organization game, especially at home
was in its infancy, the Flyers games where one entertainopened the season without a ing scrum can shift momentrue enforceron their roster. tum and liven up the fans. "I think th e f i ght i tself, Heck, their biggest threat
might be goalie Ray Emery, who headlined a fight last season against Washington's unwilling goalie, Braden Holtby. "We've got some tough-
there is a purpose for it, and you can put your finger on that purpose," he said. "I think it makes sense to keep
ness on our team," Flyers
that reason."
that in the game, and I think
it's valuable to the game for
general manager Ron HexChicago Bla c khawks tall said. "We've got some forward Dan Carcillo said guys that can handle them- fights are not going to coms elves. But I t h i n k w h e n pletely vanish, either. "I don't think the mindyou look, there weren't a lot of fights in the preseason. less, senseless, go out and There are never any fights fight, rah-rah, for no reason, in the playoffs. In between, I don't think that has a place there's been less and less." in the game anymore," CarThe numbers back up the cillo said. "If guys take runs former NHL goalie. at other players, I think those There were 143 fights players that take the run at through the first 408 games them, whether they fight or of the season, which projects not, they have to know in to 431 fights overall, accord-
the back of their mind that
ing t o h o ckeyfights.com.there's still fighting in this That is a dramatic dip from game and they're going to 734 fights in 2008-09 and 714 fights in 2009-10. The num-
have to answer the bell or
in 2011-12 and the 400s last
shots."
respond to it if they're going ber of fights fell into the 500s to take dirty runs or cheap season (there were 347 fights But in the back of everyin th e l o ckout-shortened one's mind is the risk of 2012-13 season). concussions and other longThe NHL has toughened term health risks that come instigation penalties in place with trading punches on the since the 1930s. It added a ice. The idea that brawling t wo-minute minor fo r t h e was as much fun as a nasplayer who started the fight t y wreck i n N A S CAR or in the 1990s, looking to both a bench-clearing brawl in cut down on brawling and baseball came to a jarring perhaps attractmore casual fans. Of late, the NHL is
halt in 2011 when three former enforcers were found
dishing out longer suspen-
dead. Derek Boogaard, once
sions for cheap shots and
illegal hits, erasing some of named in a Sports Illustratthe players' unwritten code ed players poll as the NHL's of justice. toughest fighter, died from "That tells you, let's just
play hockey," Schultz said. "And when there's a problem,
the league will take care of it." That role used to be left
to theenforcers,the de facto bodyguards for the stars. Back on the put-up-yourdukes heyday, even Wayne Gretzky had his own personal great one watching his back: Marty McSorley was the Hall of Famer's first line of thuggish defense, serving and protecting Gretzky in stints with Edmonton and
Los Angeles. "I remember when guys
an accidental mix of alcohol
and the painkiller oxycodone. Wade Belak hanged himself, and Rick Rypien was discovered at his home after suffering from depression for a decade.
The 65-year-old Schultz said he suffered nothing more than a couple of minor concussions and feels fine. "We didn't hit anyone near
as hard as they do today," Schultz said. Now, though, there are far
fewer of those hits.
"It's still an exciting sport," Schultz said. "It's just evolv-
ing. It's the way it is."
C4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
PREP ROUNDUP
U
COLLEGE BASKETBALLROUNDUP
No. 3 Arizonacruises to win overUtahValley
W
r n
r i
The Associated Press
vi
reer-high 24 points, and had man Stanley Johnson's 14 nine rebounds and six assists. points led a balanced attack No. 7 Villanova 73, Illinois
SISTERS — Sisters cap-
tured its second straight boys
Boys basketball
basketball win of the season,
but it took a strong second half in order to remain perfect. After scoring just 12 points in the first half to fall into a
six-point deficit at the intermission, the Outlaws tallied 33 sec-
ttoucoufereuce
Ridgeview 71, CrookCounty 49 Ridgeview (71) —GeorgeMendazona19, Al-
ond-half points, including 20 in the fourth quarter, to put away Madras 45-37 in a nonleague matchup. Keegan Greaney paced the Outlaws (2-0 overall) with 11 points, Steen Johnson con- Mountain View 61, Lincoln 59 tributed with eight, and Hayes Mountain View (61) — JordanVance16, Moore finished with
s even Hoffy 15,Haugen10, Albin 10,Scinto4, Wilcox3,
points. Madras (0-1) was led by Jered Pichette's 12 points-
nine of which came off 3-pointers. Brent Sullivan was the
only other double-figure scorer for Madras, as the 6-foot-8-inch senior finish with 10 points. Also on 7Ltesday:
Boys basketball Bend 61, Grants Pass 47: GRANTS PASS — The Lava
Bears had three players hit d ouble figures en r oute t o
their first victory of the season. J.J. Spitler led Bend with 19 points, followed by Mario Mora with 14 and Christian Johnson with 11. Chris Wal-
lace paced the Bears (1-1) with nine rebounds. Mountain View 61, Lincoln 59: PORTLAND — B e hind Jordan Vance's 16 points, the
Dufur 65, Culver 26
Culver 42, Dufur 31
Dufur (65) —C. Morris 26,Kortge13, Keeve r 9, Caldwell 7, Morris 6,Wwetherbee2, Cawford 2. Totals 26 4-1265. Culver (26) —CorySledge12, Knepp7, Basl3, Besler 2, Mueffer1,Totals 51-226. Dufur 24 19 17 5 — 65 Culver 2 9 12 3 — 26 Three-pointgoals— Dufor: Morris 3; Culver: Sledge 3, BaslKne , pp.
Dufur (31) — Taylor Darden11, Ellis 6,Miler 6, Beeson 6, Harris 2. Totals11 9-1531. Culver (42) — Raea nneSlaght 17, Lewis10, Retan o6,Fritz4,Hoke3,Duff 2.Totals 177-1242. 8 6 9 8 — 31 Dufur Culver 8 12 14 8 — 42 Three-pointgoals—Dofur: none;Culver: Slaght.
brecht16, C. Manseffe14, O'Neat10,Alvarez6,Taylor 4, Edmondson 2.Totals 25 15-18 71. Crook County (49) — BlakeBaitels16, Kessi 15, Jones 7, Kee7, Harper3, Hernandez L Totals 19 7-12 49. Ridgeview 18 18 12 23 — 71 CrookCouuty 8 7 26 1 4 — 49 Gllchrlst44, Le Pine JV36 Three-pointgoals—Ridgeview: Alvarez2, Mendazona 2, C.Manseffe,Albrecht; CrookCounty: Kessi Gilchrisl (44) — Jacob Blood17, Bernabe13, 2, Harper,Jones. Alexander4, Jensen4, Archer4, Newton 2. Totals
Korzynowski 3.Totals 247-14 61. Lincoln (59) — JonahPemberton27,Caffan12, Rodriguez 6, Pyle6, Director 3, Hazard3, Kent 2. Totals 21 14-2159. Mountai nView 18 15 11 17 — 61 Lincoln 15 9 18 17 — 59 Three-pointgoals— Mountain View:Holly 2, Vance 2, Albin,Wilcox; Lincoln:notavailable.
Bend 61, Grants Pass47 Bend (61) —J.J. Spitler19, Mora14,Johnson 11, Parson 5, Gieber3, Wallace 3, Wily 2. Totals not available. Grants Pass(47) — SeanRyan19, Hanley8, Cotton 6,Weiss 5,Appling 2, Stine2, Reed2, Mosser 1. Totals notavailable. Bend 16 14 15 16 — 61 Grant Pass 11 12 14 16 — 47 Three-pointgoals—Bend: Spitler 3, Moore3, Johnson 2,Gieber;GrantPass: Ryan2,Weiss.
17 9-15 44.
LaPine (36) — Jacob Farnsworth16, Smith9, Gerhart-Cole 4, George3, Pike2, Manley 2. Totals 14 8-12 36.
Gilchrist 4 18 11 11 — 44 La Pine 11 8 8 9 — 86 Three-point goals — Gilchrist: Bernabe;LaPine: none.
Girls basketball Nonconference
Bend 34, GrantsPass32 Grants Pass(82) — SkylieBrummet 9, Torgerson 8, Miller 5, Johnson4, Dinkel 4, Loaders2. Totals142-2 32.
Bend (34) —SophiaJackson13,A.Jackson8, Olson 5, Wheeler 2, Parker2, Kinkade2, Evert 1.Totals 13 8-1384. Grants Pass 15 8 7 2 — 82 Bend 1 611 6 7 — 8 4 Three-poingoal t s— GrantsPass: Miler, Brummett; Bend:none.
Madras 45, Sisters 26
Sisters 45, Madras37 Madras (37) — JeredPichete12, Soffivan10, Bryant 5,Winishut2, Lindgren2, Yeahquo 2, Rauschenburg 2.Totals13 4-8 87. Sisters (45) —KeeganGreaneytt,Johnson 8, Gill 7, Moore 7, Schaab6, Schotte 3, Mackenzie 2, Larsonl. Totals1512-2445. Madras 9 9 7 1 2 — 37 Sisters 8 9 13 20 — 45 Three-poingoal t s— Madras: Pichette 3, Bryantt; Sisters:Moore.
Sisters (24) —Haylie Hudson9, Knoop5, Stewart 5,Moore2, Arroda2, Homer 2. Totals 12 2-24 26.
Madras (45) — Mariah Stacona22,Whipple9, Adams 7, Wolfe 4, Soppah 2, Harry 2. Totals 5 1-2 26. 2 6 9 9 — 26 Sislers Madras 178 5 1 5 — 4 5 Three-pointgoals—Sisters: none;Madras:Stacona 3.
La Pine JV46, Gilchrist 38 La Pine (46) —SueAnnMarsh 17, Byers 15, Conklin 7, Waddsworth4, Hulse3. Totals192-846. Gilchrist (38) — SierraShuey22, Berling 9, Bernabe4,Blom2,Krohnkel.Totals1581938. La Pine 11 16 12 13 — 46 Gttchrtst 7 12 7 12 — 38 Three-poingoal t s—LaPine:Marsh5, Holse;Gilchrist: none.
tfonconfereuce
TdnilyLugteren54,MitchellSpray27 Trinity Lutheran (54) —ErinCowan 10, Emily Eidler10,KatieMurphy 10, Spencer 8, Sample5, M. Morphy4, Martin4, Clift 3. Totals 28 8-17 54. Mitchell (27) —MirnaDaltosott, Myers9,Tolton 2,Ordway2,Holt2,Domenighini l. Tolals115-1027. Trinity Lutheran 1 2 15 16 11 — 54 Mitchell 6 3 8 1 5 — 27 Three-poingoal t s—none.
Wrestling ttonconference
Summit 70, Sisters18 At Summit
166 —Bennett Kater, Sum,wonbyforfeit. 113Doubleforfeit. 126 —Qointin McCoy, Som,d. Cole Pade, Si s,12-1.126— ThomasBrown,Som,pinned AndrewStevens, Sis. 132 —AndyCorpus, Som, won byforfeit. 138 —DyutFetrow, Sis, pinnedAlex Clouston,Sum.145—Grant Leiphart, Sum,pinned ChayseHead, Sis. 152 — PatrickLeiphart, Som, won by forfeit.166 —Clayton Darst, Sis, pinned LuisGonzales,Som.170— JacobThompson,Som, pinnedMarkFish,Sis. 182 —Dostin Foffett, Som, pinnedChaseLawrence, Sis. 195 — JoshWittwer, Sum, pinnedPatrick Dingeman, Sis. 226 — Noah Yonker,Sum,pinnedBradyWessel, Sis. 285—Trevor Betcher,Som,pinned GabeIsle, Sis.
Cougars secured their second straight nonconference
win and improved to 2-1 on the season. Davis Holly had
Girls basketball
Eidler and Katie Murphy each quarter and North Lake faded Madras 46, Sisters 26: MA- logged 10 points for Trinity (4- at the finish against the visit15 points for Mountain View, DRAS — M a r iah S t acona 0), which outscored Mitchell ing Summit freshmen. Jade while Ments Haugen and Aus- scored a game-high 22 points 16-3 in the third quarter. Mur- Stockton scored eight points tin Albin chipped in with 10 to give the White Buffaloes a phy also had 11 rebounds, and and Megan Nelson added sevpoints apiece. season-opening victory. Sis- Eidler hauled in 10 boards. en for the Cowgirls (0-3). Dufur 65, Culver 25: CUL- ters, which hit on only two of La Pine JV 46, Gilchrist 38: VER — Despite 13 points by 24 free-throw attempts, was GILCHRIST — Sierra Shuey Wrestling Cory Sledge, including three led in scoring by Haylie Hud- put up 22 points, 10 rebounds Summit 70, Sisters 18: The 3-pointers, the Bulldogs could son with nine points. and three assists, but the Griz- hostStorm seta schoolrecord not keep the scoring pace set Culver 42, Dufur 31:CULVER zlies could not keep up with for points scored in a dual by visiting Dufur in suffering — Raeanne Slaght posted a the Hawks' Sue Ann Marsh, meet in their nonconference their third straight loss to open game-high 17 points to help the who drilled five 3-pointers win over Sisters. Thomas the season. host Bulldogs down the Rang- to lift La Pine to a nonleague Brown (126 pounds), Grant Gilchrist 44, La Pine JV ers for their first win of the win. Charlene Berling had Leiphart (145), Patrick Lei36: LA PINE — Jacob Blood season. Hannah Lewis scored nine points for Gilchrist (1-2), phart (152), Jacob Thompscored a game-high 17 points, 10 points for Culver (1-2) in the and Cassandra Blum posted son (170), Dustin Follett (182), and the Grizzlies improved to nonconference contest. six boards to go along with Josh Wittwer (195) and Noah 1-2 on the season with a nonTrinity Lutheran 54, Mitch- two points. Yunker (220) all won by fall for league victory. Gabe Bernabe ell/Spray 27: M ITCHELLSummit frosh 48, North Lake Summit, which also got a machipped in with 13 points for Three players scored 10 points 37: SILVER LAKE — Kendra jor decision from Quintin McGilchrist, which outscored La and lead the Saints to a non- Murphy scored 21 points and Coy (120). Dyut Fetrow (138) Pine 18-8 in the second quar- league win and remain un- grabbed 18 rebounds, but she and Clayton Darst (160) both ter to take control.
defeated. Erin Cowan, Emily
fouled out early in the fourth
for No. 3 Arizona in the Wildcats' 87-56 win over Utah Val-
59: NEW YORK — Dylan
down 10 rebounds, Dusan
Malcolm Hill scored a ca-
Ennis scored 18 points to ley on Tuesday night. lead Villanova past Illinois. Rondae Hollis-Jefferson Darrun Hilliard and Daniel scored 12 points and pulled Ochefu both scored 12 points.
PREP SCOREBOARD
Bulletin staff report
won by fall for the Outlaws.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Cooper puts upbig numbersfor Tide
Ristic scored 13 points and reer-high 20points for Illinois. Gabe York added 11 for the No. 11 Wichita State 77, Wildcats (9-0). Ristic and Seton Hall 68: W I CHITA, Johnson each had seven Kan. — Ron Baker scored 22 rebounds. points, Fred VanVleet added Utah Valley went seven
minutes of the second half without a point, trailing 6230 at the 12-minute mark.
ball, plus experienced receivAmari Cooper ers such as Christion Jones prepares to and DeAndrew White, have make the created headaches for defenscatch for a es trying to figure out how to touchdown cover Cooper. during a Double team? Man to man7 55-44 victory Or some other, more creative over Auburn method'? Alabama offensive this season. tackle Austin Shepherd has Cooper is his own idea for covering one of three Cooper. "I'd have the whole defense finalists for the Heisman on him," Shepherd said. Trophy, which Alabama's
The Associated Press
Editor's note:This is thefirst of three profiles lookingat the Heisman Trophy finalists. TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Al-
abama receiver Amari Cooper blew past the defensive
back on a deep post pattern, and his offensive coordinator did not even wait until the ball
was in the air to celebrate. Lane Kiffin r aised his hands on the sideline to signal a touchdown. A little earlybut he was right.
will be awarded Saturday night in New York.
"I guess he's seen me do it,"
Cooper said. Much of the country has by
The Associated Press file photo
He will win votes for...
Cooper was unstoppable in
18 points and eight assists and Wichita State handed
Seton Hall its first loss of the season. Darius Carter had 16
Arizona continued to pull points and 12 rebounds for away, leading by 34 points at the Shockers (6-1), who used one point. a big first-half run to seize The win gave Arizona 36 control, and then breezed straightregular-season non- through a foul-filled second conference victories, the lon- half. gest streakin the nation. No. 14 lowa State 73, MisThe Wildcats used a 12-0 souri-Kansas City 56: AMES, run over 3r/z minutes of the Iowa — Bryce Dejean- Jones first half to take a command- scored 22 points and Iowa ing lead, going from a 16-14 State beat M i s souri-Kandeficit at the 13:04 mark to a sas City for its third straight 26-16 lead a short time later win. Dejean-Jones topped 20 on P arker J a ckson-Cart- points for the third time for
wright's steal and layup. the Cyclones (6-1), who have Also on Ibesday: won 25 straight nonconferNo. 4 Louisville 94, Indiana ence games at home. 74: NEW YORK — T erry No. 25 Notre Dame 93, Rozier scored a career-high Mount St. Mary's 67:SOUTH 26 points and grabbed six re- BEND, Ind. — Steve Vasbounds as Louisville beat In- turia scored a career-high diana in the Jimmy V Classic 19 points and Zach Auguste at Madison Square Garden. had 19 points and eight reThe Cardinals (8-0) also got bounds to lead Notre Dame outstanding performances over Mount St. Mary's. Vasfrom Montrezl Harrell, who turia was perfect on the had a double-double with 21 night, hitting 7-of-7 from the points and 11 rebounds and floor.
Soccer
said.
Continued from C1 The question, along with the competing interests of the American soccer indus-
hired three years ago, he has emphasizedincreasing
try, gained broader atten-
fortable environments. For the national team, that em-
tion in October when Major League Soccer's commissioner, Don Garber, sharp-
ly attacked Klinsmann for his repeated criticisms of the quality of MLS and its
S ince K l i nsmann
was
competition and the value
of placing players in uncomphasis has manifested itself in amore rigorous schedule for the first six months of
2015, a slate that includes exhibition games at Chile (Jan. 28), home against Panama (Feb. 8), at Denmark (March 25), at Switzerland (March 31), home against Mexico (April 15), at the Netherlands (June 6) and at Germany (June 10). But it is also why Klins-
players. Garber accused Klinsmann of undermining the league's development efforts — and by extension the country's soccer interests — by pushing young players toward professional clubs in Europe. On Sunday night, Klins- mann, in his role as technimann joinedthe U.S. Soc- cal director, has encouraged cer Federation's president, young American players to Sunil Gulati, an d s everal leave teams and programs in other top officials and of- the United States, like MLS fered the latest plan to close and the short-season college that talent gap by enhancing system, to join clubs abroad. soccer development in the It is also why he has been United States. The presenta- critical of stars like Clint tion, made to about a dozen Dempsey and Michael Bradnews media members and ley for leaving those environreleased publicly on Mon- ments to return home. day, could have been titled On Sunday, Klinsmann "Growing Pains in the Birth made it clear that he preof a Soccer Nation." ferred players to be in the It included measures that
By John Zenor
Chris Jones, who scored a ca-
TUCSON, Ariz. — Fresh-
will increase the federation's reach, like extending development programs to the under-12 level; adding two youth national teams to fill
in gaps in the development system; and raising standards for coaches, partly through a partnership with MLS club Sporting Kansas City for a National Coach-
ing Education Center. Scholarships will be increased for club programs affiliated with U.S. Soccer, in the hope of removing the pay-to-play barriers
t h a t so m etimes
the Iron Bowl to end the regu-
keep children from low-in-
lar season on a huge stage. He had 13 catches for 224 yards
come families out of the talentpool.
and touchdowns of 17, 39 and
most competitive environ-
ments, but he acknowledged that going abroad was not for everyone. A s
G u l ati
pointed out, K linsmann's son, a goalkeeper, will enroll at the University of Califor-
nia next year. And as an olive branch to MLS, U.S. Soccer has
brought in Nelson Rodriguez, a longtime league executive, as a counselor for players who are deciding whether to play in college, sign with MLS or head overseas. The biggest problem in development, Klinsmann said, is that despite all the competitive options available for
first-year starting
We knew he could do it, but q u a rter- he's doing more. So that's
the only wide receivers to win
award will be presented Sat-
urday night. Cooper streaked 39 yards
back Blake Sims. impressive. Without Coop Cooper has even trumped I don't know where we'd be the numbers produced by the right now." Atlanta Falcons' Julio Jones, Cooper had four catch-
both of those winners also were stars in the kick-return
In an effort tobetter under- teenagers in the United States stand how the United States (MLS academies, colleges or compares with countries like minor league teams), hardly Spain, Brazil and the Neth- any offer 11-month calenerlands, a consulting firm dars. That, he says, leaves will be hired to assess the developing players with too youth national teams and much time off, and far behind development academy clubs. foreign players their age. In addition, U.S. Soccer is To bridge those gaps in the c onsidering building i t s schedule, Klinsmann said he own facilities — it currently would continue to encourage rents fields and offices from younger players to go to Euthe Los Angeles Galaxy's rope and Latin America for parent company, Anschutz short periods, even if simply
game. Cooper was shut down
Entertainment Group, and
only once, when A r k ansas
lacks dormitories — or more with established MLS playmodest satellites in different ers to keep them from losing parts of the country. their sharpness during threeGulati said U.S. Soccer, month offseasons. "It's only a win-win," Klinswhich budgeted $53.4 million in operating costs for mann said. "It's a win for us the fiscal year that ends in because it shortens the offMarch, had budgeted an ad- season. Just broaden your ditional 50 percent next year. horizon. If you can train one "Obviously with all the month with a Bundesliga or initiatives, we want to push Premier League team, jump the envelope," Klinsmann onit."
now.
Cooper has become easily the biggest, most dangerous weapon in a football program normally defined by tailbacks and defense, while leading ence record with 115 recepthe t o p - ranked Cr i m s on tions. He has demolished Tide into a College Football previous Alabama marks for Playoff matchup with No. 4 yards and catches. Ohio State and becoming a It turned into a perfect comHeisman Trophy finalist. The bination of Kiffin, Cooper and
for a touchdown midway through the third quarter to
spark a comeback win over Auburn in the regular-season
finale, just one of many plays that left the Tide celebrating and opponents dumbfounded. Somethingno one — other than Kiffin, perhaps — could have seen coming: a Tide receiver producing 1,656 yards and 14 touchdowns and setting a Southeastern Confer-
75 yards. Then he set an SEC championship game record with 12 catches against Mis-
souri, posting 10 by halftime. the season.
"To do what he does every But he will lose Saturday is impressive, man," thembecause... Alabama tight end O.J. HowDesmond Howard (1991) ard said. "We're like, 'Wow.' and Tim Brown (1987) are a Heisman. Unlike Cooper,
held him to two catches for 22 opening drive for a touch- yards, butlike any receiverhe nationally in both yards re- down in Saturday's 42-13 vic- had games in which he did not ceivingand catches pergame. tory over No. 16 Missouri in put up eye-catching numbers. Praised by coach Nick Sa- the SEC title game. ban and teammates for his Even when teams know the NFL prospects work ethic, Cooper has three ball is likely to be delivered to Cooper, a junior, is widely 200-yard receiving perfor- Cooper, they have struggled regarded as the top receiver in mances this season. Tide re- to keep it away from him. the draft if he opts to turn pro. ceivers collectively had proA labama's n o rmal p e n - He is projected as a top-five duced only two coming into chant for smash-mouth foot- pick in mock drafts. the Tide's last superstar receiver. Cooper ranks second
es and a rush on Alabama's
to train — just as he does
C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
+
S&PBOO
N ASDAQ ~ 2 5 7Q 4,766.47
Todap Luxury market bellwether Increased home sales and rising prices have helped lift Toll Brothers' earnings this year. The luxury homebuilder sold more homes in the first three quarters of its fiscal year than in the same period a year earlier. Did the trend continue during Toll's fourth fiscal quarter? Find out today, when the builder releases its latest financial report card.
34
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17,600" ""' 10 DAYS "
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16,500"
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1,850
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Treasury budget
not seasonally adjusted
$120 billion
106
71
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2014 Source: FaotSet
Holiday sales update? Financial analysts predict Costco Wholesale's fiscal first-quarter earnings and revenue improved from a year ago. The warehouse club operator, due to report financial results today, already gave Wall Street a preview of its latest sales figures. Last week, the company reported that its sales in the 13 weeks ended Nov.30 climbed 7 percent versus a year earlier. Investors will be listening for an update on how thecompany sees holiday sales faring this month.
Burger King
16,000
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HIGH LOW CLOSE 17847.37 17629.57 17801.20 DOW Trans. 9013.18 8843.83 8979.95 DOW Util. 606.91 599.96 605.37 NYSE Comp. 10863.56 10742.73 10847.36 NASDAQ 4768.41 4674.38 4766.47 S&P 500 2060.60 2034.20 2059.82 S&P 400 1442.26 1418.51 1441.83 Wilshire 5000 21623.34 21320.47 2161 6.03 Russell 2000 1188.08 1153.53 1188.06
A
CHG. -51.28 -52.90 +3.38 -16.18 +25.78 -0.49 +7.74 +34.12 +20.85
N
'
.ri"l':-
Alaska Air Group A LK 34.81 ~ Avista Corp A VA 26.79 ~ Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ BarrettBusiness B BS I 18 . 25 e — Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Cascade Bancorp CA C B 4 . 1 1 ty ColumbiaBnkg COLB 2 3.59 ~ 3 Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — e CostcoWholesale COST 109.50— e Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ~ FLIR Systems F LIR 28.03 ~ Hewlett Packard HP Q 2 6.29 ~ Intel Corp I NTC 23.50 ~ Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 5.30 ~ LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ MDU Resources MDU 23 . 20 e — Mentor Graphics MEN T 18.25 ~ Microsoft Corp MSFT 34.63 ~ Nike Inc 8 N KE 69.85 ~ Nordstrom Inc J WN 54.90 ~ Nwst Nat Gas N WN 40.05 ~ PaccarInc PCAR 53.59 — 0 Planar Systms PLNR 1.93 ~ Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 215.09 ~ Safeway Inc S WY 26.69 ~ Schnnzer Steel SCHN 2 1.41 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 170.63 — 0 StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 — 0 Triquint Semi TQNT 7.75 — o Umppua Holdi ngs UM P Q 14.94 ~ 1 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ WellsFargo & Co Weyerhaeuser
D
%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD -0.29% L L +7.39% -0.59% L +21.34% t0.56% L L L +23.40% -0.15% +4.30% t0.54% L L L +14.12% -0.02% L L +11.44% t0.54% L L L +7.40% t0.16% L L +9.69% t1.79% L L L +2.10%
35
L L L T L T L L L T L L L L L T L T L L L L L L L L L L T L L L L
8
0 N D 52-week range $20.62~ $3 7.3D
BIRT Close:$6.56%0.01 or 0.2% The software provider has agreed to be purchased by Open Text for about $330 million to help enhance its product offerings.
$8
comparable-store sales. Chairman and CEO Bill Rhodes also cited the company's focus on inventory. AutoZone posted revenue of $2.26 billion for the period ending Nov. 22, which also beat forecasts for $2.22 billion from Wall Street. Sales at stores open at least a year, a key gauge of a retailer's health, climbed 4.5 percent.
AmdFocus
S
0 N 52-week range
$3.29~
Vol.:908.7k (2.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $304.42 m
FCNTX B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME
BluebBio TriangPet GoodrP pfC GreenH pfC GoodrP pfD GoodrPet MillerE pfD PDC Engy PtroqstE Globelm n
L AST CHG 84.28 + 35.39 4 .91 +1 . 6 1 9 .79 +3 . 2 1 1 5.85 +4 . 8 0 8 .95 +2 . 6 0 4 .09 +1 . 1 3 1 2.75 +2 . 7 5 3 5.09 +6 . 7 4 3 .99 +.75 8 .00 +1 . 4 5
%C H G + 7 2 .4 +4 8 .8 oDC +4 8 .8 03 +4 3 . 4 +4 0 .9 273 +3 8 .2 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +2 7 . 5 e Fund target represents weighted +2 3 . 8 Q +23 . 1 average of stock holdings +2 2 . 1 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings
Losers CATEGORY Large Gro wth L AST C H G %CHG MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * ** * f r -14.26 -40.6 Conns 20.83 Affimed n 5.79 -1.26 -17.9 ASSETS $77,082 million -.43 -14.9 KingtoneW 2.47 EXP RATIO 0.67% DirDGldBr 22.43 -3.69 -14.1 MANAGER William Danoff -.33 -13.7 NBGreece 2.08 SINCE 1990-09-17 RETURNS3-MO +2.7 Foreign Markets YTD +10.1 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +12.9 Paris 4,263.94 -111.54 -2.55 3-YR ANNL +19.2 London 6,529.47 -1 42.68 -2.14 5-YR-ANNL +15.7 Frankfurt 9,793.71 -221.28 -2.21 Hong Kong23,485.83 -561.84 -2.34 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 42,339.63 -602.20 -1AO Berkshire Hathaway Inc Class A Milan 19,390.00 -561.15 -2.81 -.68 Google Inc Tokyo 17,81 3.38 -1 22.26 Stockholm 1,452.24 -15.64 -1.07 Google Inc Class A -90.60 -1.69 Wells Fargo & Co Sydney 5,258.30 Zurich 9,051.39 -1 29.85 -1.41 Facebook Inc Class A NAME
0 N D 52-week range $52.97~ $ 63. 16
Delia's DLIA Close:$0.02 %0.00 or 10.7% The teen retailer plans to sell all of the merchandise it owns and expects to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection soon. $0.4
D
S
0 N D 52-week range $8 .D8 $0.01 ~ $1.35 PE: . . Vol.:13.3m (3.9x avg.) P E: . . . Yie ld: ..Mkt. Cap: $1.29 m Yield: ...
Francesca's Holdings FRAN Five Below Close: $15.13L0.08 or 0.5% The clothing company named former Signet Jewelers CEO Michael Barnes as its new CEO. He succeeds Neill Davis, who resigned. $16 14
FIVE Close:$37.33 L0.05 or 0.1% The retailer's third-quarter results missed analyst expectations. It also named Chief Operating Officer Joel Anderson as CEO. $50 45 40
12
8
0
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D
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52-week range $77.02 ~ Vol.: 2.4m (2.2x avg.) Mkt.Cap:$639.97 m
0
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3 yr
*
5 yr
$22.60
$33.94~
$47.89
PE: 17.0 Vol.:1.6m (1.5x avg.) P Yie ld: ... Mkt. Cap:$2.03 b
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DGLY Big Lots BIG Close: $17.81 T-0.20 or -1.1% Close:$41.18 V-0.07 or -0.2% A push bythe L.S. government to The discount retailer reported profit have police officers wear body cam- and revenue for its second quarter eras has sent Digital Ally's stock that missed what Wall Street anahigher. lysts were expecting. $25 $60 20
50 40
15
0 N D 52-week range $3.D3 ~ $33.59 Vol.:1.1m (1.1x avg.) P E: .. Mkt. Cap:$53.63m Yield:..
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0 N D 52-week range $25.50~ $ 51.75 Vol.:2.0m (1.7x avg.) PE:1 9 . 8 Mkt. Cap:$2.31 b Yie l d : 1.7%
SOURCE: Sungard
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.21 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
. 0 3 .01 + 0 .02 L L . 1 0 .09 + 0 .01 L L .22 .14 +0 . 0 8 L L
2-year T-note . 6 2 .6 3 5-year T-note 1.62 1.66 10-year T-note 2.21 2.26 30-year T-bond 2.87 2.90
BONDS
-0.01 L -0.04 L -0.05 T -0.03 T
L T T T
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities AmBalA m 26 . 26 +8.9 +10.8 +14.9+12.3 8 A A CaplncBuA m 60.94 -.30 +7.5 +9.5 +11.9 +9.3 A A A The price of oil CpWldGrlA m 47.21 -.28 +5.9 +8.3 +16.3 +9.7 8 8 C rose Tuesday EurPacGrA m 48.75 -.31 -0.7 +1.7 +11.8 +6.4 8 8 C as drop in the FnlnvA m 55. 7 5 +9.2 +12.6 +19.0+14.0 D C D value of the dolGrthAmA m 47.15 +.10 +9.7 +12.9 +20.5+14.1 C 8 D lar made oil IncAmerA m 21.92 -.89 +8.6 +10.6 +13.5+11.5 8 8 A more attractive InvCoAmA m 41.10 -.87 +13.2 +16.0 +20.3+13.9 8 8 D to global invesNewPerspA m39.26 -.14 +4.5 +7.1 +16.4+11.2 C A 8 tors. In metals WAMutlnvA m43.17 -.16 +10.9 +13.4 +18.6+15.1 C C 8 trading, gold, Dodge &Cox Income 13.92 +.81 +5.5 + 5 .6 + 5.0 +5.1 8 A 8 silver and copIntlStk 44.86 -.38 +2.4 + 5.4 +15.2 +8.8 A A A Stock 183.67 -.12 +10.3 +13.7 +23.8+15.9 8 A A per rose. SoyFidelity Contra 104. 7 3 +.16+10.1 +12.9 +19.2+15.7 C C 8 beans and corn ContraK 104 . 76 +.16+10.2+13.0 +19.3+15.8 C C B fell. LowPriStk d 50.27 -.83 +6.5 + 8 .6 +19.0+16.2 D D B Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 73.35 -.82+13.5 +16.2 +20.5+15.8 A 8 A FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 42 -.81 +3.1 + 4.8 +10.4 +9.2 C A A IncomeA m 2. 3 9 - .81+3.7 + 5 .0 +11.0 +9.8 C A A Oakmark Intl I 25.30 -.33 -3.9 -1.4 +16.3+10.4 D A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 80 +.81 +11.0 +14.2 +16.5+13.4 C E D RisDivB m 17 . 70 +.81 +10.1 +13.2 +15.5+12.4 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 57 +.81 +10.2 +13.3 +15.7+12.6 D E E SmMidValA m48.19 +.17 +9.2 +12.5 +18.1+13.8 C D E SmMidValB m40.50 +.15 +8.4 +11.6 +17.2+12.9 C E E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 34.53 + .84 +6.7 + 8 .8 +17.9+13.6 E D C Exchange GrowStk 57.2 7 + .88 +8.9 +12.4 +21.1+16.6 D A A The dollar fell HealthSci 77.1 4 +.30+33.5 +35.8 +39.8+29.0 8 A A versus the euro Newlncome 9. 5 7 ... +5 .5 + 5 .3 + 3.2 +4.3 and the Vanguard 500Adml 190.82 -.85 +13.6 +16.2 +20.5+15.8 A 8 A Japanese yen, 500lnv 190.78 -.85 +13.4 +16.1 +20.3+15.7 8 8 8 but rose against Cappp 55.44 -.11 +20.1 +22.5 +26.4+17.1 A A A the pound. The Eqlnc 32.55 -.11 +11.5 +13.9 +18.9+16.2 8 C A ICE U.S. Dollar IntlStkldxAdm 26.66 -.13 -2.5 -0.2 +9.1 NA 8 D index, which StratgcEq 33.78 +.16 +12.6 +16.0 +23.6+19.5 A A A compares the TgtRe2020 29.83 +7.1 +8.6 +11.7 +9.9 A A A dollar's value to Tgtet2025 16.89 +7.2 +9.0 +12.8+10.5 A 8 A a basket of key TotBdAdml 10.88 +.81 +5.6 +5.2 +2.7 +4.0 C D D currencies, fell. Totlntl 15.94 -.88 -2.6 -0.3 +9.0 +4.9 C D D TotStlAdm 51.73 +.87 +12.2 +15.1 +20.5+16.2 8 8 A TotStldx 51.70 +.87 +12.1 +14.9 +20.3+16.0 C 8 A USGro 32.49 +.10 +13.2 +17.3 +21.4+15.7 A A B Welltn 40.96 -.84 +9.9 +11.7 +14.3+11.4 A A A
h5Q HS
FUELS
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
L L L
.06 .09 .12
L .30 T 1.48 T 2.84 T 3.87
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
*
PCT 4.65 3.7 3.7 Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 3.35 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 3.13 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.
D
52-week range
Digital Ally
Fidelity Contrafund has a strong long-term record, but has lagged FAMILY Marhetsummary American Funds its peers this year; Morningstar Most Active analysts say "patience should pay NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG off."
VALUE
S
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.71 2.74 -0.03 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.31 4.33 -0.02 T T Barclays USAggregate 2.28 2.30 -0.02 L T Price-earnings ratio:19 A ZO 26.8% 2 2. 5 31.1 PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 6.46 6.38 +0.08 L L 612 ( Based on past 12 month results) RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.82 3.90 -0.08 T T *annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.92 1.95 -0.03 L T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.12 3.15 -0.03 L L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualpunds
Tuesday's close:$605.81
AP
Fidelity Contra
JPM
0.2
4
AutoZone beats expectations SU HIS
AutoZone shares jumped 4 percent Tuesday after the company reported a strong fiscal first quarter. The company reported a profit of $7.27 per share, well above the $7.18 per share that analysts had projected, according to a survey by ZacksInvestmentResearch. The auto parts retailer reported that falling gas prices and colder temperatures helped push up its
JPMorgan Chase
Vol.:6.0m (2.9x avg.) PE: 6 5.0 Vol.:19.5m (1.3x avg.) PE: 11.6 Mkt. Cap:$11.44b Yie l d: 1.0% Mkt.Cap:$233.45 b Yield:2.6%
+53. 7 +5 8 .0 1 502 15 0 . 5 0 +23.7 +29 .4 4 0 8 1 1 1. 2 7 +12. 8 +1 4 .3 91629 16 0 . 20 -76.4 -74.2 183 d d 0 .88f -5.0 -1.5 3040 19 2 . 92 -8.2 -8.8 81 +1. 9 +6 .7 353 18 0.64f +13.0 +30 .4 2 4 1 2 6 0. 6 0f + 20.2 +17 .7 2 0 53 3 1 1. 4 2 -16.8 -19.5 5 2 85 +8.7 +8.4 19 8 8 2 3 0. 4 0 +36.5 +41 .6 10169 15 0.64 + 42. 1 +5 3 .5 28126 18 0 .96f +3.0 +8.0 83 2 7 1 3 0. 2 6 + 55. 6 +5 3 .4 2 621 19 0 .74f +20.4 +14 .7 8 1 1 30 - 6.9 + 5 . 1 4 379 d d -22.4 -19.3 1156 15 0.73f -7.7 -0.6 428 1 9 0. 2 0 +27.2 +27 .3 21 938 19 1 . 2 4 +23. 4 +2 3 .6 2 965 33 1 .12f +20.8 +25 .7 1 2 55 2 0 1. 3 2 +13.4 +17 .4 13 7 2 2 1. 8 6f + 19.2 +25 .3 1 7 02 1 9 0 .88a t 189. 4 + 1 74.1 5 6 5 4 3 -10.4 - 3.2 77 9 4 0 1 . 7 6 -10.2 - 4.5 62 6 1 9 0 . 12 +19.6 +20 . 6 1 4 13 3 0.92 -27.5 - 20.9 296 8 2 0 . 75 +36.0 +36 . 2 38 4 2 9 2. 2 0 +3.2 +9.0 140 13 1. 3 0f +5.9 +6.2 42 8 3 3 1 1 . 28f +209 .3 + 214.6 2292 c c -8.4 -3.9 1863 24 0 . 60 L +11. 9 +1 6 .8 7 022 15 0 . 9 8 -4.4 -5.1 35 0 1 4 0 .59f L +20.8 +27 .2 12685 13 1 . 4 0 L +14.5 +24 .5 3 5 73 2 7 1. 1 6
DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 0 -Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredor paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.
AP
206.47 -.14 17.56 -.10 19.77 +.88 32.89 -.99 114.12 +1.72 39.90 -.38 46.92 -1.98 118.17 +1.95 24.88 -.06 27.44 +.39
QQ45
60
30
S
52-WEEK RANGE
1152581 916290 657551 582893 Apple Inc s 569677 iShEMkts 524650 VerizonCm 488163 iShR2K 485750 SPDR Fncl 447293 8 iPVixST 445366
+
1.2374
Close:$62.45 V-0.22 or -0.4% The bank's CEO, Jamie Dimon, told JPMorgan staffers that he is clear of cancer after receiving treatment for throat cancer. $65
Actuate
59.97 56. 4 0 - 1 .04 - 1.8 T L 35.98 34.8 8 +. 4 1 +1 .2 L T 18.03 1 7. 5 6 -.10 -0.6 T L 102 . 20 21 . 89 + . 38 +1.8 L T 144. 5 7 12 9.66 -.62 -0.5 T L 5.82 4.8 0 +. 0 4 + 0.8 T 0.3 6 28.80 +.19+0.7 L T 45.51 44.49 + . 09 +0.2 T L 14 3 .49143.84 + . 71 $.0.5 T L 17.97 13. 6 6 +. 4 6 + 3.5 L T 37.42 32. 7 2 + 1.28t 4 .1 L T L 39. 6 5 38.20 -.26 -0.7 T 37.90 3 6. 8 9 -.31 -0.8 T L 14.70 13.8 2 +. 0 9 + 0 .7 L L 61.98 61. 4 9 +. 1 3 +0.2 L L 9.19 6.61 +. 1 3 + 2.0 T T 18.96 17. 2 4 +. 4 1 +2.4 L L 36.0 5 23. 71 + . 5 3 +2.3 L T 24.31 22. 2 2 + . 1 2 +0.5 T L 50.05 4 7. 5 9 -.11 -0.2 T T 99.76 9 7. 0 3 -.69 -0.7 T L 77.20 74.6 4 +. 0 7 +0 .1 T L 47.75 48.5 4 + 1.33 t2 .8 L L 71.15 70 .52 + . 9 1 +1 .3 L L 8.12 7.35 +. 0 6 t 0 . 8 T L 46.99 41.6 6 +. 0 8 +0 .2 L L 275. 0 9 24 1.89 -.84 -0.3 T L 36.03 34.8 6 +. 0 1 ... L T 33.32 23. 6 7 + . 7 5 +3.3 L L 25 0 .00249.58 + . 08 ... L L 70.35 6 8. 3 8 -.25 -0.4 L T 84.20 83.03 -.77 -0.9 T L 26.53 25 .80 + . 22 +0.8 T L 9.6 5 17.53 +.15+0.9 L T L 45.52 4 5. 2 1 -.16 -0.4 L L WAF D 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 22 .27 +.38+ 1.7 L L L WF C 4 3.47 — o 55.35 54 .83 + . 0 6 +0.1 T L WY 2 7 .48 — e 36.17 36 .15 + . 04 + 0 .1 L L
AutoZone (AZO)
S&P500ETF BkofAm MktVGold AT&T Inc
BKW
Close:$32.49 V-1.33 or -3.9% The burger chain and Canadian doughnut seller Tim Hortons said they expect to complete their$11 billion tie-up on Dec. 12. $40
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV
WashingtonFedl
EURO
' 77
.
NorthwestStocks
The Treasury Department reports today how much moneythe federal government took in and paid out last month. The October report showed that the federal government's receipts and outlays translated into a deficit of $121.7 billion for the month. Economists anticipate the November shortfall at a far smaller $64 billion. In November last year, the government ended the month with a deficit of $135.2 billion.
+
Major stock indexes ended mixed Tuesday, echoing larger declines inoverseas markets.The Standard & Poor's 500 index and Dow Jones industrial average both fell slightly, while the Nasdaq composite notched a modest gain. Telecommunications stocks led among the decliners in the SB P 500. Energy stocks moved higher as oil prices rebounded. Traders had their eye on overseas developments. Greece called an early presidential vote, sending European indexes lower. Chinese stocks slumped on news the government tightened rules for lending. The uncertainty helped drive up demand for bonds and precious metals, pushing prices higher.
Change: -51.28 (-0.3%)
DOW
Dividend: none
Uncle Sam'8 wallet
$63.82
StoryStocks
... CIOSe: 17,801.20
.
based on past 12 month results
Source: FaotSet NAME
CRUDEOIL
$17.08
1,950
Vol. (in mil.) 3,875 1,875 Pvs. Volume 3,711 1,916 Advanced 1897 1871 Declined 1 276 8 5 3 New Highs 113 90 New Lows 2 58 1 7 1
4Q '13 4 Q '14
35 QQ
"
NYSE NASD
$32.89
.
"
2,050 "
,"14
Operating EPS
+
$1,231.50
Dow jones industrials 17 6PP .
StocksRecap
28
GOLD
05
2 p4p. ............................... Close: 2,059.82
$34.79
TOL
+
SstP 500
Wednesday, December 10, 201 4
$40
10 YR TNOTE 2.21%
2,059.82
T 3.68 T 5.14 T 2.42 L 5.62 T 4.7 2 T 1.73 L 3.26
CLOSE PVS. 63.82 63.05 1.72 1.72 2.08 2.05 3.65 3.60 1.72 1.71
%CH. %YTD +1.22 -35.2 +0.52 -1 0.1 +1.42 -32.3 +1.59 -1 3.7 +1.00 -38.1
CLOSE PVS. 1231.50 1194.70 17.08 16.22 1246.80 1229.40 2.95 2.91 812.10 798.30
%CH. %YTD + 3.08 + 2 .5 +5.33 -11.7 -9.1 +1.42 +1.24 -1 4.4 +1.73 +1 3.2
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.62 1.61 +0.59 +20.7 Coffee (Ib) 1.79 1.77 +1.36 +62.1 -9.2 Corn (bu) 3.83 3.78 +1.46 Cotton (Ib) 0.60 0.60 +0.95 -29.3 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 333.90 341.60 -2.25 -7.3 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.47 1.47 + 0.31 + 8 . 1 Soybeans (bu) 10.49 10.44 +0.53 -20.1 -0.8 Wheat(bu) 6.01 6.10 -1.56 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5662 -.0008 -.05% 1.6427 Canadian Dollar 1.1 4 39 -.0023 -.20% 1.0639 USD per Euro 1.2374 +.0045 +.36% 1.3738 -.94 -.79% 103.23 JapaneseYen 119.49 Mexican Peso 14. 4 035 +.0493 +.34% 12.8652 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9340 -.0289 -.73% 3.4927 Norwegian Krone 7 . 1173 -.0293 -.41% 6.1377 South African Rand 11.4548 -.0741 -.65% 10.3905 Swedish Krona 7.5 2 58 -.0073 -.10% 6.5320 Swiss Franc .9712 -.0039 -.40% . 8 907 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2044 +.0001 +.01% 1.0980 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1892 +.0165 +.27% 6.0717 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7523 +.001 2 +.02% 7.7533 Indian Rupee 62.015 +.140 +.23% 61.145 Singapore Dollar 1.3163 -.0026 -.20% 1.2487 South KoreanWon 1104.59 -6.70 -.61% 1053.35 -.06 -.19% 2 9.57 Taiwan Dollar 31.13
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
BRIEFING
•
bility."
Most of the affected banks haveraised billions of dollars of newcapital since the crisis, so they will most likely not find the proposed ruleonerous to comply with. Fed officials estimated that nearly all of theeight banks would already meet the newrequirements outlined Tuesday. They addedduring phone a call with reporters that the eight bankswould have to raise atotal of $21 billion in additional capital but declinedto provide specific figures for individual banks. JPMorgan, however,may account for most or all of thatsum. At a public Federal Reserve Boardmeeting Tuesday,StanleyFischer, the central bank's vice chairman, made comments that implied that JPMorganwould be hardest hit by theregulation. "The whole shortfall looks to betied to JPMorgan," saidJason Goldberg, abankanalyst at Barclays.
BANKRUPTCIES Chapter7 Filed Dec. 2 • Edward Romandia 111, 3357 SW35th St., Redmond Filed Dec. 3 • Derekand Jacqueline Lee Jones, 20346 Shetland Loop,Bend Filed Dec. 4 • Kevin J. and Angie L. Porterfield, 2416 NW Second St., Bend Filed Dec. 5 • Michael G. andGinger K. Evans, 3471 N.MainSt., Prineville Filed Dec. 8 • Ronald A. Forseth III and Kimberly S. Forseth, 4990 NW Dubisar Lane, Prineville • Iva M. Lent, 15750 Eastwind Court, La Pine • Karen L. Robinson, 1850 NE JacksonAve., Bend • Jeffrey L. Hartzog, 2031 6 Shetland Loop, Bend • Robert J. and Lisa A. Cummins, 21457 Neff Road, Bend Chapter13 Filed Dec. 4 • Todd A. Taylor, 890 NE Locksley Drive, Bend • Shannon L Hawkins, P.O. Box 266, Redmond Filed Dec. 5 • Frank Lee, 61915Dobbin Road, Bend
ri in
II
Fedaimstomake big banksresilient The FederalReserve, fearing complacencysix years after the financial crisis, movedTuesdayto preserve the efforts that have strengthenedlarge banks. The Fedproposed a rule that would increase capital requirements for the nation's eight largest banks, including JPMorgan ChaseandGoldman Sachs. By increasing the requirements, theFed aims to makelarge banks more resilient to shocks. A bank with higher capital dependslesson borrowed money,which may cease to be available in times of stress. The Fed'spushto increase capital mayalso reduce thechancesthat a large bank's problems may weigh onthe wider economy. Someeconomists havesaidthat thesizeofsomebanks has madethem "too big to fail." Janet Yellen, theFed's chairwoman, saidTuesday that the proposed rule might persuade banks to shrink. Therule, she said in astatement, "would encouragesuch firms to reducetheir systemic footprint and lessen the threat that their failure could pose to overall financial sta-
•
By Joseph Dltzler
lytakes place withinthree
to its lawsuit, has loaned the
Properties LLC and Edward
The Bulletin
months to a year of the court
association $5.5 million to build and run the facility since 2003, filed a motion Monday asking the judge to rule in thebank's favor and forgo a civil trial.
Willard of Sunray Vacation
wood Road and theproperty inside and arranged for a
Rentals Inc., also known as
security service to keep watch
Cascara Vacation Rentals. A Deschutes Countyjudge in
onthe building, accordingto court records. Two weeks later,
October removed Willard, who
the bankdropped itsrequest
filed forbankruptcy in federal court, from the Mavericks suit.
for the court to appoint an independent receiver to oversee
Bruce Cahn, a Portland lawyer with Ball Janikwho
the operation of Mavericks at
The wave no longer breaks
order. Deschutes County as-
at Mavericks at Sunriver, but the legal waters around it still
sessed the real market value of Mavericks land and structures
ripple. Deschutes County Circuit Judge Beth Bagley last month
at $3.4million last fiscalyear. The association on Oct. 31
The bank filed the lawsuit
ordered the water attraction
dosed Mavericks at Sunriver, where vacationers lifted
in August, seekingto appoint a receiver to run the business
and recreational facility in
weights, tossed free-throws
Sunriversold by the Deschutes
on abasketballhalf-court and swam in its pool, according
and to foreclose on its loans after failed talks with the own-
County Sheriff to satisfy a $5.5 million default judgment against Sunriver Vacations Recreation Association. The
association members, who Bank of the Cascades says
guaranteed those loans, are headedbacktocourttodetermine who will pay the balance owed. A sheriffs sale normal-
ers in Mayto sell the facility,
represents the bank, summed up his case'Ibesday: "The borrowerborrowed$5million and didn't pay it back," he said.
to court records. The facility
according to court records. The
also features a surfing wave
suit names as defendants the
machine, a FlowRider 1800, installed in 2007, that provided
Sunriver Vacations Recreation Association, its member busi-
a venue forprofessional surfers and bodyboarders to compete for cash prizes. An attorney for the Bank of the Cascades, which, according
nesses and theirprincipals: Larry Browning of Resort After closing Mavericks, the Realty Inc., Richard Hadley of association on Nov. 5 agreed Mountain Resort Properties to maintain the 32,000-squareInc., Mark Halvorsen of Village foot building at 18135 Cotton-
"The guarantors promised to
payitback and didn'tpay it back."
uesonair or l u l S no a i n a o i a
Sunriver. With no revenue forthcom-
ing to pay down the Mavericks debt, the bank sawno reason for a receiver, Cahn said.
'When they voluntarily closed the facility and put in a security and maintenance program, there was nothing for a receiver to do," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Amazon workers lose lawsuit By Robert Bames The Washington Post
By Joe Sharkey
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruledunani-
New York Times News Service
mously Tuesdaythatworkers
At an airport international checkpoint in Zurich recently, Leonard Berkowitz
who fill orders in Amazon.
had a small bottle of shampoo and a tube
com warehouses need notbe paid for the time they spend in
of toothpaste confiscated before a trip
security lines at the end of their
home. "The toothpaste was a little over the
shifts to make sure theyhaven't stolen anyproducts.
size limit, agreed, but I still thought it
The court reversed a lower
was a bit of overreaching," said Berkow-
courtruling fortheworkers, who alleged theyspentup to
itz, of Boca Raton, Florida. "Anyway, I
thought they were going to revise those rules on carrying liquids." Revising the rules on liquids is a long-
25 minutes at warehouses in
Nevada waitingtogo through security dearance.
term goal, but nothing is imminent,
according to the Transportation Security Administration, which works closely
"The Court of Appeals erred by focusing on whether an employer required a particular
with other security agencies internation-
ally to coordinate policies. Still, Berkowitz and many other frequent travelers often express bewil-
activity."
derment about rules on carrying liquids and gels onto airplanes. The vexation
— Justice Clarence Thomas
increases at the year-end holidays.
This is a time even the most savvy business travelers, normally expert at
efficiently navigating airport security, might be traveling with extra baggage in the form of presents, perhaps including
But Justice Clarence Thomas
saidthat federallawrequires that workers be paid for activi-
that Christmas-gift bottle of high-end
ties before and after their shifts onlywhen the activities are"in-
bourbon someone gave you, not to
tegral and indispensable" to the job they are hired to perform. "The Court of Appeals erred by focusing on whether an employer required aparticular
mention those Christmas snow globes — though the Transportation Security
Administration now lets them through if they appear to contain less than 3.4
ounces of liquid. The liquids limits can pose problems for holiday travel. Does that container of
mom's famous holiday creamed spinach that she insisted you take home get a
BoyounKim/The New YorkTim es
This time of year presents a particular set of problems for travelers, but a federal official says the limits on liquids and gels are still needed.
activity," Thomas wrote.'The
integral and indispensable test is tied to the productive work
that the employee is employed
pass at security? How about that salsa
to perform." He addedthat Integrity Staff-
from Albuquerque, or that pumpkin pie your sister made? What about wrapped gifts? The TSA has a page online that addresses many of these questions. As to presents, the TSA says a screener "may
ic scanners that can identify potentially
to remove those one-quart zipper-lock
dangerous nonmetallic explosives, but
bags and present them for inspection is seldom followed, or enforced, at
ing Solutions, a companythat
checkpoints.
have to unwrap a gift to take a closer
provided they are presented separately for additional screening — which takes
"There's often a guy there at the checkpoint saying 'Take it out! Take it
warehouses across the nation, "did not employ its workers to undergo security screenings,
out!' But then they don't check to see if
but to retrieve products from
you do," he said. "For at least two years now, I've been stopped exactly never" for failing to remove allowable liquids from a carry-on. However, he added, "on those times when I have a Nalgene bottle in my bag, which holds like 32 ounces of water, and I forgot to dump it out, they'll catch it every time." This indicates, he suggests, thatthescreeners areusingcommon
warehouse shelves andpackage those products for shipment to Amazon customers." The implications of the decision in Integrity Staffing Solutions v. Buskwould havebeen great had it gone the other way.
sense. As part of its "risk-based security"
that use security checks at the
initiatives, the TSA gives screeners
of their inventory walks out with the workers. A win would
look inside." The liquids limits are, of course, complex to enforce and often confounding to
travelers. However, aviation security officials stress that their biggest fear is a terrorist plot to bomb airplanes using liquid explosives, like the foiled plot in 2006 in
these are used mainly to screen "medically necessary" liquids that are allowed through in quantities over the limits, extra time at the checkpoints.
Technology companies are working to develop scanners to "allow most, if not all liquids, aerosols and gels to fly again," Pistole said. The hitch, he said, is to do this reliably
which terrorists were said to be planning to use liquid explosives in soft-drink con-
and without creating additional check-
tainers to bring down 10 aircraft bound
One small relaxation in the liquids rules occurred this year at airports in
from Britain to North America.
point delays.
"There are still some naysayers out Europe, when the European Union rethere, still some people who say it's all se- laxed some restrictions on bringing on curity theater," John Pistole, the TSA adboard certain liquids, including bottles ministrator, said of complaints about liq- purchasedatairportduty-freeshops. uids limits and other restrictions on what Those containers must be in special duty-free bags, subject to additional can be carried onto a plane. "But those folks just don't know what the threats screening with bottle-liquid scanning are. One classified briefing on what the technology.
discretion in matters such as insisting
that some passengers physically remove from their carry-ons otherwise compliant quart-size bags, readily identified in the standard X-ray scanning of all carry-ons. That comes across as a common-sense approach.
actual threats are would, hopefully, con-
On the other hand, while most of us
vince them — though some people are never convinced — that these threats are
follow the rules on the amount of liquids
real and the stakes are high."
steiner, of Carlsbad, California, we also
be happy to see even more of at the air-
know that the additional requirement
ports next year.
In fact, the TSA is now using electron-
in our carry-ons, like Brian Boden-
And common sense is what we will all
workshop about using social media andwebsites; $10/ farm; register online or call 541-447-6228; 9-11:30 a.m. Central OregonCommunity College Redmond Technology Education Center, 2324SE College Loop, Redmond www.agbiz.eventbrite.com. TUESDAY • Habitat for Humanity Affordable Homeowner Information Session:For
families and individuals who earn 35 percent to 60 percent of the areamedian income andareinterested inbecominghomeowners inCrookCounty; free; 5:30 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 NW MeadowLakes Drive, Prineville; 541-3855387 Ext. f 03 or djohnson© bendhabitat.org. • SCORE free business counseling:Business
Olg.
to improve your credit and how it affects you; registration required, 541323-6567 or homesource© neighborimpact.org; 5:307:30p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 SW First St., Redmond. www.neighborimpact.org/ financialskills.
WEDNESDAY • Understanding8 ManagingCredit: Learn
• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
counselors conductfree, 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk onthe second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library,601 NWWall St.; www.SCORECentral0regon.
There are more than a dozen
dass-action suits filed against Amazon andothercompanies end of shifts to make surenone have openedthe way for hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation.
The workers had daimed that because the security checks were required to keep
their jobs, theyshouldbe compensated for their time. Andthey saidthat the com-
pany could cut the wait time by employingmore security screeners or staggering shifts so that not all the workers were
BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR SATURDAY • HomebuyerEducation Workshop:Learn to save time and moneywhen buying a home;$45 plus fees; registration required; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 SW First St., Redmond; 541-323-6567 or www. neighborimpact.org/ homebuyerhelp. • Make YourBrandStand Out:Agricultural business
provides workers for Amazon
released at once. But the court agreedwiththe Obama administration in reading the law to favor the company. And Thomas said it was not relevant to the law whether the
company had ways to reduce the wait time.
"These arguments are properlypresented to the employer at thebargainingtable, not to a court," he wrote.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing Report, D5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors
Skis that evolve with the times
SNOW REPORT For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts, seeB6
BRIEFING
Iew~~I
Tour Larkspur Trail on Saturday Bend Bikes is hosting a leisurely, family-friendly tour of the Larkspur Trail on Saturday. The tour coincides with the Larkspur Neighborhood Association's "Light Up the Larkspur Trail." Residents who border the trail have beenasked to decorate their backyards for the trail users' enjoyment. All trail users, including children, are invited to the 4-mile, off-street trail, which runs north and south on theeast side of Bend. Those who want to begin from the west side can meet at 6 p.m.at Bend Electric Bikes, 223
I
By Jack Bell New York Times News Service
For years, many people thought of the cross-country skier as either a soli-
tary tree hugger out in the woods, icicles hanging from a frozen beard, or
perhaps as a perfect human specimen struggling across the finish line of a
long race in Finland and promptly vomiting onto the snow.
While those images may endure, the sport has experienced a renaissance Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Bill Miller sits in front of a pair of commemorative10th Mountain Division skis at his home in Sisters.
of sorts among millions of health-conscious Americans eager to burn 300 to
700 calories an hour when the winter chill and snow
NW Hill St. Those who
want to begin nearer the trailhead canmeet at 7 p.m. outside the Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road. This is a freeevent, and warm refreshments will be provided. For more information about the event, contact Lucas Freeman atlucasf©bendbikes.org or
See video coverage on The Bulletin's website: boutibullotiu.com/skitrooper
o
on the ground keep them from their regular outdoor exercise, such as jogging or biking.
541-241-6077, or visit
www.BendBikes.org.
lan Coble via The New York Times
Madshus eMpowerXC smart skis have a microchip
Birding eventset for Sundayin Bend The Young Birders of Central Oregon will host a Christmas Bird Count from10 a.m. to noon Sunday near Bend's Overturf Butte. The bird-watching and identification event is free and designed for those ages 9 to18 and supporting adults. The event will include ashort hike near the butte. For more information, call 541-385-1799 or email acegerard©bendbroadband.com. — From staff reports
TRAIL UPDATE With ChrisSobo Due to wetter, springlike weather last week, snow conditions in sno-parks and onthe Deschutes National Forest winter trail systemarein fair, wet-pack conditions. The DutchmanFlat area could seemorethanan inch of rain in thenext48 hours. Recent rainand more rain onthe current snow packmaycreate numerous water slush hazards alongthewinter trails near Dutchman Sno-Park. Snowmobile riders shoulduse caution when riding through pools of slush. It is easy to get stuck, andriders can sink waist deepin slush hazards. Slushhazards will likely persist into the weekend.Weather forecasts are predicting slightly colder temperatures but not muchsnow in the next week. Wet, warmer temperatures havecreated a less than ideal winter recreation scenario. Lower elevation trails and sno-parks have inadequate snow conditions for trail access, especially below the 5,500-foot mark. Most sno-parks in the Deschutes National Forest are not operating. Dutchman Sno-Park has the best conditions, but they are only fair, and things could get sloppier in the next couple of days before there is minor improvement. SeeTrails /D5
installed to make choosing skis and tracking activity
easier. According to Snowsports Industries America, a trade group, more than 3
• Sisters residentBill Miller recalls his days fighting in the 10th Mountain Division duringWorldWar II
million Americans took to the trails in 2013-14. Like
alpine skiing, cross-country skiing appeals to an affluentand educated clientele: 49 percent of
SISTERS-
cross-country skiers have household incomes of
igh in Italy's rugged Apennine
.53
Mountains in the winter of 1945,
\
Qorr
-l -l '-
a packboard saved his life twice, taking the brunt of a barrage of Nazi bullets. A close friend from the same hometown, in the wrong place when a mortar shell
repw-<~ a
Several old photos from Bill Miller's time in the10th Mountain Division during World War II, including a picture of him at Camp Hale, Colorado, in 1944.
MORICAL
York. "The way I ski now, if I
had to race myself at 23 on a giant slalom, I'd whip that Longtime Sisters resident Bill Miller, one of a dwin-
with remarkable clarity.
the slopes this year, but that is
23-year-old kid's butt," Miller
an ambitious aim for a man 90 years old. M iller — who appears spry and fit — claims he is a better
says with a laugh while sitting
War II, recalls the details of
Right now, though, Miller's thoughts are on another mountain slope — nearby Hoodoo Ski Area. He says he will be lucky
skier now than when he was
and technique."
those three months of battle
to get three or four days on
23 and competing and coach-
dling number of surviving members of the Army's 10th Mountain Division in World
Even as the sport has
become more popular and more mainstream, the
prosaic ski has been slower to evolve. The choices are still between waxable and waxless skis. But shus eMpower XC series
ing for the ski team at Colgate University in upstate New
MARK
approached the top of Mount Belvedere.
percent have a bachelor's degree or higher.
the digital age is coming, particularly with the Mad-
struck, literally died in his arms. He solemnly rememberedthe scattered bodies ashe
more than $75,000, and 59
at a small desk in his modest home outside Sisters. "I'm ski-
ing better. It's good equipment
of smart skis. "We wanted to create a finished product that
is perfect," said Chris McCullough, the global brand manager for K2 Outdoor, the parent company of Madshus skis. He added, "A tag goes into the ski and gives it a unique signature, one microchip per ski."
SeeMiller ID3
See Smart skis/D2
Rescuing adouble-barreled damsel indistress More years ago than I caretoremember, Istrode into a pawn shop and saw
her behind the counter. She was long, lean and spare, but
GARY LEWIS
health. And then we'd walk
together, and maybe we'd get to know each other.
was manufactured in 1936. It
was probably purchased by a hunter on a budget — just
graceful, too. I could tell she'd
been hurt, and she'd need to be carefully nursed back to
to be associated with wellbuilt, inexpensive shotguns. My gun, as it turned out,
ment, and it had languished ever since. In hand, the action was
tight. It closed up solid and
like I was in 1993 when I rescued the double-barreled and money was tight, but as
money inmy shotgun budget, but this baby was worth a chance at the $150 price tag. No one had looked at the old shotgun, I guessed, for months. It was a 12-gauge
the counter and took the gun home in a bag.
tra, I took the old smoothbore to a gunsmith.
Lefever Nitro Special, and on the rack it was in three
shotgun, introduced in 1878. Later, the Lefever Arms
What I learned from a
worn-out copy of Gun Digest was that Daniel Myron Le-
fever was best known as the inventor of the hammerless
Iugjrt t IItrrirl't ,
6
damsel in her distress. We had two little girls then
didn't rattle. The next day, I laid three 50-dollar bills on
There was not a lot of
i
soon as there was a little exvs
"It looks like someone left
too much oil on her," he said.
"She sat on a rack, and the oil ran down into the stock, and then, after a few years
pieces, its stock cracked and
Company was incorporated
of not being shot, the wood, weakened by the oil saturation, gave way in recoil. I bet
splintered at the action. Its
with Ithaca Gun Company,
it scared him!"
owner had left it on consign-
and the Lefever name began
SeeShotgunID5
I
stn
1l'r,
,, i[i
a
Gary Lewis /For The Bulletin
This old shotgun was found, broken, in a pawn shop. After a careful restoration, the 1930s era smoothbore has served for two more
decades hunting waterfowl, chukar and pheasant.
D2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
k • I''
• ' •
• •
Send us your best photos for another special version of Well shot! Submit your best work at I bendbulletin.cem/readerphetes. Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
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MIDDLE AND NORTH SISTER Julien Havac was able to capture a surreal setting during our recent influx of fog.
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shus Redline ($760), Nanosonic ($655) and Hypersonic ($475) lines. Having a chip i n y o ur cross-country ski s m i g ht sound a bit gimmicky, but how many of us can say, "My
also enter information about
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mends the best wax and the
is rifewithvideos ontheintrica-
optimum places on the ski to apply the wax.
cies and secrets of waxing. For most people, getting waxing right is simply much too complex, which is where the app can help to simplify. Anyone can wax a ski, but most people would like to spend less time waxing and more time skiing. For now, the eMpower technology is available on 10 classical and skate skis in the Mad-
During time on the trails,
the app will catalog his performance, much as the Runkeep-
and customers can build a profile using an Acer tablet and custom software.
er app tracks a runner's or a
biker's outing — mapping the run, tracking distance and calories burned, for example. Af-
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much wax to use and how to
the weather and snow con- use it. Volumes have been writditions. The app then recom- ten about waxing, and YorfTube
lan Coble via The New York Times
I
able to see the data." The skis are even smart-
ter a day out on the trails, the
er than that, though; the free
be sharedacrosssocialm edia.
app allows that information to
' NORTHWEST CROSSING Aaoard-qeinning neighborhood on Bend's qoestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
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optimum places on the ski to apply the wax.
Smart skis
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Continued from D1
sales personnel and custom-
Madshus was founded in 1906 by Martin Madshus in a barn in Vardal, Norway. It
ers can build a profile using an Acer tablet and custom
A
The software calls for entering the skier's height (in Asnes, is one of the two re- centimeters) and weight (in maining ski manufacturers in kilograms), and level of abiliNorway, home to thousands of ty, ski style (classical or skate) cross-country skiers. and experience. Customers What's smart about these are immediately pointed to a skis? First, the guesswork selection of skis in store invenabout which ski to buy is most- tory that fit the profile. "I'm not really clear on how ly eliminated by the microchip embedded in each ski. it all works, but it expands on T he proper f i tting f o r a tool for the salesperson, the cross-country skis is not rock- wax zones, the profile," said et science, but the infusion of Ted Clarke, an avid biker and digital technology promises skier who was checking out to make it more precise. An new skis at the Skirack in Buroptimum experience for the lington, Vermont, recently and skier depends on skis with the speaking through a Skype vidcorrect flexibility, length and eo hookup. "It does help me decide stiffness.
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has been based in the village of Biri since 1972 and, with
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quency identification chip with near-field communication, or NFC, capability is inserted in
nice to know my options rather
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Skiers enter their personal details into the Madshus eMpower skiing app and combine it with their skis. Then, before they take to the trails, they can also enter information about the weather and snow conditions, and the app will then recommend the best wax and the
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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
I ao o esto raws iers wit resort U By Roger Phillips The?daho Statesman
BOISE, Idaho — Not long after the recession put the skids on skiing like an unwaxed board in heavy crud, Sun Valley, Brundage and Tamarack resorts are applying a fresh coat and hoping to slide into a smoother future. All three are upgrading facilities and slopes in response to animproved economy and renewed excitement about ski-
ing, snowboarding and other winter sports. The resorts are hoping that
with a little help from Mother Nature, they will boost their bottom line this season.
Signs are everywhere — at big and small ski areas, locally and nationally — that skiing is bouncing back. Sun Valley is spending millions on its slopes and renovating its signature lodge. Brundage is expanding its lodge and giving it a face-lift, as well as building a terrain park in its own style. Tamarack is finally out of a financial fog and is investing
drop in visits in part because of drought, and ski areas
Park.
Admission is $15, which indudes a lift ticket, ski or snowboard rental and lesson. Neptune's parks are simple: He makes snow with generators and portable snowguns,
throughout the Northwest got
a late start last winter. One ski area, Mt. Ashland in Southern
Oregon, remained closed for the first time in its history from lack of snow. National skier visits peaked
uses a snowcat to spread it
around a slope, adds rope tows or surface lifts (aka magic carpets), adds jumps and rails and encourages people to have fun.
at around 60 million in 2007-08 and reached that again in 2010-
11, which coincided with good snow years despite a down economy.
His business model is also
simple: make skiing, snowboarding and tubing afford-
Skier visits bottomed out at 51 million in the 2011-12 season, which was the lowest in
able to families, and bring it to them.
"I'm honestly just trying to
more than a decade. B erry said t h a t w i t h a snowy winter, this ski season could match or top the national
make an economicalproduct.
Everything else is too expensive in time and money," he said. "I'm opening it up to a gigantic amount of people who otherwise wouldn't have the
records.
Brundage With its short lift lines and
opportunity to do it."
uncrowded slopes, you might
KatherineJones/The Idaho Statesman
think
B r u ndage M o untain After a skiing slump from the recession, Sun Valley, Brundage and Tamarack resorts are applying a Resort near McCall has some fresh coat and hoping to slide into a smoother future.
growing room for skier visits, but that's not how Brundage's managers see it.
While people are sliding on snow by whatever means they choose, others are watching,
relaxing and socializing. Kids can ski or board af"We see some optimism with the public," he said. "Not
an industry that rarely sees age wants to preserve those newcomers. things. "People come here because Boise snowboarder, terrain park designer and entre- they get the powder days, and preneur Ryan Neptune has it's low-density skiing," Brundopened a new microresort age president Bob Looper said. at the Eagle Sports Complex "If that erodes, we will lose
The resort is i mproving ter school and hang out with snowmaking, buying new ski their friends. Parents can put a just with us, but throughout rental equipment, replacing family of four on the slopes for the whole ski industry." expanded and improved ter- snowcats and snowmobiles for roughly the price of an adult Sun Valley gets about 26 rain parks, which are among grooming, expanding its ter- day pass at other Idaho ski percent of its visitors from Ida- the best in the U.S. rain park and cutting brush on areas. ho, and Sibbach said they are Dollar Mountain features the slopes to improve skiing. They can also drive to one of valued customers. two high-speed quads, a tubPeople will notice a differ- Neptune's parks within minBut that means the resort ing hill, a full-featured terrain ence, Ashcraft said. utes from their homes in the has to attract nearly three out park with 76 rails and one The resort rode the wave Valley. offourguestsfrom outofstate. of North America's largest of the early 2000s real estate Neptune said he's watched Sun Valley is getting di- super-pipes. boom like a surfer in a tube, how people use his parks, and
after a
rect flights from Seattle and
in its ski operations. And there are new faces in
The resort is known for its
quality snow, affordability, family-friendly a t mosphere and uncrowded vibe. Brund-
s h o rt-but-successful them." T he resort p l ays t o i t s land State Park. strengths by renovating its Just across the state line, a existing lodge and improving new resort is opening north it, while maintaining the tradi-
launch last winter at Eagle Is-
of Logan, Utah. Cherry Peak
tional atmosphere. Looper said a goal of its and families with affordable expansion is t o c r eate a lift tickets. It will offer three well-rounded experiencefor hopes to cater to both adults
lifts for skiers and snowboard-
visitors on the slopes and in
ers, a three-lane tubing hill
the lodge, whether buying a lift ticket, renting equipment or "The industry is doing well having a meal and drinks after and it can afford to upgrade," skiing. "We want to give them a said Michael Berry, president and an ice rink.
of the National Ski Area Asso-
complete ski experience," he
ciation. "It's almost across the sald. board. Whether it's big resorts
or mom and pop, everyone is Sun Valley doing pretty well right now." Idaho's biggest and most That might buck conven- famous resort can't rest on its
tional wisdom of some who claim skiing is an ailing industry that's chasing Baby Boomers to their graves. Berry disagrees. Skier visits, which is a head
count each time a person buys a day pass (or season pass) and visits a skiarea,were 56.5
reputation when competing with the biggest ski companies in the world, as well as entire ski towns (Iooking at you, Park City, Utah). Even during the downturn, Sun Valley remained aggressive, adding or improving everything from halfpipes to golf courses. This year, Sun Valley marketing director Jack Sibbach said he sees a renewed enthu-
million nationally last winter. That's just less than the 10-year average of 57 million, Berry said, despite a disastrous year in California. siasm from skiers he visited That state saw a 30 percent with at trade shows.
er Nature is stingy with natural snow. Sun Valley will continue its
San Francisco this year, and Tamarack everyone who visits will see In Tamarack's case, one reachanges. son it's spending money is beThe resort is renovating its cause it finally can. lodge, which won't be completThe resort emerged from ed until June, and is unavail- foreclosurethisyearand now able this winter, although Sun has a new company backing it, Valley will still have plenty of known as Newtrac. places to stay. The company is spending "There's never a good time $2.6 million at the resort, into do it," Sibbach said. cluding $1.2 million on the S ibbach described i t a s slopes, according to project a "rebirth" of the lodge. It manager David Papiez. will go from 148 rooms to 94 The resort isalso expanding rooms, but rooms will be more its operations to daily skiing luxurious. when it opens Saturday. "It adds to our message that On the slopes, Sun Valley has improved glade skiing on Tamarack is back," said Wolfe 25 acres of the mountain by Ashcraft, marketing and recthinning trees and removing reation manager. dead ones. It's designed to im-
prove forest health and improve skiing. While 25acres may be a small fraction of the 2,000 on site, more acres will be thinned in the future under a long-term
plan with the Forest Service. One of Sun Valley's biggest advantages over other resorts is it operates North America's largest automated snowmak-
ing system, which ensures its Thanksgiving opener and lets skiers carve turns when Moth-
close friends," Miller says. "When the war was over, we
down near th e P o V alley," go back, and those villages Miller says. "It was day after still wine and dine us, because
Continued from D1
maintained a very strong association."
day, week after week, of try- we freed them," says Miller, ing to take one more ridge. who lives with his son Gary,
The 10th Mountain Division left Camp Hale and trained in Austin, Texas, for six months, then made the trip by sea to Europe in late 1944.
Just attack, after attack, after attack, until finally when the Germans were pushed into
he calls "heavy snow country." He says his grandfather helped form the First Kingdom of Ski club around 1900. Miller says he was on skis by the time he was 3 years old. When he turned 18 and knew he would be d r afted
into the war, he volunteered for the 10th Mountain Divi-
sion, which was being formed to specialize in mountainous and arctic battle conditions — more specifically, to take
the German stronghold on Belvedere to liberate the Italian city of Bologna. He was sent to train at Camp Hale, near Leadville, Colorado, at about 10,000 feet in the Rocky
Mountains. "I thought this was going to be a great ski resort up in the Rockies," Miller says with a chuckle. "It turned out a little
differently." Miller trained at Camp Hale for a year and a half as part of the 85th Mountain Regiment
of the 10th, and he estimates he did not sleep in a barracks for more than a month. Most
nights, he was in his sleeping bag in the snow with the oth-
er trainees, in temperatures dipping as low as minus 45 degrees as the soldiers carried heavy loads on two-weeklong maneuvers through the Rockies.
the Po Valley, they started fleeing."
63, on five acres northeast of
Sisters. Of the 12,000 10th Mountain Division soldiers who served in Italy in 1945, 1,000 were
One of the main objectives,
Miller says that the moun- killed and 4,000 were woundtain climbing skills of the 10th ed. Next year will mark the the Po Valley and Bologna, came into play much more so 70th anniversary of the diviand drive the Germans north. than their skiing skills during sion's battle in Italy. Belvedere, which had been the three months of nearly After its time in Europe, the built into a fortress by the Ger- constant combat. 10th was scheduled to join op"But no other flatland infan- erations in the Pacific theater mans, stood in the way. "If they d i dn't t ake t h at try would have been able to in Japan. But before Miller and mountain, they couldn't get to take Riva Ridge," Miller states. his mates could be shipped the highway to go to Bologna," Trained as a machine-gun- to the Pacific, the Americans Miller says. "That's why we ner, Miller carried on his back dropped atomic bombs on the were sent over there." a packboard,to which ammuJapanese cities of Hiroshima According to Miller, weeks nition boxes were strapped. and Nagasaki, ending the war. M iller n otes t ha t m a n y before the attack on Belve- One nightnear Belvedere,as dere, the 86th Mountain Reg- he was crawling and feeling prominent ski resorts in the iment of the 10th sneaked up for tripwires, he took fire from U.S. were founded by former 10th Mountain Division memhigher and higher on Riva a German machine gun. "He hit all the ammo boxes," bers, including Mt. Bachelor Ridge, just below Belvedere, setting up fixed ropes to climb Miller recalls. "He went right ski area, which was founded the sheer rock faces. The 86th across my back (with the bul- by 10th trooper Bill Healy and attacked once atop the ridge lets). If I hadn't had the pack- opened as Bachelor Butte ski and startled th e G ermans, board on, I'd have been dead area in 1958. Miller attended Colgate Miller recalls. The 85th and right there." 87th regiments then moved The packboard saved him on the GI Bill, and then, after in to attack the Germans on again just after the Americans graduating, eventually joined Belvedere at night, with all of had broken through into the the CIA. He served as an opertheir weapons unloaded, so as Po Valley. ational psychologist in South"There was a largeblast and east Asia, helping case offinot to give the Germans targets from muzzle flashes. I felt myself hit," Miller remem- cers evaluate potential foreign "We had grenades,"Miller bers. "Everybody thought I agents. "If I'd gone on 'What's My explains. "Any shot that was was dead. The shrapnel that fired had to be a German, knocked me forward had hit Line,' I would have said I because we were unloaded. my packboard. I had bruis- trained spies," Miller says with They (the Germans) didn't es on my back and that's all. a wry smile. Miller says he worked for have any target. If they heard Being a human mule with the you and they fired at you, you packboard saved my life." the CIA in Vietnam as early Miller recalls, was to reach
The t r aining i n cluded just watched where the flash rock-climbing, skiing, snow- was and you would throw a shoeing, and some intense grenade there. No weapons bonding among the men, were loaded but we had lots of many of whom were collegiate grenades." skiers. At daybreak, Miller and his The long period of training fellow troopers found themtogether helped the troopers selves near the summit of work cohesively in combat. Belvedere. " When you l o s t y o u r "The mountain was taken, friends, it was really tougher and then there was a whole because we had become such series of mountains that ran
When the victorious 10th Mountain Division marched through the Po Valley, Miller
recalls, the roads were lined with Italians, many of them
a small, intimate atmosphere
out and send the resort into a works best. "These kids are not clamfinancial wipeout. Meanwhile, Tamarack be- bering for more acreage," he came an "under the radar" satd. resort that's now a favorite for Neptune said he's not trying Treasure Valley skiers. to make a mini-ski area, but to "We know that Boise and replicate the experience of a the Treasure Valley is our pri- skate park on snow. He's found it's not only kids mary market, and also McCall. We want to win over the using his parks. "Our entire business is locals," Ashcraft said. Momentum is gaining at based on that f our- and Tamarack. Ashcraft said Mc- five-person family showing up Call's summer traffic was the at our park," he said. best it's been in years, and Neptune said opening day Tamarack's Osprey Meadows at Eagle Island in January atgolf course had its best season tracted 1,500 people. ever. Despite getting a late start Daily skier visits in recent last winter, he was satisfied years have been on par with with the season at Eagle Island Tamarack's lifts ran f o ur the years preceding the real and may reopen it this winter days a week and holidays since estate crash. as a tubing hill and ski/snowit reopened for skiing in 2010, board slope for first-timers. He's not just grooming when its homeowners associ- Gateway Parks ation took over ski operations. Neptune, the Boise entrepre- slopes — he's grooming the The association had a goal neur, is taking skiing back to next generation of skiers and of breaking even while show- its roots with a modern twist. boarders, and the National Ski ing Tamarack remains a viable This winter, he will operArea Association's Berry has ski resort, which it succeed- ate four microresorts in three taken notice. "We lovethese places.They ed in doing. But there was states and offer low-cost skilittle or no money for capital ing, snowboarding and tubing. get kids excited," he said. "And improvements. He opened his latest park when 300 vertical feet doesn't "From a purely operational recently at the Eagle Sports meet their needs, they head standpoint, we need some up- Complex and may reopen up to Bogus or up the road to grades," Ashcraft said. another at Eagle Island State McCall."
Miller Miller was born and raised near Utica, New York, in what
only to have the wave close
as 1961, in the initial stages of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Back in the United States,
Miller served for a time as an
bringing wine to the troops.
arctic survival instructor on
Miller and his wife, Nan, who died this past June, made a trip back to Italy in the late
the Canadian border for foreign agents. Miller retired from the CIA
in 1975 and moved with his 1980s. "Almost every year, a whole wife to San Diego. With free time i n r e tirebunch of guys (from the 10th)
ment, he got his ham radio the lodge. license through the Amateur Gary Miller says he often Radio Emergency Service. accompanies his father on ski He began working with the trips to Hoodoo. "At 90, you've got to be a litSan Diego Mountain Rescue Team, first as a radio operator tle more delicate," Gary says. and then as a climber. "He won't ski as many days Looking for a dry climate as he used to, but it's hugely with good skiing nearby, the important to him. His goal is Millers moved to Sisters in to still be skiing when he's 99. 1988 and Bill began working Skiing is huge in the family." with local ARES operators, Bill Miller is also learning helping search and rescue to play the keyboard alongside teams with communication. Gary, whom he calls a "top"We can be called by the notch bluegrass banjo player." emergency manager or head He also spends time with his of search and rescue if they're four stepgrandchildren, seven having communications prob- stepgreat-grandchildren and lems," Miller explains. "We one s t epgreat-great-grandcan provide links from the child, all r elated to G ary's ham radios that aren't avail- wife, Beckie. "I've been really lucky," able from the walkie-talkies. "I've dropped out in the last
Miller reflects. "I'm still amaz-
few years. They don't need a inglyhealthy and active — and 90-year-old out there doing looking forward to skiing." that. But I was very involved with it until about two years
— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com
ago." Several years ago, Miller served as a ski instructor at
Hoodoo. He donated a pair of 10th Mountain Division memorial skis to the resort, and
they are now displayed inside
TOUCHMARK
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INSURANCE PROBLEMS'? WE CAN HELP. Call 888-8 7 7 - 4 8 9 4
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•
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
D4
UrDOORS BIRDING YOUNG BIRDERS OFCENTRAL OREGON:Christmas Bird Count on Sundayfrom10a.m.to noon; free bird-watching and identification for ages 9-18 and supporting adults; a short hike near Bend's Overturf Butte; meet at private residence; call 541-385-1799 or email
E1VD
offices, Bend; 541-306-4509, communications©deschutestu.org, www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:A group of fly-anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541306-4509orbendcastingclubO
acegerard©bendbroadband.com
gmail.com.
for more information.
THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: 7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www. sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB: 7 p.m .;meets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.
CYCLING CHRISTMAS LIGHTAND HOT TODDY RIDE:Bend Electric Bikes will host a family-friendly tour of the Larkspur Trail on Saturday from 6 to 8 p.m.; the event is free and warming refreshments will be provided; to begin from the west side, meet at 6 p.m. at Bend Electric Bikes, 223 NW Hill Street, to decorate and light up bikes; to join the event nearer the trailhead, meet outside the Bend Senior Center at 7 p.m.; 541-241-6077; info© bendbikes.org; www.bendbikes.
org.
FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; 6 p.m.; meets on the first Monday of each month; Oregon Natural Desert Association
HIKING DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Led by skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds, and take in spring wildflowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.
HUNTING CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION: Meets W ednesdays at 6:30 p.m.; next meeting is Jan. 7; VFW HallRe , dmond; 541-447-2804 or facebook.com at RMEFCentral
Oregon.
LEARN THEART OFTRACKING
Email events at least 10 days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.
SKY WATCH
LQQking intQ a supernQva's lifespan A supernova (the plural is supernovae) is the explosion of a star that, for a brief time, can outshine all other stars within a host galaxy. The subject is often discussed as a possible explanation for the bright Star of Bethlehem, of special significance in Christianity during the month of December. Science today has not found data to support the appearance of that star. The Crab Nebula, also known as M1 in the constellation Taurus, is a supernova remnant created by a supernova explosion in 1054 AD. Bright enough to be observed in daylight, the explosion was seenand recorded by the Chinese at the time. This sighting is a testament to the gargantuan amount of energy released. Supernovae can comeabout by two principal means. One is the sudden reigniANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker to learn how to identify and interpret tracks, signs and scat of the animals in Central
Oregon; 8a.m. to noon;two or more
walks per month; $35; 541-6337045; dave©wildernesstracking. com, wildernesstracking.com. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meetsthesecond W ednesday ofeach month;King Buffet, Bend;ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE
tion of nuclear fusion in a white dwarf star. Material may be gravitationally pulled from a nearby companion star, fall onto the surface of the dwarf and initiate the explosion. It is also possible for this method to happen as a result of merging dwarf stars. The second method involves collapse of the core of a very massive star, which can release enough gravitational potential energy to create a supernova explosion. There are a number of other suggested mechanisms that can generate a supernova; however, detailed explanations go well beyond the scope of this article. Supernova explosions are of particular significance to all life. All high-mass elements, those heavier than iron and nickel on the periodic table of elements, are created by these gigantic explosions.
OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.
SHOOTING HOLIDAYTURKEY SHOOTS AT CENTRALOREGONTRAP CLUBS: Saturday at Bend TrapClub; Dec. 21 at Redmond Trap Club; Saturday at
Moreover, the interstellar medium is thusly seeded with elements, both relatively low and high mass, that are necessary for life. The progenitors of life are spread everywhere throughout the universe. The last observed naked-eye supernova in the Milky Way, our home galaxy, was Kepler's Star, seen in1604. Occurring in the constellation Ophiuchus, the explosion originated about 20,000 light-years from Earth. It is estimated that three supernovae explosions happen in the Milky Way over periods of about a hundred years. Naked-eye examples are quite rare. — Kent Fairfieldis a volunteer with Pine Mountain Observatory and a lifelong amateur astronomer. He can bereached at kent.fairfleld© gmail.com. Other PMOvolunteers also contributed to this article.
Jefferson County Rod 8 Gun Club; Saturdy at Paulina Trap Club; Dec. 20 at Burns Trap Club; Sunday at Paisley Trap Club; contact Bill Ferrin at 541-382-7515. COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10;10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284.
PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE:Cowboy action shootingclub;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www.
pinemount ainposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass.
MontanaOut oor Ha o Fame ettin 1stin uctees By TomKuglin ~The (Mont.) Independent Record
HELENA, Mont.
-
t may be easy to forget when hiking alone into the wild areas of Montana that conservation starts with people. And to honor those who made the abundant natural resources and wildlife a staple of the state, an inaugural class of 12 was inducted into the newly formed Montana Outdoor Hall of Fame Saturdayata ceremony in He lena. Longtime conservation ad- Society will house a permavocate and author Jim Pose- nent display of inductees and witz spearheaded the hall of played a major role in verifyfame, bringing the idea to sev- ing the histories and signifieral conservation organiza- cance of the nominees. Havtions and the Montana Histor- ing professio nal researchers ical Society.With resounding vet the candidates adds a desupport, the Montana Outdoor gree of credibility to the hall Hall of Fame board formed of fame, said Bruce Whittenand began looking into poten- berg, director of the historical tial inductees. society. "The idea was tobe diverse Posewitz gives credit to the Wyoming Outdoor Hall of and to have the spectrum of Fame for the inspiration, but outdoor conservation repreWyoming focuses primarily sented," he said. "Conservaon game and fish employees, tion and outdoor recreation rather than the conservation are a part of our history and a community as a wh o le, h e part of who we are." said. Becky Garland, daughter "We began planning and of Scapegoat Wilderness addecided in this first year to ar-
bltrarily decidethe first class,"
vocate Cecil, described her father as an honest and direct
man who worked hard for class to demonstrate people what he believed in. Cecil was from the highest level of pol- not particularly confrontationitics down to the grassroots al but would speak up when because at any level inour so- asked, she said. cietythere arepeople working Cecil openeda store in Linthat make this happen." coln and worked for the Forest Although the board chose Service to make ends meet the first inductees, plans call but disagreedwith many of for public nominations in fu- the policies that depleted the ture classes, Posewitz said. backcountry he loved. When The inaugural classincludes word came of a timber sale deceasedinductees, including in what would become the early wildlife advocate Gran- Scapegoat Wilderness, Cecil ville Stuart, President Theo- and others formed theLincoln Posewitz said. "We wanted the
dore Roosevelt, artist Charles
M. Russell, Sen. Lee Metcalf,
Back Country Protective Association to fight against the
citizen advocate Don Aldrich, U.S. Forest Service trailblazer
logging and for permanent protection.
Bud Moore, tribal wilderness Boycotts of the store soon advocate Thurman Trosper, followed and threatened his citizen advocate Doris Milner livelihood, but s u p porters and Scapegoat Wilderness drove from as far as Helena advocate Cecil Garland. Liv- and Missoula to keepCecil in ing inducteesinclude longtime business. In 1972, Montana's wilderness volunteer Gerry congressional delegation sucJennings, fisheries biologist ceeded in the S capegoat's and former Rocky Mountain designation. "It's kind of humbling for Elk Foundation associate and deputy directorRon Marcoux sure being in a group of peoand citizen advocate Chris ple that distinguished," Becky Marchion. said. "We were little kids when "History is always told as he did what he did, but now as the history of how we exploited it," Posewitz said. "The side we never teach are the
we look back and know there's
a greatpieceof property that's protected, for me I'm terribly remarkable things done with proudof it." our wildlands, and we're capTaking pride in a legacy of turing those stories and trying protectedlands wasechoed by to connect them to contempo- theliving inductees aswell. rary events to show that conAlthough no new wi l derservation is relevant." ness has been designated in The M o ntana
H i s torical Montana since 1983, any lay-
The Associated Press file photo
Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th president of the United States, is part of an inaugural class of 12 people inducted into the newly formed Montana Outdoor Hall of Fame on Dec. 6 at a ceremony In
Helena, Montana. er of protection that a land-
icy away from continually
scape receivesopens the door
stocking trout, to allowing the
developmentof a naturally reRobin Loznak I Great Falls Tribune road, Jennings said. The hon- producingtrout fishery. Montana artist Charles M. Russell was inducted into the Montana or is fitting given that 2014 is Marcoux a lso de v eloped Outdoor Hall of Fame. the 50th anniversary of the severalof the land programs WildernessAct, she added. in the Rocky Mountain Elk The Great Falls resident Foundation after retiring from legislation, which has raised Association, Montana Trout persists in her advocacy with FWP. Co n servation n e v e r millions of dollars for bighorn Unlimited and the Cinnabar Foundation. the Montana Wilderness As- happens withonly oneperson, conservationin the state. "It's a realhonor to be onthe sociation because of her love he said. "When you look back on list, and youwonder if you're of wild places,the people who have persisted alongside her this history and seeing a lot really worthy," he said. "My and theimportance for future of changes take place and family knows what I've put in generations. If those who ad- seeing the individuals that over the years, and now my vocated for wildernesscame stood up and made changes grandkids and family going up shortin one area, it was not or worked to preserve some forward get to say that 'He did realizing the need to involve of the best areas of the state, I something extraordinary with the next generation to contin- think recognizing those folks conservation.'" is incredibly important," he Major supporters of the hall ue the fight, she said. The hall of fame is a great said. "It all adds up to some- of fame include the Montana's way to tell people the history thing, and we're truly lucky Outdoor Legacy Foundation, Saturday Decemder13 of theirpublic lands while also here in Montana to have these the Broadbent Family FounShooting Starts dation, Boone and Crockett honoring those who started opportunities." the movement, Jennings said. Anaconda re sident M a r - Club,the Montana Wilderness at 9:30am "Every time you ho nor chion emphasized that while Squads for all skill someone orsomething, you're he is the inductee, the honor leVelS Or ShOOterS may letting people know the im- goes far beyond him to the portance of something," she many people he worked with form their OWn SquadS. Check Out said. "It's a neat thing and over the years to make conser$25 Will get you 5 ShootS our Miele needlessto say, a wonderful vation possible. and a guaranteed prize. "Montana has pretty much honor." coffee Marcoux agreed on t h e effectively re stored every machines! Ammunition and lunch importance of reflecting on wildlife and fish species with available. the history of conservation in the one exception of bison," Highway Montana while looking to the he said. "When you look at 8 future. While hebelieves oth- that whole diversity, this is the 20, at the ers maybe more deserving of state that's really set the mark30 mile BROTHERS the honor, Marcoux said he is er for everyone else." TV.APPLIANCE marker. With nearly three decades overwhelmedand humbled by ohnsonbrotherstv.com his induction. of co nservation advocacy, The Helenaresident worked Marchion's projects include for FWP in fisheries during mining settlements on t h e one of the biggest shifts in Clark Fork River, formation the division. Despite serious of the Mount Haggin Game resistance, he and some other Range, the elimination of 541 382-6447 ~ 2090 NE wyatt court ~ suite 101 biologists successfully pushed game farm hunting and draftBend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com S U r olo S~ the department to shift pol- ing the Bighorn Sheepauction for more protection down the
Everyone's Welcome!
0
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
California womancompletes the ultimate five-month marathon By Mark Emmons San Jose Mercury News
Christina Lee stopped run-
ning on Saturday morning. Finally. A five-month, 3,100-
mile odyssey that began in New York City and took her across the country's heartland reached the finish line near
the base of the Golden Gate Bridge. Leading to the conclusion of her mission, she felt "...a little
twinge of sadness," said Lee, a 23-year-old San Jose, California, native. "I'm dreading the end even though I know this Gary Reyes / Bay Area News Group should be the crowning mo- Christina Lee is on across-country run from NewYork City to San ment. I've really been seeing Francisco to raise money and awareness for the nation's Navy nothing but the best parts of SEALs. Lee's trek began in New York on July 7 and concluded in America. I'm worried that real San Francisco Saturday. Lee uses the stroller as a support vehicle life might not be as much fun." to carry her supplies on the trip. That "fun" involved deal-
ing with flash floods, tornado warnings, biting headwinds, don't think that I have a brain 9 0-plus-degree heat a n d injury," Lee added. "But a head blinding snow. But none of it injury doesn't have a 'look.'" stopped her from averaging What the concussions did more than a marathon each not alter was her positive, can-
day as she pushed a 70-pound do attitude as she focused on jogging stroller nicknamed academics.Lee graduated in "Thor" to r a ise money for t he nonprofit N av y S E A L Foundation. Oh, and she did it alone.
May from New York Univer-
sity with degrees in computer science and math as well as from Stevens Institute of
And it's why Lee was cho- Technology in m echanical sen by the editors of Runner's engineering. World to grace the DecemBefore heading into a highber cover with the headline: tech career — she already has "Unstoppable." interned at Google — Lee fig" Her story j ust b lew u s
ured the time was right to at-
away," said David Willey, the tempt that daunting bucket-list magazine's e d itor-in-chief. dream: running from sea to "We just became convinced shining sea. that there's really nothing that this woman cannot do. We
The journey begins
were just inspired by everything in her life." The epic running quest is
City on July 7, pushing the
Lee started in New York stroller filled with water, food,
clothes and other gear. The sidering Lee has overcome one, nonnegotiable condithe lingering effects of a trau- tion set down by her parents, even more remarkable conmatic brain injury. But Lee
went on to graduate from two
Harry and Debbie, was that the youngest of their three
children would not camp outleges this spring before decid- doors. Lee stayed in motels ing it would be a cool idea to and benefited from the kindrun backhome, checking off ness of strangers who allowed the most ambitious item on a her to stay in their homes. bucket list she created when Other than when her parshe was 21. ents took turns spending a For the record, her parents few days with her in the Upwould have been perfectly per Midwest, it was a solitary happy if she had returned to journey. "I left her on the side of the the Bay Area in a more conventional manner. road in Wyoming in the mid"We definitely tried to talk dle of a whiteout," Lehr-Lee her out of this because of our said. "I definitely wondered own fearsforhersafety,"said what I was doing as a mom her mother, Debbie Lehr-Lee. right then. But she really "But then it became apparent wanted this." that she was going to do this. Lee has averaged about 30 She is very determined." miles a day, going through five pairs of running shoes, — yes, two — East Coast col-
Active early
outlasting her first "Thor" and
Starting at age 4, Lee did most of her running on the soccer field, eventually playing at P r esentation High School. But her goal to play in college was derailed by a series of concussions. The seventh one came during her se-
losing 13 pounds. Lee esti-
nior season. "It got to the point where
Christinalee Age:23 Hometown:SanJose Education:2009 Presentation High School graduate who in Mayearned degrees from NewYork University and Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, NewJersey. What:Lee completed a 3,100-mile run across the country with no support team. The journey took five months as shemixed in rest days along the way. Her quest caught the attention of Runner's World magazine, which put her on the current cover. Fundraising:Shehas raised more than $40,000 toward her goal of $100,000 to benefit the
nonprofit Navy SEALFoundation. Visit her website at christinarunsamerica.com to donate. Cool moment:49ers icon Jerry Rice invited Lee to run the football out to officials before a Nov.23 game at Levi's Stadium. Afterward, Lee returned to the Sierra Nevadasand continued the final stages of her journey. Quote:"It's amazing the people that I've met along the way. It's incredible how much they went out of their way. It wasn't uncommon for people to buy medinner when they learned what I was doing. I had people pick me up onthe road, let me sleep in their homeand drive me back to the same place the next morning."
mates that she burned at least
5,000 calories daily. Last summer, Runner's W orld i n v ited
r e aders t o
share stories about something they've accomplished through running and received more than 2,300 responses. Lee was selected as one of the co-win-
at something," she said. "It just
made me work harder on the run." Lee has raised more than
$40,000 for the Navy SEAL Foundation, which helps families of these "hidden warriors."
ners in the cover contest. "Believe it or not, it's really not that uncommon to run
those trails havesomesnow or muddy conditions. With the recent freeze andthaw patterns, and Continued from D1 rain in the near forecast, there is Winter sign-posting out of increased potential for mud. DutchmanFlatandabovehas Lower-elevation trails, such started. Currently, 60 percent of as the Deschutes River Trail, and signs are in place, andall signs trails further east such asHorse should be posted byChristmas. Butte and Horse Ridge, are fair for High-country trails will continue biking and equestrian use. Horse to be marked. Until signs are in Butte has become popular a winter place, those familiar with the area trail for hikers and bikers, but it should try to respect trail bound- was designed for equestrian use, aries. Many of the high-elevation so hikers and bikers should use snowmobile trails have not been courtesy to horse riders when marked with snow poles. There using these trails. are few trees, making it easy to get The Badlands trail system east lost. Stay in lower elevation areas of Bend has drier conditions. Most if the weather is poor. lower-elevation trails are snowSno-parks fill up quickly and free and accessible, but beaware often exceedcapacity. People of soft and muddy spots. If people should have analternate plan in do encounter substantial mud on the trails, they should avoid using place andavoid parking outside the designated sno-park, or possi- those trails because it tends to bly face towing andcitations. cause damage tothe trail tread. Summer trail conditions are Heavywearonsoft,wetand mudsomewhat better, but mostof dy trails cause damage.Often peo-
Trails
FISHING REPORT CRESCENTLAKE: Open to fishing all year. Anglers report fair catches of lake trout. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMAN DAM:Trout fishing has been excellent. The whitefish are spawning and the trout will be keying in on the eggs. The use of bait is no longer allowed until May 23, 2015. Only artificial lures and flies may be used. Anglers are reminded that trout over 20 inches are considered steelheadand must be released unharmed. CULTUS LAKE:Open to fishing all year. DAVIS LAKE:Opento fishing all year. Restricted to flyfishing only with barbless hooks. FALL RIVER:Fall River downstream of the falls is closed to fishing. Fishing upstream of the falls is open all year. Restricted to flyfishing only with barbless hooks. HOOD RIVER:A few hatcheryorigin stray, along with wild summer steelhead, are entering the river and should provide anglers with some opportunity. Anglers are reminded that all non finclipped steelhead must be
released.
HOSMER LAKE:Open to fishing all year. Restricted to fly-angling only with barbless hooks. LITTLE LAVALAKE: Open to fishing all year. METOLIUS RIVER:Metolius River upstream of Allingham Bridge closed to fishing until May 23, 2015. Metolius River downstream of Allingham Bridge open all year. Special regulations are in effect for this section. NORTH TWIN:Open to fishing all year. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day
FLY-TYING CORNER
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Arthofer Nymph, tied by Quintin McCoy.
Here is an interesting nymph that can beused in slow-moving streams and in stillwaters. Instead of henhackle for legs and gills, it employs ostrich and partridge or guinea to suggest life and movement. Created by Louis Arthofer, it is popular in Austria and throughout Europe. Fish the Arthofer Nymph by itself or in tandemwith a Callibaetis Nymph or aRubber-Leg Hares' Ear.Useeither a floating line or a clear slow-sink line and along fluorocarbon leader. Tie this one with brown or black thread on aNo.8-12 nymph hook. For the tail, use three strands of ostrich herl dyed brown. Wrap brown ostrich herl for the body. Use hen pheasant fibers for the wing case.Wrap thethorax with copper wire. Finish with a short-clipped guineafowl or partridge hackle. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin with an 8-inch minimum length. Trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead and must be released unharmed. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Anglers are doing well catching 14- to 16-inch trout. Recent sampling revealed good numbers of trout ranging from12 to 16 inches long. There were also some smallmouth bass up to15 inches long. PRINEVILLE YOUTHFISHING POND:The pond is currently iced over. For safety reasons, the pond
is closed when iced over. Ice fishing is not allowed. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Open all year to angling. Two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to anglers17 years old and younger. SUTTLE LAKE:Opento fishing all
year. TAYLOR LAKE:The lake is covered with ice. THREE CREEK LAKE: Open to fishing all year.
Shotgun Continued from 01 After two weeks, I went
to pick up the Lefever. The smith had found a piece of walnut that matched the
stock and sectioned out a piece, epoxied it back in, then used epoxy on the oth-
er side to put strength back on that side of the frame. We moved to Central Or-
egon the next year, and my journal says I packed that shotgun on a chukar hunt
north of Madras. My brother-in-law Shannon Winters
What's made her cross-counthe easier it was to get them," try run more special is that she's doing it in memory of a Lee said. "The last one was much worse. I was feeling across America," Willey said. former SEAL who suffered a very angry for no reason, and "It's probably been done thou- brain injury in the service and the doctor said it was affecting sands of times. But the more took his own life this year. His the part of the brain that con- we talked to C hristina, the widow reached out to Lee and trols emotion. So I had to walk more we began to lean in her let her know how much her efaway from soccer, and that direction. And when she told us fort means to families helped was really hard." that she also was applying for a by the organization. Her memory also was im- Rhodes Scholarship while she's On Saturday, this journey paired, and she copes with doing this, we just thought, ended with a half-marathon a cognitive disorder called 'Well, of course she is."' and then a celebration parprosopagnosia — more comShe did not receive one of ty. But Lee doesn't sound as monly known as "face blind- the elite scholarships. Rather if she's finished with good ness" — that makes it difficult than be disappointed, the re- deeds. Another goal on her for her to recognize people lentlessly upbeat Lee prefers bucket list? Raising $1 million she knows in out-of-context to look at it a s a t eachable for a good cause. situations. moment. It probably would be a mis"Because I'm a relatively "It was a nice reminder that take to think she won't accomhigh-achieving person, people I'm human and it's OK to fail plish that, too. the more concussions I got,
D5
ple biking, hiking or riding horses will go "around" the muddy spot, causing widening of the trail and potentially damaging vegetation along the trail. Phil's Trail system off Skyliner Road is fair but mayhavemuddy spots that should beavoided. Suggested drier trails are theCline Butte area, anewsystem of biking trails west of Redmondand Smith Rock State Park. Cline Butte is not recommended for equestrian use due to the high number of cyclists. The Three Sisters, Mount Jefferson, Diamond Peakand Mount Washington wilderness areas are mostly inaccessible dueto snowpack. On all trails, recent high winds have caused blown-down trees across trails and roads. Beaware of these obstacles andsafety hazards. Windy conditions are expected over the next few days and may causenewdownedtrees across trails.
and my friend Mike Tom joined me on a rimrock hunt for chukar. There was another day that year when
I
I bagged one more chukar with the Lefever as well as assorted pests. Y ears later, the N i t r o
Special was at my shoulder when I bagged my first limit of Canada geese in a Klamath marsh. D arren Roe shot a triple that day.
I missed with both barrels, shook off my jitters and
An old Lefever Nitro Special, a workingman's shotgun from the
took two birds from the
1930s, and a youngpupafter a pheasant hunt.
Gary Lewis / For The Bulletin
next flock — one with each barrel. I finished my limit Depression, still functions as it he didn't say much except, "Let's go take a walk," and did when it was new. Something in me rejects the that, I think, is what an old flirted w it h o t her s h ot- thought of owning a gun just gun wants. guns and in 1999 picked for the sake of owning it, and — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV" and up a semi-auto Reming- I've made it a point to carry ton. I loaned the Lefever the Lefever in the field at least author of "John Nosler — Going to friends on hunts, and once a year since. Ballistic," A. Bear Hunter's one day someone shot it On an October day after my Guide to the Universe," with a third bird from the
next flight. As such things go, I
better than I. M y
f r i end deer tag was tied on a buck, I
Ron Burns broke something like 15 out of 15 clay pigeons, and as I looked at him with that rescued shotgun, I realized he shot it better than I did. We struck
a deal, and he took it home. To replace the Lefever, I
loaded my pup into the truck and drove down to Lake in the Dunes, where my friend Russ
Scott was waiting. Russ looked at my ancient shotgun and my pudelpointer pup — one with perhaps too much experience, and the oth-
carried pumps, autos and over/unders, and finally
er with not very much — and
settled on a CZ Ringneck
2 locations inBend
I'd learned to shoot a dou-
2150NE StudioRd,Suiteu
ble and wasn't particularly good at any particular
2863Nortwhest CrossingDr,SuitelO
side-by-side in 20 gauge.
style, but I found my shoot-
ing passable when birds
"Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www. GaryLewisoutdoors.com.
WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066
Adjustablc Beds
Main Center NWX
541-389-9252 sylvan©bendbroadband.com
RIATTRESS
G allery - B e n d 541-3$0-50$4
were in the air.
I always missed the old gun. We had history together. Ten years later, Burns brought the Lefever
back to me. There's something about old guns. This one still has most of its bluing. Whoever owned it before me had loved it so much they had over-oiled it, loved it too
much. It was hard to blame them. And the gun, built in
New York during the Great
NORCOR Corrections in The Dalles, OR has issued a Request for Proposals for Jail Food Services & Jail Commissary Services for Adult & Juvenile Facilities. It is anticipated & preferred that these services be managed by one vendor as prime contractor. Complete RFP & instructions I www.norcor.co Questions 541-298-1576. All proposals due by December31st,2014@4pm.
D6
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
orre e i
o i n a i n s e r nic e
TV SPOTLIGHT
15, she was traveling to Austria when she took her first acting class. A photographer sugchestra and dabbling in model- gested the class might help her ing. At 16, she moved to Chica- relax in front of the camera. It go and later to Japan to model. worked, but she broke up with The tour in Japan turned out modeling for her new love, to be unforgettable. "My moth- acting. er went with me, got me set Graduating from high school up in my apartment, and then early at 17, DeVitto came to she left, and I was by myself L.A. to pick a manager and for two months. It was Sept. moved back to Florida until she 11, which was pretty crazy. I was 18. Then she packed up was out there by myself. I was her Explorer Sport and moved terrified because I saw it on west to become an actress. She's been in L.A. for 12 TV, but nobody spoke English who could tell me what was years and has paid her dueshappening, so I just saw the dining on Ramen Noodles and visuals and didn't know what KFC biscuits and making ends was going on. The phone lines meet by working at the Califorand Germany with a youth or-
"The Best Christmas Party Ever" 8 p.m. Saturday, Hallmark
By Luaine Lee Tribune News Service
PASADENA, Calif. — Actress Torrey DeVitto used to
quiver like a s eismograph when she had to audition for a part. "It would affect my per-
formance hugelybecause I just could not get control of my nerves," she says over coffee in
a diner. When she heard about a c lown class from he r
dra-
ma teacher, she thought that might help overcome her fear Elly Dassas 1 Tribune News Service and trembling. "My teacher Torrey DeVitto plays anevent planner whose big chance comes said, 'We have this guy, Anson when she prepares "The Best Christmas Party Ever," airing on the Mount, coming in. He's going Hallmark Channel Saturday. to do a course in clown.'
"I thought, 'Oh, my God, I'm going to take it. That's going to help with mynerves. If I can get through a clown class and perform as a clown, I can do anything.' So I pictured Anson to
be an old, Italian guy with gray hair. And when he showed up I said, 'Oh, my God, my teacher is insanely attractive. How am I goingto make a fool of myself in front of this guy?'" It turns out she had no trouble making a fool of herself, and then some. At the end of
the course, Mount (who stars in "Hell on Wheels") required his students to present a five-min-
ute sketch utilizing their down persona.
were down for a while, and I
nia Pizza Kitchen, the Tangerine Cafe, Abercrombie & Fitch
couldn't get hold of my family.
and Urban Outfitters. She was employed by a yoga facility but everybody was OK, but I asked neverpracticedyoga."Ijustanto go home early." swered phones," she says. She She says she never liked married and, after two years, "I don't know how, but my "The Best Christmas Party modeling. "I was always divorcedactorPaul Wesley, her down had ended up being a Ever," premiering Saturday, around tall (women). And I've costar on "Vampire Diaries," pregnant referee. It was so DeVitto plays an a mbitious always been thin, I'm not say- but insists she's eager to marry weird.So formy performance, event planner who is forced to ing I wasn't thin, but I was a again and have a family. She's been working with a I brought in real raw beef and work with an actor who threat- kid. I had a little tummy and onions. I wrapped the onions ens to i nherit the business was curvier at that age, and I coach,whom she calls"ateachin the beef, rapped this song by in which she has devotedly was around these stick, very er,guide and mentor."A fterher Ludicris and cut up the onions worked her way up. serious, big, tall, 5-10 models. parents' divorce and her own, and beef and rubbed it all over She played a doctor on So I was the one coming in she says, "There's been a lot of me while I was rapping. And "Vampire Diaries," a former with McDonald's at 10 o'clock time for reflection and a lot of after I was done, Anson was soldier on "Army Wives" and at night. And they were eat- work I'm doing with this teachlooking at me and he said, 'Ex- the bratty older sister on "Pret- ing carrot sticks. I was, like, er, and you realize, 'Oh, God, 'Something doesn't feel right shoulda, coulda, wouldacuse me, ma'm, WHAT are you ty Little Liars." doing'?' I said, 'I don't know!' But DeVitto, 30, isn't like here.' But I did make a lot of maybe.' But that all needed to After that I thought, 'If I can do any of those characters. She friends and had the time of my happentogetme to see everythat in front of a whole class, I grew up playing the violin, the life. But as far as being on the thing that I saw, to be here, to can do anything.'" daughter of a drummer who job, I never felt like a model. I be working on all of this now, She pretty much has. As the performed with Billy Joel for didn't feel like I fit in there." to grow from it, to become who star of the Hallmark Channel's 30 years. By the time she was She finally found her niche I am." And my sister and dad were in New York at the time. Luckily
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m.on2,9,"The Middle"The yuletide won't be the same if Frankie (Patricia Heaton) has her way in the newepisode "The Christmas Wall." Feeling unappreciated for the effort she puts into decorating each year, shedecides to forgo it this time. Mike (Neil Flynn) still tries to makethe occasion festive, though Sue's (EdenSher) Christmas-tree allergy poses a complication. Brick (Atticus Shaffer) aims to write a seasonal letter about howtheyearhas been for his family. 8p.m. on5,8,"The Mysteriesof Laura" —The title of the new episode "The Mystery of the Fertility Fatality" might not suggest horse racing as anelement, but Laura (Debra Messing) and her colleagues are indeedoff to the track as they seeka missing fertility doctor. On the homefront, Laura has problems when other mothers respond to accusations that the twins (Charles andVincent
Reina) are acting overlyaggres-
sive in a martial-arts class. Josh Lucas and Laz Alonso also star. 8 p.m. on10, "Hell's Kitchen" — It's no surprise that two executives of OmahaSteaks join Gordon Ramsay asguest judges in the newtwo-hour episode "6 Chefs Compete/5 Chefs Compete," since that food brand is usedin a challenge by the remaining contestants as they compete as individuals. The winner will get lots of face time, becoming the subject of an ad
campaign.Then,glampers —or campers who conduct their treks glamorously — get to sample the cooks' dishes. 9 p.m. onCW,"The100" — An impending assault by the Grounders forces Abby (PaigeTurco) to
Ga i turnsoutto eaturn-on
MOVIE TIMESTODAY
Dear Abby:A few months ago, I turned 50, and my co-workers held a small celebration. When we celebrate birthdays, we all have agreed to regift an item (usually a gag gift). One of my presents was a black
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BIG HERO6 (PG)10:40 a.m., 1:20, 4:10, 6:55, 9:35 • BIRDMAN (R) 1:10, 4, 10:05 • THE BLUE ROOM(R)3:15, 9:10 • DUMB AND DUMBER TO(PG-13)11:20a.m.,2,4:40, 7:20, 10:10 • GONE GIRL (R) 11:40 a.m., 3:10, 6:25, 9:40 • HORRIBLE BOSSES2(R) 12:30, 3:05, 6:05, 9:20 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOGKINGJAY — PART1 (PG-13) 10:30 a.m., 11:30a.m., 1:55, 3, 6, 7, 9:05, 10 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) noon, 4, 8 • INTERSTELLAR IMAX (PG-13) 1,5, 9 • MEETTHE MORMONS (PG) l2:15, 6:15 • NIGHTCRAWLER (R) 11:45 a.m., 3:25, 9:50 • PENGUINS OFMADAGASCAR (PG) 10:45 a.m.,1:15, 4:05, 6:45, 9: I5 • PENGUINS OFMADAGASCAR3-D (PG)11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45 • ST. VINCENT (PG-13) 1:05, 3:40, 6:40, 9:20 • THETHEORY OFEVERYTHING (PG-13)11:35a.m.,3:20, 6:20, 9:25 • THE VATICAN MUSEUMS(no MPAArating) 7 • THE VATICAN MUSEUMS3-D (no MPAArating) 7 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.
• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f
six years and had three children cheating! — The Ex-Mrs. in Illinois with my husband. He always said he hated people who cheat on their Dear Ex-Mrs.: These "friends" spouse, but then he had an affair
with a married co-worker, a woman who had three kids. We had a leather miniskirt an d m a tching huge argument about it. I called vest. I never planned her names and he on wearing it, but my beat me up. I called husband, "Tom," and t he police, he w as DFP,R I were invited to an arrested, jailed, and I ABBY '80s-themed Hallowfiled for divorce. een party, and I didn't
I t has
b een s i x
may not have told you because they either didn't want to get involved,
or they had already chosen whose side they planned to be on. I suspect many readers will want to chime in on your question. And I also suspect that, unlike years ago when folks opted to remain silent, the majority will say they feel the spouse has a right to know because
want to spend a lot of money on acostume, sow edecided to go as a rock star and his groupie. I left work early to get ready for the party. When Tom arrived home, he couldn't keep his eyes or hands off me. We never made it to
years and I h a ve they would want to be told. moved on, but I'm still angry over Dear Abby: Please provide adtheir cheating. They got married vice on hugging a woman without and invited mutual friends who it seeming like I am more interestknew of their affair. All of them at- ed in experiencing a free feel of her tended the wedding. breasts than in just hugging her. When I questioned a few of them Any help or suggestions will be the party and had the best sex we'd about why they didn't tell me he appreciated. had in years. Before that night, was cheating on me, they said it — Healthy American Male our love life had been practically was "none of their business." (Oddly Dear H.A.M.:If you are hugging nonexistent. enough, those people thought noth- women you don'thave much of Abby,please remind readers to ing of socializing with the cheaters.) a relationship with, your i ntenI'd like to know how many of tion could be misconstrued. If you always keep intimacy in their relationships. Apparently, Tom and I your readers wouldtellsomeone think your attempt to be warm just needed to be creative and spice their spouse was cheating. I know I and friendly might be regarded as things up a little. would, because affairs aren't inno- making a pass, then you shouldn't — Happier fn Pennsylvania cent fun. do it, or you may be considered less Dear Happier: That's a great Just to add to the end of my story, a "healthy American male" than a suggestion. Now I know why your my ex and his trophy wife are now creepy lecher. jack-o'-lantern was smiling. divorcing after three years of mar— Write toDearAbbyatdearabbycom Dear Abby: I was married for riage. The reason? He caught her or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, DEC.10,2014:Thisyearyou open up to more adventure, which allows your creativity to surge. You easily could become known as an "idea person." You
always seem to land onyour feet, evenif you give in to your innate impulsiveness. If you are single, you will have your pick of suitors. Your biggest dilemma will be choosing whom 8tsrsshowths kjod to date. If you are attached, your of dsyyoo'I hsve ** * * * D ynamic sweetie might * *** posltlve be taken aback ** * Average at t i mes by your ** So-so spontaneity. Indulging him or her * Difficult with tokens of your affection will help. LEO makes a delightful playmate.
ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * * A friend could be hot under the collar as of late, particularly today.
A vaguesenseof confusion surrounds a project, yet someone you respect adds clarity. This person is full of ideas; brainstorm with him or her more often. Tonight: Midweek break.
** * * Take charge of a responsibility, even if it means having to avoid a family YOURHOROSCOPE member. Your understanding marks your By Jacqueline Bigar interactions. Someone close to you will admire the way you handle this matter person's position. Aone-on-one converand will let you know in his or her own sation could clear the air. Tonight: Out and way. Tonight: Till the wee hours. about.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
** * * You will want to approach a mat** * * Take some time today to do some ter differently, as you suddenly might be shopping. You will enjoy yourself, as able to see the whole issue in a new light. you're likely to find several special gifts. A It's possible thatyou won't be able to condifficult friend might have you wondering vince someoneelseof the usefulnessof what is going on with him or her. Listen to your plans. Count on going alone on this what he or she has to share. Tonight: Visit path. Tonight: Let your mind wander. with a loved one.
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)
** * * You might enjoy being closer to a ** * * * Y ou'll feel great interacting with loved one. A family member or domestic others. Your attitude is likely to be more caring toward people you might not know situation could add some stress to your interactions. Worry less, and go forward. well but who play a key role in your daily You'll be able to handle this matter in a life. Conversations could go beyond the usual "hello/goodbye" exchange. Tonight: creative way. Time is on your side. Tonight: Make time for a close friend. Act as if the world is your oyster.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
** * Be sensitive to the changes happening around you. You might want to take a nonreactive stance for a few days. TAURUS (April 20-May20) Your intuition will be in high gear, so give ** * * Venus, your ruling planet, changyourself time to verify these impressions. es signs and helps you see the big picture. Take some time to indulge a loved one. Travel could be part of your life in the Tonight: Get some extra R and R. next few weeks. Do not get yourself into a rigid situation or become involved with an LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * You have the ability to create unusually controlling individual. Tonight: Head home early. more of what you want. You understand the art of diplomacy and of saying the GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * * Y ou'll choose the right words right thing to build up others' confidence. As a result, you'll make people feel better and naturally say the right thing. Neverabout themselves. Tonight: Join a friend theless, someone might decide to poke for someholiday eggnog. holes in your logic. Be gracious and willing to debate the pros and cons of this SGORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb.18) ** * * * You could be unusually assertive, and others might be having a strong reaction. Understand that you are triggering these reactions; they are not occurring from out of the blue. Use caution with funds when your mind is elsewhere. Tonight: Say "yes" to an offer.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * " All work and no play" could be a difficult goal to accomplish. In fact, it might be impossible to rein in your imagination today. Your effectiveness could be enhanced if you opt to give yourself a healthy break. Tonight: Run some errands on the way home. © King Features Syndicate
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makesome toughdecisionsin the new episode "Long Into an Abyss." Clarke (ElizaTaylor) suggests a plan to counter the attack. Jasper and Monty (Devon Bostick, Christopher Larkin) develop doubts about their newacquaintances. Bob Morley,Thomas McDonell and Isaiah Washington also star.
10 p.m. onFX, "AmericanHorror Story: FreakShow" — In the new episode "Tupperware Party Massacre, "adespondentJim my (Evan Peters) sinks into an alcoholic spiral in the aftermath of a terrible loss. Maggie (EmmaRoberts) gives Dandy (Finn Wittrock) a reading that spurs him to take action. Stanley andElsa (Denis
O'Hare,JessicaLange)track
down the Twins (Sarah Paulson). Cr Zap2it
ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications
r
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THE BOOKOF LIFE (PG)2:30 • THE MAZE RUNNER(PG-13) 6 • A WALKAMONG THETOMBSTONES (R)9 • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegal guaidi'en. f
In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • The "Spaghetti Westem" will screen at 630 p.m. (doors open at 6 p.m.) andincludes anall-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • BIG HERO 6 (PG)4:15, 6:45 • HORRIBLE BOSSES2(R) 4:30, 7 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PG-13) 3:30, 6:15 • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR (PG)4:15,6:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • HORRIBLE BOSSES2(R) 6:15 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PGI3) 6 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) 5:30 • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR (PG)5:45 Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • BIG HERO8 (PG)5, 7:20 • DUMB ANDDUMBER TO (PG-13)4:20,6:50 • HORRIBLE BOSSES2(R) 4:45, 7:10 • THE HUNGERGAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PG-13) 4:10, 7 • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR (PG)5,7:15 •
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY— PART1 (PG-13) 6:15 • PENGUINS OFMADAGASCAR (Upstairs — PG) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
EVERGREEN
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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Pure. &m/6 Co.
aj. B~ dU Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com Visit Central Oregon's
HunterDouglas See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
See us alsofor: • RetractableAwnings • Exterior SolarScreens • Patio ShadeStructures
s®aCMSSIC COVERINGS 1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www. classic-coverings.com
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014 •
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ge
5,'2;
Ads starting as low as $10/week rivata art onl
kfl
Call for package rates
=2
Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
:'hours:
contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
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B ug l e t ln : 206
Pets & Supplies
1 7 7g 210
210
Furniture & Appliances Furniture & Appliances
a
German Shepherds
The Bulletin recommends extra '
www.sherman-ranch.us $1900+. 541-281-6829
i caution when pur-i
Want to Buy or Rent
Peekapoo, Lhasa Apso Wanted: $Cash paid for puppies 4 sale $250 vintage costume jewCall Angel elry. Top dollar paid for 541-761-7233 Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist POODLE or POMAPOO Elizabeth,541-633-7006 puppies, toy. Adorable! 541-475-3889 or WANTED wood dress541-325-6212 ers; dead washer/ dryers. 541-420-5640 QueenslsndHeelers Standard 8 Mini, $150 203 8 up. 541-280-1537 Holiday Bazaar www.rightwayranch.wor & Craft Shows dpress.com CHRISTMAS BAZAAR Rodent issues? Free adult barn/ shop cats, Crescent Community
fixed, shots, some Center, Crescent cut-off- Rd., Crescent. friendly, some not. Will deliver. 280-3172 Dec 12-13, 8-5 Free Admission 20+ venders - quilts, SHIH-TZU, male, $400 Pure Bred, 3yr old, knitting, metal art, Trained. 541-589-4948 wood crafts, jewelry, blossomhut©gmail.co bread & more! m
I WILL WRAP YOUR PRESENTS! Call 541-408-5909 205
Shih-Tzu puppy, male, gorgeous! $350 541-788-0234 or 541-548-0403
Siberian Husky/Wolf pups, bundles of love! $400. 541-977-7019
206
$450. 541-771-0956
Yorkie pups AKC baby dolls! Shots, potty trained, health guar., ready now! The Bulletin recom- $600 8 up. 541-777-7743 mends extra caution when purc h as210 ing products or ser- Furniture & Appliances vices from out of the area. Sending cash, A1 Washers8 Dryers checks, or credit inf ormation may be $150 ea. Full warsubjected to fraud. ranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's For more informa541-260-7355 tion about an advertiser, you may call the O regon State Check out the Attorney General's classifieds online Office C o n sumer Protection hotline at www.bendbulletinecom 1-877-877-9392. Updated daily
The Bulletin Serving CencrerOngnn since igle
Adopt a rescued cat or kitten! Altered, vaccinated, ID chip, tested, more! CRAFT, 65480 Besutiful Oval Table 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Solid walnut, hand1-5. 54 1 -389-8420 crafted by an Amish
artisan for Schanz www.craftcats.org Furniture Co. Excellent Aussies, Mini, A KC, condition w/lovely patina. ready to go. M/F red 27" H, top 30" L and 20" merle & tri, black tri. wide. Graceful curved u.t.d. shots & wormlegs with 2-1/2e ing. 541-598-5314 hand-turned center Chihuahua puppies for support. Orig. $649; sell $200. sale, $200-$250 Call 541-365-4790 for info, 541-233-9079
541-977-0035 Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol.,
Dining Chairs (8) & Table Moving, 6 mos old. Purchased at Haven Homes for $10K; asking $5,000.
Massage Chairs Paid $4,600 a piece at M.Jacob's; Selling for $750 a piece. Call Gary, 541-419-8860
Queen size matt & box, Tempurfoam, great cond, $350. 541-504-9210 Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory SOFA - dark brown leather, Hit a c hi brand, l i k e n e w, $300; and matching chair and ottoman like n ew , $ 2 0 0. 541-280-0892
7 South Korean Apothecary chest typical of what was used decades ago to sell herbs and medicinals. This piece is believed to have been producedDin 1940se or deep x 42" high. Asking $2500cash 231-360-5105(Bend)
260
Art, Jewelry & Furs
Musical Instruments
Misc. Items
AGATE HUNTERS
Bird & Big Game hunting access in Condon, OR. 541-384-5381
Peliahera • Saws •
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wide x 22" high. Asking$800 cash. 1-231-360-5105
(Bend)
Olhaunsen regulation size pool table
in very good shape with cues, balls, misc. accessories. $1000. 541-389-1272 or 541-480-4695
Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. Mclntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808
Wurlitzer Ultra Console Model ¹2636 Serial ¹1222229. Made in USA. Genuine maple wood. Includes matching bench.$750. (541) 598-4674 days, or (541) 923-0488 evenings.
Wineguard/carry-out auto portable satellite antenna adapts to either DirecTV or Dish system. $500 or best offer. 541-549-4834
~kweeke 25! New Pandora bracelet Men's Enhanced AlumiAd must with 10 charms, $360. num Alloy-constructed 262 include price of Larry, 541-385-4797 Antique Barber Chair Crossroads Sport 2012, n l e ke oi 5555 Commercial/Office ~ complete with headS/N ENI14764, has or less, or multiple rest & strops! Swivels, never been used or rid253 Equipment & Fixtures 260 items whose total reclines. Built in 1901, den.Wheel & rear reTV, Stereo & Video Misc. Items does not exceed in good condition con- flectors, removable front KONICA MINOLTA BI$500. sidering age. Perfect ZHUB 222 Full size busibasket, special order Buying Diamonds ness eall in one" unit. gift - excellent TV comfort seat, Planet Bike Wineguard/carry-out Call Classifieds at /Gofd for Cash chair for the man who eco-rack, unisex bar, Virtually brand new with auto portable 541-385-5809 has everything!$2700 Saxon's Fine Jewelers only 4000 pages on the Shimano non-slip gear satellite antenna www.bendbulletin.com 541-389-6655 Interesting trades counter. All manuals and system. Was $940;selladapts to either Diconsidered. discs Call 541-390-7239 ing for $775cash, firm. recTV or Dish sys541-408-1628 BUYING for more info. $1500 obo. 1-231-360-5105 Good classified ads tell tem. $500 or best Lionel/American Flyer Takara bikes, mens & the essential facts in an offer. 541-549-4834 trains, accessories. 263 womens, ridden once, interesting Manner.Write 541-408-2191. Tools Anti uetable Top: $75/ea. 541-382-9211 from the readers view -not 255 BUYING & S ELLING the seller's. Convert the 242 10 n Delta table saw, All gold jewelry, silver brand facts into benefits. Show Computers never used Exercise Equipment the reader howthe item will and old coins, bars, $450.new, 541-382-4476 rounds, weddintj sets, help them in some way. T HE B U LLETIN r e Treadmill, Proform XP rings, sterfng silThis quires computer ad- class 265 352/sn diameter, has Crosswalk 580, $300. ver, coin collect, vinvertisers with multiple advertising tip image of sailing ship 541-382-9211 ta( watches, dental Building Materials ad schedules or those goIe brought toyou by on the d. Bill Fl e ming, selling multiple systop. Base 243 541-382-9419. The Bulletin tems/ software, to dis• Cambria Quartz is oak Serving CenlretDregon srnceistg Ski Equipment close the name of the Coffeeshop going out nBellingham,n capstan. business or the term Very 55 nx36", nearly For sale, used Brown- "dealer" in their ads. of business. Conti unique 1-1/2 n thick, never ing A5 12ga. shotgun XEOS espresso maPrivate party advertis- chine $3000; Mazzer piece, could sell installed, $300 or with non rib barrel, separately. $300 Luigi grinder $700; best offer. good condition, $450. ers are defined as obo 541-419-6408. those who sell one Everest r e frigerator OBO. 541-382-0321. computer. $800; LK 3-panel sink • Bronze & Crystal with f aucet $800; 2-tier, 6-arm chan200 pairs of X-Coun- Left-hand Savage Mod Just bought a new boat? try & Downhill skis, 10 Predator Hunter Max 257 grease trap; blinking delier, 22" across, Sell your old one in the many leading brands, 1 with Nikon N223 4-16 open sign Car notifi- $300 or best offer. classifieds! Ask about our (Atomic, K2, Head, for- BDC scope, like new, Illlusical Instruments cation system $200; 541-923-7491 Super Seller rates! 541-419-3147 eign imports, etc.) with $1250. 541-536-7924 541-385-5809 bindings, in great conLawn Crypt for two at La Pine Habitat dition, some like new. Remington1100 Deschutes Memorial RESTORE Children's & adult sizes. semi- auto 12 ga., Gardens near the Pond. Building Supply Resale Cheaper than a 1-day 3" shells. Pur1948 Wurlitzer piano, $1500. 541-771-4800 Quality at rental! $22/psir. Call chasedin 1980s. Nust See! all wood, no plastic. LOW PRICES for information/location. Present condition is Tuned in Nov., looks New Samsung S5 with 52684 Hwy 97 541-408-1828 like new. Asking like new, with bench Dining Table 3 extras, $360. 541-536-3234 $750. 541-410-4066 $700 54 1-382-3837 (with 2 leaves) 245 Larry, 541-385-4797 Open to the public. 8 chairs with burGolf Equipment
gundy upholstered seats, hutch and buffet, built in 1927, a beautiful set! Seats 10-12. Paid $4500; asking$1800 obo. 541-548-2797
The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.
The Bulletin
'pj —.'8X~
CHECK YOURAD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is corD rect. Spellcheckn and human errors do occur. If this happens to
Get a roomier~PAD" and pad your wa'Iletlat the same Iime! WSell,your L Uff! ,STARTING AT
your ad, please contact us ASAP so that
corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
6 00
246
are 31n long x 14.5
Grand Piano Beautiful American made (1926) Kurtzmann parlor grand piano for sale. 5'5", mahogany case, matching bench, recently serviced and tuned. Family owned since original purchase. $1200 or OBO. 541-306-6770.
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
South Korean Blanket Chest typical of storing blankets for frigid nights. Dimensionsn
9 7a •
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
of'
CA King Henredon Sleigh Bedwith Organic Mattress and Bedding. It's magnificient. $4500 Cash only. 541-390-7'I 09
g < ~
Crafts 8 Hobbies
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541-419-8860.
non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/neuter. T railer a t Jak e ' s D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Petco (near Wal-Mart) Dining table plus 6 in Redmond; or dochairs, custom nate M-F a t S mith made, 82 nx43 nx29 n Sign, 1515 NE 2nd end grain walnut and Bend; or CRAFT in alder. Asking Tumalo. Can pick up $1150. large amts, 389-8420. 541-312-2393 www.craftcats.org
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later. 35 W x 9.5
Chihuahua puppy, micro-mini, tiniest Chihuahua, $450.
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Pets & Supplies
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2 young Parrakeets, w/ big iron cage. $67
St. Bernard puppies, 1st shots, deworming, dewclaws removed,
A v e .
240
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Items for Free
30" Sony TV, good condition, FREE! 541-408-2535
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chasing products or • Repair& Supplies services from out of I s g s CASH!! Exceptional c r a fts-t the area. Sending t For Guns, Ammo & manship signed by ' cash, checks, o r ' Reloading Supplies. builder. All solid oak i credit i n f ormation 541-408-6900. Above artwork, medium colored stain may be subjected to crested in 1975 in Quilting Advertise your car! i FRAUD. For more desk that looks as elBangkok, Thsiland, MachineAdd A Pfcture! egant from the back information about an t is fabricated from litof readers! H u sqvarna/ Reach thousands as it does from the advertiser, you may I I erally thousands upon Call 541 e385-5809 Viking, 10-ft bed, front. Lumbar sup- t call t h e Ore g ont thousands of wax The Bulletin Clsssifieds Atto r ney ' computerized, ported chair included. ' State particles, and can Paid $4400 a sking i General's O f f i ce only be described as $ 85oo. I unimaginable art! $650 cash. More info Consumer Protec- • L541-416-0538 Painting is 44" x 32". available. tion h o t line a t i Asking $2,500cash 541-408-5227 i 1-877-877-9392. 241 231-360-5105 (Bend) DO YOU HAVE G ENERATE SOM E l TheBulletin l Bicycles & SOMETHING TO Serving Cenrrnc Oregon sincerggk EXCITEMENT in your SELL Accessories neighborhood! Plan a FOR $500 OR What are you garage sale and don't LESS? Childrens bikes, girls 212 looking for? forget to advertise in Non-commercial 20", $60. Boys 16", Antiques & classified! advertisers may $40. 541-382-9211 You'll find it in 541-385-5809. Collectibles place an ad I ~7 with our The Bulletin Classifieds "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 541-385-5809 /
202
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Three Chinese Men produced in solid teak. Dimensions: 15 n high x 6.5 n wide.
Figures were produced in Thailand in 1978. $200 for all 3 statues, cash. 1-231-360-5105
(in Bend)
300 Weatherby magnum Mark V German made, with Leupold 3x9x50 scope. $1600 obo. 541-480-9430 AR15 - Wyndham arms. Includes 100rnds .556 and 6 0 rnds . 2 2 3. $650. 541-610-4538
g~t~hr CausJk Set D k fts!fsn soft tgstfk er chair, ottoman 2nd
couch set. Excellent condition: no tears, stains. Very comfortable. Was $1600 new,
The Bulletin serving Central Oregon sincergle
541-385-5809
ItemPriced af: Yo ur Tofgl Ad Cost Onl: • Under $500.........................................................$29 • $500 to $999.....................................................$39 • $1000 to $2499.............................„„„„„„„„„, $49 • $2500 and over................................................. $59 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. Some restrictions apply.
o6ering for only $700 541-000-0000
Your adwill also appear im
• The Bulletin • (efttral OregOn MarketplaCe
• The CentralOregonNickel Ads • bendbulletin.tOm
'Privofe parfymerchandiseonly - excludespets&livestock, autos, Rys, moforcyclsk,boats,airplanes, andgaragesale cafegoriea
E2 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
To pLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES -
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
«- ~ oN Siuslaw
District Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • School Job Openings Florence, OR Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. www.siuslaw.k12.or.us Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. • Spanish Teacher, Middle and High School, 1.0 FTE Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. • School Counselor, School, Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Elementary 1.0 FTE seeour website Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Please for more information.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •
Starting at 3 lines
Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
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4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
!call for commercial line ad rates)
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
*ftlfust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 266
267
286
Heating & Stoves
Fuel & Wood
Sales Northeast Bend
Get your business
Maintenance Person Temporary Maintenance
person needed for our memory care
community. Please call Victoria Dale 541-385-4717 for more information. Plumber, Journeymen Needed for new con-
Houses for Rent Redmond
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Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award RV Parking FRAUD. Winner For more informa- I Full hookup RV site Showroom Condition tion about an adver- • avail. through April Many Extras Low Miles. I tiser, you may call 30th, $325 + e lec. the Oregon State Central Oregon KOA $15,000 I Attorney General's 541-546-3046 541-548-4807 a Office C o n s umer a l Protection hotline atl
I credit i n f ormationI I may be subjected to
675
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I 1-877-877-9392.
LThe Bull~n
struction. Start immediately! Good pay/benefits
J
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Cal l Gary, 541410-1655
5 Mzm
Fuel Transport Driver Eds Trucking is looking for a regional TRANSPORT TRUCK AND TRAILER DRIVER for
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The Bulletin
HD Softtail Deuce 2002,
QoP o 750
Redmond Homes Looking for your next emp/oyee? 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
broken back forces sale, only 200 mi. on new motor from Harley, new trans case and p arts, s p oke wheels, new brakes, n early all o f b i k e brand new. Has proof of all work done. Removable windshield, T-bags, black and all chromed out with a willy skeleton theme on all caps and covers. Lots o f w o rk, heart and love went into all aspects. All done at professional shops, call for info. Must sell quickly due to m e d ical bi l l s, $8250. Call Jack at 541-279-9538.
KAWASAKI KLX125, 2003,
good condition. $925. 541-593-8748
Yamaha V-Star, 250cc 2011 motorcycle, new custom seat for rider, vinyl coating on tank, 2 helmets included. Gets 60mpg, and has 3,278 miles. Asking $4700, firm. Call Dan 541-550-0171 The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting yourneeds.
Call on one of the professionals todayl 870
Boats & Accessories
3 bdrm, 2 bath $50,900 finished 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, on your site. like new, 135hp I/O, low J and M Homes time, Bimini top, many 541-548-5511 extras, Karavan trailer with swing neck current NEW Marlette Special registrations. $7000. 1404 sq.ft., 4/12 roof, 541-350-2336 a rch s hingles, d b l dormer, 9 lite door, glamour bath, appliance pkg, $69,900 finished on site PRICE GUARANTEED TILL MARCH JandMHomes.com 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 541-548-5511 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, :s. light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-81 5-2523
®'
: 0 0 850
Snowmobiles
4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ Rocky Mountainpkg, $8500. 541-379-3530 860
Motorcycles & Accessories
2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp
Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition, $23,500 503-646-1 804
1985 Harley Davidson 1200C with S portster frame and '05 Harley crate motor. Rat Rod look, Screaming Eagle 2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like tips, leather saddlebags, new, ActiV hull, safe e xtras. S a crifice a t $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, lock canister, 15HP Yamaha w/ t r olling 458-206-8446 (in Bend). plate, 6 gal Transom tank, less 30 hrs, 2 Call a Prc chest seats, full Bimini Whether you need a top, Transom wheels, cover, RV's special. fence fixed, hedges $5500. 541-923-6427 trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
Community Sportsl Preps Reporter
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pickup and safe delivery of propane gas, fuel and/or other products as directed. Follow DOT 775 and company safe driver guidelines while Manufactured/ performing duties. Performs daily inspections 528 as required by DOT to ensure that assigned Mobile Homes Loans & Mortgages equipment is in safe and compliant operating condition. Ensure all required paperwork Fall Clearance including certifications, logs, etc is completed BANK TURNED YOU 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, DOWN? Private party and is in compliance with company and 1601 sq.ft., will loan on real esg overnment regulations. Adheres t o a l l RETAIL tate equity. Credit, no company safety policies and procedures. $85,609 problem, good equity SALE is all you need. Call The ideal candidate must meet DOT require$77,599 Finished Oregon Land Mortments, possess a valid Class 'A' CDL with On Your Site. gage 541-388-4200. Hazmat and Tankerendorsement and have J & M Homes tractor/trailer experience. 541-548-5511 LOCAL NfONEyrWe buy secured trustdeeds 8 List Your Home We offer competitive pay, new equipment, note,some hard money JandMHomes.com ability to be home most nights, medical and loans. Call Pat Kellev We Have Buyers dental plan, 401 (K), Profit Sharing, paid 541-382-3099 ext.19. Get Top Dollar holidays and vacation, and Safety Bonus. Financing Available. 541-548-5511 Email employment©edstaub.com to get an application or you can fax resume to New Dream Special
.00
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HDFat Bo 1996
Eagle Crest Custom Home -3 bdrms/3 baths, upstairs family room, ofcaution when pur- fice, large deck, 3-car gachasing products or I raqer Includes sports ctr services from out of a pnvileges. $2400/mo + I the area. Sending deposit. 541-639-7783 c ash, checks, o r
Natural ga s h e a ter,All yearDependable Avalon, free standing, Firewood: Seasoned; ** FREE ** 38,000 BTU, w /ce- Lodgepole, split, del, Garage Sale Kit ramic hearth & stove B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Place an ad in The pipe, like new, re- or 2 cords for $365. Bulletin for your gad uced t o $600 . Call fo r m u lti-cord rage sale and reMadras 541-325-6791 discounts! ceive a Garage Sale 541-420-3484. 421 NOTICE TO Kit FREE! ADVERTISER Schools & Training KIT INCLUDES: Since September 29, 269 • 4 Garage Sale Signs 1991, advertising for Gardening Supplies IITR Twck School • $2.00 Off Coupon To used woodstoves has REDMOND CA!v!PUS & Equipment use Toward Your been limited to modOur Grads Get Jobs! 877-846-2516 Next Ad els which have been 1-888%38-2235 • 10 Tips For "Garage certified by the OrWWW.HTR.EDU BarkTurfSoil.com Sale Success!" egon Department of Mill Workers Environmental Qual470 PROMPT D ELIVERY ity (DEQ) and the fedP!CK UP YOUR FINGER JOINT, CVTTING AND Domestic & eral E n v ironmental 541-389-9663 GARAGE SALE KIT at MILLING EXPERIENCE In-Home Positions Protection A g e ncy 1777 SW Chandler AS WELLAS ENTRY LEVEL (EPA) as having met Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Vacation Rentals Will do HHA, Housitting, We are looking for individuals with experience smoke emission stanFor newspaper housecleaning. & Exchanges dards. A cer t ified delivery, call the The Bulletin to fill positions in our finger joint, milling and Sewog Central Oregon since r903 Call 937-789-7756 w oodstove may b e Circulation Dept. at cutting departments. Looking for experienced identified by its certifi541-385-5800 operators in milling, fingerjointing, engineered :) Ocean front house 476 cation label, which is To place an ad, call wood products, cutters, graders and feeder beach walk from town, 288 Employment permanently attached 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, 541-385-5809 work team members. Entry level well. If you Sales Southeast Bend to the stove. The BulOpportunities fireplace, BBQ. $95 or email have a good work history and attendance we letin will not knowclassifiedttbendbuttetin.com per night, 3 night Min. want you to apply. This Sat. 12/1 3ingly accept advertisGift? 208-369-3144 9am-5pm - 61562 The Bulletin CAUTION: ing for the sale of Starting pay is commensurate with experience seorasceneel onyonsincer9la American Loop. Ads published in uncertified $10.50 to $15.00 or more. We offer medical, Lots of interesting stuff, "Employment O p woodstoves. dental, vision, and life insurance, after 60 days • R ooms for Rent collectibles, old tools, portunities" include of full time employment, vacation after 6 270 Look at: hand blown glass deco- employee and indemonths, profit sharing plan as well. We are a Room for rent in RedBendhomes.com Lost & Found rations, Indian artifacts, pendent positions. mond, $425, incl utilities. rendezvous and moun- Ads fo r p o sitions family owned wood remanufacturer and have No smoking. Mature, refor Complete Listings of been in business for over 50 years. Please tain man artifacts. Iite that require a fee or sponsible, 6 stable. Call Area Real Estate for Sale Lost: Mid-sized Black apply in person at lab/Catahoula on Em- stands Guns - Ruger upfront investment Jim, 541-419-4513 267 pire Ave. W e a ring 357 mag.- GP 100, must be stated. With Bright Wood Corp. Colt 357 mag, Trooper collar w it h p e a ce any independentjob Fuel & Wood 335 NM/Hess St. or 6 3 0SE First St. signs. P l ease call Mark III, Ruger P 90Condo/Townhomes opportunity, please 45 cal., Win. Super XMadras, OR97741 Redmond, OR97756 541-280-7992 i nvestigate tho r • for R e nt 12ga shotgun., Black WHEN BUYING Use extra Pow Kentucky long rifle, oughly. Must pass pre-employment drug test. c aution when a pFIREWOOD... Eagle Crest Townhome swords, knives,more. plying for jobs on2 bdrm/2 bath. Includes To avoid fraud, line and never prosports ctr privileges. No REMEMBER: If you General The Bulletin vide personal inforpets. $1200/mo+ deThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturhave lost an animal, recommends paymation to any source don't forget to check day night shift and other shifts as needed. We posit. Call541-639-7783 ment for Firewood you may not have currently have openings all nights of the week. The Humane Society only upon delivery researched and Need to get an Bend Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts and inspection. deemed to be repustart between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and ad in ASAP? • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 541-382-3537 table. Use extreme 4' x 4' x 8' Redmond end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoYou can place it c aution when r e sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. • Receipts should 541-923-0882 s ponding to A N Y online at: Madras Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a include name, online employment minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts www.bendbulletin.com 541-475-6889 phone, price and ad from out-of-state. Prineville are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of kind of wood We suggest you call loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack541-447-7178 purchased. 325 541-385-5809 the State of Oregon or Craft Cats ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup • Firewood ads ~ Hay, Grain & Feed Consumer Hotline and other tasks. For qualifying employees we 541-389-8420. 632 MUST include at 1-503-378-4320 offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, AptiMultiplex General species & cost per 1st Quality, 2nd cutting For Equal Opportushort-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid cord to better serve People Look for Information grass hay, no rain, nity Laws contact vacation and sick time. Drug test is required our customers. barn stored, $250/ton. CHECKYOUR AD About Products and Oregon Bureau of Call 541-549-3831 Services Every Daythrough Labor & I n dustry, prior to employment. The Sulletin Clastriffeds Patterson Ranch, Sisters Civil Rights Division, servlnyceneal oregon slncessr Please submit a completed application atten971-673- 0764. tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Wheat Straw For Sale. at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanThe Bulletin also weaner pigs. seointr centraltheyon since sal dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be 541-546-6'I 71 541-385-5809 obtained upon request by contacting Kevin on the first day it runs to make sure it is corEldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applirect. "Spellcheck" and Looking for your Add your web address human errors do occations will be considered for this position. No next employee? to your ad and readresumes will be accepted. Drug test is recur. If this happens to Place a Bulletin ers on The Bulietin's C all 54 I-385-58 0 9 quired prior to employment. EOE. your ad, please conweb site, www.bendhelp wanted ad to r o m ot e o u r service tact us ASAP so that bulletin.com, will be today and corrections and any The Bulletin able to click through reach over Servin9 centralofeson since fs03 adjustments can be Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care automatically to your 60,000 readers made to your ad. website. each week. 541-385-5809 NEWSPAPER The Bulletin Classified Your classified ad NOTICE: Oregon state Want to impress the law requires anyone NOTICE: Oregon Landwill also Senior Apartmentwho con t racts for scape Contractors Law appear on relatives? Remodel Independent Living construction work to (ORS 671) requires all bendbulletin.com your home with the ALL-INCLUSIVE be licensed with the businesses that adwhich currently with 3 meals daily help of a professional Construction Contrac- vertise t o pe r form receives over The Bulletin is looking for a resourceful and enMonth-to-month lease, from The Bulletin's tors Board (CCB). An Landscape Construc1.5 million page thusiastic reporter with broad sports interests to check it out! "Call A Service active license tion which includes: join a staff that covers the wide range of comviews every Call 541-233-9914 means the contractor l anting, deck s , Professional" Directory petitive and recreational activities for which our month at no is bonded & insured. ences, arbors, 634 region is famous. extra cost. Verify the contractor's water-features, and inApt./Multiplex NE Bend Bulletin CCB l i c ense at stallation, repair of irAutomotiveSales We are seeking a reporter who can cover evwww.hirealicensedClassifieds rigation systems to be in preparation for the erything from traditional sports to the offbeat Call for Specials! contractor.com Get Results! l icensed w it h th e grand opening of our and extreme, with particular emphasis on com- Limited numbers avail. or call 503-378-4621. Landscape Contrac- Call 541-385-5809 ALL-NEI/f/ state-ofmunity (participation) sports and preps. Neces1, 2 and 3 bdrms. The Bulletin recom- tors Board. This 4-digit or place your ad the-art facility, Robsary skills include feature writing, event coverW/D hookups, patios mends checking with number is to be inon-line at berson Ford is lookor decks. age, and the ability to work well on deadline. A the CCB prior to con- cluded in all adverbendbulletin.com ing for 2 established college degree is required. Reporting experi- tf/fOUNTAIN GLEN, tracting with anyone. tisements which indidynamic sales exence, polished writing skills and a track record 541-383-931 3 Some other t rades cate the business has ecutives. We offer of accuracy and reliability are a must. Many of Professionally also re q uire addi- a bond, insurance and 341 full benefits includthe duties of this position require evening and managed by Norris & tional licenses and workers compensaing profit sharing. weekend availability. Stevens, Inc. certifications. tion for their employ- • Horses & Equipment please apply in perees. For your protec642 son as these 2 posiAlso important is the ability to conceptualize the tion call 503-378-5909 Debris Removal tions will fill rapidly. multimedia components that might complement Apt JMultiplex Redmond or use our website: stories, including video, audio and slide show www.lcb.state.or.us to ROBBERSON elements. Experience using social media sites, 4 Plex, 2 bdrm, 1.5 JUNK BE GONE check license status including Facebook and Twitter, is preferred. bath, 1200 s q .ft., before contracting with I Haul Away FREE very clean. Fridge, the business. Persons For Salvage. Also 5th wheel 3-horse dishwasher, w/s/g & The Bulletin is an independent, family-owned doing lan d scape Cleanups & Cleanouts Silverado 2001 maintenance do not newspaper in Bend, a vibrant city of 80,000 sur- gardener pd, carMel, 541-389-8107 r equire an LC B l i - 29'x8' trailer. Deluxe Caregivers rounded bysnow-capped mountains and home port with large storshowman/semi living cense. to unlimited outdoor recreation. The Bulletin is a a ge room, r e ar Needed quarters, lots of exTURN THE PAGE drug-free workplace and an equal-opportunity deck, large l a wn for all shifts in tras. Beautiful condiemployer. Pre-employment drug screening is area. Peaceful setFor More Ads our memory care tion. $21,900. OBO required prior to hiring. ting. $725 + d e p. Painting/Wall Covering The Bulletin 541-420-3277 community. Must 541-604-0338 be caring, a To apply, please email cover letter, resume ALL AMERICAN One gently used single team player, and and writing samples to: PAINTING s ortsre orter©bendbulletin.com Houses for Rent Handyman pony cart with 53" Interior and Exterior reliable. Wage shafts, $450. 2 Head NW Bend Family-owned DOE, Contact No phone inquiries please. I Do THAT! Residential & Commercial stalls and harness set Victoria Dale Home/Rental repairs 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts up for Shetland pony House for rent/sale! 3 541-385-4717 Small jobs to remodels but can be adjusted 5-vear warranties bdrm 2 bath, newly reHonest, guaranteed for a mini horse. $100. HOLIDAY SPECIAL! for more mod. thru-out, 134 NW work. CCB¹151573 Phone eve n ings, Colorado. $1200/mo. 1st/ Call 541-337-6149 information. 5erving Central Oregon since 1903 Dennis 541-317-9768 541-443-4301. last/sec. 541-389-2028 CCB ¹193960
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Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! wanted ad today and with an ad in reach over 60,000 The Bulletin's Door-tc-docr selling with readers each week. "Call A Service fast results! It's the easiest Your classified ad will also appear on way in the world to sell. Professional" bendbulletin.com Directory which currently The Bulletin Classified receives over 1.5 541485-5809 Fastidious farmer and million page views every month at wife seek quiet fas- Ranch help S i sters tidious farm/guardian Horse Ranch looking no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds helper. Will provide for experienced barn room in our home and help. S t a ll/paddock Get Results! Call 385-5809 occasional m e a l s. cleaning. 6am-11am Minimal work load for DAILY. Must be deor place a maximally trustwor- pendable, have referyour ad on-line at thy presence. Refer- ences and r e liable bendbulletin.com ences please. You t ransportation. C a l l may bring a horse. 541-504-1144 (leave 541-678-0325. message) Raezes
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860
658
Employment Opportunities
servin central ore on since1903
Harley Davidson 2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684
Harley Davidson 883 Sportster 1998, 20,200 miles, exc. cond.,
$3,500.
541-548-2872.
Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345. 875
Watercraft ds published in "Wa tercraft include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
serv>ng central oregon since r903
880
Motorhomes
Harley Fat Boy 2002 14k orig. miles.. Excellent cond. Vance 8 Hines exhaust, 5 spoke HD rims, wind vest, 12" rise handle bars, detachable luggage rack w/ back rest, hwy pegs 8 many chrome accents. Must see to appreciate! $10,500. In CRRarea call 530-957-1865
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2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $55K. Pll. 541-447-9268
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, DEC 10, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
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TH E BULLETIN6 WEDNESDAY, DEC 10, 2014
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sbortz
C L U B w ednesday, necember 1o,2014
ACROSS 1Reactto a haymaker 5"Songof the South" appellation 9 Pair on a yawl 14Take the edge off 16Many a Greenlander 17 1964 hit for Manfred Mann 19Is the first act 20 Perpendicular to vert. 21 It sells, it's said 22 Home in the sticks? 23 Viagra rival 26 1968 song from the Beatles' "White Album" 32 ID thief's target 35 Flick with a duel,
Duck vs. Duck By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
I c o n tinue a se r i e s o n the "ducking" play: getting an edge by refusing a trick you could win. In today's deal, one good duck deserves another. Against 3NT, West led the jack of hearts: deuce, king, ace. Declarer next led a diamond to dummy's jack. East ducked, so South came back to his king of clubs and tried a diamond to the queen. This time East took the king and returned a heart. S outh won, led t o t h e k in g o f s pades and c a shed th e a c e o f diamonds. He hoped for a 3-3 break, but when West discarded, South took only two tricks in each suit.
r ight, opens on e d i a mond. Y ou double, and your partner bids one heart. What do you say? ANSWER: Thi s pr o b l em i s awkward. You would like to act again — you have 17 points, and your partner may have eight or nine — but no action is attractive. A raise to two hearts would strongly suggest fourcard support(since partner's hearts may be ragged). I would reluctantly recommend a bid of one spade. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH
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FIRST DIAMOND South makes 3NT if East forgets to duck the first diamond. South can then set up and cash a third diamond trick. But South can counter East's actual duck with one of his own: On the first diamond, dummy should play low. East wins cheaply and returns a heart, but South wins and leads a diamond to thequeen and king. He can reach dummy with the high spade to cash the A-I and five of diamonds, assuring the contract.
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woman to win six gold medals at a single Olympics
0 4 2 4 A K 5 2. The dealer, at your (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
T S H I H A E G E D M O W P E R A RO N V E L R EM H O B LO G R ULE S AT Y R O NE S N D Y O S T I N K S T OR D DA
G R O U P H U G S H U S K Y
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P A S S E M E S S F L E A
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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosaworda ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvera: nytimes.com/learning/xworda.
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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
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By Gareth Bain ©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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12/10/14
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 10 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
881
882
932
935
935
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Antique & Classic Autos
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water 8 sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR.
Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 6.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with aw541-604-5993 nings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driyer door w/power window, cruise, Where can you find a exhaust brake, central helping hand? vac, satellite sys. Asking From contractors to $67,500. 503-781-8812 yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
a
ToyotaSienna 2005 li i
Snowbird Special! Open Road 36' 2005 model is like new w/3 slides!! King bed, hide-a-bed, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $25,995 541-419-0566
Mercedes 450SL, 1975 97K Miles
885
Canopies & Campers
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master
Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 1 55 K m i l es, $11,500. 541-549-6407
$8999.
541-504-8399
BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - co!d weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg.
Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-91 5-9170 What are you looking for? You'll find it in
Runs great! Bargain Corral Price
$6,977
Vin¹264100
ROBBERSON ~ ~
Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 12/31/14 940
Vans
The Bulletin Classifieds
Four Winds 2008 18' travel trailer used very little
Skamper 1990 8-ft pop- Just bought a new boat? 541-385-5809 up cabover camper, im- Sell your old one in the maculate, many extras, classifieds! Ask about our Chrysler Town & Super Seller rates! 3-burner stove, heater $8500. Country LXI 1997, 541-385-5809 w/thermostat, hot water beautiful inside & 541-719-1217 heater, oversized presout, one owner, nonsure water s ystem„ smoker, loaded with Fantastic Fan, lots of options! 197,692 mi. storage, sleeps 4, $3750. Service rec o rds 5000 tow bar, Chevrolet Trailblazer 541-617-0211 available. $4 , 9 50. $22,995. 2008 4x4 541-383%503 Call Mike, (541) 615Automatic, 6-cylinder, 6176 after 3:30 p.m. tilt wheel, power winOldsmobile CUSTOM 0 CRUISER WAGON 1991 dows, power brakes, TURN THE PAGE Heartland P r owler 1 owner, 8 seatbelts, air conditioning, key0 0 975 2012, 29PRKS, 33', 118K mi, 350EFI VB, For More Ads less entry, 69K miles. Automobiles like new, 2 slides-livauto, $3000 Excellent condition; The Bulletin i ng area 8 l a r ge 541-385-6168 or tires have 90% tread. closet. Large enough Norm06omsn.com $1 1,995. Buick LaCrosse to live in, but easy to Call 541-598-5111 tow! 15' power awning, power hitch 8 Ford Escape stabilizers, full s i ze 908 queen bed, l a r ge Aircraft, Parts shower, porcelain sink & Service Fleetwood D i scovery 8 toilet. 2006 - Great runner, 40' 2003, diesel, w/all $26,500. 541-999-2571 VW CONV. 1 9 78 must see. $8999 -1600cc, fuel options - 3 slide outs, VIN ¹159299 injected, classic 1976 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, $7,977. 2009 Hybrid Limited, Volkswagen Convertetc., 32,000 miles. ible. Cobalt blue with AWD, great tires. Wintered in h eated ROBBERSON y a black convertible VIN¹ A17570 shop. $79,995 obo. top, cream colored $23,977 541-447-8664 interior & black dash. 541-312-3986 1/3 interest m ROBBERSON This little beauty runs Dlr ¹0205. Price KeystoneLaredo 31' Columbia 400, and looks great and LlllcoLN ~ II IR W R good thru 12/31/14 RV 2006 w ith 1 2 ' Financing available. turns heads wherever slide-out. Sleeps 6, it goes. Mi: 131,902. 541-312-3986 $150,000 queen walk-around Buick LeSabres, Phone 541-504-8399 Dlr ¹0205. Price (located @ Bend) bed w/storage under2002 132k $3999; good thru 12/31/14 541-286-3333 neath. Tub & shower. 2005 179k $4999. Fleetwood South2 swivel rockers. TV. 933 541-419-5060 Isuzu Rodeo 1996, wind 1991, 33', 454 Air cond. Gas stove 8 Check out the Pickups 4WD great in snow! Buick (or comparable 4 GMC.Owner died; yrs refrigerator/freezer. classifieds online new all-terrain tires, dr sedan) Wanted, with of storage. Loaded Microwave. Awning. www.bendbulletin.com clean, Must sell! $1200 under 80K miles, for unwith factory options. Outside sho w er. obo. 541-550-9980 Updated daily der $6500. 541-408-1628 Twin AC & 2 TVs, Slide-through storelectric steps & cora ge. E as y Li f t . ner jacks, tow pkg, Jee Liberty 2012 Want to impress the $29,000 new; Askoutside shower, great ing $1 3,600 relatives? Remodel tire tread.$15,500. 541-447-4605 your home with the Jim, 541-408-1 828 2005 Diesel 4x4 help of a professional Chev Crewcab dufrom The Bulletin's ally, Allison tranny, Looking for your 1/3 interest in well"Call A Service next employee? equipped IFR Beech Bo- tow pkg., brake conLimited Edition. troller, cloth split Place a Bulletin help Professional" Directory nanza A36, new 10-550/ PRAYING FOR front bench seat, wanted ad today and prop, located KBDN. SNOW! Vin¹149706 only 66k miles. reach over 60,000 $65,000. 541-419-9510 Buick Rendezvous 19.977 Very good condition, www.N4972M.com readers each week. 2005, V6, 144K Original owner, Your classified ad ROBBERSON Frelghtllner 1994 miles, clean inside & HANGAR FOR SALE. $34,000 will also appear on II II c 0 I N ~ IM ROR Custom 30x40 end unit T out, white over black, or best offer. bendbulletin.com Motorhome hanger in Prineville. 541-408-7826 gray interior, good which currently re541-312-3986 Will haul small SUV Dry walled, insulated, ceives over 1.5 miltires, $4900. Dlr ¹0205.Price good or toys, and pull a and painted. $23,500 lion page views evthru 12/31/1 4 541-408-1828 trailer! Powered by Tom, 541.768.5546 ery month at no CAL LW 6.3 Cummins with 6 extra cost. Bulletin TODAYA Chevy Cruze 2014 speed Allison auto Classifieds Get ReJEEP WRANGLER ChevyPickup 1978, trans, 2nd owner. sults! Call 365-5809 long bed, 4x4, frame Very nice! $53,000. or place your ad up restoration. 500 541-350-4077 on-line at Cadillac eng i ne, bendbulletin.com fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low Save money. Learn Gas Saver! Auto. mi., no rust, custom to fly or build hours 882 interior and carpet, 2009 hard top Only 14k miles with your own airFifth Wheels 16,000 miles. autoVin¹277341 c raft. 1968 A e ro n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see matic, AC, tilt & Commander, 4 seat, $13,977 cruise, power winit! $25,000 invested. 150 HP, low time, HOLIDAY RAMBLER ROBBERSON 4 dows, power steerfull panel. $21,000 $12,000 OBO. VACATIONER 2003 ing, power locks, al541-536-3669 or ~ mama obo. Contact Paul at 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, 541-420-6215. loy wheels and 541-447-5164. workhorse, Allison 1000 541-312-3986 running boards, 5 speed trans., 39K, Dlr ¹0205. Pricing garaged. NEI/I/ TIRES, 2 slides, 916 good thru 12/31/14 Alpenlite 28 ft. $22,500. Onan 5.5w gen., ABS Trucks & 541-419-5960 1987, New stove, brakes, steel cage cockfridge. Good furpit, washer/dryer, fireHeavy Equipment lace, mw/conv. oven, nace, AC. Stereo, ree standing dinette, DVD player. Queen was $121,060 new; now, bed WITH bedding. Chevy Si l verado $35,900. 541-536-1008 20 ft. awning. 1500 20 1 4 , L T , Good shape. $4500 4 WD, crew c a b , PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, 541-977-5587 short box, 5.3L, new 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, MERCEDES-BENZ Peterbilt 359 p otable Feb. 26, 2014. Not new tires + mounted GL450 2 0 10 I m water truck, 1 990, driven since June studded snow tires, maculate, custom 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 2014. Gar a ged. wheels and new 20" $7250. 541-433-2026 pump, 4-3" h oses, Loaded, brown tan tires. 2nd set MBZ camlocks, $ 25,000. cloth interior, 4900 Providence 2005 with snow541-620-3724 Fully loaded, 35,000 mi., $34,9 9 0. wheels flake tires. Full new miles, 350 Cat, Very 541-480-5634 car ext. warranty Freightliner custom clean, non-smoker, gythrp©gmail.com SEMI-DRY VAN March 2017. 59,500 3 slides, side-by-side 5th wheel puller, 53' long x102" wide, miles. Fully loaded refrigerator with ice sleeper cab, rebuilt good tires, no dings, incl. DVD and NAV. maker, Washer/Dryer, engine with 20k miles, $6500. $34,500. 6.5 generator, 120 cu. Flat screen TV's, In Nearly perfect! Must 541-719-1217 541-615-3049 motion satellite. ft. storage boxes - one see! vin¹ 142671 8' long. Gets 10.9 $95,000 $11,977 541-480-2019 mpg, many more 931 fI/fercedes GLK350 features. All in good ROBBERSON y Chevy Silverado Automotive Parts, shape. See to appreLINcoLII ~ I M RDR 2012 4x4 Crew Cab ciate (in Terrebonne Service 8 Accessories 39K miles, • a a t sl area).$24,000. 541-312-3986 White Diamond paint, 14" rims (4) great for this Tonneau = 'W ~ 503-949-4229 Dlr ¹0205. Price cover, leather year's snow tires, $60 all heated seats, good thru 12/31/14 running obo. 541-279-8908 boards, tow-ready, Winnebago 22' 2010 Gorgeous, new tires (only 200 4 non-studded snow tires 2002 - $28,500 AWD. Vin¹310777 nco S 0 on st e e l whe e ls, miles on them), like Chevy 454, heavy $26,977. / new inside and out! 205/65R-15, good tread, duty chassis, new $150. 541-788-7713 $28,900. ROBBERSON batteries & tires, cab 541-350-0775 Keystone Everest 5th '65-'66 Mustang original LlllcoLN ~ II IR W R & roof A/C, tow hitch Wheel, 2004 w /brake, 21k m i . , bucket seats, completely Dodge 1990 full size, 541-312-3986 Model 323P - 3 slides, more! 541-260-3251 rebuilt, better than new. 1/2 ton 4x2 $2000. Dlr ¹0205. Price rear island-kitchen, AWD Sedan. Price lowered, must sell. 541-536-1141 fireplace, 2 TV's, good thru 12/31/14 Bargain Corral Price 541-447-7272 CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner $12,977 w/surround sound, A/C, Vin¹615069 FORD F150 2011 932 custom bed, ceiling fan, fi/fercury Mariner W/D ready, many extras. Antique & ROBBERSON 4 New awning & tires. Classic Autos ~ mama Excellent condition. Ready to makememories! $18,900. More pics 541-312-3986 Top-selling Winnebago available.541-923-6408 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing 31 J, origina! owners, nongood thru 12/31/14 New body style smokers, garaged, only 2009- AWD, same crew cab 4X4, 18,800 miles, auto-levelLaredo 30' 2009 vehicle as the Esing jacks, (2) slides, upVin¹A21126 Toyota Camry LE 2007 cape, in great graded queen bed, bunk 20,998 73,200 miles, newer shape! Vin¹J13074 beds, micro, (3) TVs, tires, includes keyChevelle tiijalibu ROBBERSON Onl $13,977 sleeps 10! Lots of storless start after factory, LINcoLN ~ IM RO R age, maintained, very 1966 4 studless snow tires ROBBERSON y Complete clean!Only $67,995!Exnot on rims. $9300. 541-312-3986 restoration, tended warranty and/or fi541-771-0005 or Dlr ¹0205.Price good overall length is 35' nancing avail to qualified $32,900. 541-389-3550 541-312-3986 has 2 slides, Arctic thru 12/31/1 4 buyers! 541-388-7179 Dlr ¹0205. Price package, A/C,table (509) 521-0713 good thru 12/31/14 881 & chairs, satellite, (in Bend, OR) Arctic pkg., power Travel Trailers awning, in excellent Toyota FJ Cruiser condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com 2012, 4WD, w/traction control, alloy $22,500 VOLVO XC90 2007 wheels, mud & snow 541-419-3301 Honda Ri d geline t ires, tow pkg. + AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, RTL 2006. 2nd owner trailer break, back power everything, 112,000 mi.. Records grey on grey, leather 2007 Jayco Jay Flight up camera, roof since owning car for 5 rack, ABS breaks + heated lumbar seats, 1965 Mustang 29 FBS with slide out & years. Truck crew cab independent system, 3rd row seat, moonHard top, awning - Turn-key ready w ith 3.5 V 6 , a u t o blue tooth connecroof, new tires, al6-cylinder, auto trans, to use, less than 50 totrans, very clean with ways garaged, all tal days used by current power brakes, power tion, hands free cell maintenance up to most options, 17" alowner. Never smoked in, steering, garaged, phone c a p ability, date, excellent cond. loy wheels with Toyo compass, o u tside well maintained, no indoor pets, excellent MONTANA 3585 2008, A STEALAT $13,900. exc. cond., 3 slides, engine runs strong. Tires at 60%. Custom temp, inclinometer, cond., very clean. Lots of 541-223-2218 king bed, Irg LR, t onneau cover f o r 32K mi., p r istine bonus features; many 74K mi., great condihave never been used. Arctic insulation, all tion.$1 2,500. bed, and tow hitch. condition, $29,900. Must see! Price to sell$12,497. Asking $18,000. C a l l options - reduced by 541-549-1736 or VW 1977, red, n ew Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r $3500 to $31,500. 541-598-7940 dagreene75ohotmail. 541-647-0061. paint, fresh motor. more info /more photos. 541-420-3250 com or 610-909-1701 $7500. 541-536-1141
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LEGAL NOTICE Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for A merican Hom e Mortgage A s sets Trust 2006-5, Mortgage-Backed Pass-Through Cert ificates Seri e s 2006-5, its successors i n in t e rest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Kathy Fish aka Kathy J. Fish aka Kathy Jo Fish; Discover Bank Issuer of the Discover Card; Ridgewater II Homeowners Ass o ciation; State of O r egon; Oak View PUD Homeowners Associat ion; a n d O c c upants of the premises, D e fendant/s. Case No.: 13CV1157FC. NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, March 12, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 62665 H a w kview R oad, Bend, O r egon 97701. Conditions of Sale: P otential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's f unds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.or-
egonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE
Deutsche Bank National Trust Comp any, solely a s trustee for Harborview Mortgage Loan Trust Mor t gage Loan Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-14, its successors and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Lance E. Lewis, Betty J. Fox; and all other Persons or Parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, or interest in the real property commonly known as 5 0 6 30 Deer Forest Drive, La Pine, OR 97739, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13C V 0906. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, March 5, 2015 a t 1 0 :00 A M, in t h e m a i n lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Off i c e, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 50630 Deer Forest Drive, La Pine, Oregon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE D eutsche Ban k Trust Com p any Americas as T rustee for R A L I 2004-QS12, its successors and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Michelle R. Mitchell; and all other Persons or Parties unknown claiming any right, title, lien, or interest in the real property commonly known as 1050 NE Butler Market Road Unit 6, Bend, Oregon 97701, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0990FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby
given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, March 12, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 1 050 N E Bu t l e r Market Road Unit 6, B end, Oreg o n 97701. Conditions of Sale: P otential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e ac cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately u pon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Everbank, its successors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Aaron Kuziemski; Jennifer Kuziemski aka Jennifer Carrie Kuziems ki; S a muel A . R amirez; Ange l Stanton; P o rffolio Recovery A ssociates, LLC; Occupants of the Premises; and the real property located at 52125 Lec h n er Lane, La Pine, Oregon 97739, Defendant/s. Case No.: 12CV0710. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, March 10, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Coun t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 5 2125 Lech n e r Lane, La Pine, Oregon 97739. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will
be accepted. Pay-
ment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Federal N a t ional Mortgage Association ("FNMA"), its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Mike L. Unger Jr; Jamie L. Sandall aka Jamie Sandall; and Occupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 14CV0077FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, March 12, 2015 at 10:00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 7 40 N E Ne g u s Place, R e dmond, O regon 977 5 6 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior to t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's f unds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm
LEGAL NOTICE FEDERAL NAT IONAL MOR T GAGE A S S OCIATION, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. PAMELA G . S T A RR; ROBERT A. FRAVEL; O C C UP ANTS O F T H E PREMISES, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0960FC. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will, on Thursday, March 5, 2015 a t 1 0 :00 A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Desc hutes Cou n t y Shenff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 65120 Collins Road, B end, Oreg o n 97701. Conditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e a c cepted. P a yment must be made in full i mmediately u p on t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E C I R CUIT C OURT FOR T H E STATE OF OREGON I N AND FO R T H E COUNTY OF DESC HUTES. WE L L S FARGO BANK, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. UNKNOWN HEIRS OF JOHN C. LEHTO AKA JOHN COREY LEHTO; DEBORAH LEH TO; CALVIN L E HTO; NIKKITA LEHTO; CITIBANK, N.A., S UCCESSOR B Y M E RGER T O CITIBANK FEDERAL S AVINGS BAN K ; STATE OF OREGON; MID OREGON FCU; OCCUPANTS OF THE PRE M ISES, A ND T H E REA L PROPERTY LOCATED A T 276 3 NORTHEAST HOPE DRIVE, BEND, OREGON 97701, Defendants. C a s e No. 14CV0776FC. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. TO THE DEFENDANTS: UNKNOWN H EIRS OF JOHN C. LEHTO AKA JOHN COREY LEHTO: Inthe name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby
required to a ppear
and answer the complaint filed against you in the above-entitled Court and cause on or before the expiration of 30 days from the date of the first publication of this summons. The date of first publication in this matter is November 19, 2014. If you fail timely to appear and answer, plaintiff will apply to the above-entitled court for the relief prayed for in its complaint. This is a judicial foreclosure of a deed of t rust i n w h ic h t h e plaintiff requests that t he plaintiff be a l lowed to f o reclose your interest in the following d e scribed real property: LOT 31 OF EAG L ENEST, P HASE 11, D E S CHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. Com monly known as: 2763 Northeast Hope Drive, Bend, Oregon 97701. NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS: READ T HESE PAP E R S CAREFULLY! A lawsuit has been started a gainst you in t h e above-entitled c ourt by Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., plaintiff. Plaintiff's claims are stated in the written complaint, a copy of which was filed with the ab o ve-entitled Court. You must "appear" in this case or the other side will win automatically. To "appear" you must file with the court a legal document called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "an-
swer" (or "reply") must
be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein a long with the r e q uired filing fee. I t must be i n p r oper form and have proof o f service on t h e