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WINTER STORMWATCH • STORYON B1
TODAY'S READERBOARD
=: =
tonight
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in Bend Medicare
VETERANS
backslung
More roomfor the otters
— High Desert Museumplans to upgrade its otter exhibit.B1
cancer
screening
Bend, title town —six of the past eight 5A champions in prep girls soccer hail from Bend. Is another coming?C1
By Markian Hawryluk The Bulletin
Plus: Infamousgaffes-
Lung cancer is the deadliest of all cancers in the U.S., killing 160,000 individuals each year, more than breast, pros-
A look back at one ofcollege football's biggest blunders.C1 4
EXecutiVe File —Bend
tate or colorectal cancers combined. Yet, it is the
woodworker aims to create heirloom-quality pieces.C6
only cancer for which no screening program exists. That will soon change, as Medicare announced
EDITOR'SCHOICE
it plans to cover annual
low-dose CT screening for lung cancer in long-term
Scramble
smokers who meet certain
guidelines. The move aligns Medicare payment policy with that of private health plans
~© >Tene~"
on to savea sea created
s
that will be required to cover screening at no cost starting in 2015.
by accident
The screening benefit will be available to current
smokers or those who Fr
By Felicity Barringer
have quit within the past
15 years, ages 55 to 74, with a smoking history of at least 30 pack years. (A pack year is equivalent to smoking a pack of ciga-
New York Times News Service
MECCA, Calif. — The
area around this town of date palms attracts two
kinds of migrants — hundreds of humans who work
rettes a day for a year or
two packs a day for half a year.) SeeScreening/A5
the land and millions of birds that stop to rest and
gorge at the nearby Salton Sea. The sea is a 110-year-
old, increasingly briny, shallow lake that covers 350 square miles but is
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Laszlo Maths, a United States Marine Corpsveteran, left, works with Navy veteran Leroy Kissee on his classwork in theVeterans Center at Central Oregon Community College on Monday.
dwindling fast. It was actually an accident, created when
Colorado River floods overwhelmed flimsy dikes, but it now fills crucial eco-
• Hundreds of vets are amongthose enrol led atCOCC,OSU-Cascades
logical niches in southeastern California. Its wetlands and fish attract as many as
400 species of migrating birds. As it disappears, officials are scrambling to fend off the consequences. See Sea /A5
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny, cold High 34, Low12 Page B6
INDEX At Home D1-6 Business C5-6 Calendar B2 Classified E1-6 Comics E3-4 Crosswords E4
Dear Abby D5 Horoscope D5 Local/State B1-6 Obituaries B5 Sports C1-4 TV/Movies D5
By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
At lunchtime Monday on
Inside • What's closed in honor of Veterans Day, B1
the Central Oregon Com-
Nore veterans en campus The number ofstudents whoarereceiving benefits as veterans has generally gone upover the past five years atboth Central Oregon Community CollegeandOregonState University-Cascades.
VETERAN STUDENTS
of us," said Mathe, who is pursuing an associate
tary service shared a room
of arts Oregon transfer
at the Campus Center.
degree at COCC and plans
200
Laszlo Mathe, 39, of Bend, a Marine veteran,
to study respiratory therapy at Oregon Institute of
150
munched on a hot dog while Leroy Kissee, 28, of
Technology in Klamath
IOO
Falls.
Redmond, a Navy veteran,
50
worked on a paper. The two are among
COCC has 349 veterans among about 6,500 students signed up for the
hundreds of veterans at-
current term. OSU-Cas-
tending COCC or Oregon State University-Cascades
cades has 41 among more
in Bend.
"There are quite a few
SeeVeterans/A4
COCC Q
OS U-Cascades
300
munity College campus, friends bound by their mili-
than 1,100 taking classes this term.
Q
350
Walden: More time on forest road maps By Andrew Clevenger
250
The Bulletin
WASHINGTONWeeks after meeting in La Grande withthe Pacific
0 2009
2 010
20I 1
20I 2
2013
201 4
Note: COCC enrollment is shown for fall term, while OSU-Cascades enrollment is shown for the entire year, with the exception of 2014, which shows only summer and fall enrollment.
Source: COCC, OSU-Cascades Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
Northwest's regional forester, U.S. Rep. Greg Walden on Monday urged the U.S. Forest Service official to give the public more time to comment on road maps for the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest.
Some localresidents are worried the Forest Service is rushingthrough the completion of existing condition road maps, whichwill help determine which roads the
An Independent Newspaper
What, exactly, is net neutrali all about.
agency doses or leaves open tothepublicin the travel-management plan for the forestin Northeast Oregon.
Vol. 112, No. 315,
By Neil Irwin
Previous travel-management plans have eroded the
The Bulletin
30 pages, 5 sections
Q i/i/e use recycied newsprint
:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII 0
88 267 02329
in favor of so-called net neutraijty (story A4) What has
munications law, there is a real- Nearly every time I flip a light New York Times News Service ly simple way of thinking of the switch in my home, energy that It's one of the most importb ee n a long-simmeringbattle debate over net neutrality: Is was generated at some distant ant policy disputes between telecommuni- access to the Internet more like power plant and that flows that will determine the AN A L YSIS ca tions and tech lobby- access to electricity, or more throughacomplex network of future of the Internet, ists is now likely to step like cable television service'? transformers andpower lines and now President Barack to t h e front of public debate. Regulated electricalutilities makes its way to the bulbs. Obama has formally weighed in F o r all the arcana in telecom-perform aremarkable service. SeeNet neutrality/A4
public's trust in the Forest Service, Walden, R-Hood River, noted in a letter to
Jim Pena, the regional forester for Washington and
Oregon. SeeComment/A4
A2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
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VA reOrganiZ8tlnn — Ontheeveof Veterans Day,the VeteransAffairs Departmentannounced a reorganization designedto makeit easierfor veterans togainaccessto the sprawling departmentand its mazelikewebsites. OnMonday,VASecretary Robert McDonaldcalled the restructuring the largest inthedepartment's historyand said it will bring asingular focus on customerservice to anagencythat serves22 milion veterans."As VA moves forward, wewill judge the success ofall our efforts againsta single metric: theoutcomesweprovide for veterans," McDonaldsaid.The VA's mission is tocarefor veterans, "so wemust becomemore focused on veterans'needs," he said.
By Hilary Stout and Bill Vlasic
ty for the company as it faces a nal. Hilliard said he planned to mountain of litigation over the deposecurrentand former DelNearly two months before faulty switch. phi employees. notifying federal regulators Delphi was in close contact Since the 500,000-switch orand the public that it was recall- with GM for years as engineers derwas quietly placed,GM has ing cars with a dangerously de- developed, and then tried to recalled 2.6 million cars for the fective ignition switch, General correct, the problematic switch, defect, beginning in early FebMotors placedan urgent order and the company could be- ruary, and has acknowledged for 500,000replacement switch- come a factor in the lawsuits if that some engineers and others es, emails to its supplier Delphi it cooperates fully with lawyers in the company knew of the Automotive show. representing accident victims flaw for more than a decade. The emails were sent on Dec. and their families. GM reacted to the disdosure "Delphi is refusing to par- of the emails with a statement 18, 2013, a day after a committee discussed the switch issue ticipate in the cover-up," said that noted the steps it has taken but adjourned without order- Robert Hilliard, one of three after the ignition-switch recall ing a recall. Despite the official lead plaintiffs attorneys in toensurequicker andcloseratinaction, a GM representative federal multidistrict litigation tention to safetyissues. sent an email to Delphi the next against GM. "They are fully Mary Barra, who took over day requesting the half-mil- and honestly disclosing what as GM's chief executive in Janl ion replacement parts f o r w e have a rightunderthe rules uary, has said she did not learn "an urgent field action for our to know." of the ignition-switch defect uncustomers." The emails showing the De- til a committee decided on Jan. Aside from adding to the cember order were produced 31 to recallthe cars. But the size evidence that GM was main- by Delphi during discovery in and expense of the mid-Decemtaining a public silence about the sweeping federal litigation. ber order, $2.6 million, raises the switch while focusing with Hilliard obtained permission questions about who approved increasing intensity on it in- from Delphi to declassify them. it and why the company continternally, the disclosure of the Their existence was first reued to delay an official recall of emails highlights a vulnerabili- portedby The Wall Street Jour- the cars. New York Times News Service
U.S. aid prOjeCtS — TheState Departmentsaid Mondayitwas reviewing some of its secretivedemocracy-promotion programs in hostile countries after The Associated Pressreportedthat the nation's global developmentagencymayeffectively endrisky undercoverwork inthose environments.Theproposedchangesfollowan AP investigation thisyear into work bythe U.S.Agency for International Development,whichestablished aTwitter-like service in Cubaand secretly sought to recruit a new generation of dissidents therewhile hidingties to the U.S.government. Theagency' sproposedchangescouldmovesomeofthatworkunder America's diplomaticapparatus. StateDepartment spokeswomanJen Psaki declined toelaborate onthe plan Monday,saying it was"premature" because ofongoing deliberations. ViOlenCe in Migei'ia —In awaragainsteducation, the casualtiesare theyoung andambitious. In northern Nigeria, it hasbecomedangerous to drink in astreet bar, playgospelmusic in apublic placeor watch televised soccer matchesat sports bars andbig-screenviewing centers. Roadsand bus stations arefraught with risk. But it is schoolsthat havebecomethe front lines ofthewarto establish an Islamist state, onein which boys'education would belimited to Quranic schoolsand Islamic universities, and girls would stayhomeandget married. OnMonday, dozens of students were killedin a suicidebombingatan all-boys high school, thelatest ina series of suchattacks. Therewasglobal horror in April overthe kidnapping of nearly300schoolgirls from the northeastern town of Chibok.The abduction promptedfirst lady MichelleObama,amongothers, to speak outabout the risksgirls everywherefacedfor pursuing their ambitions.
NOrth KOreahOStagereleaSe — PresidentBarackObamais squelching speculation that the release of two Americansheld in North Korea might pavethe wayfor a new round of nuclear talks, saying the U.S. needsmorethan "small gestures" before reopening a high level of dialogue with Pyongyang.Shortly after Obamaarrived in China, North Korea's neighborandchief benefactor, the president madehis first extensive public commentsMonday onthe hand-over of Americans Kenneth BaeandMatthew Miller. Thetiming of the Americans' release raised questions aboutwhat messageNorth Korea'syoung leader, Kim Jong Un, might be trying to send the U.S.president while he is in the region.
Dtsouies rr
PROTESTS CONTINUE INMEXICO
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
WSSt LInk 8RICkS —Palestinian assailants carried outstabbing attacks Monday inTelAvivand the WestBank, police said, killing anIsraeli woman andasoldier as a waveof Arabunrestappeared to begaining strength. Israeli PrimeMinister Benjamin Netanyahupromised aharsh response —a confrontational strategy that risks deepeningweeksof turmoil that hasshakenthe country. Withtheattacks believedto bethe work of lone assailants, however,police could haveatough time preventing more of them.Tensions betweenIsraelis andPalestinians havebeenhigh following a50-day Israeli war inJuly andAugust against militants in the Gaza Strip andincreased friction over Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site — thehilltop complexrevered byJewsasthe TempleMountandby Muslims asthe NobleSanctuary.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
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Marco Ugarte/The Associated Press
A maskedstudent holds astick during a protest at the Acapulco airport in Mexico onMonday against the disappearance,andprobable murder, of 43 students in the state of Guerrero. Supporters of the missing students, refusing to believe theyare dead,havekept up the protests that have blocked major highwaysandset government buildings ablaze in recentweeks.The43 students disappeared at the hands of acity police force onSept. 26 in the town of Iguala. President EnriquePenaNieto's government, which
had seensmooth sailing through its firstyear and ahalf in office, is suddenly listing in theface of multiple crises. The administration scrambledMondayto respondto growing questions aboutthefamily's multimillion-dollar mansion owned bya government contractor, evenasit tried to calm theprotests. The president hastried to shift Mexico's focus away from a bloody fight against organizedcrime to aseries of political andeconomic reforms his administration successfully pushedthrough congress.
CascadeCustom PHARMACY PweSC<i ptiOIrtS PCY'eofrtrAIt<eA
— The Associated Press
Discover aBETTER kind of PHARMACY
Egyptian militant grouppledgesloyalty to IS By David D. Kirkpatrick
milestone achievement weeks into a U.S.-led bombing camCAIRO — They h ave paign against it s s trongs laughtered hundreds o f holds in Syria and Iraq. It is Egyptian soldiers and po- the latest manifestation of a lice officers, recruited expe- swirling descent into violence rienced fighters and staged around the region amid the increasingly s o phisticated dashed hopes for democracy raidsfrom the western desert of the Arab Spring uprisings to the Sinai Peninsula. They three years ago. have beheaded informants But i n p r a c tical t e r ms, and killed an American in a the Islamic State could also carjacking, say Western of- share resources — from its ficials familiar with intelli- wealth of stolen money and gence reports. oil, seized-weapons stores On Monday, the leaders of or jihadi-world prestige — to Egypt's most dangerous mili- add new fuel to the Egyptian tant group, Ansar Beit al-Ma- group's insurgency at a critiqdis, also pledged obedience cal turning point. to the organization that calls In recent w eeks, A n sar itself the Islamic State, beBeit al-Maqdis has come uncoming its first significant in- der a withering crackdown ternational affiliate in the bet by the Egyptian military, that the link will provide new which has begun the evacumoney, weapons and recruits ation and destruction of hunto battle the government in dreds of homes in an attempt Cairo. to eradicate the group from The affiliation could pull its havens in th e n orthern the militant group away from Sinai. But at the same time its current almost exclusive the group has confounded focus on attacking Egyptian the c o n f ident p r e dictions military and security forces of Egyptian officials that it toward the Islamic State's in- would soon be defeated, raisdiscriminate mass killings of ing fears that the fight may civilians. just be beginning. "The organized army is in The pledge alone could undermine the government's ef- confrontation with a g r oup forts to win the trust of West- of disorganized ghosts," said ern tourists, a vital source of Ahmed Sakr, a government hard currency. official working on economThe decision expands the ic development in Sinai, who New York Times News Service
Islamic State into the most
populous and
said th e
m i l i t ary's "brute
h i storically force" there was alienating most influential Arab state, a the population while scat-
tering fighters across the country. "I am very worried
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that there is now going to be more instability in the west, and Ansar Beit al-Maqdis will make inroads into Cairo
and the big cities."
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Tuesday, Nov. 11, the 315th
day of 2014.Thereare 50days left in the year.This is Veterans DayintheU.S.,Remembrance Day in Canada.
MILESTONE
SCIENCE QS.A
Nature's most, and least, efficient
HAPPENINGS EbOla —Craig Spencer, an emergency room doctor who was NewYork City's first Ebola patientandis nowfree of the virus, is scheduled to bereleased from the hospital.
HISTORY
It's a moment 15 years in the making. On Wednesday, a craft that has been tailing a comet through space will attempt to land on its surface.
digesters
By Deborah Netbum Los Angeles Times
Highlight:In1918, fighting in World War I came to an end with the signing of an armistice between theAllies and Germany. In1620, 41 Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower, anchoredoff Massachuset ts,signedacompact calling for a "body politick." In1778, British redcoats, Tory rangers andSenecaIndians in central NewYork killed more than 40 people inthe Cherry Valley Massacre. In1831, former slaveNat Turner, who'd led vi aolent insurrection, wasexecuted in Jerusalem, Virginia. In1889, Wash ingtonbecame the 42nd state. In1969, President William Howard Taft acceptedthe recommendation of ajoint Army-Navy board that Pearl Harbor in theHawaiian Islands be madethe principal U.S. naval station in thePacific. In1921, the remains of an unidentified American service member were interred in a Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in a ceremony presided over by President Warren G. Harding. In1938, Irish-born cook Mary Mallon, who'd gainednotoriety as the disease-carrying "Typhoid Mary" blamedfor the deaths of three people, diedon North Brother Island in New York's East River atage69 after 23 years of mandatory quarantine. In1942, during World WarII, Germany completed its occupation of France. In1966, Gemini12 blasted off from CapeKennedywith astronautsJames Lovelland Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin Jr. aboard. In1972, the U.S.Army turned over its base atLong Binh tothe South Vietnamese,symbolizing the end of direct U.S.military involvement in theVietnam War. In1984,the Rev.Martin Luther King Sr.— father of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.— died in Atlanta atage84. In1992, the Church ofEngland voted to ordain womenas priests. Ten yearsago:Palestinians at home andabroad wept, waved flags and burnedtires in an eruption of grief at news ofthe death of YasserArafat in Paris at age 75. PresidentGeorge W. Bush expressedhopethat Arafat's passing would clear the way for successful Mideast peace negotiations with new Palestinian leaders. Five yearsago: Forthe first time sinceWorld War I, the leaders of GermanyandFrance held a joint ceremonyto commemorate theendof the conflict, saying it was timeto celebrate their countries' reconciliation and friendship. One yearago: Iran and the United States blamedeach other for the failure to reach agreement on adeal to limit Iran's uranium enrichment in exchangefor an easing of Western sanctions. Bowing to pressure from Jewish groups and art experts, the German government madepublic details of paintings in a recovered trove of 1,400 pieces ofart that might havebeenstolen by Nazis andsaid it would put together a task force to speed identification.
BIRTHDAYS Sen. BarbaraBoxer, D-Calif., is 74. Thepresident of Nicaragua, Daniel Ortega, is69. Golfer Fuzzy Zoeller is63. Actor Stanley Tucci is 54.Actress DemiMoore is 52. ActressCalista Flockhart is 50. Rockmusician Scott Mercado is50. Actor Leonardo DiCaprio is 40.NFLquarterback Mark Sanchezis 28. — From wie raporls
Claudia Alexander has spent
the past 15years ofher life waiting for this moment: landing a
By C. Claiborne Ray New York Times News Service
•W hich animals a r e •most and least efficient
spacecraftthe size of a wash-
ing machine on the surface of a speedingcomet.
at digestmg food? Digestive efficiency • varies, depending on the food and the animal, said Michael Schlegel, chief
A•
She knows it won't be easy.
The comet is hurtling through space at 84,000 mph, and its icy surface appears to be strewn
with large boulders and steep slopes. She doesn't know if the
nutritionist at San D iego
Zoo Global, which operates the San Diego Zoo. When carnivores eat meat, they are very efficient
comet's nudeus has the consis-
tency of talcum powder, or if parts of it are hard as diamond. On Wednesday, the NASA
scientist will be with her counterparts atthe European Space Agency's operations center in Darmstadt, Germany, waiting
in extracting its nutrients,
Schlegel said. And some animals that consume foods high in plant fiber — such as cows, colobus monkeys and kangaroos — have digestive
Gina Ferazzil LosAngeles Times/TNS
Claudia Alexander, NASA's point person for the Rosetta mission, stands on the view deck of Mission
Control last month in Pasadena, California. Rosetta is the European Space Agency's mission to catch up to a comet in space and send a ladder down to its surface.
to hear ifthe spacecraft has made it to the comet's surface,
systemswith"foregut" areas
and if it's still functioning. The wait will be agonizing. The gravity of the comet is 60,000 times less than the grav-
believe they were formed in the
ity of Earth, and scientists expectitwill takethelander seven
terialsthat makeup theplanets.
weren't even birds chirping yet,
into absorbable nutrients. In animals with 'M ndg ut" fermentation — l i ke horses, elephants, wombats,
hours to free fall from its moth-
two massive solar-panel wings and I was just in the dark — litbelieve that the study of comets that span 105 feet tip to tip for erally and metaphorically.
gorillas and to some extent humans — microorganisms
er ship, Rosetta, to the comet.
earliest days of the solar system, descent. and that frozen into their icy nuThe new flight plan also took dei are the sameprimordialmaESA researchers named the mission Rosetta because they
Then there is a delay of 28 min- canunlockthe secrets of our soutes for a signal from Rosetta to lar system's past, just as the Roreach our planet. setta stone allowed us to unlock "There are so many things the secrets of one of humanity's that could go wrong," Alexan- ancient cultures. der said recently from her office Alexander keeps a picture of at NASA's Jet Propulsion Labo- the historic Rosetta stone above ratory in La Canada Flintridge, her computer. gn fact, she has California. "At the same time, a whole collection of Rosetta you don't want to not try it." stone paraphernalia, induding From the start, ESA's Rosetta pot holders, mouse pads, and mission has unfolded like a sus- even a picture of herself standpense novel. There have been ing next to the stone at the Brittwists and turns, and no short- ish Museum). age of nail-biting moments. She was 40 when she was As project scientist on Ro- brought in as project scientist on setta, Alexander, 55, oversees the Rosettamissionin2000. She N ASA's contribution to t h e wasyoungtotake onthe job, but mission. That includes three not unqualified — her doctorate instruments on the orbiter, as was on comet thermophysical well as tracking and navigation nucleus modeling, and she had support fromthe agency's Deep already worked on NASA's GalSpace Networkhere on Earth. ileo mission to Jupiter. She also acts as a kind of When ESA gave the misdiplomat between the two sion the green light in 1993, the agencies. It has, at times, been a plan was to sendthe orbiter and trickyposition. NASAisn'tused lander to the relatively small to playing a supporting role on comet Wirtanen, which measuch high-profile missions. sures six-tenths of amile across. "We do things a certain way," ESA designed and built the she said. "And when you look Rosetta spaceship and its Phiat someone else doing it their
Rosetta may be ESA's boldest
the orbiter farther from the sun than expected, and that was a problem. The orbiter relies on
power; as the spacecraft flew
that was supposed to usher the orbiter into space. The launch
was postponed and a new tarcomet asitpassesbythe sun, ob- get was chosen. serving it from the Rosetta orbitOn the plus side, Comet 67P er and the Philae lander. is four times larger than Wir"Ireallywant peopletounder- tanen, which gives researchstand that these things are diffi- ers more comet to study. But cult to do," Alexander said. "So if noteveryone was convinced it it happens, and we are all jump- would be possible to put Philae ingup and down, it'sbecausewe on the new comet, because the really have that feeling likelander was designed to touch howdidthis getpulledoff?" down on a significantly smaller Space scientists are fasci- comet with even less gravity. If nated by comets because they the new comet was too dense, 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
in which fermentation effectively breaks down cellulose
up fromits recordslumber. "I was watching for the signal it woke up from home, and it was early in the morning," Alexander r ecalled.
"There
"It was about 45 minutes late. We waited while the minutes
farther from the sun, the panels would be unable generate the necessary energy. The scientists and engineers at ESA had no choice but to cre-
clicked past, wondering when are we going into failure mode. ... And then the signal came through. God — what a relief
ate a flight plan that induded a
that was."
in the lower digestive tract
also help extract nutrients from plant fiber. S ome animals, l i k e rabbits, consume their own feces, regaining the p roducts made by t h e microorganisms.
three-yearhibernation. Since early August, Rosetta Rosetta finaiiy launched on has been in orbit around the its epic space journey in March comet, surveying its surface, 2004. Sevenyearslater, the ESA and gathering information on team carefully put it to sleep. O n Jan. 20 this year,four alarm
Among the least efficient
digesters are giant pandas, Schlegel said. They lack
the best landing site for Philae,
specialized areas in their di-
whichhas spent thepast decade docks on the spacecraft woke it strapped to the orbiter's side.
gestive tracts to help break down plant fiber.
"I WaS diagnOSed With Sudden SenSOry
Neural Hearing Lossin my right ear 6years ago. I WaSreferred to Mike alid DeniSe at
*-
.
Beltone bya coworker. I only had about 20-30percent hearing in my right ear at the time but they helped get a set of hearing aidSthat PiCked uP SOund on my
right side and transmitted to my leP side. ThiS Summer, I M/aShit With SSNHL in my
left ear. I again went to Beltone. Mike and Denise have been a huge help to me during
lae lander with Wirtanen in
way and not our way, there is a mind. But a few months before tendency to say, 'Well, that will launch, engineers discovered never work.'" a problem in one of the rockets missionyet: totagalongwiththe
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
Comment Continued from A1 "Assessing and correcting 19 maps covering 2.3 million acres is a complex and slow enough process by itself, but it is further exacerbated by logistical issues of limited high-
Wallowa-Whitman NationalForest I.;Py laad,'
speed Internet in some rural
areas and limited supplies of hard-copymaps,"Walden wrote. "I ask that you extend
the public review period for this process by at least 90 days
yee
' gi
Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
"In Eastern Oregon, access-
ing our forests is a way of life, Through a s p okesman,whether for huckleberry pickPena, who took over as the ar- ing, mining, firewood cutting, ea's regional forester on Aug. hunting, or just going for a 3 and met with Walden and ride through the woods. Local others on Oct. 20, did not give communities are most affectan indication of whether he ed by these regulations and supports an extension of the their needs and input must be public review period. at the forefront of the decision "Although we have not of- making process," Walden said ficially received Mr. Walden's Monday in a prepared stateletter, I share his interest and ment. "Regional Forester Pena concern for the lands and res- heard loud and clear from loidents of the Blue Mountains. cal residents who are tired of We look forward to raising the their input being overlooked." level of community engageWalden has p r eviously ment onthe issues regarding c riticized a n e a r lier d r a f t federal forests in the Blues," of the Forest Service's Wallowa-Whitman tr a v el-manPena said. Earlier this year, Walden agement plan, which it has i ntroduced th e F orest A c - since withdrawn, saying it cess in Rural Communities would have closed more than
to ease these challenges."
Act. Under the bill, the Forest Service would be barred
from implementing its 2005 travel-management rule, the agency's method of determining which roads, trails and areasare open to motorized vehicles, on national forests
west of the Mississippi River. The bill, which is still in
4,000 miles of road in a forest
where more than 25 percent of the 2.3 million acres is already designated as wilderness and off-limits to all vehicles. At a hearing in June, a senior Forest Service official
said the Obama administration opposes Walden's bill because it would undermine
committee, would also make the Forest Service consult with counties that contain or are adjacent to the road under dis-
the travel-management plans already in place. Getting coun-
cussion during the planning processbeforeitcould change
process and hinder the Forest
a road's status. The counties
must sign off on the change before it goes into effect.
ties to sign off on the plans
would prolong and delay the Service's ability to properly manage public lands, she said. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
Veterans
Raymond Kuhn, 36, of Bend, a Navy veteran, is also taking advantage of
Continued from A1 The most popular majors for veterans at COCC are O regon-transfer and h elicopter-aviation degrees. The most popular majors for veterans at OSU-Cascades
the GI Bill. He's a junior at
OSU-Cascades studying energy systems engineering. He said he tried to go to college right out of high school, but
are natural resources and
he didn't have the commitment or desire to complete a
business administration.
degree. By joining the Navy,
M any veterans turn t o
he not only built a work ethic but also found out what he
higher education after they discover what they learned in the military might not
wanted to study. In the Navy, he served as
an electrician working on nuclear power systems in air-
translate well into a civilian
job, said Amy Ford, an in-
Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin
structor at O SU-Cascades and clinical mental health
Army veteran Adrienne Yaw, 33, jokes with her classmates while
program coordinator. She offered the example of
ty College on Monday.
craft carriers.
working together in chemistry class at Central Oregon Communi-
it," Kuhn said. "It definitely
someone trained to oper-
ate a
"The military experiences just kind of helped lead me to school and prepared me for
m u ltimillion-dollar
D eode Castro, 4 8 , o f Prineville, a Coast Guard
and Kissee's views about vet-
gave me the discipline to do it
erans on campus.
that skill only qualifies him veteran, was among those or her to drive a bus once who helped set up the room home. But lessons learned a couple of years ago. Casin the service can make tro started college at COCC, them good students. where he earned a transfer "My veteran students are degree, and then continued typically very p u nctual, at OSU-Cascades. He revery respectful," she said. ceived a bachelor's degree Kissee is in his junior in human development and year a t O S U -Cascades,family services in 2013. He studying business account- is now enrolled in the uniing. He and Mathe both said versity' s master's program their military backgrounds in counseling. He expects to make them better s tu- graduate in June. dents than when they were When they served, he younger. said, veterans found cama"I think it helps with be- raderie in the military. It's ing more concentrated on something many still want my studying," Mathe said. to have in their lives. "For me, going to college The room they shared Monday i s t h e V e t erans feels as close to that as I Center, a converted con- could find," Castro said. ference room with tools, The center gives veterans computer and printer, and a place to meet and support comforts— good chairsfor each other through school reading, a TV and coffee — even if one veteran is a makers — to help veterans Marine and one served in make it through COCC or the Navy. OSU-Cascades. Army veteran Adrienne It's "a sanctuary to g et Yaw, 33, of Warm Springs, away form all the crazy col- also uses the Veterans Cenlege kids," Kissee said. ter. And she shares Mathe
"We have a little more life
this time." T he veterans all
tank in battle who finds out
s ai d i t
experience (than younger students)," she said.
helps to know other veterans
Finding other veterans on
Their combined, similar experiences allow them to share jokes about drill sergeants from the past and professors today.
are on campus with t hem.
campus and staying connected helps as they chart their higher-education paths. Yaw was an X-ray technician in the Army and, as a civilian,
Yaw said other students
is working on a transfer de- are respectful when they gree at COCC — where she's learn she's a veteran. "I've had some say, 'Thank able to take classes in Bend, in Madras and online. Even- you for your service,'" Yaw tually, she wants to teach sald. radiology. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, She doesn't know w here
ddarling@bendbulletin.com
she'll enroll once she's done with COCC, but she's glad to know the GI Bill will help with the cost of e ducation
wherever she goes. "It enables me to focus on
class," she said.
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Net neutrality Continued from A1 I pay my local electric utility (mine is Peptxt, which serves
Washington) a nice fee for this service everymonth, tied to how
much of this energyIuse and its current price per kilowatt-hour, with some moneybuilt in for the
utility to make a comfortable profit. But beyond that, Pepco has no role in determining what
Iusethatelectricity for. Things are completely differentwith cable service. Comcast,
my cable provider, offers me a menu of packages from which I might choose, each with a different mix of channels. It goes through long and sometimes
ObamawantsInternet accesstobeettual WASHINGTON — In his most direct effort yet to influence the debate about the Internet's future, President BarackObamasaid Monday that a freeand open Internet was as critical to Americans' lives as electricity and telephoneservice and should be regulated like those utilities to protect consumers. TheFederalCommunicationsCommission,Obama said,needs to adopt the strictest rules possible to prevent broadbandcompanies from blocking or intentionally slowing down legal content and from allowing content providers to pay for a fast lane to reach consumers. That approach, hesaid, demandsthinking about both wired and wireless broadbandservice as apublic utility. "For almost a century, our law hasrecognized that companies who connectyou to the world havespecial obligations not to exploit the monopoly they enjoy over access into andout of your home or business," Obama, who is traveling in Asia, said in a statement and avideo on the White House website.
owners of those cable channels neutrality and the Internet.
arrangement with the utility.
and hasa differentbusiness arrangement with each of them.
One theory ofthe case, and the one that the Obama ad-
Those arguing against net neutrality, most significantly
The details of those arrange- ministration embraced Mon-
the cable companies, say the Internet will be a richer experi-
day, is that the Internet is like electricity. It is fundamental to
would, in a world without net neutrality, be free to t h rot-
'You can trust
4 plece «rr Nom
tle the speed with which you could access services that don't pay up, or block sites entirely, as surely as you cannot watch a cable channel that your cable provider chooses
to help you.'
(800) 605-5295 APrrrrlbrrrbmeaenrrtbnt bgarseniarliringrrrrrrrrr in&nnareerrrrrrr.Wed'onorawrtoparare,rnd'orrror rrrorrmrendrrnyrenerlirrterammunrty.rNrorr poidbypanner romrrlrnirirr, ro orrrsaverrorr.rompetetrfieeefrrmilrrr.
not to offer.
•
•
UI TO
if they can negotiate deals with
X dollars a month or the sports
major content providers (the equivalent of cable channels)
essential to functioning in mod-
package for Ydollars andsoon. ern society as electricity. It is a The downside is that it is public utility. easy to end up paying a few In the president's logic, and hundred dollars a month for that of the Internet content comcable service. The upside is that paniesthat are themost aggressive supporters of net neutral-
t he"
C - 0 . .. in combinedJenn-Air rebates
ence if the profit motive applies,
can get the movie package for the 21st-century economy, as
this state of affairs has a profu-
more economic leverage. It
— Edward Wyatt, NewYork Times NewsService
arduous negotiations with the
ments are opaque to me as the consumer. All I know is that I
but it dOeSn't haVe to be.
ternet provider considerably
so that Netflix or Hulu or oth-
er streaming services that use huge bandwidth have to pay for the privilege. The same kind of business model that has created a boom
sion of new channels and en- ity, just as your electric utility tertainment options. That is a has no say in how you use the in content for cable television genuineimprovement over the electricity it sells you, the Incustomerscan create a more state of Americans' home en- ternet should be a reliable way fertile environment for an extertainment options from just a to access content produced by plosion of creativity on the Ingeneration ago. anyone, regardless of whether ternet, goes this logic. All of which brings us to net they have any special business It would also give your In-
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Screening
"Now we will focus our attention on making
The deadliestcancer
Continued fromA1 "Roughly 90 percent of people who develop lung cancer die from it, so it's got a pretty bleak prognosis," said Dr. Michael LeFevre, chair of
More than half of lung cancers are diagnosed aslate-stage distant cancers, after they havespread beyond the lungs. Such cancers have a five-year survival rate of 3.9 percent. A large national study suggested that a screening program for high-risk smokers could catch lung cancer at earlier, more treatable stages andcut the death rate by 20percent.
the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. "And so this is
BY STAGE
PERCENTAGE OFCASES
5-YEAR RELATIVESURVIVAL RATES BY STAGE
our opportunity to potentially change that bleak prognosis, in at least some people." In 2011, results from the Na-
Regional Spread to regional lymph nodes
tional Lung Screening Trial showed that CT scans could
cut the lung cancer death rateby 20 percent,preventing
Dlstant • 3 9e/
57g. 1 , E
E
one death for every 320 per-
sons screened. But the study also found that 96 percent of patients who tested positive
Cancer has metastasized• unknown • 7 3% Unstaged ~
Source: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
on the scans didn't actually have lung cancer. That high f alse-positive
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
r a t e me a n s
many patients will face the uncertainty of a
weight, as a clause in the Af-
p o tentially fordable Care Act
ed there was not enough evi-
dence to support screening. benefits outweighed the harms. Proponents of screening "CT scans are very good launched a vigorous camat finding bumps in people's paign to get Medicare to disrechest. That means they're go- gard the committee's recoming to find a lot of little bumps
mendation and avoid a two-
and most of them are not can- tiered system where at-risk cer," LeFevre said. "It's really smokers could be screened important for us to allay that
for free until age 65 under the
anxiety before they go for that test in the first place."
terms of their private insur-
The task
ance but would have to pay f o rce's recom- the full $300 to $500 cost of
mendation carried significant
In Central Oregon, both the
r e quires ical societies, including the
fatal lung cancer diagnosis private health insurance plans while they undergo needless to cover, at no cost to benefifollow-up scans, biopsies and ciaries, any preventive health perhaps even treatment. s creening backed by t h e Nonetheless, in D e cem- group. The requirement, howber 2013, the U.S. Preventive ever, does not apply to MediServices Task Force backed a care, and in April, a Medicare screening program for long- advisory committee concludterm smokers, conduding there was moderate evidence that the
of advocacy groups and med-
screening afterward. Scores
sure those who would benefit most from this
pital spokeswoman, several patients are now undergoing additional screening, but they have no confirmed lung cancer diagnoses so far.
screening actually get screened."
that smoking is the biggest risk factor for lung cancer and
arm of the Imperial Irrigation
fewer natural resources. becoming more and more
Continued fromA1 "It's not a tragedy yet, but it could be a forthcoming tragedy if there is a failure of our government officials to take
District. The district receives
The complexity of the issues scarce."
preventive measures," said
federal, state and local agen-
Roger Shintaku, director of the Salton Sea Authority, a quasi-governmental agency. Every year, the north shore of the Salton Sea is a little far-
cies have new urgency about the problem, but he made it
ingly managed as we leave grows as the resources are
Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
•
.
•
e II
e
I
•
ipal waste feed the Salton Sea. He doesn't exactly say that
clear that at least there was a
BB OLII cI.BS
mn
Some Californians h ave
0 OuI ea
was a fisherman's paradise
lows blows into the air and is and a weekend destination easily inhaled by local chil- that lured Dean Martin and dren, whose asthma r ates
Frank Sinatra for speed-boat-
lead the state.
ing trips, but officials say all
the Pacific Institute, a non-
dU it
farmers; the runoff and munic-
fish to eat as the shallow wa- not given up hope of bringing ter disappears. And the dust back the days when the sea
there is some urgency to the problem. A recent report by
aj.a~
~(CoNsoLIDATEDCRBDIT wh eel Is t el
Colorado River water for its
new sense of purpose after a decade of relative torpor. The ther from this Sonoran Des- agencies are making plans to ert town, partly because of create smaller wetlands and drought and partly because of at least one tilapia-friendly the sale of Colorado River wa- deep-water spot, while septer to coastal areas. The mi- arating hypersaline water grating pelicans and grebes from less briny areas.
say
Pu.re. &frod.6 Co.
is aeir C~e Saruzw~~ eusarrr?
who runs the environmental
Environmentalists
effective way to prevent a lung cancer death. The screening
Bend Memorial Clinic and American Lung Association, the CascadeMedicare Imag- cer has spread to other parts the American Cancer Society ing provide CT scans for lung of the body, at which point paand the American College of cancer screening, and local tients have a five-year survivRadiology, lobbied the Centers providers applauded Medi- al rate of less than 4 percent. for Medicare & Medicaid to care's announcement. Patients whose lung cancer "The CMS decision is in- is still localized, on the other cover the screening, and nearly 200 members of Congress line with th e b est medical hand, have almost a 54 persigned letters to the agency in evidencethat CT lung cancer cent survival rate. support of the benefit. screening is a cost-effective Using $10,000 in funding The coverage decision is test proven to save lives," said from the St. Charles Foundanow subject to a 90-day com- Dr. Steven Michel, a radiolo- tion, St. Charles has enrolled ment period, after which CMS gist with Central Oregon Ra- 101 people to be screened, and expects to issue a final cover- diologyAssociates. 59 have completed their iniage decision in February 2015. CORA, CMI and St. Charles tial scan. According to a hosThe radiology community has Cancer Center announced in also developed guidelines for September they would proscreening which could signifi- vide free screenings to longcantly reduce the number of term smokersage 55 to 74, false positives, and help guide regardless of what Medicare clinicians on when to recom- decided. "The verdict is this is the mended additional imaging or biopsies. right thing to do for patients
Sea
from n o w-desiccated shal-
that quitting is still the most
Lung Cancer Alliance will h ave other l i m itations and doctors stress than even patients who meet Medicare's who are considered high parameters should discuss the risk," Dr. Jamie Conklin, a St. pros and cons of screening Charles pulmonologist said with their doctors. "(CMS) got it right," said at the time. "The benefits are very clear in terms of saving Laurie Fenton Ambrose, preslives. Lung cancer is most ident of the national Lung curable in its earliest stages. Cancer Alliance. "Now we Unfortunately, we see many will focus our attention on patients with more advanced making sure those who would disease." benefit most from this screenAccording to CMS, more ing actually get screened." than half of all lung cancers — Reporter: 541-617-7814, are diagnosed after the canmhaMtryluk@bendbulletin.com
FREE •
that hang out there have less
Public health experts stress
— Laurie Fenton Ambrose, president of the national 53.5%
Coniineti to primary site
15
that is over. Vicken Etyemezian of the Desert Research Institute in Las Vegas said that the lake's
profit based in Oakland, pre- disappearance "should make dicts that in 15 years the wa- us consider very carefully the ter volume will decrease by 60
potential for very serious air
percent, 100 square miles of quality problems." lake bed will be exposed and Toxic selenium may have the water will get three times
become concentrated on the
as salty. The average depth of beaches,prompting worries the receding sea is now less that birds could inhale it with than 30 feet.
dust particles and suffer ma-
The big fish, mostly tila- jor reproductive problems. pia now, could disappear. If None of this is a surprise. In so, migrating birds, like the 2007, California, then a cashbrown pelicans on the shore strapped state, developed an here, will have little to eat. up to $10 billion menu of soluThe exposed sand and dust,
tions. But little was done.
blown by desert winds, will contribute to dust clouds,
Everyone agrees things will get worse if at the expira-
making attainment of federal
tion of a contract in 2018 the
of inaction, the Pacific Insti-
water that slows the sea's de-
air-quality standards impos- Imperial I r r igation D i strict sible. Over 30 years, the cost stops supplying mitigation tute report argues, will be $29 cline. However, the recent billion to $70 billion. passage ofthe state's $7.5 In some ways, Salton's fate billion water bond is likely is like that of other disappear- to provide tens of millions of ing saline lakes, such as the dollars to the long-underfundalmost-vanished Aral Sea in
ed effort.
Central Asia and Lake UrThe Imperial I r r igation mia in Iran: They are slowly District is exploring a plan to getting saltier and disappear- cover the exposed lake bed ing because people have pur- by attracting construction loined the water that flows of geothermal power plants, into them. although the expense of proThe Salton Sea's increasing ducing energy by pulling hot brininess and oxygen depri- w ater and steam from t h e vation caused by abundant ground has discouraged new algae are fatal to fish, whose business. remains sometimes line the
beaches. And perhaps because this organic matter is
Both the water district and California's natural resourc-
es agency are starting small engineering projects to create oxygen, it sometimes emits a an area of deep water and enrotten-egg smell that can be sure the continuation of large blown as far as Los Angeles, fish in the river and to provide 150 miles away. a wetland for migrating fowL The people most directly The focus on fish and the fermenting in a place without
affected by
St. CharlesHeartandLungCerHer is pleased Iowelcome p.GaneshMuthappan,MD, Allen Rafael, MDandGary Foster, MD. Drs. MLithappan, Rafael and Foster bring 40
combinedyears of experience toour expert team of cardiologists. Board-certifed in multiple areas of cardiology,these newproviders have the dePth of training and eXPerienCeneeded to
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St. CharlesHeartandLungCenter is theonly comprehensiveheart center in Oregoneast of the Cascades.Andas part of St. Charles Health System,weoffer streamlined care and COmmuniCatiOnbetween prOviderS with the gOal of improving the heart health of all of our patients.
To make an aPPOintment in Bend or at Oneof our satellite locations, please call541-388-4333.
t h e s o mewhat birds that eat them while they
overpowering odor live in Imperial County, where the population has many poor farmworkers, and the Coachella Valley around Palm Springs, which is rapidly growing. Researchers estimate that the population around the sea, now about 650,000, will dou-
ble in 30 years. "This is a disaster waiting
to happen, if it hasn't already started," said Bruce Wilcox,
rest on their journeys between Alaska and South America has drawn attention from the
National Audubon Society. If nothing is done as the disappearing sea becomes more sali ne,said Stan Senner of the National Audubon Society, "we've left the birds no alternative."
The Salton Sea, he added, "is a microcosm of the world.
Everything will be increas-
A5
541-388-4333 2500 NE NEFF RD. BEND,OR StGharlesHealthCare.org IIH
t.
ar e s
HEART R LUNG CENTER
A6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
BRIEFING Sexual corruption charges drought Bend Police have arrested a 32-year-old former Central Oregon resident on suspicion of attempting to pursue minors for sexual purposes and encouraging child sex abuse, the department announced Monday evening. Detectives began investigating Oct. 14 when they learned Micah Kennedy, who currently lives in FederalWay, Washington, had been texting and using social media allegedly to pursue minors for sexual purposes, according to a news release from the police department. Kennedy was arrested two days later on suspicion of first-degree online sexual corruption of a child and luring a minor, the news release stated. When police executed a search warrant, they found multiple images of child pornography, according to the news release, which led to an additional10 counts of encouraging child sex abuse. Kennedy was being held Monday night in the Deschutes County jail in lieu of $300,000 bail, according to jail
STORM WATCH
un eu:
i n erwarnin issue
By Ted Shorack
watch also said movement of
The Bulletin
the weather system has been uncertain, so the forecast could change. The weather service predicted today's high tempera-
The National Weather Service predicts low temperatures in Central Oregon to
drop into the teens and 20s this week — delivered by a strong cold front that was expected to move into the Pacific Northwest overnight.
The agency also issued a winter storm watch on Mon-
day, suggesting areas across Central Oregon could get up to 6 inches of snowbetween Wednesday evening and Thursday afternoon. But the
lt will get colder defore it gets warmer Here's the National WeatherService's forecast for Bend: abig dip tonight and awinter storm watch, before
ture may not climb above
freezing in Bend and could drop to as low as 12 degrees tonight. Daytime temperatures should slowly rise through the week, possibly reaching the mid-40s by Friday, according
temperatures start climbing again later in the week. For The Bulletin's full daily forecast, see Page B6. 50 Today Wednesday Thursday Friday 40 FREEZING
30 20 10 NOV.11 6A.M.
to aforecast released Monday
evening. See Winter /B5
NOV.13 12A.M.
NOV.12 12A.M.
Source: National Weather Service
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
VETERANS DAY
o om orO erS 0
a
— an us osee em d
lecolds.
xW+
Health advisory lifted at Wickiup
' &M
e
Forestland panel to meet Nov. 21
Authority lifted the
Authority. Water samples taken Oct. 28 showed reduced levels of blue-green algae in the reservoir. "We got the results back today," Farrer said Monday. A mixture of high nutrient levels, abundant sunlight and warm, stagnant water led to the blue-green algae bloom at Wickiup. While it's normally found in waters around Central Oregon, bluegreen algae may pose a health risk to people and pets, particularly dogs, during a bloom. The algae puts out a toxin that may be dangerous to swallow, breathe or contact. Symptomsofexposure to the toxin include dizziness, diarrhea, breathing problems and rashes. Earlier this year, from July 21-Aug. 8, Odell Lake was under a health advisory due to blue-green algae, according to Health Authority data. — Bulletin staff reports
Correction In a story headlined "Despite a midterm shutout, minor parties claim victories," which appeared Sunday,Nov. 9, on PageB1,information about the last third-party candidate elected governor of Oregon was incorrect. Gov. Julius Meier, an independent, was elected in1930.
The Bulletin regrets the error.
In honor of Veterans Day, most city, county, state and federal offices are closed today. • Most banks are closed. • Mail will not be picked up or delivered today, and post offices are closed. • All public schools in Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties are closed. Central Oregon Community College is also closed. • The Jefferson County and Crook County libraries are closed.
BRIEFING
l
The Oregon Health
ogist with the Health
CLOSURES
a
at 541-312-7956.
health advisory Monday for toxic blue-green algae at Wickiup Reservoir, nearly two months after it went into effect. Issued on Sept. 19, the health advisory lasted for 52 days, said David Farrer, toxicol-
NOV.15 12A.M.
NOV.14 12A.M.
HIGH DESERT MUSEUM REMODEL
The investigation is ongoing, and police asked anyone with information to contact detective Chris Morin
Sat.
High Desert Museum/ Submitted images
Above, a rendering of what the exterior remodel of the High Desert Museum's Autzen Otter Exhibit could look like. The interior is also slated for renovation, as drawn below. Part of the reason behind the remodel is to make it easier for children to see the otters.
By Tim Doran
ple by remodeling the Autzen
The Bulletin
Otter Exhibit, it announced
On days when the High admission, visitors some-
Monday. The project will also give the otters a little more room to play.
times stand five deep to get
But the High Desert Mu-
Desert Museum offers free
a glimpse at Rogue the river otter and his companion, said John Furgurson, the museum's public relations manager.
seum needs a little funding help. The Oregon Business Development Department awarded the High Desert
Museum a $250,000 matching on U.S. Highway 97 plans to grant, but the museum must open upthe view tom ore peo- raise an additional $250,000 The museum south of Bend
by June 30to get the state money. As of Nov. 1, it had raised
nearly half the amount, but it needs more and would welcome contributions of
cording to a news release. "The otter exhibit is a high
priority," Dana Whitelaw, the museum's executive director, said in the news release. "Re-
any size. Information can be
pairing and maintaining the old equipment is costly and
found at www.highdesert
time-consuming. We plan to
museum.org/otter-exhibit -renovation-fundraising. While it's one of the High Desert Museum's most pop-
upgrade to higher-efficiency equipment while improving
ular attractions, the otter exhibit is also the oldest, ac-
the overall experience for the
visitor. We're very excited about it." See Otters /B2
- LliI I, illl.
The Deschutes County Forestland Classification Committee has scheduled apublic meeting Nov. 21 atthe Deschutes County Road Department in Bend. The purpose of the meeting, which will take place from noon to 2 p.m., is to establish rules for future committee decisions on lands in Deschutes County that may beclassified as forestland. The Deschutes County Road Department is located at 61150SE 27th St. — Bulletin staff reports
Have a story idea or suhmission? Contact us!
The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ...................541-617-Z831 Sunrlver.................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..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-383-0367 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
Submissions • Letters andopinions:
CITY OF BEND
23 recommendedfor vacation rental task force By Ted Shorack
applied can be found on the
The Bulletin
mission on Monday recom-
city's website at http://bit. ly/ltAVKCO. Jon Skidmore, assistant
mended the City Council appoint nearly two dozen res-
city manager, told planning commissioners that the se-
idents to a task force that will spend the next few months
lection committee tried to
The Bend Planning Com-
studying how the city manages vacation home rentals.
provide a balance between residents who are concerned about vacation rentals, people
The list of 23 recommended who might manage or own members will be brought Nov. them and those who are likely 19 to the Bend City Council,
which ultimately decides who will serve on the task force. A list of all those who
neutral about the issue.
Six of the recommended
concerned about vacation rentals or that they live on a
to the City Council by early
street with several of them
Fifty residents applied for the task force. Seven were appointed to the recommended list by neighborhood associations, the Bend Economic Development Advisory Board,
nearby. The recommended list also includes six members who own or manage vacation rentals.
"(We) wanted that balance
March.
to dictate how this pro-
Visit Bend, the Bend Chamber
cess moves forward," said Skidmore.
of Commerce and the planning commission. Planning
Task force meetings are
scheduled for Thursdays between 4-7 p.m. starting Nov.
members stated in the appli-
20. Members are expected
cation process that they are
to make recommendations
commissioners Joan Vinci
and Rex Wolf are members of the task force but won't vote
on recommendations. See Task force/B2
Email: letlers@bendbulletin.com Mall: My Nlckel's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Civic Calendarnotices: Emaileventinformation to news@bendbulletln.com, with "ClvicCalendar" lnthesubiect and includeacontact name and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
• Obituaries, DeathNotices: Details on theObituariespage inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, oblts@bendbulletln.com
• Community events: Email events to communltylife© bendbulletln.comorclick on "Submltan Event"onlineat bendbulletln.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
E VENT
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?
ENDA R
Connect Hearing YOUR HEARIHR RROSESSIOHALS
FORMERLY
TODAY BEND VETERANSDAYPARADE: The annual event to honor veterans; free; 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; downtown Bend; www.bendchamber.org or 541-480-4516. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Lee McMurrin will speak about his book "Stories From the Front Lines of Integration: Toledo, Ohio 1965-1975 and Milwaukee, Wisconsin 1975-1987"; free; 2-3:30 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road; www.bendparksandrec.org, watermarkcomm©bendbroadband. com or 541-382-2484. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Craig Johnsonwillspeakonhisbook "Wait For Signs"; free, registration requested; 5:30-7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-593-2525. VETERANSDAYPARTY: Featuring Notables Swing Band, vintage cartoons and newsreels, a picnic and more to benefit Caring for Troops and Band of Brothers; $5 plus fees; 6:30 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "SYMPHONY OFTHE SOIL":A screening of the film about soil around the world; free; 7 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend; www. envirocenter.org or 541-389-0785. NATURAL HISTORYPUB: Dr. Thomas Connolly, director of Oregon Archaeological Research, will discuss "Before the Oregon Trail: An Archaeological Perspective"; free, registration
requested; 7p.m., doors openat 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/ rsvp or 541-382-5174. GOLDBOOT:TheLasVegas soul-pop band performs, with Isles; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
WEDNESDAY "BILLYELLIOT,THE MUSICAL LIVE":Live production of the musical aboutayoung boy's struggle to be a dancer; $18, $15 for seniors and children; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8, IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. MARK SEXTONBAND:The Nevada funk and soul band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. REBIRTH BRASS BAND: Funk, soul, jazz and more from the veteran New Orleans band; $17 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329. FORTUNATE YOUTH: The Los
Angeles reggae band performs, with The Expanders and Thrive and HighDro; $10; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. REDWOOD SON:ThePortland Americana band performs; 9:30 p.m.; Dojo,852 NW BrooksSt., Bend; www.dojobend.com or 541-706-9091.
THURSDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.;Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. H LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Discuss A Constellation of Vital Phenomena" by Anthony Marra; noon-1 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. "NOTURNINGBACK": Showing of Warren Miller's 65th ski film; $17 plus fees in advance; 6 and 8:30p.m.;TheOld Stone,157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www. oldstonechurchbend.com or 541-322-7273. KNOW EXPLORING,WOMEN OF DISCOVERY: Learnabout aviators, primatologists and environmentalists; free; 6 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www.deschuteslibrary. org/eastbend or 541-312-1034. PAINTINGOREGON'S HARVEST EXHIBIT TOUR: Curator-led tour of the collection of art inspired by visits to Oregon farms and ranches; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers, registration requested; 6 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org, info©highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Wiliam D. Frank, Ph.D. andauthor of "Everyone to Skis! Skiing in Russia and the Rise of Soviet Biathlon" will speak; free; 7-9 p.m.; Central
Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.
edu, betsyfrank1©gmail.comor 541-318-7527. BRIAN COPELANDBAND:The Americana band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. SUPPORT BAMA'SROAD TO RECOVERY:Featuring a silent auction, a raffle, a karaoke night and more to benefit Lee Works' recovery from a traumatic brain injury; free; 7 p.m. silent auction, 4 p.m. doors open; SevenNightclub,1033 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-760-9412. BODYVOX:ThePortland contemporary dance troupe
performs; $25-$40 plusfees, $18for
LEAGjELD HEARINGAIDCENTER
541-317-4847. "NOTURNING BACK": Showing of Warren Miller's 65th ski film; $17 plus fees in advance; 6 and 8:30p.m.;TheOld Stone,157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www. oldstonechurchbend.com or 541-322-7273. "ATOMB WITH A VIEW": A dark comedic play about a family that inherits a large fortune; $5; 7 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend; www.bend.k12. or.us or 541-355-4401. "WHERETHETRAIL ENDS": Showing of the 2013 mountain biking film; $9; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.realmschool. org, manfredwalderCjyahoo.com or 574-453-7329.
students; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. HEAD FORTHE HILLS: The Colorado bluegrass band performs; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. DIRECT DIVIDE:TheSeattle alt-rock band performs, with Vermont's Bow Thayer; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
I
I I
1 -888-568-9884
' NORTHWEST CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
I I I
I
I I ' 'I
I
FRIDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.;Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.;
XEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMEMT Theft —Atheft was reported at10:52 a.m. Nov. 3, in the 100block of NE Bend River Mall Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:58 p.m. Nov. 3, in the 1500block of NE Neff Road. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:07 a.m.Nov.4,inthe2700blockofNE 27th Street. DUII —Ryan Alan Olson, 18, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:28 p.m. Nov. 5, in the 1000block of NE Butler Market Road. DUII —Sarah JeanJangala,32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:14 p.m. Nov. 6, in the700 block of NW Bond Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:37 a.m. Nov. 7, in the62000 block of 27th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:55 a.m.Nov.7,atanunknown location in Bend.
Theft —A theft was reported at 4:21 p.m. Nov. 7, in the 1200 block of NE Ninth Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at11:49 a.m. Nov. 3, in the 1400 block of NWSeventh Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:43 p.m. Nov. 3, in the3100 block of North U.S. Highway97. Theft —A theft was reported at11:14 a.m. Nov. 4, in the61000 block of Sky Harbor Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:03 p.m. Nov. 4, in the600 block of NE Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:51 p.m. Nov.7, inthe1700blockof NW Harriman Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:31 p.m. Nov. 5, in the1300 block of NE Purcell Boulevard. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 6:41 a.m. Nov. 3, in the900 block of NE Butler Market Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:39 p.m. Nov. 3, in the 3100 block of North U.S. Highway97. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:04a.m. Nov. 7, inthe1600 block of NE ForbesRoad.
p.m. Nov. 7, in thearea of NEThird Street. DUII —Ralph Gibbs, 74, wasarrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:14 p.m. Nov. 7, in thearea of NEHolly Street. DUII —TamaraCornelio, 52, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:14 p.m.Nov.8,intheareaofNESecond Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 12:15 p.m.Nov.9,intheareaofNESecond Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:49 p.m. Nov.9, intheareaof SE Fifth Street.
JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 9:17 a.m. Nov. 3, in the100 blockof NW Depot Road. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 12:19 p.m. Nov. 6, in the400 block of NW U.S. Highway26.
under the influence of intoxicants at 12:45 a.m. Nov. 7, inthe area of U.S. Highway 20 and NE Azure Drive in Bend. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 6:46 a.m. Nov. 7, inthe area of BakerRoadand Cinder Butte Road in Bend Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 9:44 p.m. Nov. 8, in the area of U.S. Highway 20near milepost 3.5 near Bend. DUII —Scott Evan Greenstone,44, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:47 a.m. Nov. 9, in the area of NW 12th Street and NWWest Hills Avenue in Bend. DUII —Christie Jo Hessler, 52, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:17 p.m. Nov. 9, in thearea of U.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost116.
/Vith a customizable menu, in a festive setting, just f ive minutes Pom downtown Bend, having your party
anyplace else would be humbug. Call >4j.g8g.82+4 or Email: Emitchener@brokentop.com
TO SCHEDULE YOUR HOLIDAY PARTY O R GO O N L I N K A T : W W W
6200 0
. B R OK K N T O P . C O M
B R O KKN TOP DR.
PRIMEVILLE POLICE ppg~gK DEPARTMENT Theft — A theft was reported at 6:36
Otters
opportunities." Renovations will also give
Contlnued from B1 Along with new equipment,
Rogue an d
DUII —Antoine C. Dudley, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving
such as a place, geographical
feature or plant, according to t h e y e t -to-be- the auction booklet.
named second otter more When the museum comroom to play, Furgurson said. pletes the project, however, new glass wall section inside Naming rights for the second Rogue and his 2-year-old comand out. otter were auctioned off in Au- panion will have a feature to "Right now it's difficult for gust at the High Desert Ren- slide on, along with an extendchildren to get a clear view of dezvous, the museum's major ed, or second, pool to swim the otters without climbing annual fundraiser. around. "It will be an upgrade for onto the rocks or onto their Museum officials are still p arents," Whitelaw said i n waiting to learn the name, them, certainly," Furgurson the news release. "The new which must be respectful, sald. plan will alleviate that prob- appropriate and inspired by — Reporter: 541-383-0360, lem and open up the viewing a feature of the High Desert, tdoran@bendbulletin.com the renovations will feature a
Task force Continued from B1 The task force was initially envisioned to be 18 members.
Skidmore said the 50 applicantsrepresented a lotofexpertise and people who know their communities well, so the
membership was increased to 23.
"I think this group represents a slice of the commu-
"I think this group represents a slice of the community that
has ... constituents that they can reach out to, report back to and getfeedback from."
of information between the
task force (and) the community that's impacted." Wolf asked if the city has
receivedfeedback about the short time frame that the task
point, but said when putting together the list of finalists it was tough to decide who to
leave out. But he reminded the planning commission that the
TUEsDAY, NQYEMBER11, 2014 AT11A.M.
Duty, Honor, Sacrafice
CelebrufingourHorldH&r ll Yeferuns ParadeGrandI Irshel: lorin I yrinI, II. S.Narine, WWIIIeteren
The planning commission chose to recommend 23 members to the City Council with
Anne Goldner, a bed-andsaid. "... We've got eight meet- breakfast owner in the River ings, possibly nine, to work West neighborhood, as an this out."
alternate.
Allegra Briggs, an applicant
Bill Wagner, Rex Wolf,
not chosen as a finalist, was
Rockland Dunn, Joan Vinci,
concerned those representing a traditional bed-and-break-
Karon Johnson and Laura
fast were left off the list. "I think that's really missing
forcehas to discuss the issue and make recommendations out on an important voice beto the City Council.
mistake to leave out that voice. Skidmore said it was a valid
written comments.
Skidmore said he has heard
cause this is a business that is
®I~agy ffgg
she said. "I think it would be a
— Jon Skidmore, public process, and people can assistant city manager provide comments and submit
comments about it being ambitious. "It is ambitious," he
g N ~f
affected by vacation rentals,"
task force meetings will be a
nity that has ... constituents
that they can reach out to, report back to and get feedback from," he said. "By choosing a group of 23,or something similar, it provides a nice conduit
BEND
cHAMeaR
Fritz voted in favor of the recommended members. Vincent
Mercurio abstained. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorackibendbulletin.com
Lorin Myrlng was acorporal In the Marlne CorpsFifth Division. He wasin thefirst wave that stormed the SouthPacilic island in WorldWar II."It was amassacre thefirst day,"Myringsaid. Hewas19when the Battle of IwoJima began.
Myrlng was tralned in communlcations,Heworkedalongslde hisfrlend, NavajoCodeTalker,Wlllle Notah whowas killed at Iwo Jlma.The Navajo language served asthe basisfor a mdethat the Japanese were unable to crack. All the ships saw it in the bay,"Myringsaysof the raising of the Ameecan flag on IwoJima. He spent time in Nagasah after the atomic bombing.
LOCBIIOh: NW Harmon — Newport Avenue — South on Wall Street — Riverside Drive to Galveston
II I mi I BI~ S I
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• HH Th e B ujblin
Formoreinformation,contacttheeendchamber BendCha m b e r .Org -
(541) 382-3221
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BUEHLER www KnuteBueh.ler com P v l f ;v ' Isy Bt>s:I sls=> fss B tu u t EsI ( : s " s v R
STATE REPRESENTAT IVE I EEIVD, 0+ .
.
B4
TH E BULLETINâ&#x20AC;˘ TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
roec e i s ome-ci are es -cigarettes present a public health conundrum: They appear tobe far less dangerous than regular tobacco cigarettes are, but much more damaging than not smoking at all. Because they are not regulated, they can be marketed and sold to children and adult nonsmokers. Current law sharply limits advertising for cigarettes, drastically limits where peoplecan smoke them, and outlaws purohasebythoseunder age 18. None of those regulations apply to e-cigs. As Bulletin reporter Markian Hawryluk reported in Monday's HighDesert Pulsemagazine,2.5millionpeopleinthe U.S. nowuse e-cigs, only a few years after they exploded intothemarketin2006. But although they eliminate many of the most damaging health effects of smoking tobacco,they do addictregularusers to nicotine. Just as worrisome, little is known about longer-term health impacts of themyriad differentstyles of e-cigs, which come in hundreds of brandsandthousands offl avors. Some critics want e-cigs treated like tobacco products, while others say such extensive regulation could devastate the young industry and harm smokersforwhom e-ci gs wouldbe ahealthier alternative. It will take time to find the appropriate level for regulation of this revolutionary product and to persuade lawmakers to pass enabling
legisMon. One thing seems dear, however. Children should not be able to buy e-cigs, and marketing that targets children should be banned immediately. Protecting children likely also requires placing e-cigs behind store counters rather than in accessible
t
pay. Friday, the ethics commission dedined to give an opinion on Kitzhaber's questions. It did so, its executive director said, because it can give opinions, as opposed to rulings, only about hypothetical problems. The governor's questions weve not hypothetical and thus were beyond the commission's
charge. The commission's staff, meanw hile, is reviewing two ~ e for mal complaints about Hayes' role in advance of the commission's decision aboutwhethertheyshouldbeformallyinvestigated. Neither Kitzhaber nor Hayes should use the commission's failure
/
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displays. In Prineville, the City Council has indicated a willingness to consider establishing local regulation. Kris Williams, tobacco-prevention coordinator for the Crook County Health Department, hasurgedthe councilto treat e-cigs the same way ~ es are treated, according to a report in the Central Oregonian newspaper. She arguesa local ordinance could go into effect swiitly, whereas state or national legislation will be a long time coming. While we share Williams' sense of urgency,we think a smarter approach is to ban sales to youngsters without imposing the full weight of tobacco regulation to this new industry. Protect the kids while more is learned about the right way to manage the rest.
Hayes must stay out of governor's office n October, when questions were swirling about Cylvia Hayes and her dual roles as private businesswoman and trusted adviser to Gov. John Kitzhaber, the governormade Oregonians a promise. He had askedthe Oregon Ethics Commission to give an opinion on whether handling of those dual roles was a violation of state government ethics rules. And until that opinion was given, he said, Hayes would be gone from the governor's office, where shehadbeenworking without
I
to give its opinion on Kitzhaber's questions as a license to allow her back into the governor's office. Nor should decisions about the two complaints, if investigations into them go forward, persuadethemto returnher to herunofficialpost. She is not, after all, a stale employee or an elected official. She is the governor's fiancee and no doubt a person whose opinion he values. But for toolong,sheandthegovernor have overlooked or ignored one very important thing: Perceptions count, at least as much as reality. And where the governor and Hayes are concerned,publicperceptions do themno favors. If Kitzhaber hopes to leave office withthe sort of reputationwe suspect he wants, Hayes can have no personal space in the governor's office or eventhemostlimitedassistancefmm any member of his staff. She cannot act as friendly intermediarybetween her former business friends and the governor, no matterhowcasually. Rather, she must, like Caesar's wife, be above suspicion, and in this casethatcomes onlywithahighwall between Hayes and the official State
of Oregon.
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Campus must submit full plan T IN MY VIEW
he plan to build OSU-Cascades on Bend's west side is accommodate the expansion of the arguably one of the largest university. projects in recent memory, and most While this may be a clever way Bend residents might assume that a to avoid a full master plan, it is an master plan would be necessary to incomplete and deceitful maneuver start the building process. played on the residents of west Bend. Apparently this is not the case in Because the university actually Bend. owns just the 10-acre site, officials Inexplicably, our City Council has argued to the City Council that a voted to allow construction to begin full master plan wasn't legally neceven though OSU has not submitted essary. The council found the politia master plan or impact studies for cally expedient way to avoid responthe full build-out of the university. sibility was to allow this incomplete How can this possibly happen with a plan to move forward. Possibly project of this magnitude and poten- councilors need to be reminded that tial impact to the community? they were elected by Bend residents During the public meetings con- to make these decisions, not appointducted over the last couple of years, edby OSU. Bend residents were "sold" a vision So who needs a master plan and of OSU-Cascades which consisted complete impact studies? How about of a two-phase plan. Phase 1 would parents who drive their children to be built on a 10-acre site on the cor- school on the west side and already ner of Century Drive and Chandler see crowded roundabouts during Avenue followed by Phase 2, which busy commute hours? And residents would be built on the adjacent 46- who shop at Safeway and other local acre site (an old pumice mine). stores who are concerned with the Any resident who attended these potential impact of 3,000 to 5,000 colearly public meetings saw the beau- lege students? tiful artist renderings of the future And homeowners in adjacent school situated on 56 acres and felt neighborhoods who fear an increase certain of the university's intent. in student rentalhousing? And those Now things h ave c hanged. existing businesses that might not Spokespersons for OSU have recent- want a college dormitory or a classly stated that OSU may not purchase room next door'? Basically everythe pumice pit and instead buy land one living in west Bend who thinks or buildings along Chandler, Cen- the area is already residentially and tury and Mt. Washington Drive to commercially balanced deserves a
Inexplicably, our City
Council has voted to allow
construction to begin even thoughOSUhas not submitted a master plan or impact studies for the full build-out of the university. master plan. At the very least, OSU-Cascades needs to disclose its intent to Bend
residents and the Bend City Council. Does the branch campus intend to
proceed with the purchase of the 46acrepumice mine, orinstead nearby buildings/parcels and slowly expand the school as the campus acquires more land?
The 10-acre building site which was approved by the Bend City Council does not exist in a vacuum. Everyone understands that much
more land will be necessary to complete what we all hope will be a great university. The Bend City Council
shouldhave the courage to demand full disclosure from OSU-Cascades.
A project of this large magnitude may require a change in city code or a different interpretation of exist-
ing protocol, but the main objective should be to make sure Bend has chosen the right site and completed
full impact studies. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Bill Eddie lives in Bend.
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My
View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters@bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Character education should be a vital part of school M By Joseph Kosanovic y second career journey, with a goal of becoming a teacher in the secondary schools, began at the age of 50. Teacher c e rtification
i n c luded
hours of college coursework, numerous exams and completion of a semester of student teaching in the
classroom. My enthusiasm as a new high school teacher was similar to that of my younger college classmates. As all rookie teachers quickly discover, academic coursework does not adequately prepare prospective teachers for the student behavioral issues that are experienced on a daily basis by educators.
I discovereda pressing need in our schoolsforteachers to foster not only the intellectual growth of our
students, but to explicitly teach a formally implemented character education agenda. That is, I believe the
prime responsibility of our schools is to make children knowledgeable and
decorous citizens in our democratic society. When academics are combined with responsible character educa-
IN MY VIEW
Harder because cultivating huevolving digital technology. Parents man intelligence is one of the most dren. On Jan. 23, 1997, President Bill who allow their children to learn difficult things in the world. It is far Clinton used a State of the Union from thestreetor the school of hard more complex and takes far longer tion, students will attain knowledge address to challenge the schools to knocks to define critical character than training employees or directfor self-improvement, enhance con- teach character education, good val- traits are granting them permission ing a new sales campaign. It takes structive civic traits and develop pos- ues and good citizenship. President to make some serious mistakes, per- thousandsofreinforced, customized itive habits toward becoming produc- George W. Bush remarked in 2002 haps some even life-threatening er- stimuli delivered in a supportive tive members of society. that the family is the primary unit of rors in judgment. emotional environment. It's unpreThere are several characteristics to traditional character education. Bush Basic character education for the dictable and is certain to fail without what constitutes good character, such stated that parents expect the schools mind would be comparable to phys- commitment. as: respect for life and liberty, respon- to be allies in the moral education ical education for physical well-beDeveloping character in a child is sibility toward others, honesty, fair- of childrenand forthe schools to re- ing. Regardless of the method, the equally overwhelming. Integrity, perness, tolerance, courtesy, self-disci- inforce the lessons learned at home bottom line is to help students to severance, honesty, humility, courpline, integrity, kindness, compassion with high standards. be repeatedly kind, courteous and age, responsibility and compassion and courage. I strongly believe that Bill Bennett, with Presidents Bush self-disciplined in their actions until are just as important as the intellecteachers should incorporate these and Clinton, join many state legisla- it becomes easy and somewhat un- tual gifts we treasure. Like intellisimple values into their daily curricu- tures, the United States Department natural for them to do the opposite. gence, instilling character take years lum to reinforce positive social traits. of Education and a multitude of auI spent over 25 years in private of deeply personal, rigorous cultivaFurther, district-wide character-ed- thors in calling on the schools to cure business before becoming a public tion. When teachers challenge and ucation programs should be put into the moral problems of society. school teacher. I held sales training inspire students to be positive forces practice at every grade level. Curriculum-based character ed- and management positions in some in their society, they're changing the In 1991, former Education Secre- ucation would help students inter- of America's largest corporations. course of the next generation. And tary William Bennett emphasized pret the myriad social issues they I know business, and I know some- that's worth some instructional time, teaching the positive character traits witness on the big screen or in their thing about education. Education is in the very least. we admire and wish for our chilliving rooms, as well as the challeng- harder. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; JosephKosanovic livesinR edmond. es encountered with their constantly
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
Winter
BITUARIES
Continued from B1 Nighttime temperatures
should also rise slightly, though they will likely re-
Prineville, including Barry's Custom H a ying, B a r r -Lee Equipment Company as a Hesston Dealer, B&B Farms, Country Cab, Stafford Inn, Oct. 31, 1958 - ffov. 5, 2014 C ross Street Station, GW B enjamin ( B a r ry ) Ba r r Stafford, Cl u b Pi o n e e r, Groff III p assed away NoRock P r o ducts M a n u facvember 5, 2014 peacefully turing, and Rock Products at home. He was born Oc- Cement D i v i sion . Wi th tober 31, 1958 to Barr and each business, he donated Barbara much to the community of (Wiesz) Prineville. G roff. H e Barry enjoyed socializing w as 56 with f r i e n ds, f i s h in g i n t y e a rs old. A laska, t r a v e l in g and Barry was spending time with his wife b orn a n d i n John Da y an d a t t h e i r r aised i n home in Arizona. Prineville B arry w a s p r e ceded i n OR. He death by h i s f a t her, Bengraduated j amin B a r r Gr o ff II of Barry Groff from Prineville. H e i s s u r vived Crook County High School by his l oving w i fe, L i nda; i n 1977. At a n a g e w h e n m other, Barbara G r of f o f high school students were Prineville; sisters, M a r lise f iguring out how t o b u y (Tom) Jay of Prineville, and t heir f i rst c ar , B a rr y w a s D enise Groff of New Y o r k f iguring ou t h o w t o p u r - City; children by marriage, chase his first ranch. At 18 Reed Colovos of Prineville, e ars old, as a s e nior h e Marcelle (Josh) Howard of ad already purchased two Bend, Chris (Leslie) Colopickup trucks and $90,000 v os o f Pri n e v i lle, N i c k w orth o f e q u i pment w i t h (Shyla) Colovos, of Prinevthe money he earnedfrom a ille, and Craig (McKenzie) business he called Barry's McCullough o f P r i n eville; C ustom Haying. A s a s e - many grandchildren, nieces n ior he w a s a w a rded t h e and nephews, and f r i ends Star State Agribusinessman who have a special place in A ward, D e g ree o f St a t e his heart. Farmer Award and the DisTogether, fam i l y and trict Agricultural Sales Profriends will miss his infecficiency Award, competing tious smile, his remarkable with 6,000 other members. generosity and wit. He had H e farmed 9 0 0 a c re s t o a way with words that was which he raised cattle, pota- genuine. toes, sugar beets, pepperThe funeral service folmint and seed carrots. lowed by a d e ssert social Barry continued that comwill be held Saturday, Nomitment as a businessman vember 15, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. f rom t h a t t i m e u n t i l h i s at Powell B u tt e C h r istian passing. Church, Powell Butte, OrS tarting b u s inesses an d e gon. P a s tor C h ri s B l a ir p urchasing e x i sting b u s i - will officiate the service. In nesses of m any t y p es, he lieu o f fl o w e rs, c o ntribue njoyed every m i n ut e o f tions m a y be ma d e i n b eing p ar t o f th e tea m B arry's n a m e t o Po w e l l which stemmed from farmB utte C h r i stian C h u r c h , ing/ranching, r es t a u rant/ P roject L o v e 1 3 72 0 S W motel management, to rock Hwy. 126 Powell Butte, OR. m anufacturing. H e w a s a Pro]ect Love is a non-profit business owner who was so organization for th ose often behind the scenes and f amilies o r i n d i v iduals i n d id not need glory for t h e need inour community. w ork he d id . O n e w o u l d Whispering Pines Funeral hardly see him without his Home is assisting the famcell phone to his ear. ily with arrangements. 185 Barry has been the owner, NE 4th S t r eet, P r ineville, co-owner and past owner of Oregon 97754. many thriving businesses in
DEATH NoTIGEs Benjamin 'Barry' Barr Groff III Angella M. Bartleson, of La Pine
Feb. 8, 1970 - Oct. 31, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A visitation was held Thursday, November 6, 2014 at Caldwell's Mortuary in Astoria, OR. Funeral services were held Friday, November 7, 2014 at Caldwell's Mortuary in Astoria followed by a Graveside Service at Lewis 8 Clark
Cemetery.
Contributions may bemade to: Clatsop County Animal Shelter, www.dogsncats.org Clatsop County Women's Resource Center, (503) 325-3426.
G. Alan Wyland JIly13,1927- ffov. 7, 2014 George Alan Wyland, 87, of Wilton, formerly of R ow ayton, C T , a n d Ro w e , MA, died on Nov. 7, 2014. He was the husband for 5 9 years of t h e l a t e F l o r ence E w in g B a t e s W y l and. M r . W yl a n d w as born July 13, 1927, in New York City. He was the son o f Martha R . S h u ltz W y land an d G e o rg e G i l b ert Wyland. He s e r v e d wi th t h e a mphibious service in t h e P acific, i n th e U ni te d S tates Navy during W o r l d War II. He was a commissioner in the Boy Scouts of America for 10 years. With his wife, Florence, he presented M a r r iage E n count er weekends ar ound t h e country for a number of years. He had served in a number of capacities in the United Church of R o w ay t on, in c l u d in g Su n d a y School teaching, property, f inance, h o u sehold c o n c erns, D e a cons c o m m i t tees and Lay Leader/ Moderator. Mr. Wyland retired a s a s u p ervisor a f te r 3 5 years with the Nash Engineering Company, in 1995. Mr. W y l an d i s s u r v i v ed by t w o so n s , S c o t t A . Wyland a n d h i s w i fe, M ichelle an d C l i f f or d W . Wyland and his wife, Amy of Bend, OR; tw o d a u ght ers, M a r th a E . W yl a n d and her husband, J. Edwin of S u b l i m i ty , OR an d Laura L. Donnelly of Easth ampton, MA ; seven grandchildren a n d f ou r g reat-grandchildren. He i s also survived by his sister, Catherine L. Smith and her h usband, S t e ve n S i l v e r man o f NY ; an d w as predeceased by hi s si ster, Barbara A. Broad. A memorial service w i l l be held on Friday, Nov. 14, at 3:00 p.m., at the United Church of R owayton. The Reverend John L i v i ngston will b e o f f i ciating. B u r i al w ill b e i n t h e M e m o r i a l G arden a t th e U ni te d Church of Rowayton. I n l ie u o f fl o w e r s , t h e family r e quests donations b e m ad e t o t he U ni t e d C hurch of Row ay t o n , A nimals i n Di s t r es s i n W ilton, o r a cha r i t y o f y our choice. To l e ave a n o nline condolence for h i s
family,
p l e ase g o
t o:
www.magnerfuneralhome. com
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deathsof note from around the world:
H. Gary Morse, 77:Businessman who became a billionaire by turning a Florida mobile home park into a sprawling retirement destination, T he
Villages, with nearly 600 holes
,P
Virginia Laughlin 1912 - 2014 V irginia L a u g h li n w as b orn o n Se p t e mber 2 3 , 1912 in K l ondike, Oregon in the home of her granda rents, A .B . a n d E l i z a eth P otter. S h e p a s sed a way o n November 6, 2014 at Aspen
R idge i n
B end O r -
egon.
Prior to that sh e h ad l i v e d Virginia in B en d Laughlin w ith h er d aughter, Gingir, fo r s e v e ral y e ars. V i r g i ni a w a s 102 years old. Virginia's g r a n d p arents settled in Sherman County i n th e e a rl y 1 8 0 0s. A . B . Potter bought the General Store at KIondike in 1889. V irginia's p a r e nt s w e r e Raymond and M ay me M orehouse. They f a r m e d i n Sherman C o u nty , a n d V irginia r e t a i ne d v iv i d memories of th e b eautiful horses her f a t her o w n ed, the work horses, Babe and T oots, i n p a r t i cular. S h e a ttended t h e " little r e d schoolhouse" in K l o n dike, t he W a sc o S c h o ol , a n d graduated from The Dalles High School. It w a s t h ere s he met h e r f u t u r e h u s band, Dale Laughlin. They eloped in 1932, and lived in T he D al l e s . V i r gi n i a worked at The Dalles Gene ral Hospital a s a b o o k keeper; and h e r h u s band worked fo r t h e D o c h erty F urniture Co. l aying l i n o leum. After s everal y ears they moved to Wasco tobe n ear h e r fam i l y , an d o pened D a l e' s C l o t h i n g. Her uncle, George Potter, was closing th e K l o n dike Store so di splay counters a nd m e r c h andise w e r e moved to the Wasco store. D ale's C l o t h in g w a s i n
b usiness fo r s e v eral d e cades. It w a s a p l e a sure a nd a c h a l lenge t o t h e m both. They s u rvived b oth t he f ir e t h a t b u r n e d t h e Wasco Hotel to the ground in the 1950s, and the 1964 flood, w i t h t h e he l p of t ownspeople wh o q u i c k ly moved the store merchandise to safety. V irginia's fa m i l y w as musical. Her m oth er played pi ano f o r s q u a r edances in th e l a rge space above the General Store in K londike, an d h e r f a t h er was th e c a l l er . V i r g i n i a, h erself, played th e p i a n o and the organ. She loved t o r e ad, g a r den, a n d t o paint watercolors. She was a lways supportive o f h e r children, and enjoyed her g randchildren a n d g r e a t grandchildren. We are so grateful to the staff at A spen Ridge, and to Partners In Care Home Health a n d H os p i c e i n B end for t h ei r l o v in g p a tience and incredible care. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r daughters, Sharon Laughl in a n d Gi n g i r Hak a l a ; grandchildren , H ei d i Patterson ( Scot), D o n Hakala ( Christy), a n d Andy H a k al a ( M i c h elle); great-grandchildren, Natalie, Nathan, Ben, R i l ey, Ethan, and Austin; her sister, Eulalie W e lk ; n u m erous nieces and nephews. S he w a s p r e c eded i n d eath b y her hu s b a n d , Dale, in 1982; her brothers, J errold an d K enn e t h M orehouse; a n d so n - i n law, Don Hakala. A service will be held in Wasco a t t h e M e t h o dist C hurch, at 1 1:00 a.m. o n Friday, Nov., 14th, 2014. In heu of fl owers, please m ake d o nations t o H o s p ice or t o t h e c h a r it y o f your choice. N iswonger-Reynolds Fu neral Home is in charge of arrangements. Please sign t he guest registry fo r t h e famil y at w ww . niswonger-reynolds.com
Crane, stalwart Republicanand presidential candidate By Emily Langer
gan. After Army service, he
The Washington Post
received a m a ster's degree in 1961 and a Ph.D. in 1963,
both in history from Indiana University.
He wrote several books, including "The Democrat's Dilemma" (1964), "The Sum of Good Government" (1976) and "Surrender in Panama" (1978). Crane also penned a Christ-
mas song, "Little Sandy Sleighfoot"; a Jimmy Dean recording ofthesong sold 300,000copies. Crane's wife of 53 years, the former Arlene Johnson, died in
— From wire reports
with the heaviest snowfall
expected Thursday and Thursday night. It could change to rain or a mix with
snow through Friday. M ike Buettner, a w a ter-conservation manager
with the city of Bend, said irrigation systems are the most susceptible to freez-
ing. He said outside faucets should be insulated and any garden hoses disconnected. Buettner said crawl spaces should be checked to see
if any pipes will be exposed to the elements. Foundation vents should be closed to
protect pipes. Insulate any and every water pipe that you can, he said. "Hopefully we don't have anything too extreme like last December," Buettner said. Lots of w ater lines
broke because of below-zero temperatures, including one night where it reached minus 20 in some locations. For home o wners, Buettner said, "know where
the water shutoff is so if you do have an emergency you know where to shut it off."
According to the Oregon Department of Transportation, nine people died in
2013 from crashes occurring in snowy or icy conditions in Oregon. About
3,000 crashes occurred in the cold weather. ODOT's website reminds
drivers to drive cautiously in freezing conditions. Bridges and overpasses are the lastpartof roads tothaw and are consideredthe most dangerous in cold-weather conditions. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.com
• Wrap all pipes in Unheated areas. • Caulk around pipes where they enter the house and close all foundation vents. • Disconnect garden hoses from the faucets • Know where your main water shutoff valve is outside your home. • Shut off and drain your water system if you are leaving home for an extended period. • Open cabinetdoors in the kitchenandbathrooms to allowwater-line pipes to getmoreheat.
2012. Survivors include seven
children; a sister; two brothers, including Daniel Crane, an Illinois Republican who served in the House from 1979 to 1985; and nine grandchildren.
changingSmiles
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Save the Date
Saturday, November 15, 2014 RiverhouseConvention Center - Bend, Oregon Cocktails,dinner, dessert dash, silentand live auctions, and beautifully decorated treesand wreaths
of golf, more than 80,000 resi-
dents and outsize political influence. Died Oct. 29, according to The Villages Daily Sun, which he owned.
Snow could start to fall in Central Oregon on Wednesday night, the weather service predicted, spreading north and east Thursday,
Precautions for freezing weather
FEATUREDOBITUARY
House Republican. When Reagan joined the A former history professor race, Crane faced complaints Philip Crane, an Illinois Re- with clean-cut good looks, he that his candidacy would split publican who cast himself as had entered Republican poli- the conservative vote — an a standard-bearer for conser- tics in the 1960s and worked outcome that he said he would vatism, promoting limited gov- for the presidential campaign not allow. Amid campaign ernment and low taxes during of Barry Goldwater, the Arizo- debt and an exodus of staffers, 35 years in Congress and as a na senator who lost to Lyndon Crane withdrew from the race presidential hopeful in 1980, Johnson in a landslide but was and supported Reagan, who died Saturday at a daughter's credited with invigorating the won the first of his two presihome in Jefferson, Maryland. conservative movement. dential terms thatyear. He was 84. Crane described himself as In Congress, Crane rose to The cause was complica- a "conservativefirst and a Re- become a top member of the tions from lung cancer, said publican second" and promot- tax-writing Ways and Means Kirt Johnson, his former con- ed in Congress and on the hus- Committee. He chaired the gressional chief of staff. tings what he regarded as the subcommittee on t r ade but Crane was elected to the core conservative philosophy: was not selected, as he hoped House of Representatives in a "to maximize free choice and he would be, for the committee 1969 special election to fill the minimize trespass." chairmanship after the 2000 seat vacated by another RepubIn 1978, Crane became the election. lican,future Secretary of De- first Republican to enter the Philip Miller Crane was fense Donald Rumsfeld, who 1980 race for the presiden- born Nov. 3, 1930, in Chicago. had taken a job in the Nixon cy. He had supported Ronald He credited his father, a physiadministration. Reagan's previous bid for the cian, with instilling in him his Crane held the seat in the White House and said that he conservative beliefs. northern suburbs of Chicago thought the former California In 1952, the younger Crane until his 2004 defeat by Demo- governor, who was two de- received a bachelor's degree in crat Melissa Bean. At the time, cades his senior, might not run history and psychology from he was the longest-serving thatyear. Hillsdale College in Michi-
main in the 20s.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014
R
'
d
TODAY
I
TONIGHT
HIGH 34'
ALMANAC Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record
THURSDAY
12'
' M
46' 27'
A bit of morning snow;
Rain and snowshowers
31'
Periods of sun; snowand ice at night
Mainly clear andcold
storm total 1-3R
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows.
ria /3
Rufus
city
39/17
•
•
•
•
•
•
ip
•
•
UV INDEX TODAY
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
C rane Prairie 326 9 7 59% 40'yo Wickiup 80948 Crescent Lake 5 6 8 14 65% Ochoco Reservoir 14827 34% Prinevige 83804 56% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 188 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 43 Deschutes R.below Bend 435 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 532 Little Deschutes near LaPine 71 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 12 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 26 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 72 Crooked R.near Terrebonne 151 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 2
FIRE INDEX
Red/d 'e Rd M M d Sisters Pl e l//e
LPP/ /M/R/M
~
L
~
L
~
L
~ ~
L L
Source: USDA Forest Service
48 contiguousstates) National high:88
Hi/Lo/W 44/26/pc 43/26/pc 58/32/r 59/31/s 44/31/s 67/41/pc 67/42/r 56/32/pc 64/34/r 7/-6/pc 58/34/pc 20/-6/sf 35/26/pc 59/37/pc 63/36/r 43/28/c 55/34/r 45/28/r 77/54/pc 72/44/pc 58/34/pc 7/-8/c 33/21/pc 43/24/pc 41/28/pc 14/4/sn 34/19/pc 76/48/pc 72/45/pc 43/24/pc 56/30/c 58/42/pc 47/29/pc 41/24/pc 12/-1/sn 31/18/pc 39/25/pc 27/15/sn 64/35/s 33/16/pc 29/14/sn 56/30/pc 35/26/sf 28/18/c 69/39/pc 59/34/pc 61/32/r 9/-2/pc
1
• Billings
9/4I
p 12/-
0,,'
To
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegss Lexington Lincoln Litiis Rock Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix
Salt Lake City Sen Antonio Ssn Diego Ssu Francisco Ssn Jose
55/32/pc
38/22/pc 56/34/pc 77/54/s
•
53/47/pc 67/58/c 67/53/sh 76/47/s 93/77/I 54/34/pc
80/65/pc 54/49/pc 64/49/I 60/45/pc 82/62/I 83/67/s
80/61/pc 11/-2/c 82/67/s 53/48/r 52/46/c 56/45/pc 89/60/s 77/67/c 64/54/pc 72/52/c 68/57/I
S
DVBS RsSizsmxmS IN HONOR OF VETERANS Lg
uu em
Not Pictured I
DAVID WALKKR
2920 N.E. Conners Ave * Bend, Oregon
Av l
/
54$ 3$2 9690
HPWHP.H/hiS erin
12/-8/pc
63/31/pc 69/53/c 64/48/pc 70/48/pc 47/27/pc 69/59/pc 66/55/sh
65/49/pc 59/29/s 77/50/s
45/30/pc 22/8/c 26/13/pc 41/22/pc 76/57/s 82/55/s 44/24/pc 69/57/pc
38/14/pc 36/16/s 82/59/s
100/79/0.00 97nO/s 74/49/0.00 72/51/I Montreal 45/41/0.00 52/40/pc Moscow 41/32/0.00 43/33/c Nairobi 72/61/0.28 79/59/c Nassau 81/74/0.73 81/70/s New Delhi 86/63/0.00 84/56/s Osaka 63/49/0.00 69/49/pc Oslo 45/42/0.52 46/40/pc Ottawa 41/36/0.06 53/43/c Paris 52/41/0.00 60/47/pc Riu de Janeiro 79/69/0.00 80/68/s Rome 70/57/0.02 70/57/I Santiago 81/48/0.00 82/52/pc Ssu Paulo 77/61/0.00 80/63/s Sspporo 55/41/0.08 52/41/pc Seoul 59/32/0.00 58/42/pc Shanghai 64/49/0.00 66/54/pc Singapore 86/79/0.26 89n6/I Stockholm 48/44/0.23 49/38/sh Sydney 73/59/0.03 69/58/sh Taipei 76/65/0.00 75/66/pc Tei Aviv 79/54/0.00 79/63/pc Tokyo 70/57/0.01 59/56/r Toronto 48/39/0.01 58/38/pc Vancouver 50/36/0.00 45/34/pc Vienna 61/50/0.00 61/50/pc Warsaw 54/46/Tr 58/44/s
73/63/pc 64/57/pc 55/49/c 55/46/r 89/76/s sgn5/s
3nd to our many gesident 'Veterans, our deepest thrtngs and admiration.
69/56/pc 84/59/s 66/42/pc 58/45/s 62/48/s 69/48/pc
65/38/r 82/58/s 44/26/pc 60/35/c 62/34/pc 72/41/pc 13/-6/pc 61/41/pc 71/37/pc 49/28/c 68/54/s 38/25/pc 42/29/pc 57/39/pc 70/59/pc 68/58/pc 66/54/s 48/22/pc 79/55/pc 44/32/pc 25/10/pc 27/14/s 36/21/pc 77/59/s 81/54/s 39/23/pc 66/39/pc 34/18/pc 34/20/pc 80/59/s
L
Mecca Mexico City
54/43/r 67/59/pc 61/53/sh 76/48/s 92/78/I 45/30/s 79/66/s 57/48/pc 64/48/c 58/46/pc 74/53/pc 86/65/s 79/62/s 12/-3/s 83/66/s 52/45/pc 54/43/r 50/43/r 85/61/s 76/65/pc 62/54/c 71/51/pc 65/57/I 73/62/c 65/59/pc 56/47/pc 58/44/pc
AISP'SRDVg
® hispering 6'inds cek6rates 'Veteransfor their serviceto our country rtnd our Peedom
79/55/s 79/55/s 83/56/pc 82/56/s 43/24/pc 35/20/pc
52/42/Tr 46/26/pc 79/46/0.00 64/42/pc
69/63/0.00 68/53/0.00 73/46/0.00 Santa re 68/36/0.00 Savannah 73/48/0.00 Seattle 52/44/0.06 Sioux Falls 31/28/0.02 Spokane 41/29/0.02 Springfield, Mo 75/49/0.00 Tampa 75/56/0.00 Tucson 84/56/0.00 Tulsa 79/52/0.00 Washington, DC 66/42/0.00 Wichita 77/48/0.00 Yskima 52/29/0.00 Yuma 86/61/0.00 L
Amsterdam Athens
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 43/36/0.02 40/26/s 36/21/s 69/50/0.00 37/17/pc 32/1 8/pc 57/38/Tr 55/28/c 34/24/sf 84/55/0.00 75/54/pc 73/53/s 65/37/0.00 64/35/pc 46/27/pc 57/40/0.02 31/11/c 30/11/pc 75/45/0.00 63/33/c 50/31/pc 70/62/0.00 68/57/pc 69/57/pc 65/36/0.00 63/35/c 47/27/pc 57/35/0.02 37/21/r 30/19/pc 73/45/0.00 64/35/c 47/31/pc 77/66/0.36 81/63/s 82/64/s 55/39/0.06 44/24/r 32/22/pc 31/26/0.27 28/9/sn 25/1 2/c 69/32/0.00 67/35/pc 49/28/pc 74/45/0.00 79/60/s 64/47/pc 61/44/0.00 64/55/pc 65/40/r 61/37/0.00 65/52/pc 66/37/r 64/40/0.00 68/55/c 68/44/r 80/52/0.00 42/21/pc 36/21/pc 60/31/0.00 31/14/c 31/1 5/pc
75/63/0.01 84/59/0.00 69/45/0.00 63/37/0.00 84/59/0.00 Pittsburgh 64/39/0.00 Portland, ME 57/30/0.00 Providence 58/31/0.00 Raleigh 66/35/0.00 Rapid City 19/18/0.30 Rsno 61/36/0.00 Richmond 68/36/0.00 Rochester, NY 58/40/0.00 Sacramento 77/47/0.00 Si. Louis 73/44/0.00
60/39/pc
PHMM
ss/46
55/48/0.24 Boston - . * * * ", 72/52/0.00 / 8 at Blythe, CA • 41/19* * * " /48 * * * * * * Auckland 66/55/0.04 National low: 0 w York Baghdad 77/48/0.00 * R* P* * * /42 at Great Falls, MT /54 Ch M Bangkok 93/76/0.00 e/17 *„ c g o M * *td/ Precipitation: 1.74 • *5 iladelphio aeijing 59/36/0.00 5 i • Col mh Soh Loko Iey R• 9/se Beirut 81/64/0.00 at Daytona Beach,FL Omah Louis *o DMM 44/ae Berlin 50/48/0.00 ington SM ronci 4 7 23/2 Loui iso 69 Bogota 66/48/0.25 ee/ 5 R Kansas Cffy es/3 Budapest 54/48/0.00 Angel • 37/17 d d d o Buenos Ai r es 86/68/0.17 5/54 57 o Chorlo d d d d d Csbo Ssn Lucss 84/68/0.12 R y/7/3 es/33 d d d ' d d d San D eo • Cairo 79/63/0.00 Anchorage 69/5 Albuque Me klohoma Cl • At Calgary 12/9/0.19 PK~/3 es/40 Phoenix 72/53 Csncun 81/64/0.03 d d~ d d ingho /59 • DMIIM Juneau al po 'Q l d Dublin 52/36/0.48 71 46 51/3 1/4 Edinburgh 48/34/0.00 46/2d d /. dd dd Houston Geneva 50/46/0.31 .d, P db ', 74/45 • • dlohdo Hsrsre 93/62/0.00 MM • Ch w Orleans Hong Kong 75/68/0.15 Honolulu 73/43 M erpoy 79/eo c ~.I Istanbul 66/54/0.00 hsiomi 82/ Jerusalem 74/55/0.00 81/ihe, Johannesburg 81/58/0.14 Lima 72/63/0.00 Lisbon 63/50/1.56 Shown aretoday's noon positions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 55/43/0.00 T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 54/32/0.10 Manila 87/76/0.12 aoio * * *
Yesterday Today Wednesday
City
84nO/pc
d
43/30
Mostly cloudy
L
Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W • ermiston 46 50 71' in 1 9 59 Abilene 84/55/0.00 51/28/s /19 Ifngton 39/14 27' 29' Portland 4 Akron 62/40/0.00 64/35/pc 8'in 1916 Meac am Lostine 1/ /20 Albany 56/30/0.00 60/50/pc • W co 34/11 Enterarlse PRECIPITATION dletnn 28/5 heoag 3 8 Albuquerque 72/41/0.00 65/40/s • • 32/10 • 35/ 5 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace CENTRAL: Windy with 50/31 andy • Anchorage 48/40/0.02 44/36/r 42/24 Mc innviu 2/29 • Atlanta 71/43/0.00 72/53/s Record 1.03ein 1984 • He ppner Grande sunshine andclouds nt „ , Condon P P 5/10 Atlantic City 62/33/0.00 66/56/pc 36 13 Month to date (normal) 0.10 (0.37 ) today. Mainly dear Union Mncoin R Austin 78/39/0.00 60/36/pc 30/1 Year to date (normal ) 6.51 " (8.14 )e and cold tonight. Partly 51/36 Sale Baltimore 61/33/0.00 66/52/pc prsy Granite, B arometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30. 0 5 sunny tomorrow. 47/2 • 7/12 Billings 19/11/Tr 9/-8/sn a 'Baker C Newpo 34/9 Birmingham 70/36/0.00 71/46/pc SUN ANDMOON /27 49/34 • Mitch u 35/9 Bismarck 23/17/0.17 15/1/c camp sh man Red WEST:Partly sunny, 37/1 1 Today Wed. n orv Ilis Boise 48/37/Tr 41/19/s 34/12 • John Mu Sunrise 6:55 a.m. 6: 5 6 a.m. breezy andcolder 49/24 Boston 60/48/s • Prinevillo Dey 9/10 tario Bridgeport, CT 58/37/0.00 Sunset 4:43 p.m. 4: 4 2 p.m. today. Clear to partly 60/36/0.00 62/50/pc 37/11 • Pa lina 38 / 1 6 18 n Buffalo 60/42/0.00 63/42/pc Moonrise 9:1 0 p.m. 10 :07 p.m. cloudy tonight. Clouds Floren e • Eugene • Bo d Brothem 3914 Valee Burlington, VT 51/32/0.00 58/49/pc Moonset 11: 05 a.m. 1 1 :44 a.m. and sun tomorrow. 54/41 14 Su ivere 34/12 43/17 Caribou, ME 42/24/0.00 38/33/pc Nyssa • 3 6 / 3 • La plna Ham ton MOONPHASES C e Charleston, SC 65/49/Tr 74/51/s 42/19 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 69/32/0.00 71/42/s Last Ne w Fir s t Full • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES 42/12 54/31 /29 Chattanooga 68/36/0.00 70/46/pc • Fort Rock Riley 39/9 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 42/17 Cheyenne 35/17/0.02 14/-6/sn 38/10 43/19 Chicago 62/41/0.00 50/25/r High: 69' don Ro s eburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 64/35/0.00 63/32/pc N ov14 Nov22 N ov29 D e c 6 at Brookings Jordan V Hey 69/42 Beaver Silver 42/16 Frenchglen 57/38 Cleveland 60/43/0.00 64/35/pc Low: 23' 40/18 Marsh Lake 43/19 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 70/22/Tr 24/7/c 46/20 at Burns Po 0 44/20 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 73/46/0.00 41/22/pc T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley a Columbia, SC 70/36/0.00 73/44/s • 41/18 Mercury 5:33 a.m. 4: 1 1 p.m. Chiloquin Columbus,GA 73/39/0.00 74/52/s Medfo d '4N20 Gold ach 89 36 Rome Venus 7:19 a.m. 4: 5 7 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 64/40/0.00 64/35/pc 41/16 Mars 11:15 a.m. 7 : 5 6 p.m. • Klamath Concord, NH 55/26/0.00 57/40/s Fields • • Ashl nd Falls Jupiter 11:15 p.m. 1 : 2 2 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 79/52/0.00 82/48/I Sro ings 44/23 57/ 49/25 Saturn 7:22 a.m. 5: 0 9 p.m. 59/47 47/17 46/16 Dallas 79/51/0.00 51/32/pc Dayton 63/42/0.00 61/32/c Uranus 3:13 p.m. 3 : 5 5 a.m. Denver 64/1 7/0.02 23/2/c Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Des Moines 66/44/0.01 36/1 7/c city H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W city Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 56/39/0.00 59/31/c 57/42/Tr 49/31/pc 46/35/pc La Grande 46/36/0.08 36/1 3/s 34/20/ pc Portland 58/4 2/0.0143/30/pc40/32/ pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asfuris Duluth 25/20/0.35 26/16/sn Baker City 43/31/0.11 35/9/s 3 1/16/pc L a Pine 46/24/0.00 39/18/pc 40/26/pc Prineviiie 48/ 2 5/0.0037/11/pc 40/21/pc El Paso 78/52/0.00 71/47/s 1 N(~ 2 ~ 1~ N 0 Brookings 69/52/0.0059/47/pc 57/51/r Medford 6 2/ 38/0.00 57/37/pc 55/45/pc Redmond 49 / 23/0.0034/10/pc 32/18/pc Fairbanks 35/17/0.00 33/21/pc The highertheAccuWeslherxmmUVIndex number, Bums 47/23/0.00 39/9/s 33/16/pc Newport 5 7 / 43/Tr 49/34/pc 48/38/p c Roseburg 56 / 43/Tr 57/38/pc 56/46/pc Fargo 24/22/0.00 24/13/sf the greatertheneedfor eyeaudskin protecgon.0-2 Lcw, Eugene 52/37/0.00 51/28/pc 48/37/pc N orth Bend 6 1 / 41/0.00 61/41/pc 60/48/pc Salem 57/40/Tr 47/27/pc 44/32/ p c Flagstaff 59/34/0.00 57/31/s 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme. Klamath Falls 51/26/0.00 49/25/pc 48/34/pc Ontario 51/41/Tr 43/18/s 36/22/pc Sisters 47/25/0.00 33/10/pc 32/19/pc Grand Rapids 58/39/0.02 53/29/c Lekeview 52/28/0.00 47/1 7/pc 47/29/pc P endleton 4 9/3 4 /Tr 3 5 / 1 5/s 3 1/1 8/pc The Dalles 5 6 / 42/0.00 42/24/s 37/25/pc GreenHsy 41/32/0.12 35/18/sn Greensboro 67/36/0.00 69/43/s Westher(W):s-sunny,pc-pertlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-ruin, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowi-ice,Tr-frece,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 63/33/0.00 66/53/pc G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hsrffurd, CT 62/29/0.00 64/45/pc Absent ~ L o~ w Abs e nt Helena 21/12/0.07 10/-5/sf Source: OregonAiiergyAssocistes 541-683-1577 Honolulu 83/68/0.00 84/TO/s ~ c s ~ T O s ~ 2 06 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ 606 ~ 706 ~ 80s ~ gcs ~t ccs ~ttcs Houston ~ tcs ~cs 80/45/0.00 74/45/c Huntsville 71/34/0.00 68/40/pc Colgo Indianapolis 62/39/0.00 55/28/c As of 7 s.m. yesterday NATIONAL * * * * * „ p p „ cue o 5 11/-2 54/ * * * * i Mipeg T Md or aaxe* * os/6 Jackson, MS 76/37/0.00 76/44/pc Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES eo 45/30 * "* 2 51 3 "* ed e "d 2 exev Jacksonville 65/52/0.02 76/47/s YESTERDAY (for the * eo ev eo
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Yesterday Today Wednesday
Umatiga
Hood
SATURDAY "'" 4C'
TRAVEL WEATHER
OREGON WEATHER EAST:Mostly sunny, windy and chilly today. Seasid Mostly clear andcold 49/36 tonight .Sunshine and Cannon clouds tomorrow. 49/37
FRIDAY
40' 32
LOW
Partly sunny andcolder
I f' I
WEDNESDAY
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64/44/pc 88/TTII
44/39/pc 74/61/s 72/62/pc 79/64/pc 66/55/pc 40/26/c 44/32/pc 56/48/c 56/42/pc
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N FL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 MLB, C2 NBA, C3 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
MLB AbreII, deGrem
picked asROY NEW YORK — Chi-
cago White Sox first baseman JoseAbreu was a unanimous winner of the ALRookie of the Yearaward, and New York Mets pitcher Jacob deGromwonthe NL honor. "I don't have any words to describe this mo-
ment," Abreu said Abreu
th r ough a
translator onthe MLB Network telecast Monday. "I
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
RODEO: COLUMBIA RIVER CIRCUIT FINALS
Terrebonnecowboywins all-around
MOTOR SPORTS COMMENTARY
• Roper among several Central Oregoniansto performwell overthe weekend in Yakima Bulletin staff report
with heeler Andy Carlson, of Hermis-
YAKIMA, Wash. — Terrebonne's Shane Erickson was the all-around
ton, to place fourth and in the money
Central Oregon entries dominated
respective events at the 2014 Columbia
in all three rounds of the team-roping competition, good for second place in the average with an aggre-
River Circuit Finals Rodeo. The two-day Professional Rodeo
gate time of 18.6 seconds. Erickson and Carlson
cowboy, and two other Central Oregon entries placed first in the average in their
Cowboys Association event, which includedthree performances, concluded Saturday night at the Yakima Valley SunDome. Erickson captured all-around cowboy honors for winning a total of $2,261 in two events: team roping and tie-down roping. Erickson, a header, teamed
Erickson
the bareback competition, led by Steven Peebles. The Redmond rider scored a total of 246 points on three head to
win the average title and $1,780. Bend's Wyatt Bloom finished second in the bareback average with 241 points
ea r ned $1,356 apiece for
their finish. Also in team roping, Powell Butte
($1,335), and Terrebonne's Austin Foss was fourth with 234 points ($445).
Rick Scutert/The Associated Press
Bloom won the first round, Peebles
Driver Jeff Gordon was
won the second round, and another Central Oregon rider, four-time world
knocked out of the running for
header Brandon Beers and teammate Jim Ross Cooper, a heeler from Monument, New Mexico, finished third in
champion Bobby Mote, of Culver, tied with Bloom for first place in the third
the average with a time of 21.1 seconds, good for $904 apiece.
round. SeeRodeo/C4
deGrom consider
myselfa good hitter, and I guess I've proven it." One year after defecting from Cuba,the 27-year-old Abreu led the major leagueswith a.581 slugging percentage. Hewas sixth in batting at.317, tied for fourth in home runs
PREP SOCCER
the Sprint Cup title on Sunday.
Format c rLts es
Gor on's OI'
with 36 and fifth in RBls with107.
Abreu received all 30 first place votes for150 points in balloting by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Los Angeles Angels right-hander Matt Shoemaker wassecond with 40 points, followed by New YorkYankees reliever Dellin Betances (27), Houston pitcher Collin McHugh (21) and Yankees pitcher Masahiro Tanaka(16), who was hurt for most of the season's second half.
tit e
• •
By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press
,n~
a
CHARLOTTE, N.C.-
N
ASCAR's new champi-
0
onship format, lauded
for creating nail-biting intensity, wild emotional swings and tension on and off of the track, has also been full of heartbreak.
I
Dale Earnhardt Jr. had one
Abreu hit.383 with
three homers and nine RBls for Cuba atlast year's World Baseball Classic, then defected that summer andsigned a $68 million, six-year contract with the White Sox in October. He becamethefirst qualifying rookie to lead the major leagues in slugging percentage since Oakland's Mark McGwire in1987, according to STATS. DeGrom received 26 of 30 first-place votes and 142 points. Speedy Cincinnati outfielder Billy Hamilton was second with four firsts and 92 points. — The Associated Press
NFL
of the best seasons of
NIXt IIP
his career with an hon-
NASCAR
est shot at his first career title — and was eliminat-
Sprint Cup, Miami 4pp' Sunday
ed in the second round of the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. Kyle Busch salvaged a mediocre regular season to put himself in position to run for
• Bend and Summihave t dominated Class5Agirls soccerfor nearly adecade entral Oregon may notbe the capital of state girls soccer prowess through the eyes of Mackenzie Groshong, but the Intermountain Conference, the Bend High coach concedes, is definitely contending
C Nextup Class 5A semifinals, Summit at Putnam When:5 p.m., today
for that title.
won by IMC members — three of the
(j RANT
i,
i i ir A c
Inside
Chase went bust. He was sud-
past four by Summit,
denly knocked out of the field.
immediately pre-
Brad Keselowski won the most races in the regular sea-
ceded by three titles
• Prep notebook,C4 • Prep Scoreboard,C4
the title. Then he was wrecked from behind at Talladega, and what seemed like a sure bet for the third round of the
m four years by the Lava Bears — and both intracity foes are back inthe hunt
for still another state
title. Safe to say, then, that the road to
Nextup Class 5A semifinals, Hillsboro at Bend High When:1 p.m., today
It is a reasonable conclusion consid- the 5A state championship comes ering that six of the past eight Class th r o ugh Bend — yet again. 5A state championships have been SeeSoccer/C4
son and picked up victories in each of the first two rounds of the Chase. One came at
Talladega, where he had to win to avoid elimination and
did it as the entire garage area seemed to turn on him for his aggressive driving. Involved in two post-race fights
during this Chase, he never flinched. SeeGordon/C3
COLLEGE FOOTBALLCOMMENTARY
Oregon, Alabama can be happythat mistakes happen
Philadelphis's Jordan Matthews runs with s catch during the second half of Monday
night's game.
Eagles power past Panthers
By Chris Dufresne Los Angetes Times
Defense, special teams and offense all contributed as Philadelphia rolls to a 45-21 victory over Carolina,C3
H
always on.
Tommy Lewis went to his grave last month,
at age 83, after a full life that was not, unfortunately, remembered for his service to his country, church and family. The first line in Lewis' obituary was irrevocably linked to the 1954 Cotton Bowl.
NBA Spurs holdoff Clippers, 89-85 Kawhi Leonard leads San Antonio with 26 points and 10 rebounds in a win over L.A.,C3
is full name was Thomas Edison Lewis, but that did not mean the light bulb was
That was the day Lewis, an Alabama full-
back, somewhat insanely came off the bench to tackle Rice's Dicky Maegle as Maegle raced Tom Smart/ Desert News
Utah wide receiver Kselin Clay (8) drops the ball before crossing the goal line during Saturday's game against Oregon in Salt Lake City. Clay's long reception could have put Utah ahead of the No. 5 Ducks by two touchdowns, but he inexplicably dropped the ball on the1-yard line.
down the sideline toward the end zone.
Lewis claimed he was "just too full of Alabama" to allow Maegle to score. See Mistakes/C4
Nextup Colorado at No. 3 Oregon When:TBA, Saturday, Nov.22 TV:Pac-12 Radio:KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
C2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY TENNIS
ATP Tour, World TourFinals
Time 10a.m.
TV/Rayiie Tennis
FOOTBALL
College, Toledo at Northern lllinois College, Akron at Buffalo
5 p.m. 5 p.m.
ESP N 2 ESP N U
5 p.m.
NBC S N
6 p.m. 7 p.m.
Big Ten CS N NW
HOCKEY
NHL, Buffalo at St. Louis BASKETBALL
Men's college, Bowie State at Maryland NBA, Charlotte at Portland
WEDNESDAY TENNIS
ATP Tour, World TourFinals 4 a.m. ATP Tour, World TourFinals 10 a.m. SOCCER International friendly, Netherlands vs Mexico 11:25 a.m.
Tennis Ten n is E S P N2
Women's college, Mississippi St. at Alabama 3 p.m. ESP N U Women's college, Michigan at Wisconsin 4:30 p.m. B i g Ten VOLLEYBALL
SEC P a c-12
BASKETBALL
NBA, Indiana at Miami NBA, Portland at Denver NBA, Houston at Minnesota
4 :30 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. B l azerNet 7 p.m. ESPN
FOOTBALL
College, Kent State at Bowling Green College, Ball State at Massachusetts
5 p.m. 5 p.m.
ESP N 2 ESP N U
HOCKEY
NHL, Boston at Toronto NHL,LosAngelesatAnaheim GOI.F EuropeanTour, Turkish Airlines Open
Today Boys soccer:Class5Asemifinals, Woodb urn at Summit, 6p.m. Girls soccer. Class5Asemifinals, Hilsboroat Bend, 1p.m4Summit atPutnam, 5p.m. Friday Boys water polo:Class5A/4Asemifinals atDsborn Aquatic Center,Corvaffis, Ashlandvs. Sum mit, 2:30p.m. Girls water polo:Class5A/4A semifinals atDsborn Aquatic Center,Corvagis: Ashlandvs. Madras, 12:10p.mcParkrosevs. Summit,1:20p.m. Saturday Boys waterpolo:Class5A/4AchampionshipatOsbornAquaticCenter, Corvagis Girls water polo: Class 5A/4Achampionship atOsbornAquaticCenter, Corvagis
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE
VOLLEYBALL
Women's college, Auburn at Florida 4 p.m. Women's college, Stanford at Southern Cal 7:30 p.m.
ON DECK
5 p.m. NBC S N 7:30 p.m. N BCSN 1 a.m. (Thur.j Golf
Listingsarethemostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
All TimesPST
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T P c t PF PA N ew England 7 2 0 .7 7 8 281 198 B uffalo 5 4 0 .55 6 191 182 Miami 5 4 0 .556 227 171 N .Y.Jets 2 8 0 .20 0 174 265 South W L T P c t PF PA Indianapolis 6 3 0 . 6 67 290 211 Houston 4 5 0 .4 4 4 206 197 Tennesse e 2 7 0 . 2 22 144 223 Jacksonvile 1 9 0 . 1 00 158 282 North W L T P c t PF PA 6 3 0 . 6 67 209 172 5 3 1 .6 11 197 211 6 4 0 . 6 00 261 239 6 4 0 . 6 00 261 181
West W L T P c t PF PA Denver 7 2 0 .77 8 286 202 K ansas City 6 3 0 .6 6 7 217 151 S an Diego 5 4 0 .55 6 205 186 O akland 0 9 0 .00 0 146 252 NATIONAL CONFERENCE Easl W L T P c t PF PA Philadelphia 7 2 0 .7 7 8 279 198 Dallas 7 3 0 . 7 00 261 212 N.Y.Giants 3 6 0 . 3 33 195 247 Washington 3 6 0 . 3 33 197 229 South W L T P c t PF PA NewOrleans 4 5 0 . 4 44 251 225 Carolina 3 6 1 .3 5 0 198 281 Atlanta 3 6 0 .3 3 3 219 238 TampaBay 1 8 0 . 1 11 167 272 North W L T P c t PF PA 7 2 0 .7 7 8 182 142 6 3 0 . 6 67 277 205 4 5 0 . 4 44 168 199 3
SOCCER DraW allOWS Seattle to adVanCe in MLS PlayoffS —The Seattle Sounders advanced to the MLS CupWestern Conference finals for the second time in franchise history despite playing to a 0-0 draw with FCDallas in the second leg of the conference semifinals on Monday night. The two-leg series finished tied1-1 on aggregate but Seattle moved onthanks to its road goal in the first game in Dallas. Road goals were implemented as atiebreaker this year. The Sounders were able to avoid the perils of the past two Supporters' Shield winners by advancing from the conference semifinals. Seattle will face rival Los Angeles in theWestern Conference finals.
BASEBALL None among 12 free agents accept qualifying offers
— For the third straight year, baseball's free agents shunnedqualifying offers from their former teamsand chose totest the market. All 12 free agents whoweregiven the $15.3 million offers last week chosenottoacceptbyMonday's5 p.m.ESTdeadline.Oneofthe dozen, Colorado outfielder Michael Cuddyer, became the first major free agent to switch teamswhen heagreed to a$21 million, two-year contract with the NewYork Mets. World Series star Pablo Sandoval (San Francisco) also let the deadline pass, asdid pitcher Max Scherzer and first baseman-designated hitter Victor Martinez (Detroit), and left-hander Francisco Liriano andcatcher Russell Martin (Pjttsburgh). The others were shortstop Hanley Ramjrez (LosAngeles Dodgers), outfielder Nelson Cruz(Baltimore), right-hander JamesShields (Kansas City), closer David Robertson (NewYork Yankees), outfielder Melky Cabrera (Torontoj and pitcher Ervin Santana (Atlanta).
MLB ProdingWhether CiidStamPered With Maddon
— Major LeagueBaseball will investigate whether the Chicago Cubs tampered with newmanager JoeMaddon while he wasstill under contract withTampaBay.TheCubsandMaddon'sagent,Alan Nero, have denied the claim by theRays,who believe Maddon opted out of his contract with the knowledge theCubswereprepared to sign him to a lucrative long-term deal. Maddonwound up leaving the Raysfor a five-year deal reportedly worth $25 million.
FOOTBALL FOrmer Viking ThOmaS dieS Of ALS—FormerMinnesotaVikings safety OrlandoThomasdied of complications from ALS. Hewas 42.Thomas wasdiagnosedwithLouGehrig'sdiseasein2004.Hedied on Sunday night in his hometown ofCrowley, Louisiana.Thedeath was confirmed by theVikings, Mark Bartelstein, the formeragentfor Thomas, and GlennBoullion, the director of Geesey-FergusonFuneral Home in Crowley. Thomaswasa hard-hitting starter for seven seasonsfor the Vikings, the last onecoming in 2001. Heled the NFLin interceptions with nine as arookie in1995and finished his career with 22.
CardinalS' Palmer Out fOrSeaSOn—CarsonPalmer hasconfirmed that he is out for the seasonafter tearing an ACLin Sunday's win over St. Louis. The injury comeswith Palmer playing some of the best football of his career on anArizona Cardinals teamthat at 8-1 has the best record in the NFL. He signed a three-year contract extension on Friday. Palmersays he is notan emotional person but"cried like a baby" Sunday night. The34-year-old quarterback, speaking to reporters on Monday,vowedthat he would play football again and hoped it would be for the Cardinals. CoachBruce Arians says Palmer should be back bylate June orJuly.
DA WOn't file ChargeS againSt 49erS' MCDOnald — The Santa Clara County district attorney's office has declined to file charges against SanFrancisco 49ers defensive lineman RayMcDonald in a felony domestic violence investigation stemming from his Aug. 31 arrest. Prosecutors said in a release that they were unableto charge McDonald because of conflicting versions of what happened, a lack of verifiable eyewitnesses and si agnificant lack of cooperation by the alleged victim, McDonald's fiancee.
TENNIS Nadal to reCeiVe Stem Cell treatment fOr haCk — Rafael Nadal's doctor says the 14-time GrandSlamwinner will receive stem cell treatment on his ailing back. Angel Ruiz-Cotorro told TheAssociated Press by phone onMondaythat "we aregoing to put cells in a joint in his spine" next week inBarcelona. Rujz-Cotorro, who has worked as adoctor for Nadal for the past14 years, said Nadal's back pain is "typical of tennis" players and that the treatment is similar to stem cell treatment Nadal received onhis kneelast year. — From wire reports
W A rizona 8 S eattle 6 San Francisco 5 4 S t. Louis 3
6
0 .3 3 3 194 277
West L T 1 0 3 0 0 6 0
P c t PF PA .88 9 223 170 .66 7 240 191 . 5 56195 202 .33 3 163 251
Monday'sGame
Philadelphia 45, Carolina 21 Thursday'sGame BuffaloatMiami 525pm
Sunday'sGames MinnesotaatChicago,10a.m. Seattle at KansasCity,10 a.m. Cincinnatiat Ne wOrleans,10a.m. Denverat St.Louis, 10a.m. HoustonatCleveland,10 a.m. Atlantaat Carolina,10 a.m. TampaBayatWashington,10a.m. SanFranciscoat N.Y. Giants,10a.m. OaklandatSanDiego, 1:05p.m. Detroit atArizona,1;25p.m. Philadelphia at GreenBay,1:25 p.m. NewEnglandatIndianapolis, 5:30p.m. Open:Baltimore,Dalas, Jacksonvile, N.Y.Jets Monday,Nov.17 PittsburghatTennessee,5:30 p.m. Monday'sSummary
Eagles 45, Panthers 21 Carolina P hiladelphia
7 0 0 1 4 — 21 17 1 4 7 7 — 4 6
First Guarler Phi — FGParkey39, 13:25. Phi — Sproles 8run(Parkeykick), 11:25. Car—Stewart1 run(Ganokick), 6:00. Phi — Sproles 65punt return(Parkeykick), 3:29. SecondQuarter
Phi —J.Matthews13 pass from Sanchez (Parkey kick), 11:33. Phi — Fletcher 34interception return (Parkeykick), 2:13.
Third Guarter Phi — McCoy1 run(Parkeykick), 7:40. Fourth Guarter Phi —J.Matthews18 pass from Sanchez (Parkey kick), 11:43. Car—Benjamin21 passfromNewton(Gano kick), 9:05. Car—Benjamin40 passfromNewton(Gano kick), 5:30. C ar
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards
Comp-Att-Int
Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
INOIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING —Carolina: Stewart 11-36, D.Wiliams 13-31, Whittaker6-29, Newton2-6. Philadelphia: McCoy12-19, Polk5-11, Sproles1-8, Barkley3-0, Sanchez 2-(minus 1). PASSING— Carolina:Newton25-40-3-306.Philadelphia:Barkley0-1-0-0, Sanchez20-37-0-332. RECEIVING —Carolina: Olsen6-119, Stewart 4-23, Benjamin3-70, D.Wiffiams3-17, Bersin2-24, Cotchery2-15, Whittaker2-7, Webb1-16, Avant1-8, Dickson1-7.Philadelphia:J.Matthews7-138, Celek 5-116,Maclin3-38, Erlz1-17,Sproles1-13, Cooper 1-6, Huff1-6, McCoy1-(minus2). MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.
BROW NS BEARS PACKES R CHIEFS PANTHE RS SAINTS REDSKIN S
NFL Thursday 5
42 r /r
Sunday
3 r/r 3
3 3 N L NL 1
42 r /r
47 NL
1 r/ r 4 2'/r
N L NL
NL
6N 6 N
5 0r/z
Broncos 49ers CHARG ERS CARDINL AS COLTS
9'/r 9'/r 4 4 1010 2 fr/r 2'/r 2'/r
5 0'/z 43' / r 4 4'/r 4 1r/r 5 7'/z
Steelers
5
7
7
45
Monday 5
47
Colorado
Thursday
ECarolina 1'/r 2 TX-SANTONIO 9 USC 14 14 Friday CFLOR IDA 18 18 Saturday NCAROL INA
NC STA TE PENNST Ohio St lowa WKEN TUCKY
2 2 1 2'/r f 4'/r gr/r 1gr/z f 2'/r 12 5'/2 5'/2
1 gr/r 1 gr/r WMICHIGAN 25r/r 25r/r
WISCON SIN TENNE SSEE RUTGE RS Clemson DUKE AIR FOR CE
6
6
7'/r 7 6H 7/2
2r/2 3 61/r 51/r
PK 2
SFlorida 1 0'/r f 1'/r SALABAM A 4'/r 4'/r Tcu 27'/r 28 ARKAN SASST 13'/r 13'/r BYU 23r/r 24 STANFO RD
UTAH ST BOISEST Oklahoma ARKAN SAS ARIZON A GEORG IA FLORIDA FloridaSt NAVY MARSHA LL NOTRE DAME CMICHIGN A
16 17 14 14 2
9 2
2 r/r
9
2 '/r
51/r 61/r
3 2 3H 3 2 0 21
f 6'/r 17 14'/z 15
L 1 2 2 2 3 7
W 8 8 6 7 6 2
L 1 2 3 2 3 8
PF PA 330 224 347 279 314 203 329 235 294 221 298 386
Thursday'sGame Californiaat Southern Cal, 6p.m. Saturday'sGames WashingtonatArizona,12:30 p.m. Utah atStanford, 3p.m. ArizonaStateatOregonState, 7:45p.m.
Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague DETROI TTIGERS— NamedDavidNewhanassistant hittingcoach. National League ATLANT ABRAVES—Agreedtotermswith OFZoilo Almonteonaone-yearcontract andRHPChien-Ming WangandLHPDonnieVealonminor leaguecontracts. CINCINN ATI REDS—NamedJimRigglemanthird basecoach.
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
All TimesPST
Pittsburgh WakeForest Temple MINNES OTA ILLINOIS Army EMichigan Nebraska Kentucky Indiana GATECH Va Tech Nevada SMU TexasSt KANSAS App'chianSt Unlv Uiah NewMexico SanDiegoSt TEXAS TECH Lsu Washington Auburn SCarolina MIAMI-FLA Ga Southern Rice Northwestern Miami-Ohio
EasternConference AtlanticDivision GP W L OT Pts GF GA 1 1 0 5 2 3 4 2
23 58 41 21 37 42 20 47 37 19 40 37 18 47 42 17 38 34 12 20 30 8 20 54
GP W L OT Pittsburgh 1 3 1 0 2 1 N.Y.Islanders 14 9 5 0 Philadelphia 14 7 5 2 Washington 14 6 5 3 N.Y.Rangers 14 6 6 2 NewJersey 15 6 7 2 Carolina 14 5 6 3 Columbus 14 4 9 1
21 55 27 18 42 42 16 45 43 15 45 42 14 39 46 14 40 49 13 35 44 9 36 51
Nashville St. Louis Winnipeg Chicago Minnesota
Colorado Dallas
1 5 11 3 1 5 10 4 1 6 10 6 15 7 3 15 8 5 14 7 4 12 4 4 16 3 11
Metropolitan Division Pts GF GA
WesternConference CentralDivision GP W L OT Pts GF GA 14 14 15 15 13 16 14
9 9 8 8 7 4 4
4 6 6 7 6
3 2 1 5 2 1 0 5 4
20 35 19 35 18 30 17 41 14 37 13 40 12 40
28 28 32 28 29 50 50
Pacilic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 1 6 1 0 3 3 23 41 32 V ancouver 16 11 5 0 22 49 44 Calgary 17 9 6 2 20 50 45 Los Angeles 15 8 4 3 19 37 30 SanJose 1 6 8 6 2 18 50 46 Arizona 14 6 7 1 13 34 47 Edmonton 15 6 8 1 13 38 51
Monday'sGames Boston 4, NewJersey2 Carolina 4, Calgary1
(Two-legaggregate) Monday'sGame FC Dallas0,Seattle0, Seattle advancesonawaygoals CONFERENCECHAMPIONSHIPS Sunday,Nov.23 NewEnglandat Ne wYork,10;30a.m. Seattle atLosAngeles, 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov.29 NewYorkat NewEngland,noon Sunday,Nov.30 Los Angeleat s Seattle 6 p.m.
DEALS
HOCKEY
Boston CINCINNA TI Detroit So Miss Toronto California Ottawa Florida Tulsa Buffalo
CONFERENCESEMIFINALS
ATIa
Pac-12 Friday's Games DrexelatColorado,5 p.m. MountSt. Mary'sat Arizona,5p.m. SouthCarolinaStateatWashington, 7 p.m. ChicagoStateat ArizonaState, 7 p.m. Ball StateatUtah, 7p.m. WashingtonStateat UTEP,7p.m. AlcornStateatCalifornia, 7p.m. Rice atOregonState, 7p.m. CoppinStateat Oregon, 9p.m. MontanaStateat UCLA, 9p.m. Wofford at Stanford,9p.m. Saturday'sGame PortlandStateatSouthernCal, 7;30p.m.
Bay Ball St Tampa Kent St Montreal
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPST
ATPWorldTourFinals Sunday atLondon RoundRobin GroupA Stan Wawrinka (3), Switzerland, def. Tomas Berdych(6), CzechRepublic, 6-1, 6-1. NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia,def.Marin Cilic (8), Croatia,6-1,6-1. Standings: Djokovic1-0 (2-0), Waw rinka1-0(20), Berdych 0-1(0-2), Cilic0-1(0-2).
Men's College
TITA NS
MLS playoffs
TENNIS
BASKETBALL
Akron 31/r 31/r 491/2 BUFFALO NO ILLINO IS 4 Toledo
Wednesday
W 5 5 5 4 3 0
ArizonaState UCLA SouthernCal Arizona Utah
College Today
UMASS 3 3 r/ r B f r/r BOWLGREEN 13 1 3 53
SOCCER
W L W L I PF PA 1 460 250 4 222 145 4 377359 4 307 264 7 338 380 5 241 268
Oregon 6 1 9 Stanford 3 3 5 California 3 4 5 Washington 2 4 6 WashingtonState 2 5 3 OregonState 1 5 4 SouthDivision
All TimesPST
Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog (Home teamin CAPS)
Today'sGames MinnesotaatNewJersey,4 p.m. ColoradoatN.Y. Islanders, 4p.m. Pittsburghat N.Y. Rangers,4 p.m. Columbus atWashington, 4 p.m. Winnipeg at Montreal, 4:30p.m. SanJoseat Florida,4:30 p.m. BuffaloatSt. Louis, 5p.m. EdmontonatNashvtlle, 5 p.m. TampaBayatChicago,5:30p.m. Dallas atArizona, 6p.m. OttawaatVancouver, 7p.m.
Wednesday'sGames BostonatToronto, 5p.m. LosAngelesatAnaheim,7:30p.m.
NorthDivision ConferenceOveral
America's Line
D OLPHINS 5r/r
4'/r — FLORIDA INT'L 10'/r Hawaii 5 Troy 5/2 Missouri 11 TULANE 7'/z UL-MDNR OE 9'/r OREGO NST 7 Miss St 2 — OKLAHOM AST 12 MARYLAN D Br/r NTexas
Pac-12 All TimesPST
Ph i
21 17 3 17 36 5 32-102 23-37 2 15 328 3 -19 3 - 85 3-82 0-0 0 -0 3 - 36 25-40-3 20-38-0 9-91 1-4 7-47.6 7-43.3 3-2 2-0 4 -30 5 - 50 38:05 21:55
Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet.
Mid Tenn St 4r/r SANJOSEST 10 I DAHO 4'/r TEXAS A&M Sr/r Memphis fgr/r UL-Lafayette 7N Arizona St 9 ALABAMA 7 Texas f r/r Michigan St 11 U TEP fy/ r
NEWYORKMETS—Agreedto termswith OFMichaelCuddyeronatwo-yearcontract. SANDIEGO PADRES— NamedMarkConnerdirector ofscouting. WASHIN GTON NATIONALS — Agreedto terms with INFEmmanuel Burriss andRHPManny Delcarmen on minorleaguecontracts. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association MEMPHISGRIZZLIES— Recalled GJordan AdamsandF/0JarnegStokesfromlowa(NBADL). PHILADEL PHIA76ERS— SignedC DrewGordon fromDelaware(NBADL). HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL— FinedDallasFAntoineRoussel$5,376.34 for punchinganunsuspecting opponent during Saturday'sgame. CAROLINA HURRICANES— Recalled DMichal Jordan fromCharlotte (AHL). DETROIT REDWINGS— RecalledGTom Mccollum from GrandRapids(AHL). AssignedGPetr Mrazek to Grand Rapids.ReassignedGJaredCoreaufromToledo (ECHL) to Grand Rapids. DETROIT—TheDetroit RedWingstodayrecalledgoaltenderTomMccogum from theAHL'sGrandRapids Griffins andassigned Petr Mrazek to theGriffins. MONTREALCANADIENS — Assigned F Rene Bourqueto Hamilton(AHL). Recalled FDraysonBowmanfromHamilton. NEWYORKRANGERS— RecalledFJesperFast from Harfford(AHL). AssignedDConor Allen andF RyanMaloneto Harfford. TORO NTOMAPLELEAFS—AssignedFsSamCarrick and JoshLeivoandDStuartPercytoToronto(AHL). SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer ORLANDOCITYSC— NamedMarkWatsonassistantcoach. COLLEGE NCAA — Grantedasixth yearofeligibility to Duke LB KelbyBrownandTEBraxtonDeaver. ST. NDREBRT— Announced the resignation of women'vol s leyball coachBethaniThibodeau. UCDNN —Suspendedwomen'ssoccer playerNorianaRadwanindefinitely.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Cuban pipeline:Abreutoday, Tomastomorrow By Tyler Kepner
in 10 September games.
New York Times News Service
enticing. "It's so hard to find power, and to find more than Castillo — will be Yasmani Tomas, a right-handed-hitting outfielder who immediate power is even harder," the scout is drawing attention from 12 teams, ac- said. "Whenyou do it in free agency, you're cording to his agent, Jay Alou. paying a Iot of money to those guys. Look "He's a very powerful ancI exciting play- at what Curtis Granderson got, at that er," Aiou said Monday. "He plays like Ken age." Griffey Jr. usedtoplay, with abig old smile. Granderson, who turns 34 in March, On off days, he's out playing stickball with signed a four-year, $60 million deal last kids. He loves to play, and he probably has December with the New York Mets, who more power than anybody I've seen in a lost their second-round draft pick to sign long time — a very balanced swing with him. Granderson hit 20homers with a.227 power to aii fields." average, and the Mets are now moving in Tomas, who turns 24 this month, defect- some of their fences. ed in June to Haiti and worked out for all Tomas projects as a right fielder — alteams in September in the Dominican Re- though Alou said he could play any outpublic. In 205 games in Cuba for the Hava- field spot, or either infield corner — and na Industriales, he hit 30 home runs with would seem to be a good fit for the Mets. 104 RBIs. He was 6-for-16 with two homers But they have played down expectations in the 2013 World Baseball Classic and is for a splashy addition and on Monday they also considered to have above-average signed 35-year-old Michael Cuddyer, makspeecl. ing any move for Tomas highly unlikely. From the mid-1990s to the early 2000s, Tomas is a top target of the Philadelphia most of the high-impact Cuban defectors Phillies, and he has also drawn interest were pitchers, including half brothers from Arizona, Boston, San Diego and
The leading slugger in baseball's majorleagues lastseason was Jose Abreu, a rookie first baseman from Cuba whose six-year, $68 million contract was thought to be a reach for the owner of the Chicago White Sox. "The person who deserves the most credit is Jerry Reinsdorf, who didn't throw
us out of his office for advocating approaching $70 million for a player who's never played in the States before — and a recordforthe White Sox," generalmanager Rick Hahn said at U.S. Cellular Field early last season. "Some of the conversation we had with Jerry centered around the fact that it's a
risk, but given where the current market is for players, roughly $11 million a year doesn't carry with it the need to be a super-
star. That is the going rate for a very solid player." The White Sox got much better than soi-
hitter without surrendering a draft pick is
The next to cash in — and probably for
id. Abreu batted .317 with a .383 on-base percentageand a major-league-best .581 slugging percentage. He also hit 36 home Livan and Orlando Hernandez,Rolando runs with 107 runs batted in, and on Mon- Arrojo, Danys Baez and Jose Contreras. day hewas named the American League In the last 10 years, more Cuban posiRookie of the Year. tion players have come to the majors ancI The impact of that performance extend- thrived. "This new class is very powerful, and ed far beyond Chicago. Abreu was the latest, and best, example of a Cuban free they've proven that with their production," agent making a quick transition to major said one scout who has seen Tomas play. league stardom, at a reasonable price. In "That's what's impressed a lot of people an industry awash with revenue — but al- about Tomas. He played in the same group ways looking for bargains — the secret is as Abreu, Puig and those kinds of guys, out. and he's in that dass. He played with them Abreu's deal had exceeded those for and produced at that level. A lot of teams outfielders Yoenis Cespedes (four years, see Abreu, Puig and Cespedes, and they $36 million with Oakland in February want that — ancI, plus, he's only 23 or 24." 2012) and Yasiel Puig (seven years, $42 The scout, who was granted anonymity million from the Los Angeles Dodgers in to conceal his team's interest level, said CuJune 2012), but another outfielder, Rusney ban players still carried plenty of risk beCastillo, topped Abreu in August. Castillo, cause scouts can rarely see them against who signed with Boston for seven years top competition. But with power waning in and $72.5 million, hit.333 with two homers the majors, the chance to sign a home run
Texas, among others. He is listed at 6 feet
1 inch tall and weighs about 230 pounds, and he told Vice Sports' Jorge Arangure Jr. that, with his size, he probably would have
played football if he had been born in the United States.
As a baseballplayer,hesaid,hewaseager to challenge himself inthe world's most competitive league and was not motivated
by the chance to edipse Castillo's deaL "It's great to have that opportunity, but my objective has always been just to play baseball," Tomas told Arangure. "I love baseball. As a boy, I was always passionate about baseball. And I just want to keep
playing and see what the possibilities can be. The money isn't necessarily going to be the most important thing I think about."
But it will likely be significant, and for that, Tomas can thank his fellow slugging defectors, including Abreu.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
NBA ROUNDUP
urs ra ast The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Kawhi Leonard tied his
career high with 26 points despite playing with only one good eye, and the San Antonio Spurs closed with a rush to beat the Los Angeles Clip-
pers 89-85 Monday night. Leonard's vision has been affected by a case of conjunctivitis. Still, he pulled down 10 re-
bounds andgave the defending NBA champions their first lead with 1:44 left. Tim Duncan added 18 points and 11 re-
bounds, and Tony Parker scored nine of his 13 in the fourth quarter for the Spurs, who snapped a two-game skid while earning their first road win.
San Antonio finished the game on a 14-3 run, giving Duncan, Manu Ginobili and Parker their 500th career victory together. They are second among trios in NBA history to Larry Bird, Kevin McHale and Robert Parish, who won 540 Michael Perez /The Associated Press
Philadelphia's Brent Celek (87) tries to break a tackle by Carolina's Thomas DeCoud during the second half of Monday night's game in Philadelphia. The Eagles won 45-21.
games with the Boston Celtics. Blake Griffin led the Clippers with 23 points and 10 rebounds, but committed two consec-
utive turnovers that led to the Spurs taking
Pant ers nomatc or Eages NFL
By Rob Maaddi The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA — Malk
times in his career.
"We wanted to keep Cam
win at Houston last week.
Sanchez did his part for the The Panthers (3-6-1) hardEagles while the defense ly look like the team that dominated and special teams won the NFC South last year. They've lost four in a row and shined. Darren Sproles had two alreadyhave all owed more touchdowns, Sanchez threw points in 10 games than they for two scores and the de- did in 2013. Making things fense sacked Cam Newton worse, Panthers defensive nine times to help Philadel- t ackle Star L o t ulelei w a s phia beat the Carolina Pan- carted off the field late in the thers 45-21 Monday night. third quarter. "We've got to do things Filling in for an injured Nick Foles, Sanchez had 332 better," Panthers coach Ron yards passing in his first start Rivera said. "I have to coach since Dec. 30, 2012. Sproles better, coaches have to coach returned a punt 65 yards for better, we have to practice a score and had an 8-yard better and then go out and TD run. Bradley Fletcher play better. And we're going returned an interception 34 yards for a TD and Jordan
to do it together as a team." N ewton threw t h e f i r st of three interceptions and
Matthews had 138 yards receiving and two TDs. DeAngelo Williams lost a "Just a n ou t standing fumble on Carolina's first performance by all t hree three plays from scrimmage. phases," Sanchez said. The turnovers led to 10 points The Eagles (7-2) stayed on for the Eagles. top in the NFC East. They're C onor Barwin h a d 3I/z trying to repeat as division sacks and Brandon Graham champions w i thout
F o les, had II/z. Newton had never
who broke his collarbone in a been sacked more than seven
in the pocket and if we didn't, w e didn't want him t o g o
north, we just wanted him
the lead for the first time. J.J. Redick added 13 points, and Chris Paul had 12 points and
10 rebounds while just missing his second triple-double of the season with nine assists.
The Clippers led by seven with just under 6 minutes to play before their shooting went cold Mark J.Terrill/The Associated Press and Griffin's miscues proved costly. San Antonio forward Tim Duncan, center, puts He lost the ball, and Leonard's fast-break up a shot as LosAngeles Clippers forward Matt layup gave San Antonio its first lead at 83-82. Barnes, left, and forward Spencer Hawes defend Boris Diaw then stole the ball from Griffin. Parker missed, but the ball caromed out to the
during the first half of Monday night's game in
Los Angeles.
to go east and west and we did that," Barwin said. "No-
Spurs and Diaw hit a floater. Ginobili scored to
body gave him a hole to rush through. Everyone stayed disciplined and he didn't really know where to go when he
Jamal Crawford got fouled on a 3-pointer and Irving scored 27 of his 32 points in the second made all three, drawing the Clippers within two. half to lead Cleveland over New Orleans. Kevin Ginobili missed two free throws with 10 sec- Love added 22 points for the Cavs, who played onds to go and the Clippers called a timeout. their second home game this season. Paul missed on a drive to the basket and GrifBulls 102, Pistons 91:CHICAGO — Derrick fin landed on the floor going for the rebound as Rosehad24points and sevenassists inhis return the Clippers called a timeout they didn't have. to the lineup, and balanced Chicago beat Detroit. After a review, the clock was set at 1.4 sec- Rose was 9 for 20 from the field in 32 minutes afonds. Parker missed the technical foul shot, ter being sidelined by sprained ankles. but the Spurs retained possession. Leonard got Hawks 91, Knicks 85: NEW YORK — Paul fouled in the final seconds and made both. Millsap scored 19 points, Dennis Schroder exSan Antonio twice got within two in t he tended his best stretch in the NBA with two big fourth, both times on free throws by Parker. baskets in the final 2 minutes, and Atlanta sent He made a pair after Paul got called for a foul, New York to is fifth straight loss. Kyle Korver although it appeared Parker pushed him down added 17 points as Atlanta finished a homewith his hand as the two got tangled on a drive and-home sweep, including a 103-96 win Saturto the basket. day at home.
tried to escape."
The game was in Philadelphia's control when Newton threw a pair of fourth-quarter TDs to Kelvin Benjamin.
Sanchez, the former franc hise quarterback for t h e
New York Jets, signed a oneyear deal to back up Foles after missing l ast
s eason
following shoulder surgery. Though he led the Jets to the
AFC championship game his first two seasons, he didn't live up to enormous expectations in New York after being
picked fifth in the 2009 draft. But Sanchez had one of
the best games of his career in his first start in Chip Kelly's up-tempo, quarterback-friendly offense.
make it 87-82.
Both teams went 2 minutes without scoring
Pacers 97, Jazz 86: INDIANAPOLIS — Roy
before Duncan rattled off six straight points as Hibbert scored a season-high 29 points to help part of the 14-0 run. Indiana beat Utah, ending the Pacers' six-game Also on Monday: losing streak. A.J. Price had 22 points and LaCavaliers 118, Pelicans 111:CLEVELAND voy Allen added 12 — also season highs for — LeBron James had a triple-double with 32 both players — as the Pacers won for the first points, 12 rebounds and 10 assists, and Kyrie time since the season opener.
NBA SCOREBOARD
NHL ROUNDUP
All TimesPST
Bruins take 4-2 win over Devils The Associated Press BOSTON — Bruins coach Claude Julien liked the way Seth Griffith blocked a shot in the Boston end to start the play.
Forward Patrice Bergeron complimented him on the "sick" way he ended it, with a shot
that went double 5-hole: Backward between Griffith's own legs, and then just under goalie Corey Schneider's pad on its way to the back of the net.
"I knew if I got it on net, something good might happen," Griffith said after his highCharles Krupa/The Associated Press light-reel goal helped the Bruins beat the New New Jersey left wing Mike Cammalleri, left, tanJersey Devils 4-2 on Monday night. gles with Boston right wing Reilly Smith during After blocking a shot to start the break- the first period of Monday's game inBoston. out, Griffith muscled through two Devils as he crossedthe blue line.As he approached the crease, New Jersey defenseman Marek the legs, it's not going to happen again." Zidlicky spun Griffith around, but he slapped Bergeron had a goal and two assists, and the puck backward and past the goalie. Tuukka Rask stopped 26 shots for Boston, The play got a big cheer from the sold-out which won its fifth straight game. Griffith's TD Garden crowd — and an even bigger goal made it 3-2 with 1:59 left in the second peone when it was replayed on the scoreboard and fans could see in slow motion what had
riod, and Reilly Smith scored 80 seconds later
to give Boston a 4-2 lead. happened. Also on Monday: "The (Bruins') third goal was a highlight Hurricanes 4, Flames 1:RALEIGH, N.C. goal. But it was kind of lucky, too, when you Justin Faulk had a goal and two assists, Jeff look at it," said Devils forward Jaromir Jagr, Skinnerscored his 100th careergoaland Carwho scored for New Jersey. "To score between olina beat Calgary.
d-Toronto d-Chicago d-Miami Washington 6rooklyri Boston Atlanta Cleveland Charlotte Milwaukee Detroit Orlando NewYork Indiana Philadelphia
EasternConierence L P c t GB
Continued from C1 But a mechanical problem at Mar-
W 0 2 3 4 5 6
Monday'sGames
Indiana 97,Utah86 Cleveland118,NewOrleansII1 Atlanta91,NewYork85 Chicago102,Detroit 9I SanAntonio89,LA. Clippers85
Today'sGames
OrlandoatToronto, 4:30p.m. LA. Lakers atMemphis, 5p.m. OklahomaCity atMilwaukee,5 p.m. Sacramento at Dallas 530p m
II I'/r 21/2 21/2 21/2
4 3 41/2
4'A 6
Summaries Mottda y'sGames
31/2
SANANTONIO(89) LeonardIO-IB 5-526, Duncan6-14 6-8 18, Bonner 2-100-0 5, Parker3-13 7-9 13,Green1-50-0 2, Ginobili 4-8 2-410,Diaw4-7 0-08,Joseph0-4 0-0 0,Baynes3-41-I 7, Anderson0-00-00. Totals 33-83 21-2789. LA. CLIPPERS (85) Crawford3-133-310, Griffin 9-175-7 23,Jordan 3-5 0-0 6, Paul6-13 0-0 12,Redick4-10 3-3 13, Barnes 2-42-28, Hawe s4-61-29, Farmar0-10-00, Turko gl u00000,Davis24004,Cunningham01 0-0 0. Totals33-74 14-1785. SattAn I ottio 14 2 5 25 25 — 89 LA. Clippers 20 2 2 28 15 — 85
4 O'A
BIIIIS102, PiStanS 91
GB I/2
I 2 2 21/2 21/2
3'A
4'/r
was knocked out Sunday despite his
his fitness and extra cognizant of his creaky back.
line, he had made it to the final four
All of it would come at the cost of time spent with his wife and two
of NASCAR's playoffs and would race for the title this weekend at
When Gordon crossed the finish
young children. To win, Gordon could not
Homestead-Miami Speedway. But it w i t h g o o d c o nscience flipped in the blink of an eye when
have his team question if there was something more the driver could be contributing. a legitimate threat to win every sinIngrid told her husband, without gle week. He so badly wanted a fifth hesitation, to go for it. He did, and at championship that he recommitted 43 years old and 19 years removed himself to his craft and raced like he from his first championship, Jeff had not raced in years. Gordon was back. Chasing the championship that He won at Kansas, at Michigan, has eludedhim sincehepicked up his at Dover in the Chase, and oh, that fourth title in 2001 was not an easy treasured Brickyard 400 win at Indidecision. He and his wife, Ingrid, anapolis Motor Speedway 20 years had a heart-to-heart talk about the after he won NASCAR's inaugural commitment that goes into winning race at the storied track. Gordon's a championship. Gordon explained laps led are the most since 2007, the that winning a title means making last legitimate title shot he had before tremendous sacrifices at home. He this season. His average starting powould need to be in the Hendrick Mo- sition and average finishing position
Ryan Newman, needing just one spot on the track to bump Gordon out of
the finale, used an aggressive move on Kyle Larson coming out of the final turn. Newman, winless on the
Only Gordon did just that and the
UTAH (86)
Hayward I1-15 6-630, Favors5-133-613, Kanter 783318, Burke2-12005, Burks4131-I 9, Exum 1-50-0 3,Booker1-4O-I 2, Gobert0-13-43, Ingles 1-3 0-0 3,Evans0-0 0-0 0, Novak0-0 0-00. Totals 32-7416-21 86. INDIANA (97) Copeland2-6 0-0 6, Scola4-IO 0-0 8, Hibbert 11-21 7-7 29,Sloaii 1-9 0-0 2, S.Hill 5-12 3-413, Allen6-120-012,Rtidezi-60-03, Piice8-123-422,
Mahinmi I-20-02. Totals39-9013-15 97. Utah 20 21 28 17 — 86 Indiana 17 30 25 25 — 97
sEWORLEANS(111) Evans 2142 26,DavisI22I3427,Asik25 4-4 8, Holiday5-12 5-5 I6, Gordon4-11 1-3 IO, AndersonII-19 2-2 32,Rivers3-60-0 8, Salmons 0-1 0-0 0, Fredette2-4 0-0 4. Totals 41-93 1720111. CLEVEL AND(118) James9-1713-17 32,Love7-132-222, Vareiao 4-7 4-412, Irving11-216-7 32, Marion 2-5 0-04, M.Miller 1-30-0 3,Thompson3-70-0 6, Harris 2-6 0-05, Cherry I-20-02, Kirk 0-00-00. Totals40-81 25-30 118. New Orleans Cleveland
stead in his grasp to a 29th-place finish. It dropped him from first to fourth in the standings and made
him vulnerable at Phoenix, something he instantly recognized based on his decision to confront Keselows-
ki on pit road in a scene that quickly was second again at Phoenix, where became a bloody brawl. winner Kevin Harvick used the victoKeselowski has steadfastly dery to punch his ticket to Homestead. fended his driving at Texas, and he The dagger was the middle race, said that what happened there was last week at Texas, where Gordon just one of those racing deals. But was actually en route to victory lane he knows in his heart that Gordon when his season came crashing deserved to be in the finale and that down. He was leading that race and one moment destroyed something nobody was catching up, but a cau- Gordon had worked so hard for and tion came out and allowed the field so desperately wanted.
season and with just four top-five finishes and 41 laps led all year, finished a shot at stealing the win away from 11th — good enough to give him a him. one-pointadvantage over Gordon He lined up on a restart next to and claim the fourth and final spot at t eammate Jimmie J o hnson a n d Homestead. raced him hard intothe corner. Gordon did not blame Newman for Enough space was left between the his last-lap act of desperation. He has two cars that Keselowski believed he been around long enough to under- could slip in and snag the lead from stand that you play with the format Gordon. The hole closed fast, Gordon provided and do everything needed and Keselowski touched, and Gordon to make it work in your favor.
ATLANTA (91) Carroll 2-74-49,Milsap6-144-419, Horford5-9 2-212, Teague 0-43-4 3, Korver4-136-617, Antic 2-4 0-0 5,Sefolosha2-5 0-04, Schroder4-86-614, Scott t-r 2-28.Totals27-71 27-2891. NEWYORK(85) Shtimpert 8-120-0 18, Anthony 11-253-5 25, Dalembert0-0 0-0 0, Larkin1-5 0-02, Hardawa yJr. 6-111-1 15,Stoudemire 2 50 24, J. Smith4-112-2 12, Prigioni1-31-2 3,Early0-4 0-00, Ja.Smith 3-7 0-0 6.Totals 36-837-1285. Atlanta 17 21 26 27 — 91 New York 16 22 21 26 — 85
Cavaliers118, Peiicans111
DETROIT (91) Monroe8-150-016, Smith8-19 2-319, Drummond 0-52-42, Jennings3-113-411, Caldwel-Pope 3-9 2-4 9,C.Butler 3-61-1 9,Singler4-7 0-09, Augustiii 5-86-916.Totals34-8016-25 91. CHICAGO (102) Dtinleavy2-7 3-3 7, Gasol 8-17 1-2 17, Noah 5-13 3-413,Rose9-20 4-524,J.Butler 6-123-319, Hinrich 2-50-04, Gibson4-70-08, McDermott O-I 0-0 0, Brooks 3-6 3-310, Mirotic 0-00-0 0. Totals 39-8817-20102. Detroit 21 23 26 21 — 91 Chicago 27 33 18 24 — 102
orders to have Earnhardt allow Gordon to win the race and earn the automatic berth in the finale. And he
Hawks 91, Knicks 85
Pacers 97, Jazz86
Spurs 89, Clippers 85
were the highest in years, and he led format crushed him. in points for 20 of 35 weeks. He finished second to teammate have to miss days at home during the And yet Gordon is out, eliminated Earnhardt at M a r t insville, where week if the team wanted to test, and Sunday after a second-place finish at Hendrick quite clearly had no team Phoenix.
None, though, are as heartbreaking as Jeff Gordon's defeat. This was his year, his throwback season to the days when ol' J.G. was
1/2
tend competition meetings. He would he would need to be fanatical about
pointment, maybe devastation. All of them hurt.
. 8 57 . 7 50 . 7 14 . 7 14 . 6 67 . 5 00 . 5 00 . 5 00 . 4 29 . 4 29 . 2 86 . 2 86 . 2 50 . 2 50 . 0 00
Wednesday'sGames Detroit atWashington,4 p.m. Utah atAtlanta,4:30 p.m. Indiana at Miami,4:30p.m. Oklahoma City at Boston, 4:30p.m. OrlandoatNewYork,4:30 p.m. LA. Lakers at NewOrleans, 5 p.m. BrooklynatPhoenix, 6p.m. Portlandat Denver, 6p.m. Houstonvs.MinnesotaatMexicoCity, Mexico, 7 p.m.
torsports shop, he would need to at-
tinsville doomed Keselowski, who series-best six wins this season. With those failures comes disap-
I 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7
Westernonference C L P ct d-Memphis I .857 I Houston W I 1 2 3 4 5 6 .857 tI-GoldenState 1 .833 d-Portlartd 3 .571 Sacrame nto 2 .714 Dallas 3 .57I Phoenix 3 .571 LA. Clippers 3 .57I NewOrleans 3 .500 SanAntonio 3 .500 Utah 5 .375 Minnesota 4 .333 Oklahoma City 5 .286 Denver 5 .167 LA. Lakers 5 .167 d-divisionleader
-
Gordon
CharlotteatPortland, 7p.m. SanAntonioatGoldenState, 7:30p.m.
Standings
was left with a flat tire. Gordon went from having Home-
Keselowski will now live with that forever. And so will Gordon. "It's tough to swallow that two sec-
ond-place finishes and staring down a potential win last week, that we
didn't get it done," Gordon said. "I felt like this was a round where we could really shine, and we did. But it still
wasn't enough." No, it was not enough. And it is very tough to swallow.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
Mistakes Continued from C1 Maegle, of course, was awarded the 95-yard touchd own and R ice wo n t h e
game, 28-6. It tormented Lewis that
one moment could define him. "If I could take back anything in my whole life, that would be it," he would tell
"I take full
responsibility for what happened tonight. I will take the criticism and the blame. It wasjust
one of those things. I got excited and let the momentjust get away from me."
reporters in the rare times he even spoke about the
— Utah wide receiver Kaelin Clay
incident.
It was easy to think of Lewis this weekend after watching the brain cramps that cost, and conversely saved, some of our favorite college football programs. "Wrong Way" Roy Riegels, if he was looking the opposite way down from above, would understand. So might Fred Snodgrass, who dropped a fly ball that cost the New York Giants the 1912 World Series.
Forgive and forget?
excited and let the moment
just get away from me." Clay's was not the only cerebellum slip-up to dramatically affect the playoff race.
T wo-loss Auburn w a s likely eliminated from contention after fouling up the
final seconds of a 41-38 home loss to unranked Texas A&M. A uburn committed t w o
The New Y or k T i m es' unforced fumbles in the fi1974 obit read: "Fred Sno- nal 180 seconds to cost the
dgrass, 86, Dead; Ball Player Muffed 1912 fly." If Oregon wins this year's national college football title, the pivot point will be a Saturday night live skit
Tigers a chance to stay in the national title race. The first was a
s i mple
handoff exchange near the Texas Al|:M goal line. The second was an inadvertent
snap from Auburn center Ducks linebacker Joe Walk- Reese Dismukes. er raced 100 yards down Dismukes snapped the another sideline for one of ball as quarterback Nick the most improbable mood- Marshall was approaching swing touchdowns in college the line to change the play. football history. How many times had that Utah had rightly thought ever happened? in Salt Lake City in which
it had taken a 14-0 lead as re-
"Never," Dismukes said
ceiver Kaelin Clay ran unim- later. "Obviously, it was a peded toward the end zone miscommunication." with the long pass he had In Baton Rouge, Alabama caught from quarterback kept its national title hopes Travis Wilson. The fans at Rice-Eccles
Stadium erupted as Clay celebrated with teammates in the end zone.
This was the same Clay who was the hero in Utah's
afloat with a 20-13 overtime win against Louisiana State.
The Crimson Tide victory was aided and abetted by
several displays of questionable LSU decision-making. The m os t
i n e x cusable
24-21 win against USC only a few weeks ago, catching the game-winning pass
was a personal foul penalty called on guard Vadal
from Wilson with eight sec-
chance in regulation. The Tigers, with the game
onds left. This ending was different. Starting his celebration a game-altering couple of feet too soon, Clay dropped the ball short of crossing the goal line. The depth of Clay's blunder was matched only by the brilliance of Oregon players who did not give up on the play and, yes, the Pac-12 Conference officials who did not whistle the play dead.
Oregon defenders Walker and Erick Dargan actually fought over the loose ball in the end zone. Walker picked it up and was led by a convoy of teammates the other
way as Utah continued to celebrate. Instead of tr ailing 14-0,
Oregon tied the game at 7-7. And the Ducks went on to win, 51-27.
tied 10-10, seemed primed to win after Alabama tailback T.J. Yeldon handed them a
gift fumble, with just over a minute to play, near his own goal line. Alexander's foul on first
down, though, forced LSU back to its 21-yard line, where it had to settle for a
field goal to put the Tigers up 13-10.
"That penalty changed the complexion of the game," LSU coach Les Miles said afterward.
Trent Domingue then made a critical, if not innocent, mistake by booting the ensuing kickoff out of bounds, setting Alabama up its 35-yard line. The Crimson Tide, without an y t i m eouts, r aced d ownfield an d s e n t t h e
den-variety 51-27 win," Or-
w e could h ave wo n
egon coach Mark Helfrich
football game," Miles said
understated afterward.
afterward. Alabama scored a touchdown on its first overtime
clinched the Pac-12 North ti-
this
tle in advance of a bye week possession and secured victo be followed by closing tory on LSU's failed fourthgames against Colorado and down pass to the end zone. Oregon State. LSU may have deserved a T he Ducks w il l d o n o worse than retain their No.
4 spot in this week's College Football Playoff rankings. Give credit to Utah's Clay for addressing his mistake. Many college sports information departments would have shielded Clay from the
pass-interference call.
Tigers quarterback Anthony Jennings, however, also had open field and could have likely rushed for a first down to extend the drive.
man for it.
"Obviously, we just needed the first down," Jennings said. Coaches tell players to learn from their mistakes
icism and the blame. It was
said "thanks" and m oved
just one of those things. I got
on.
scrutiny.
Clay is already a better
"I take full responsibility and move forward. for what happened tonight," The teams that took adhe said. "I will take the crit- vantage this past weekend
Rodeo Continued from C1 The third average champion from Central Oregon was Redmond's Allen Helmuth, who was first in t h e bull
riding with 226 points on three head ($1,809). Helmuth placed in all t hree rounds — fourth in the first round,
tiedforsecond in the second round, and third in the third
round. Other notable p erfor-
of Terrebonne, who placed
third in the average in steer roping (27.3 seconds, $651); Sean Santucci, of Prineville,
who tied for first place in the first round of steer wrestling
(3.8 seconds, $1,055) and was fourth in the second round (4.5 seconds, $301); and Jordan Weaver, of Powell Butte,
who placed fourth in the first round of tie-down roping (8.8 seconds, $301). Champions from the Columbia River Circuit Finals
were turned in by Tami Semas, of Prineville, who
Rodeo, as well as the yearend winners in the circuit, qualify for the National Cir-
tied for third in the average
cuit Finals Rodeo, set for
mances by area contestants
Prep notedook
sistant coach for a state cham-
TVC ALL-LEAGUETEAMS ANNOUNCED For the second straight season, Madras swept the playerand coach of the yearhonors for volleyball in theTri-Valley Conference. Ayear after teammate Shelby Mauritson wasvoted as the TVCplayer of the year, White Buffalo senior Alexis Urbach received the2014 recognition after helping Madras take second place intheconference. MadrascoachRhea Cardwell shares thecoach of the year honor with Crook County's Rosie Honl, whose Cowgirls finished first in the TVC. Mauritson joined Urbach on the all-league first team, as did Crook County's Karlee Hollis and KaylaHamilton.
of recruiting those younger playoff runs year after year. "It's cool to see because kids and then pushing them Continued from C1 through.... It seems like girls it b r i ngs t h e c o m petition "It's exciting because I think soccer is pretty dominant in up on all levels," Edwards it's an honor to showcase the this area, and it's not going says. "Mountain View really away." talent that we have here in stepped up this year, and Bend Central Oregon," says GroshoNot that these semifinal ap- really stepped up. It brings our ng, a former Lava Bear player pearances by Summit or Bend game up because the compewho was an assistant coach are unexpected, Brock says. tition's higher. It's nice to see for all three of Bend High's In recent years, the 10th-year that the competition is just state championships. "But I Storm coach points out, the building so that we can go all also know, having been an as- two crosstown rivals, as well the way to state." as Mountain View, have fre-
For the ninth straight sea-
pionship, it takes a lot more to quently been ranked in the top get there, and we're still in the 10 of 5A. Not only that, headbuilding stage." ing into this season, at least T his afternoon, th e N o . one team representing a high 2 Lava Bears and the No. 4 school in Bend has gone as far Storm take on Northwest Or- as the state semifinals every egon Conference teams in the year since 2006 — including semifinals — Bend at home fouryears when two advanced against No. 3 Hillsboro, Sum- to the final four and one seamit at No. 1 Putnam in Milwaukie — as they look to extend a run during which teams
son, the road to the Class 5A state title rolls through Bend. And potentially for the third time ever, two intracity Intermountain Confe r ence
foes could square off in the f inal. How's that fo r e x t ra motivation? "I think there's extra drive of we don't want to be the team that's NOT there (in the
son when all three were in the
penultimate round. "That's really what's trans-
from the city of Bend have ad- formed the IMC is all these vanced to the finals in seven of girls have some kind of conthe past eight seasons. That in- nection with e ach o ther, cludes two years in which IMC whether it's club or growing rivals (Bend and Mountain up together," says Groshong, View in 2008, Summit and
who attributes Central OreMountain View in 2010) faced gon's soccer success to club
off in the championship finaL Yet Groshong does not label Central Oregon as the classof 5A girls soccer.She notes the prominence of the NWOC, which since 2007 has produced two state champions
and three runners-up. Groshong likens the IMC-NWOC comparison to that of the Pac-
12 and Southeastern conferences in college football: two conferences deep i n
t r a d i-
tion, heavy in hardware, and consistently in the hunt for a championship. If anything, Groshong says, the IMC i s
u n derrated, as
shown by having two members in the hunt for a state title.
"Obviously it says a lot,"
state final)," Brock says, noting that she enjoys seeing, and wants to see, a fellow IMC
member succeed in the state playoffs. "There's that piece of we want to say that we're in
the finals, and that would be cool if Bend's there too. But we
programs as well as the work don't want to be the ones that ethic of coaches and players. say, 'Oh, man. We're not there, "That's what kind of makes but you guys are there.' It's like our program, all of them, so a sibling rivalry." dynamic and so strong. We The last eight years of Class do have that cohesion to build 5A girls soccer have been a stronger reputation for our- dominated by IMC squads. selves in the I ntermountain The league may not be conConference." sidered the cream of the 5A "There is some recogni- crop to some, but as two Bend tion with those club teams," programs stand in the way of Brock adds. "I don't start potential non-Central Oregon with them (her players) super state champions, the IMC conyoung. These kids come up tinues to pad its resume as the and they're really talented and class of 5A. "Our coach always tells us they stick with it. It definitely feeds into our program. The we're history in the making," quality here is clear as day. says Summit senior forward And I don't think there's going Megan Buzzas. "Summit's to be a drop-off." such a new school that it's This extended run of IMC
kind of hard to get on our feet,
dominance shows the talent of but so far with girls soccer, says of the IMC's recent state Central Oregon, according to we've kind of done that. We're dominance. "There's a con- Summit junior forward Chris- history in the making. The s istent base, especially o n tina Edwards, as well as the longer we can keep our histothe girls' side of things. And players' drive and work ethic. ry up, the better. We'll see how to some extent, you have to It shows the heightened com- that goes." recognizethe club programs. petitiveness of the IMC, which — Reporter: 541-383-0307, They've done a really good job has directly resulted in deep glucas@bendbulletin.com. Summit coach Jamie Brock
OUTLAWLEADS ALL-TOURNEYSELECTIONS In leading Sisters to its second Class 4Avolleyball state championshi pinsixseasons, Outlaws senior Nila Lukenswas the lone unanimousselection to the 4A all-tournament first team. Crook County senior Karlee Hollis and Madrassenior Alexis Urbach werealso namedto the first team, while Madrassenior Shelby Mauritson, Sisters freshmanJessie Brighamand Sisters junior Allie Spearwere second-teamselections. In 5A, Summit senior ReneeKenneally was named tothe all-tournament first team,andBend senior Callie Kruskaearned second-teamhonors. Culver senior ShealeneLittle wasa unanimous choicefor the 2A all-tournament first team,and teammatesLynzeSchonneker,a junior, andJennyVega, asophomore, receivedsecond-team recognition. Trinity Lutheran senior Katie Murphyandjunior Allison Jorgewereselected to the 1A all-tournamentsecond team, andtheSaints received the sportsmanship trophy for the 1A tournament. — Bulletin staff reports
Alexander that cost LSU a
That heads-up play by game into overtime with a Walker mayhave saved Or- game-tying field goal. egon's season. "You all can look and " Definitely not a g a r - see the number of ways
Oregon, with the victory,
Soccer
in barrel racing (38.26 sec- March 25-28, 2015, in Kisonds, $689); Russell Cardoza, simmee, Florida.
PREP SCOREBOARD Volleyball Tri-Valley Conference All-leagueteams Player ofthe year—Alexis Urbach,sr., Madras Coaches ofthe year — Rhe a Cardwel, Madras; RosieHonl,CrookCounty First team —AlexisUrbach, sr., Madras; Karlee Hollis, sr.,CrookCounty; Shelby Mauritson, sr., Madras;KaylaHamilton, sr., CrookCounty; SarahDavies, sr., Estaca da; claire Davis, ir., corbett; ToriJohnson, sr., Estacad a. second team—Aspen christiansen,so., crook County;ElleRenault, sr.,Madras;Ashley Johnson, sr., Molalla;saschaFruehaut,ir., corbett; JenRoth,ir., crook County;KassidyRunyan, sr., Estacada; Olivia Goddard, sr., Gladstone; JessicaWheeler, ir., Estacada. Honorable mention —KarissaFrunk, so., Corbett; KeelyBrown,sr., Madras;DelanieGarrett, sr., cortett; calleyBaker, sr., Molala; Ta ylor siolund,sr., Madras;LakenBerlin, sr.,CrookCounty; Jennifer Mccallister, so., crookcounty; MaddiThompson, so., Estacada;Alicia Feb,sr., Gladstone;Emma Sziemies, sr., Gladstone.
Football Class 6A Secondround Friday's games WestAlbanyat Central Catholic, 7 p.m. clackamas at west Linn, 7p.m. Lakeridgeat Sherwood, 7p.m. OregonCityat Sheldon, 7p.m. LakeOswegoatGrantsPass,7p.m. SouthridgeatWest Salem,7p.m. NorthMedfordatJesuit, 7p.m. SunsetatTigard, 7p.m. Class 5A Quarterlinals Friday's games Corvallis atMarist, 7p.m. HermistonatLiberty,7 p.m. Wilsonville atSpringfield, 7p.m. AshlandatSilverton, 7 p.m. Class 4A Quarterfinals Friday's games JunctionCityatGladstone,7p.m. Scappoose at Cascade, 7p.m. South UmpquaatNorthBend,7p.m. Saturday'sgame Phoeni xatMazama,1p.m. Class 3A Ouarterfinals Friday's games scio atsantiamchristian, 7p.m. Dayton at Harrisburg, r p.m, Saturday'sgames Nyssa at BlanchetCatholic,1 p.m. Vale atCascadeChristian,1 p.m.
Semifinals Tuesday'sgames Gladstone at ValleyCatholic, 6 p.m. CascadeatScappoose,4p.m. Championship At Liberly HighSchool, Hillsboro Saturday'sgame Gladstone/valleycatholic winnervs.cascade/scappoosewinner Class3A/2A/1A Semifinals Tuesday'sgames catlin Gabel at oregonEpiscopal,6:15p.m. Cascade Christian at Westside Christian, 2 p.m. Championship AtLiberlyHigh School, Hillsboro Saturday'sgame catlin Gabel/Oregon Episcopal winner vs. cascade christian/westsidechristianwinner
Boys soccer Class 6A Semifinals Tuesday'sgames Jesuit atCentralCatholic,4:45p.m. GrantsPassatGrant, 2:3t p.m. Championship At Hillsboro Stadium Saturday'sgame Jesuit/CentralCatholicwinnervs.GrantsPass/Grant winner Class 5A Semifinals Tuesday'sgames Woodburnat Summit, 6p.m. Wilsonville atHoodRiverValley, 6p.m. Championship AI Hillsboro Stadium Saturday'sgame Woodburn/Sum mitwinner vs.Wilsonvile/Hood River Valleywinner
Semifinals Nesday's games creswelat l oregonEpiscopal, 4p.m. BlanchetCatholic at PortlandAdventist, 6 p.m. Championship At Liberly HighSchool, Hillsboro Saturday'sgame Creswell/OregonEpiscopal winnervs. BlanchetCatholic/Portland Adventist winner
Boys water polo At OsbornAquatic center, corvanis Class 6A Friday's games Semifinals Westviewvs. Newberg, 7:20p.m. Southridgevs. West Albany,8;30 p.m. Consolation Laker idgevs.WestSalem,9;50a.m. Tualatinvs.Lakeoswego, u a.m. Saturday'sgames Fifth/Sixlh Place LakeIidge/W est Salemwinner vs.Tualatin/LakeOswego winner,8:45a.m. Third/Fourlh Place Westview/Ne wberg loser vs.Southridge/West Albany loser,1:45p.m. Championship Westview/Ne wberg winnervs. Southridge/West Albany winner,7 p.m.
Class5A/4A Friday's games Semifinals Ashlandvs.Summit, 2:30p.m. HoodRiverValley vs. Marist,3:40 p.m. Saturday'sgames Third/Fourlh Place Ashland/Sum mit loservs. HoodRiver Valley/Marist loser, u:15a.m. Championship Ashland/Sum mit winnervs. HoodRiver Valley/Marist winner,4:15p.m.
Girls water polo At Osborn Aquatic center, corvallis Class6A Friday'sgames Semitinals Barlowvs.Tualatin, 5p.m. Lincolnvs.West Albany,6;10p.m. Consolation Westv iewvs.SouthEugene,7;30a.m. Reynoldvs. s Newberg, 8;40a.m. Saturday'sgames Fifth/Sixth Place Westv iew/SouthEugenewinnervs.Reynolds/Newberg winner,7:30a.m. Third/Fourth Place Barlow/Tualatinloservs. Lincoln/WestAlbanyloser, 12:30p.m. Championship Barlow/Tualatinwinnervs. Lincoln/WestAlbanywinner,5;45p.m. Class 5A/4A Friday's games Semitinals Ashland vs.Madras,12n0 p.m. Parkrosevs.Summit,1:20 p.m. Saturday'sgames Third/Fourth Place Ashland/Ma drasloservs. Parkrose/Summitloser, 10a.m. Championship Ashland/Madras winnervs. Parkrose/Summit winner, 3 p.m.
TOUCHMARK SlNCE 1980
Class4A Semifinals Tuesday'sgames NorthMarionatHenley,2p.m. McLoughlinatStayton, 2:30p.m. Championship At Liberty HighSchool, Hillsboro Saturday'sgame North Marion/Henleywinnervs. McLoughlin/Stayton winner Class3A/2A/1A
Y
Class 2A Ouarterlinals Friday's game Oaklan datKnappa,7p.m. Saturday'sgames Union/Cove at Burns,1 p.m. Regis atGoldBeach,2p.m, CentralLinnat Heppner, 1p.m.
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Class1A Ouarterlinals Friday's games Sherman atLowell, 6p.m. TrangleLakeatCamasValley,1p.m. Saturday'sgames Wallowa at Dufur,1 p.m. YoncallaatAdriat, i p.m.
www.BulletinBidnBuy.com
Girls soccer Class 6A Semifinals Tuesday'sgames SunsetatTualatin, 6 p.m. WestSalematNorth Medford,4 p.m. Championship At Hillsboro Stadium Saturday'sgame Sunset/iualatinwinnervs.WestSalem/North Medford winner Class 5A Semilinals Nesday's games Summiat t Putnam,5p.m. Hillsboroat Bend,1 p.m. Championship At Hillsboro Stadium Saturday'sgame Summit/Putnam winnervs. Hilsboro/Bendwinner Class 4A
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VOU CAIII BID OIII Lot9inthe Yarrow Community Located in Madras Retail Valueg4,NN *60% Reserve
541-385-8522
*
The wrong lot was unintentionally listed in The Bulletin Bid-n-Buy catalog that published Sunday, November 2.Thecorrect lot number is ¹9. I
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C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
NASDAQ+
17,613.74
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S&PBOO
+
~ 0 00
4,651.62
TOdap
10 YRT NOTE ~ +. 06 2.36% ~
6 34
2,038.26
17,640"
S8$P 500
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Home sales pickup?
2 000.
D.R. Horton has been stepping up efforts to woo first-time homebuyers. Earlier this year, the nation's largest homebuilder began to roll out a new line of homes designed primarily to be more affordable. Strong home price gains in many markets have made it tougher for many renters to buy a home. Is D.R. Horton's strategy paying off? Findouttoday, when the company reports fiscal fourth-quarter earnings.
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..................... Close: 2,038.26 Change: 6.34 (0.3%)
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2,050 " 2,000 "
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16,800
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16,400" M
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StocksRecap NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 3,202 1,792 Pvs. Volume 3,397 1,834 Advanced 1784 1663 Declined 1359 1028 New Highs 2 25 1 5 1 New Lows 28 46
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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17621.87 17547.51 1761 3.74 +39.81 DOW Trans. 9068.63 8948.11 9068.48 +119.37 DOW Util. 606.86 600.42 606.75 +3.67 NYSE Comp. 10898.16 10862.02 10892.56 +27.98 NASDAQ 4653.38 4626.49 4651.62 +1 9.09 S&P 500 2038.70 2030.17 2038.26 +6.34 S&P 400 1437.17 1430.39 1434.80 +4.73 Wilshire 5000 21451.43 21375.39 21447.21 +65.38 Russell 2000 1179.58 1172.61 1179.57 +6.25
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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.0.23% L L L +6.26% $.1.33% L L L +22.54% $.0.61% L L L +23.68% $.0.26% L L L +4.73% $.0.41% L L L +11.37% $.0.31% L L L +1 0.27% $.0.33% L L L +6.87% $.0.31% L L L +8.84% $.0.53% L L L +1.37%
NorthwestStocks mm,m BBBB
NAME
Spotlight on NGL
NGL Energy Partners reports fiscal second-quarter financial results today. The company, whose businesses include crude oil logistics, propane and water businesses, is expected to report earnings growth after posting a loss in the same quarter last year $32.39-
NGL
40
' ,$32.33 ' '14
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1.2423+
-.0014
2Q '13
2Q '14
Operating
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A LK 34.81 ~ AVA 26.78 — 0 B AC 14. 20 ~ BB S I 1 8.25 o — BA 116.32 ~ C A C B 4 . 11 ~ COLB 2 3.59 ~ 3 COLM 32.96 ~ COST 109.50— o BR EW 10.07 ~ F LIR 28.03 ~ HPQ 2 4 .77 ~ 3 I NTC 23.40 ~ K EY 11 55 ~ K R 3 5 .13 ~ L SCC 5.30 ~ L PX 12.46 ~ MDU 24 . 99 o — MEN T 18.25 ~ MSFT 3 4.63 — o N KE 69.85 ~ JWN 54.90 — o NWN 40.05 ~ PCAR 53.59 ~ PLNR 1.93 ~ P CL 38.70 ~ PCP 215.09 ~ S WY 26.69 ~ SCHN 2 1.41 ~ SHW 170.63 — o S FG 57.77 ~ SBUX 67.93 ~ TQNT 7.22 — o UM P Q 14.94 ~ 1 U SB 37.47 ~ WAF D 19.52 ~ 2
55.99 56. 3 2 + 1.18+2.1 L L 35.98 35 .20 + . 1 2 + 0.3 L L 18.03 17. 3 7 +. 0 1 +0.1 L L T 10 2 .20 2 4.28 -.95 -3.8 T 144. 5 7 12 4.64 + . 19 +0.2 L L 5.82 5.11 +.0 9 + 1.8 L T 0.3 6 28.40 +.18+0.6 L L L 44. 9 8 40.59 +.18 +0.4 LL 13 7.91137.69 - .02 . . . L 18.30 13. 8 3 +. 2 4 + 1.8 L T 37.42 3 3. 2 1 -.57 -1.7 T L 8.2 5 36.90 +.52+1.4 L L 35.56 3 3. 2 6 -.32 -1.0 T L 14 70 1348 + 0 9 +0 7 L L 58.15 58. 5 6 +. 7 6 +1.3 L L 9.19 6.62 +. 1 0 + 1.5 L L 18.96 14. 6 8 +. 0 3 +0.2 L L 36.0 5 25 . 9 5 -.41 -1.6 T T 24.31 21. 8 4 + . 1 9 +0.9 L L 48.92 48 .89 + . 2 1 +0.4 L L 95.09 94. 9 6 + 1.18+1.3 L L 73.94 72 .39 - 1.04 -1.4 T L 47.50 47. 6 0 +. 4 6 +1.0 L L 68.81 6 6. 8 3 -.12 -0.2 T L 7.05 7.68 + 1 .28 +20.0 L L 46.99 41.4 2 +. 0 4 +0 .1 L L 275. 0 9 22 6.10 -.15 -0.1 T L 36.03 34.8 9 +. 0 2 + 0 .1 L L 33.32 2 3. 6 8 -.78 -3.2 T L 23 6.30236.72 + .68 + 0.3 L L 70.35 68. 2 6 +. 4 2 +0.6 L L 82.37 77.6 5 +. 1 8 +0 .2 L L 23.10 22 .30 + . 23 +1.0 L L 9.6 5 17.95 +.17+0.9 L L 43.95 43. 9 3 +. 1 2 +0.3 L L 4.5 3 22 .06 +.25+ 1.1 L L L WF C 4 1.80— o 54.25 53 .83 -.01 . . . L WY 2 7 .48 — o 34.60 34 .41 + . 1 1 + 0.3 L L
Toll Brothers
16
35
14
30
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S 0 52-week range
$3262 ~
TOL
Close:$32.95 L0.73 or 2.3% The homebuilder reported a 29 percent boost in preliminary fourth-quarter revenue on increased higher-priced home sales. $40
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$19 71
$28.92 ~
S 0 52-week range
$39.95
Vol.:10.5m (4.4x avg.) PE: 4 .3 Vol.:3.6m (1.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.54 b Yie l d : 1.7% Mkt. Cap: $5.86 b RYN Close:$28.82T-5.08 or -15.0% The forest products company reported positive quarterly profit, but restated prior results and will realign its strategy. $40
N
P E: 20.0 Yield: ...
Merck MRK Close:$58.81 T-0.53 or -0.9% The pharmaceutical company won't continue development of a shortened hepatitis C treatment following interim study results. $65
L +53. 5 +5 7 .9 1 016 15 0 . 5 0 L +24.9 +30 .2 37 3 1 1 1. 2 7 L + 11. 6 +2 6 .4 52094 16 0 .20f T -73.8 -67.6 383 d d 0 .88f 35 60 T -8.7 -3.1 2549 18 2 . 92 30 55 L -2.3 -3.5 51 +3. 3 + 12.7 126 18 0.64f A S 0 N A S 0 N L + 3. 1 + 22.7 263 24 0.60f 52-week range 52-week range L +15.7 +13 .2 1 941 30 1 . 4 2 828.34~ $48.82 $46.66~ $ 61.33 T -15.8 -7.9 67 60 Vol.:6.7m (8.2x avg.) PE :1 9 .5 Vol.:14.6m (1.4x avg.) PE : 3 2.1 L +10.3 $. 2 t .t 1 0 2 1 2 4 0. 4 0 Mkt. Cap:$3.65 b Yie l d : 4. 2% Mkt. Cap:$169.65b Yi e ld: 3.0% L + 3 1.9 +44.0 8770 14 0.64 T +28. 1 +4 3 .3 30084 16 0 . 90 Dynavax Technologies DVAX Orexigen Thera. OREX L +0 4 +9 4 4703 13 0 26 Close: $15. 98LO.OB or 0. 5 % Close: $5.13L1.28 or 33.2% L + 48.1 +4 0 .4 1 455 19 0 .74f The biotechnology company said an The drug developer reported betT +20. 6 +2 1. 0 8 4 7 3 0 independentboard recommended ter-than-expected quarterly profit L -20.7 -7.0 2798 dd continuing a pivotal study on a poand revenueon milestone payT -15.1 - 8.8 89 9 1 6 0 . 7 1 tential hepatitis B vaccine. ments associated with Contrave. L -9.3 + 2 . 6 2 5 4 1 8 0. 2 0 $18 $8 L +30.7 +32 .8 36124 19 1 .24f 16 6 L +20. 8 +2 5 .2 2 901 32 0 . 9 6 14 L +17.1 +23 .9 1 6 67 1 9 1. 3 2 L +11.2 +1 4 .5 92 22 1. 8 6f A S 0 N A S 0 N L + 12.9 +2 2 .6 1 4 33 1 8 0. 8 8 52-week range 52-week range L $.20 2.4 +212.2 5219 4 5 $33.29~ $21.46 $3.11 ~ $2.82 L -10.9 - 3.3 1027 4 0 1 . 76 V ol.: 583.4k (3.1x avg.) PE :.. Vol.:15.2m (3.5x avg.) P E: . . . T -16.0 - 8.5 69 0 1 8 0 . 12 Mkt.Cap:$420.08 m Yie ld: ..Mkt. Cap:$628.6 m Yield: ... L +19.7 +17 .3 8 0 5 3 0.92 T -27.5 - 15.9 338 8 2 0 . 75 Comcast CMCSA Gogo GOGO L +29.0 +3 1 .6 40 4 2 7 2. 2 0 Close:$52.95T-2.20 or -4.0% Close:$1840 %1.76 or 10 6% L + 3.0 +14 . 4 27 0 1 3 1 . 10f The cable television provider's stock The in-flight Internet service compaL -0.9 -0.3 3150 29 1.28f slumped after President Obama isny reported worse-than-expected sued a statement calling for more quarterly profit and reaffirmed its fisL $.16 7.4 +200.7 2311 c c industry regulations. cal 2014 outlook. L -6.2 + 1 0.9 1 402 24 0 . 6 0 $60 $20 L +8.7 +19 . 5 5 3 07 1 4 0 . 9 8 -5.3 + 0 . 4 2 3 0 1 4 0 . 59f 18 55 L +18.6 +32 . 3 11538 13 1 . 40 50 16 L +9.0 +21. 2 2 2 06 2 6 1. 1 6 A S 0 N A S 0 N Source: FactSet 52-week range 52-week range $46.68~ $6 2.49 $11.66~ $3 6 27 DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 8 -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current Vol.:65.9m (4.2x avg.) PE: 1 6 .7 Vol.:9.2m (5.8x avg.) P E: .. . annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, rs regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$113.86b Yi e ld: 1.7% Mkt. Cap:$1.57 b Yield: ...
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$50
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Close $16 40A1 98 or 13 7L The milk company reported bet ter-than-expected quarterly financial results and a stronger-than-expected financial outlook. $18
Rayonier
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
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Baacorp ColumbiaBokg Spending easing? ColumbiaSportswear Jewelry and accessories maker CostcoWholesale Fossil Group has enjoyed strong Craft Brew Alliance sales growth in the first half of this FLIR Systems year. Hewlett Packard Financial analysts will be listen- Intel Corp ing for an update on the Keycorp company'ssales trends today, Kroger Co when the company reports its Lattice Semi latest quarterly financial results. LA Pacific They'll also have an eye out on MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Fossil's expenses, which have MicrosoftCorp weighed on earnings as the Nike Ioc B retailer spent more to add retail locations and beef up its market- Nordstrom Ioc Nwst Nat Gas ing and other initiatives. PaccarIoc FOSL $103.22 Planar Systms $150 Plum Creek $125.57 Prec Castparts Safeway Ioc 120 Schoitzer Steel Sherwin Wms '14 90 StaocorpFocl StarbucksCp Operating Triquiot Semi EPS Umppua Holdi ngs 3 Q '13 3 Q ' 1 4 US Bancorp Price-earnings ratio: 16 WashingtonFedl based on trailing 12 month results Wells Fargo & Co Weyerhaeuser Dividend: none
-1.25 '
Stocks pushed further into record territory Monday on solid earnings reports, extending the rally into a fourth week. Homebuilder stocks rose sharply on an improved outlook. Most companies in the Standard and Poor's 500 index have reported their third-quarter results, and earnings per share are expected to have increased 9 percent over the year ago period, according to S&P Capital IQ. Cable companies fell after President Obama said Internet providers shouldn't be allowed to cut deals with online services like Nefflix to prioritize their content. Eight of the 10 sectors of the SB P 500 were up, led by a 1 percent gain in health care stocks.
"
17,600"
"
$77.40
StoryStocks
Dow jones mdustnals Close: 17,613.74 Change: 39.81 (0 2%)
"
'
"
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$15.66
16,800 ' ""' 10 DAYS "
17,200" 1,950 "
"
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SILVER
GOLD ~
$115960 ~
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-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates SPOtlight Yahoo shares set a 52-week high of $49.63, Monday. The stock climbed as 6Singles's Day" got underway in China. It is thought to be possibly the world's busiest online shopping day. That's important because Yahoo owns a 16 percent stake in Alibaba Group, China's largest e-commerce company. Singles' Day began in the 1990s as a version of Valentine's Day for people without romantic partners.
The timing was based on the 6 date: Nov. 11, or 11.11" — four singles. Unattached young people would treat each other to dinner or give gifts to woo that special someone and end their single status. Alibaba's recent initial public stock offering was critical for Yahoo's third-quarter. It sold 140 million shares in the Chinese company's September IPO, to bring in $9.5 billion before taxes.
I
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.36 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-bill . 0 1 .01 ... 6 -month T-bill . 0 5 .05 ... T 52-wk T-bill .09 .09 ... ~ 2-year T-note . 5 4 .50 + 0 .04 L 5-year T-note 1.65 1.59 +0.06 L 10-year T-note 2.36 2.30 +0.06 L 30-year T-bond 3.09 3.03 +0.06 L
BONDS
L L
L L L L
T L ~
L .31 L 1.41 T 2.75 T 3.85
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.90 2.86 +0.04 L L T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.39 4.39 . . . L L T Barclays USAggregate 2.25 2.29 -0.04 L L T 52-WEEK RANGE Price-earnings ratio: 7 YHOO 2.2% 4 5. 8 25.2 PRIME FED Barcl Price-earnings ratio: 568 aysUS HighYield 5.87 5.87 ... L T L 50 (Ba s ed on past 12 month results) $32 RATE FUNDS based on trailing 12 month results M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.88 3.93 -0.05 T T T *annualized AP Pri c e change through Nov. 10 Source: FactSet YEST 3.25 .13 Dividend: $2.43 Div. yield: 7.5% Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.93 1.91 +0.02 L L L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Source: FactSet Barclays US Corp 3.05 3.09 -0.04 L L L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualFunds
EPS
est.
I I
YAHOO (YHOO)
Monday's close:$49.41
AP
Price change Y TD 3 - y *r
5-yr*
American Funds EuroPacific Growth has continued to perform FAMILY MarhetSummary well in choppy markets despite American Funds Most Active some recent changes in the NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG fund'smanagement team, accordMktVGold 929739 17.45 -1.19 ing to Morningstar. Alibaba n
713782 654078 S&P500ETF 582929 BkofAm 520937 iShEMkts 416692 Microsoft 361236 FordM 357741 Petrobras 335959 Cisco 306210
119.15 +4.59 52.95 -2.20 203.98 +.64 17.37 +.01 41.33 +.11 48.89 +.21 14.00 -.17 10.62 -.28 25.15 -.18
Comcast
American FundsEurPacGrA m AEPGX VALUE
B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME
LAST
Orexigen 5.13 UranmRes 2.56 Achillion 12.85 XenonPh n 16.00 Planarsy 7.68 RokaBio n 3.58 PCM Ioc 8.80 S&WSeed 3.64 Lionbrdg 5.54 ChiFnOnl 6.44
CHG %CHG +1.28 + 33.2 +.62 + 3 2.0 +2.74 + 2 7.1 +2.71
+1.28 +.58 +1.35 +.56 +.80 +.93
LAST 180.60 2.90 3.50 11.00 9.00
68
63
+ 2 0 .4
+ 20.0 823 + 1 9.3 MomingstarOwnershipZone™ + 1 8.1 e Fund target represents weighted + 1 8 .1 Q + 1 6.9 average of stock holdings + 1 6.9 • Represents 75% of fuod's stock holdings
Losers NAME
o-
CHG %CHG -70.45 -28.1 -.71 -19.7 -.84 -19.4 -2.40 -17.9 -1.71 -15.9
CATEGORY Foreign Large Blend MORNINGSTAR
RATING™ ASSETS EXP RATIO MANAGER SINCE RETURNS3-MO Foreign Markets YTD NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR Paris 4,222.82 +32.93 + . 79 3-YR ANNL London 6,611.25 +44.01 + . 67 5-YR-ANNL Frankfurt 9,351.87 +60.04 + . 65 Hong Kong23,744.70 +1 94.46 + . 83 TOP 5HOLDINGS -.21 Novo Nordisk A/S Mexico 44,523.00 -91.66 Milan 19,258.54 +1 63.22 +.85
SearHom rt ResoluteEn DirGMnBull DxGldBull AkebiaTh n
Tokyo 16,780.53 Stockholm 1,41 7.82 Sydney 5,501.40 Zurich 8,867.53
-99.85
-.59 Bayer AG
+ 6.94 + . 49 SOFTBANKCorp -20.70 -.37 Novartis AG + 50.61 + . 57 Prudential PLC
**** cr $30,382 million 0.84% Jonathan Knowles 2005-08-29 -0.5 -1.1 +4.1 +11.6 +6.1
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities AmBalA m 25 . 96 +.82+7.6 +11.3 +14.9+12.3 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.83 +.20 +7.3 +9.3 +12.1 +9.3 A A A The price of CpWldGrlA m 47.12 +.22 +5.7 +10.1 +16.3 +9.5 8 8 D crude oil fell afEurPacGrA m 48.52 +.18 -1.1 +4.1 +11.6 +6.1 A 8 8 ter starting the FnlnvA m 55. 1 5 +.13+8.0 +13.5 +19.0+13.8 D C C day higher, finGrthAmA m 46.84 +.22 +8.9 +15.5 +20.5+14.0 C 8 D ishing below IncAmerA m 21.90 +.84 +8.5 +11.1 +14.0+11.7 8 A A $78 per barrel. InvCoAmA m 40.97 +.17 +12.9 +18.7 +20.5+14.1 A 8 C The price of NewPerspA m38.67 +.13 +2.7 +8.1 +15.9+10.8 C 8 8 gold fell for the WAMutlnvA m42.88 +.88 +10.2 +14.9 +19.0+15.3 8 C A eighth time in Dodge &Cox Income 13.88 -.83 +5.2 + 5 .8 + 4.7 +5.3 A A B nine days, deIntlstk 44.83 +.13 +2.3 + 7.0 +15.5 +8.4 A A A Stock 180.67 +.45 +8.5 +14.4 +23.8+15.6 C A A clining just unFidelity Contra 103. 3 8 +.53+8.6 +14.7 +19.0+15.2 D C B der 1 percent. ContraK 103 . 40 +.53+8.7 +14.9 +19.1+15.4 C C B LowPriStk d 49.85 +.20 +5.6 + 9 .5 +18.9+15.9 E D C Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 72.45 +.23+12.2 +17.4 +20.5+15.6 A 8 A FraakTemp-Franklio Income C m 2. 49 .. . + 5 .7 + 7 .9 +11.4+10.3 A A A IncomeA m 2. 4 6 ... +6 .3 + 8 .1 +12.0+10.8 A A A Oakmark Intl I 24.83 +.12 -5.7 -2.4 +16.9 +9.9 E A A Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 21 . 27 +.88+8.5 +13.4 +16.2+13.0 D E D RisDivB m 18 . 99 +.86+7.7 +12.4 +15.2+12.0 D E E RisDivC m 18 . 87 +.86+7.7 +12.5 +15.3+12.1 D E E SmMidValA m47.27 +.15 +7.1 +12.0 +17.3+13.3 C E E SmMidValB m39.75 +.13 +6.4 +11.2 +16.3+12.3 D E E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 34.48 + .83 +6.5 +10.1 +18.4+13.6 E D C Exchange GrowStk 57.1 2 + .44+8.7 +16.5 +21.2+16.5 B A A The dollar HealthSci 73.1 3 +.90+26.5 +36.6 +38.8+27.9 B A A strengthened Newlncome 9. 6 6 - .82+5.2 + 5 .1 + 3.2 +4.4 B C D against the Vanguard 500Adml 188.46 +.60 +12.2 +17.4 +20.6+15.6 A 8 A Japanese yen 500lnv 188.44 +.60 +12.0 +17.3 +20.4+15.5 A 8 A and was little CapOp 53.87 +.59 +16.7 +23.2 +25.5+17.2 A A A changed against Eqlnc 32.26 +.87 +10.5 +14.4 +19.5+16.1 C C A the euro. The IntlstkldxAdm 26.94 +.16 -1.5 +1.2 +9.5 NA 8 D ICE L.S. Dollar StratgcEq 33.42 +.10 +11.4 +18.0 +23.2+19.5 A A A index, which TgtRe2020 28.87 +.84 +6.5 +9.2 +11.7 +9.9 A A A compares the Tgtet2025 16.80 +.84 +6.7 +9.7 +12.9+10.5 A 8 8 dollar's value to TotBdAdml 10.84 -.82 +5.0 +4.7 +2.5 +4.1 C D D a basket of Totlntl 16.10 +.89 -1.6 +1.0 +9.4 +4.9 B D D currencies, rose. TotStlAdm 51.15 +.17 +11.0 +16.5 +20.6+16.0 8 8 A TotStldx 51.12 +.16 +10.9 +16.3 +20.4+15.9 8 8 A USGro 31.97 +.15 +11.4 +19.3 +21.1+15.1 A A C Welltn 40.61 +.81 +8.7 +11.8 +14.4+11.3 A A A
PCT 5.03 2.46 2.29 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.21 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 1.8 redemption fee.Source: Momingstar.
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)
.05 .08 .10
3.60 5.11 2.29 5.64 4.5 7 1.63 3.17
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 77.40 78.65 -1.59 -21.4 1.92 1.87 + 0.11 + 0 . 6 2.47 2.50 -1.21 -1 9.8 4.26 4.41 - 3.56 + 0 . 6 2.10 2.14 -1.60 -24.6
CLOSE PVS. 1159.60 1169.60 15.66 15.70 1206.90 1212.80 3.03 3.05 765.90 772.20
%CH. %YTD -0.85 -3.5 -0.27 -19.0 -0.49 -12.0 -0.82 -12.0 - 0.82 + 6 . 8
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.67 1.67 +0.19 +24.3 Coffee (Ib) 1.81 1.82 -0.55 +63.9 Corn (hu) 3.69 3.68 +0.48 -1 2.5 Cotton (Ih) 0.62 0.64 -2.39 -26.2 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 329.00 327.10 +0.58 -8.6 -8.4 Orange Juice (Ih) 1.25 1.25 -2.04 Soybeans (hu) 10.28 10.40 -1.23 -21.7 Wheat(hu) 5.17 5.15 +0.53 -1 4.5 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5852 -.0010 -.06% 1.6002 Canadian Dollar 1.1 379 +.0048 +.42% 1.0489 USD per Euro 1.2423 -.0014 -.11% 1.3355 JapaneseYen 114.89 + . 3 5 + .30% 9 9 . 15 Mexican Peso 13. 5 984 +.0696 +.51% 13.1807 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.7955 -.0159 -.42% 3.5378 Norwegian Krone 6 . 8135 -.0077 -.11% 6.1426 South African Rand 11.2655 +.0105 +.09% 10.3225 Swedish Krona 7.4 3 5 1 + .0222 +.30% 6.6001 Swiss Franc .9680 +.0005 +.05% . 9 225 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1609 +.0026 +.22% 1.0665 Chinese Yuan 6.1195 -.0035 -.06% 6.0930 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7550 +.0021 +.03% 7.7517 Indian Rupee 61.500 +.070 +.11% 62.565 Singapore Dollar 1.2915 +.0014 +.11% 1.2468 South KoreanWon 1085.30 -2.50 -.23% 1067.39 -.05 -.16% 2 9.49 Taiwan Dollar 30.58
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
DEEDS CrookCounty • Jerol E. andDoris G. Andres to DanH.Caldwell and Bonnie P. BrianCaldwell, BrasadaRanch2, Lot 262, $469,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Charles H.Bartlemay, Ochoco PointePUD,Phase 2, Lot105, $174,500 • Jack R. andJane B. White, trustees ofthe White Family Trust, to JamesW. and Shirley L.Straughan, Prineville, Lot1, Block8, $175,000 • Richard A. andPatrick S. Hensley,co-personal representatives of theestate of Jerry L. Hensley, toDavid P. RouseJr. and Denissa D. Rouse,QuailValley Park Replat, Lot 2A,$165,000 • Bobby KennedyII to Daniel J. Lytle, HudspethAddition, Phase 3,Lot 29, $169,950 • Darline R. Clark, who acquired title asDarline R. Fastelin Clark, toTomG.and Nancy K.McLeod, Partition Plat 2001-13,Parcel3, $229,500 • LPP Mortgage LTD to Ronald S.andMarceline K. Hiott, Crystal Springs Subdivision, Phase1, Lot 22, $239,900 • Pahlisch HomesInc.to Janae D.Mulkeyand David C. Lister, OchocoPointe PUD, Phase1, Lot54, $182,500 • Ochoco LumberCompany to North TenMile Lake Investment LLC,Tracts 1-9 in Townships12 and 13 of CrookCounty, and Parcels1-6 in Township 12 of JeffersonCounty; $11,766,936 • Patrick Clarkto Patrick Clarkand Mariko F. Clark, BrasadaRanch2, Lot 225, $285,000 • Pacific Crest Realty Advisors LLCto DavidWise and Eric Rice, Township 15, Range16,Section 6, $200,000 • Ramiro L. Lopezto Patrick and ToniHarvey,Township 14, Range15,Section 2, $230,000 • Brasada Ranch LLCto Rene Tatro, BrasadaRanch 8, Lot 597,$178,200 • Tait J. Wennerstrom to Linsay andTyrone McCullough, Crystal Springs Subdivision, Phase 1, Lot 9, $196,000 • Jim Hensley, Sheriff of Crook County, toGMAC Mortgage LLC,Highlands Subdivision, Unit 2, Lot14, Block 3, $167,758.55 • James D.and Elsie M. Smith to Linda K.Pierce, trustee of thePierce Living Trust, Northridge Subdivision, Lot 29, $198,900 • Randy A. and Sharon L. Williamsto DaronL. and Alyce E.Russum, Northridge Subdivision, Lot 43, $265,000 • Beverly J. Haring to Randall A.andSharon L Williams, HighDesert Estates Subdivision, Lot 131, $248,000 • Cody Jessee to Alan D.and Juli D. Alderman,Prineville LakeAcres, Lots3,4and5, Block13, $153,000 • Clara Bernard to Cody J. and Stephanie M.Jessee, High Desert Estates, Phase 3, Lot 85, $228,000 • Brasada Ranch Development LLCto Thomas andKathryn Thompson, BrasadaRanch 8, Lot 609, $169,200 • Robert A. andMarjorie K. Pierce, co-trustees ofthe Robert A. PierceRevocable Trust, to Daniel K.and Sonja G. Roberts, trusteesof the Daniel K.and SonjaG. Roberts 2004Trust, First Fairways Subdivision, Lots 10 and11, $165,000 • Kurtis W. andNicole L. Sloper to DanielandJessica Freauff, PioneerHeights, Phase1, Lot1, ThreePines, Phase1, Lot11, $243,000 • Kris and Jodi Griffith to ThomasandMaryW. Warner, Township14, Range14, Section18, $270,000 • James M. andMarlene R. Beltramto Mary EngleBarney, Rick G.Barney and Robin C.Engle,Twin Lake Ranch, Phase1, Lot36, $420,000 • Pamela Bodie, personal representative of theestate of Teresa A.Iskra, to GaryG. and Rosemary A.Gregory, Prineville LakeAcres, Unit1, Lot 39, Block58, $228,000 • Steven R.and Janice E. Hase, co-trustees ofthe Hase FamilyTrust, to Robin A. Hubbard, Prineville Lake Acres, Lots 30-31, Block10, $161,500 • John R. Woerner,also known asJohnReed Woerner, to DeBaca Land and Cattle LLC,Partition Plat1990-19, Parcel 2,and Partition Plat1995-43,
EXECUTIVE FILE
ei in Lll S inancia IBS
What:BlackCanyonW oodworks What it does:Custom heirloom-quality furniture, cutting boards, interior finishes Pictured:Leadartisan Nate Hardenbrook, left, and company co-owner JeremyGraham Where:63023 Layton Ave., Bend Employees:Nine Phone:541-306-6308 Wehsite:www.blackcanyon woodworks.com
By Keith Bradsher and Alexandra Stevenson
markets on Nov. 17, a step that could strengthen both cities'
New Yorh Times News Service
roles as financial centers in
HONG KONG — China
unveiled a series of measures on Monday aimed at strength-
Meg Roussos i The Bulletin
ening financial ties with neighboring nations — and potentially weakening Asia's
eir ooms in e m
in
By Joseph Ditzler• The Bulletin
Jeremy Graham named thebusiness he and hisw ife opened three years ago, Black Canyon Woodworks, after a wilderness area in the Ochoco Mountains. "It's one of my favorite places in the world," he said.
building sites,which is work Graham said he hopes to expand; and cuttingboards, about 90percent of which are bought by real estate
Before that, the soft-spoken
Roseburg native made furniture in the two-car garage at the family's
brokers around the country as
former home on 18th Street in
Bend,he said,before demand dictated a move to 4,000 square feet of workshopand officespaceon Layton Avenue. Woodworking "has always been
closing gifts for their clients. If the high-end furniture turned out byJeremy Graham and lead artisan Nate Hardenbrook, fashioned from mostly cherry and
Q
walnut, represent the soul of Black
A
a passion ofmine," asmuch artas
Canyon Woodworks, the cutting
craft, he said. The designs he invokes are inspiredby well-known
board side is the muscle. Graham
craftspeople such as the late wood-
worker Sam Maloof, whose pieces are displayed in major museums. "I like a piece of furniture to feel
like a piece of wood and not a plastic-coated piece of wood," Jeremy Graham said.
said the business of making and selling cutting boards, about 250 a month, provides a reliable income
for the company and steady work for its employees. "We're trying to build something that is relatively sustainable, and I think in order to do that it needs to be somewhatrecession-proof,"he
For a time, Graham, who earned adegree atO regon State
said. "Our diversification will help
University in civil engineering, worked on designing and building
us with that."
wastewater-treatment plants in the Willamette Valley and in West Vir-
ginia. Lisa Graham, also an OSU graduate, with a degree in chemical engineering, is the marketing force behind the operation and her husband's inspiration, he said. "I love making furniture," Jeremy Graham said. "What I love
more than anything, I like making furniture for my wife, I guess, becauseitm akesherreally happy." Business strategy at Black Can-
yon Woodworks has three fronts: one-off pieces of custom furniture,
Black Canyon clients typically allow the company artistic leeway to create furniture that meets a particular setting, he said. But the
furniture side of the house is filling a tough and selective niche, Jeremy Graham said. He contemplates one day creating distinctive lines of furniture the company artisans can reproduce, with stock on hand to showcase and sell.
• Where do you • get the wood to create cutting boards and furniture? • Jeremy • Graham:For the cutting boards, we get most of our wood from hardwood suppliers, and a majority of it comes from Hardwood Industries here in Bend.... Almost all of our wood for furniture comes from small mills in the valley, where they're getting their wood from blowndown trees or trees removed from construction. Over 90 percent of the wood for our furniture comes from those sources.
it competes more aggressively
and is now vice president for
for trade deals and investment
research at the Fung Global Institute, a nonprofit research group in Hong Kong. Obama did announce early this morning that the United
broad agreement, removing tariffs on 90 percent of goods. Top officials from Australia,
which trades more with China
range of information-technol-
than with the U.S., are on the
ogy products, including video game consoles computer
vergeofasim ilardeaL Politics, too, play a role. With President Barack Obama and other world lead-
China and the United States
will now try to persuade other
nomic Cooperation meeting,
countries to accept the same
China wants to show that it is intervening less in markets. In that vein, China's central
terms so as to broaden their understanding into a global
bank unexpectedly pushed up the heavily controlled value of the country's currency, the renminbi, on Monday morning in the sharpest single-daymove in more than four years; the change makes
World Trade Organization in Geneva.
goods from other countries more competitive in the Chi-
nese market. And Chinese securities
regulators announced on the same day that they would begin allowing investors in Shanghai and Hong Kong to trade on each other's stock
By Brandon Bailey The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Goo-
gle has signed a long-term lease for part of a historic Navy air base, where it plans
is part of the former Moffett Field Naval Air Station on the San Francisco Peninsula.
By David Segal
the hangars and add other
Oklahoma oilman Harold Hamm hasdone everything on a huge scale. His net worth
After a secretive, nine-week
hasbeenpegged at more than $18billion by Forbes, making
trial, ajudge in Oklahoma
him the 24th-richest man in
must pay nearly $1 billion to
the country. Now another superlative
his ex-wife, Sue Ann Hamm.
Parcel 2, $513,000 • Jeannette D. Bush, trustee oftheJeanett eD.Bush Revocable Living Trust, to Koby W.Shortreed, Barnes Butte Estates, Lot21, Block3, $255,000 • Sandy Livingston to Patrick J. and Alena K.Bothum, Hudspeth Addition, Phase 2, Lot14, $155,000 • Hubbell J. andTerahM.April to Brae D.Runnels, Township 15, Range14,Section 27, $345,000 • Jack Rundleto Thomasand Pamela L Grudi, Prineville Lake Acres,Unit 2, Lot14, Block 47,$160,000 • Brasada Ranch Development LLC to Gerald F. and Mary F.Monin, Brasada Ranch 8, Lot607,$166,500 • Cowtown Properties LLC to Staffenson Resources LLC, Townof Prineville, Lot1, Block10, $420,000
City has ruled that Hamm, 68,
The judgment requires Har-
third of the total settlement, by
the end of 2014. The rest is to be paid in chunks of at least $7 million a month. Hamm, who has described himself as "more hardheaded
than other people," did not have a prenuptial agreement.
pact under the auspices of the While the United States still
exports many high-technology goods, China is the world's dominant exporter overall of
electronics and has much to gain from an elimination of tariffs as well. Asian neighbors like Taiwan, South Korea and Japan increasingly find themselves supplying China's huge electronics industry, deepeningtheireconomic dependence on decisions made
in Beijing.
Google signs60-year, 1billion NASAlease
The giant Internet company will pay $1.16 billion in rent over 60 years for the property, which also includes a working air field, golf course and other buildings. The 1,000-acre site
old Hamm to pay his ex-wife about $320 million, or one-
GPS devices and next-generation semiconductors.
21-economy Asia-Pacific Eco-
Google plans to invest more than $200 million to refurbish
canbe addedtoHamm's outsize career: He is paying one of thebiggest divorce settlements in history.
software, medical equipment,
ers arriving in Beijing for the
Oilman's billion-dollar divorce New York Times News Service
States had reached a bilateral
understanding with China on eliminating tariffs for a wide
ploration and robotics.
—Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
finish work as subcontractor on
est trading partner, struck a
gars and use them for projects involving aviation, space ex-
body can look at it and say, 'I know that didn't come from Ikea,'" he said.
handmade pieces of art; interior
dollars. On Monday, South Korea and China, already its larg-
to renovate three massive han-
"I like to build things that some-
to lead the whole of Asia-
na's rising economic clout, as
The moves underscore Chi• Whatdo • you envision Black CanyonWoodworks will look like in five years? • Jeremy Gra• ham:What I envision in five years is having our own building with separate areas where we manufacture furniture and cutting boards, and I would like to have anicesized showroom for furniture and cutting boards. I would like to have multiple finish crews doing all-custom interiors, and doing some high-end tenant improvement projects, as well.
leadership and to project a responsible image in wanting they're all very much linked politically," said Patrick Low, who was chief economist of the World Trade Organization
ties to the United States.
Q
Asia. "It's a real attempt to exert
improvements, including a museum or educational fa-
development, assembly and testing in the areas of space exploration, aviation, rover/
roboticsandotheremerging technologies." Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin have a well-known interest in avia-
tion and space. The company has recently acquired several smaller firms that are work-
ing on satellite technology and robotics. But a Google spokesperson declined Monday to discuss specific plans for the property, which is located just a few miles from the company's main campus in Mountain View.
NASA plans to continue operating its Ames Research
Center on the former Navy site. Google will take over operations at the runways and
cility that will showcase the
hangars, including a massive
history of Moffett and Silicon Valley, according to a NASA
structure that was built to
statement. The agency said
a Google subsidiary called Planetary Ventures LLC will use the hangars for "research,
house dirigible-style Navy airships in the 1930s. NASA said the deal will save it $6.3 million in annual maintenance
and operation costs.
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Estate Planning Workshop: Learn to secureyour estate and retirement planning; free; registration required; 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m Red 4 Lion Hotel, 1415 NEThird St., Bend; 866-252-8721, bmorphis@ wsimail.com or www.claestate services.com. • SCORE free business counseling: SCORE business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in atthe library desk onthe second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. SCORECentralOregon.org. • AccessoryDwellings, Petite, Discreet and Affordable Homes: Lecture; free; 6:30 p.m.; Brooks Room, Downtown Bend
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Suite 200; 541-382-3221 or shelley©bendchamber.org. • Video Marketing —Froma Man who KnowsR2D2: Scott Elnes of Flick FiveFilms will discuss using video marketing to drive up SEO potential and more; $25 BendChamber of Commerce members, $30 nonmembers; register online; 11:30 a.m.; BendGolf and Country Club, 61045Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. NDV. 19 •BendChamberefCom merce — BusinessAfter Hours: Free, register online; 5 p.m.; Bend Urology, 2090 NE Wyatt Court, Suite 101; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org.
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D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014
FOOD Apple-Pumpkin Pie
in her new cookbook, "Blue
Makes1 9-inch pie; serves 8 to10. This standout pie captures all the warmth, spice and earthiness of Thanksgiving. To makeit, the pumpkin is sliced, not pureed, which gives the pie an unexpected sophistication. Tomato jam adds a touch of acidity, while golden raisins provide sweetness and texture. This gorgeously playful mix of flavors and ingredients, encased in an exquisitely flaky crust, makes this pie a Thanksgiving highlight. — Rachel Saunders
Marmalade," (Andrews McMeel Publishing) is visually stunning with pumpkin slices (Iike apple slices) instead of puree, along with the subtle
CRUST: 2t/~C unbleached all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting 1 tsp kosher salt 5TBS high quality lard 15 TBS unsalted butter,
preferably European-style 9TBS ice water FILLING: 4TBS ('/s stick) cold unsalted
butter, preferably Europeanstyle, plus for more buttering 18 oz peeled pumpkin, sliced t/-inch thick 1 Ib peeled and cored firm sweet
Chair Cooks with Jam and
©OK
addition of homemade sweet
tomato jam, golden raisins and freshly ground spices, including mace, which comes from the nutmeg seed. If you're too busy to make
apples, slicedt/4-inch thick 6TBS Early Girl Tomato Jam
(see recipe below) 1t/s tsp apple balsamic vinegar
tomato jam before the holi-
or apple cider vinegar
days, you can buy it from her company, w w w .bluechair-
'/s C sugar t/4 tsp kosher salt t/4 tsp freshly ground cloves t/4 tsp freshly ground cinnamon Aetsp freshly groundmace 2 TBS and1t/~ tsp unbleached all-purpose flour '/ C golden raisins 1 Ig egg white, beaten until frothy
To make the crust, place the flour and salt in a large bowl and whisk to combine. Cut the lard and butter intot/~-inch cubes and sprinkle them over the flour. Place the bowl in the freezer to chill until very cold but not frozen, about 20 minutes. Transfer the flour-butter mixture to the bowl of a large food processor fitted with a metal blade, keeping the frozen bowl close by. Pulse the mixture several times, until the largest pieces of fat are pea-size. Immediately transfer the flour mixture back to the frozen bowl. Sprinkle the ice water over the flour mixture and stir immediately and quickly with a wide sturdy butter knife held at avertical angle until the mixture comes together, adding a little more icewater if needed. Transfer the dough mixture to a lightly floured board and gather the dough into 2 balls, one slightly larger than the other. Do not handle the dough too much, asyou do not want it to warm up.Flatten the dough balls into 5-inch discs and wrap in plastic wrap. Place them in the refrigerator to chill for at least 2 hours or as long as 48hours. Thedough canalso be frozen for future use. To make thefilling, position a rack in the middle of theovenand preheat the oven to 425degrees. Melt the'/4cup butter in a12-inch saute panover low heat and saute the pumpkin until slightly cooked but still firm, about 5 minutes. Add theapples and saute for 5 minutes, then cover and braise for another 5 minutes, stirring once or twice. Transfer the pumpkin and apples with their juices to a largebowl to cool. In a medium bowl, whisk together the tomato jam, vinegar, sugar, salt, cloves, cinnamon, maceand flour. Distribute this mixture evenly over the cooked fruit in the bowl. Add the raisins and toss gently to combine. Set the filling aside. To assemble the pie, very lightly butter a deep-dish 9-inch pie plate. Place the larger of the 2 chilled pastry discs on a lightly floured board. Beat the dough briefly with a rolling pin to soften it if needed and roll it out into an even12-inch circle, turning it often and flouring your board and rolling pin lightly as needed.Carefully fit the dough into the prepared pan. Using sharp, clean scissors, trim the overhang sothe dough extends /8 inch beyond the edge of the pie plate. Brush the entire inside of the pie shell with the beatenegg white. Roll the remaining disc of dough into a10t/~-inch circle. Pile the filling mixture into the waiting pie shell, pressing down on the fruit to create as even a distribution as possible. Center the top crust over the filling, then fold the edges of the top crust under the edges of the bottom crust, trimming any excess asneeded. Crimp the edge of the piewith your fingers or a fork. Using asharp paring knife, cut several slits in the top crust to allow steam to escape. Brush theentire top crust with the egg white. Bake the pie for 25 minutes at 425, then lower the heat to 375and continue baking until the fruit is very tender and bubbling, about another 30 minutes. Place the pie on arack to cool to lukewarm before serving.
SLUE CBAI
fruit.com.
"I'd never seen a pumpkin pie with sliced pumpkin in it, and I thought it made so
much sense. I wanted to inject some unusual spice in the Apple-Pumpkin Pie,and mace boosted the flavors. When I
Submitted photo
"Blue Chair Cooks" author Rachel Saunders is founder of Blue Chair Fruit Co. in Oakland, California.
Saunders' " Blue C h a i r nice, spicy, holiday quality to Cooks with Jam 8 Marmait," Saunders said in a phone lade" includes more than 250 interview f r o m Nor t h ern recipes for using jam in a California. wide variety of dishes, from If pecan pie is a must at your breakfast t o s a vory l u n ch house on Thanksgiving, take and dinner options, and even a look at Saunders' favorite pe- cocktails. "I love to put a little jam in can pierecipeforaspin on the usual ingredients. any fruit pie," she said. It's Sara Remington / Submitted photo My Pecan Pie gets its sweet- something you can try too, Apple-Pumpkin Pie from "Blue Chair Cooks with Jam & Marmaness from maple syrup, not with any of your homemade lade" by Rachel Saunders. corn syrup. Seville orange fruit pies." marmalade, dark rum, coIf pie making makes you ing it in an outrageous direc- conut, dates and vanilla give a little nervous, you're not tion. It's just a really good pie." the pie its intense flavor and alone. If you're an experienced makes it more interesting than Continued from 01 Haedrich, a food writer, think about that pie, it has a
Pies
"It's important to not mess with tradition too much, just
play with it. I think people
baker and want to make a
more adventurous pumpkin pie this year (instead of
the traditional version that's so sweet it almost melts your teeth.
This is the pie that Saunders told us she will be making for terested in jam and marma- Thanksgiving this year. "It's just wonderful because home in Hilton Head Island, lade maven Rachel Saunders' South Carolina. "The Penn- recipes. the orange marmalade adds She's the owner and found- an undernote to the traditional sylvania Dutch Sour Cream Apple Pie is a great pie for er of Blue Chair Fruit Co. in sweetness of pecan pie, and it Thanksgiving, and there's no Oakland, California, an arti- has maple syrup in it, a very whipped cream needed. It's in san jam company specializing underutilized ingredient. Makeeping with this whole idea in sustainably farmed fruits of ple syrup also has acidity to of tweaking tradition a bit. It the San Francisco Bay Area. it, and it's a perfect flavor with tweaks apple pie without takThe Apple-Pumpkin Pie pecans," she said.
Early Girl Tomato Jam
cookbook authorofmore than
a dozen books and cooking instructor, is so passionate about
appreciate something a little
the recipe on the back of the
pie-making that h e
different," Haedrich said in a phone interview from his
pumpkin can), you'll be in-
The Pie Academy website in 2012 (www.thepieacademy. com). Its goal is to become the top online resource for pie-makers of all levels, from
s t arted
novice to expert.
He knows that anyone can learn to make great pies from scratch, because that's what
he did. Continued next page
Rated an overall 5 stars" two years in a row. The only overall 5-star plan tn Central Oregon.
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Makes approximately11 to12 8-oz jars. Tomato jam should be a sweet, fruity jam, no different from plum or apricot jam except that the fruit used to make it is tomato. Onceyou havetasted this extraordinarily bright jam, there will be no going back.— Rachel Saunders 9 Ibs medium-sized sweet
4 to 5 TBS strained freshly
tomatoes, preferably dry-
squeezedlemon juice
farmed Early Girls 1 sm blade of mace 3 Ibs and15 oz white cane sugar 2 pinches of kosher salt
Place a saucer with 5 metal teaspoons in a flat place in your freezer for testing the jam later. Have a large bowl of ice water close at hand. Bring a medium pot of water to a boil, and then carefully drop the tomatoes into the water to loosen their skins. Leave the tomatoes immersed for 30 to 60 seconds and then transfer them to the ice water with a slotted spoon. When they are cool enough to handle, peel them over a large bowl, discarding the skins. Place acutting board on a rimmed baking sheet and coarsely chop the tomatoes into medium pieces. Return the tomatoes andtheir juices to the bowl. Add the sugar and '/4cup lemon juice, stirring well to combine. Dip a small spoon into the mixture andtaste. If you do not detect a bright, tart lemony flavor, cautiously add alittle bit more lemon juice, stirring and tasting as you go, until you can just taste the tartness and lemon flavor of the juice in the mixture. Transfer the mixture to an 11- or 12-quart copper preserving pan or wide, nonreactive kettle. Place the mace into a fine-mesh stainless-steel tea infuser with a firm latch andadd it to the mixture. Add the salt. Bring the jam mixture to a boil over high heat. Skim off any surface foam with a large stainless steel spoon. Cook, stirring often with a heatproof spatula and monitoring the heat closely, until the jam thickens and no longer seemswatery, 30 to 45 minutes. Scrape the bottom of the pan often with the spatula, and lower the heat gradually as more and more moisture cooks out of the jam. For the final 15 to 20 minutes of cooking, or when the jamstarts to visibly thicken, stir the jamgently and frequently to prevent burning. To test the jam for doneness, transfer a small, representative half-spoonful to one of your frozen spoons. Place the spoon back in the freezer for 3 to 4 minutes, then remove and carefully feel the underside of the spoon. It should be neither warm nor cold; if still warm, return it to the freezer for a moment. Nudge the jam gently with your finger; if it seems thickenedandgloppy when younudge it, it is either done or nearly done. Tilt the spoon vertically to see how quickly the jam runs; if it runs very slowly, and if it has thickened to a cohesive consistency, it is done. If it runs very quickly, or seemswatery, cook it for another few minutes, stirring, and test again, repeating more times if needed. When the jam is ready, remove the tea infuser. Skim any remaining foam from the surface of the jam. Pour the jam into sterilized jars and process according to the manufacturer's instruction. Shelf life: 2 years — From: "Blue Chair Cookswith Jam &Marmalade"by Rachel Saundem, Andrews NlcMeelPublishing, LLC,2014, wwwandrawsmcmeel.com
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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F OO D From previous page Haedrich, 60, has been making pie for more than 40 years. Because pie-making became second nature to him, he told us he got into the habit of telling people that it was easy. "But since I've been running The Pie Academy for almost three years, I'm getting questions from people who are having problems making pie, primarily with the crust: it falls apart, it doesn't cooperate, it shrinks.
ents cold, using the right surface to roll pastry on and the right pressure with the rolling pin," he said. Haedrich also created an online video class called The No-More-Tears-Pie-Pastry
Apple Cherry Pie with Coconut Almond Crumb Topping
RECIPE FINDER
Makes 8 to10 servings. Sweet summer cherries (or frozen cherries), coconut and almonds make for an irresistible pie combination. I can't get sour cherries often, but when I can, I like to use them here, increasing the sugar just slightly.— Ken Haedrich
Looking for a hardto-find recipe or can answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun, 501 N.Calvert St., Baltimore, MD21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder©gmail.com. Names must accompany recipes for them to be published.
Course where anyone can 1 recipe Flaky Cream Cheese any juice that results from TOPPING: learn pie-making techniques thawing and add it to the 1 C all-purpose flour pastry (see below), and get hours of instruction at refrigerated /s C sugar pie) a personalized pace. FILLING: 3 TBS Amaretto ~/4 tsp salt "In this day and age, we're 5 C peeled, cored and sliced 1 tsp pure vanilla extract ~/2 C sliced almonds ~/2 C sweetened flaked coconut anxious to be instant experts. apples 1 TBS fresh lemon juice You're not going to be when it 3 C pitted and halved fresh ~/2 C plus 2 TBS sugar 6 TBS 3 ( /4 stick) cold unsalted comes to making pie. Think of it cherries, or 3 C frozen 2 TBS cornstarch butter, cut into ~/4-inch pieces "So now I t ake exception as a journey to enjoy. Be patient cherries, thawed (keep COCONUT ALMOND CRUMB 1 TBS milk or light cream when people say 'easy as pie.' with yourself, and be patient It's not. There are basic things with the process," Haedrich said. If you haven't already, prepare the pastry and refrigerate it until firm enough to roll, 1~/2 to 2 hours. to learn, like keeping ingrediContinued next page On a sheet of lightly floured waxedpaper, roll the pastry into a13~/2-inch circle with a floured rolling pin. Invert the pastry over a 9-inch deep-dish pie pan.Center it, and then peel off the paper. Gently tuck the pastry into the pan, without stretching it, and sculpt the overhang into an upstanding ridge. Put the pie shell in the freezer for at Harvest Pie with Autumn Leaves least 30 minutes. Makes 8 to 10servings. To makethe filling, combine the apples, cherries, amaretto, vanilla and lemonjuice in a large mixing bowl; toss The filling is a real grab bag offall favorites: sliced fresh apples and pears, well. Mix in ~/2 cup of the sugar. Set aside for10 minutes. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. diced pumpkin and dried cranberries for extra sweetness and a splash of In a small bowl, mix the remaining 2 tablespoons sugar with the cornstarch. Sprinkle over the fruit and toss color. I use the pastry trimmings here to create a center spray of leaves. well. Turn the filling into the frozen pie shell. Smooth the filling with your hands to even it out. Place directly on You can use a leaf cookie cutter, but evenfor someone asartistically chal- the center oven rackand bakefor 35 minutes. lenged as I, it's no trouble to cut a basic narrow leaf shape and makea While the pie bakes, make the topping. Put the flour, sugar, salt, almonds and coconut in a food processor few veins in it with the back of aparing knife. I put four of these on thetop and pulse several times to mix. Removethe lid and scatter the butter pieces over the dry ingredients. Pulse the crust, stems ends in the middle, with the leaves pointing out to the 12, 3, machine repeatedly, until the mixture resembles fine crumbs. Addthe milk, and pulse again until the crumbs are 6 and 9 o'clock positions. I love the juiciness of this pie, so I recommend more gravelly in texture. Refrigerate. serving it within an hour of baking. Do use a small sugar pie pumpkin, by After 35 minutes, removethe pie from the oven and place it on a large, dark baking sheet covered with alumithe way — the larger pumpkins tend to be too watery to use in a pie. num foil. Reduce the oventemperature to 375 degrees. Carefully dump the crumbs in the center of the pie and Ken Haedrich spread them evenly over the surface with your hands. Press on the crumbs gently to compact them. Put the pie on the baking sheet back in the ovenand bakeuntil the juices bubble thickly around the edge, another 35 to 40 1 Recipe All-American Double /3 C granulated sugar minutes. Crust, refrigerated (see 2 TBS cornstarch Transfer the pie to a cooling rack and let cool for at least1 hour before slicing. — From: "ApplePle"by KenHaedri oh,TheHarvard Common Press recipe below) /3 C firmly packed light brown FILLING: sugar 1 C fresh apple cider 2 TBS fresh lemon juice Flaky Cream Cheese Pastry
Pie, plucked from the
garden By Julie Rothman The Baitimore Sun
In the process of packing and moving,Jackie Commins of Redmond lost her recipefor making green tomato pie. She was hoping someone could share one
-
4 C peeled, cored and sliced
apples 3 C cored and sliced ripe pears 1~/2 C peeled and seeded sugar pie pumpkin cut into ~/2-inch chunks '/3 C dried cranberries
Grated zest of 1 lemon ~/4 tsp ground cinnamon /8 tsp ground cloves GLAZE: Milk
Granulated sugar
If you haven't already, prepare the pastry and refrigerate it until firm enough to roll, about1 hour. On a sheet of lightly floured waxed paper, roll the larger portion of the pastry into a13~/2-inch circle with a floured rolling pin. Invert the pastry over a 9-inch deep-dish pie pan. Center it, and then peel off the paper. Tuck the pastry into the pan, without stretching it, and let the edge of the pastry drape over the side of the pan. Refrigerate while you makethe filling. Put the cider in a small saucepan, bring to a boil, and let boil until it is reduced to '/4 to~/3cup; keep a heatproof measuring cup nearby to check it. Set aside. Put the apples, pears, pumpkin and cranberries in a large mixing bowl. Add the reduced cider andgranulated sugar and toss well to mix. Set aside for10 minutes. Preheat the oven to400 degrees. In a small mixing bowl, combine the cornstarch and brown sugar. Add this to the fruit and mix again. Mix in the lemon juice, lemon zest, cinnamon and cloves.Setaside. On another sheet of floured waxed paper, roll the other half of the pastry into an 11~/2-inch circle. Moisten the rim of the pie shell with a damp pastry brush or finger. Turn the filling into the crust, smoothing the top with your hands. Invert the top pastry over the filling, center it, and peel off the paper. Pressthe pastries together at the dampenededge,then trim the pastry flush to the edge of the pan with a paring knife. Using a form or paring knife, poke several steamvents in the top pastry; put several of the vents near the edge ofthe pie, so youcancheck thejuices there later. Gather the pastry trimmings into a ball, and then roll the dough about /8 inch thick on a sheet of floured waxed paper, flouring the dough as needed. Cut the dough into 4 leaves (seehead note), using the back of a paring knife to make alengthwise vein down the center and smaller ones running diagonally to either side of the line. Lay the leaves on top of the pie with the stem ends in the center and the tips pointing out to the 12, 3, 6, and 9 o'clock positions. Brush the top of the pie lightly with milk and sprinkle with granulated sugar. Place the pie directly on the center oven rack andbakefor 30 minutes, and then reduce the oven temperature to 375 degrees. Remove the pie from the ovenand place it on a large, dark baking sheet covered with aluminum foil. Put the pie onthe baking sheet back in theovenand bake until the juices bubble thickly at the edge,another 30 to 40 minutes. Transfer the pie to a cooling rack and let cool for 30 to 60 minutes before serving. — From "Apple Pl e"by Ken Haedrl oh, TheHarvard CommonPress
4 oz cream cheese, at room
Makes enough pastry for one 9-inch deep-dish double-crust pie or two 9-inch deep-dish pie shells. To my mind, an all-American crust should include butter, for great flavor; vegetable shortening, for tenderness and flakiness; and white flour, not whole wheat. You can make this pastry by hand (directions follow), but I nearly always make mine in a food processor. This is about as large a pastry recipe as I would recommend preparing in a food processor, for the simple reason that an overcrowded processor will not mix the pastry evenly, likely resulting in a tough crust. To prevent this from happening, whenever I stop the machine, I "fluff" the ingredients with a forkto loosen anything that may havebegun to compact under the blade. — Ken Haedrich 3 C all-purpose flour 2TBS sugar
butter, cut into ~/4-inch pieces ~/4 C cold vegetable shortening,
'/4 tsp salt '/4 C (1~/2sticks) cold, unsalted
~/2 C cold water
cut into pieces
Put the flour, sugar andsalt in a food processor; pulse several times to mix. Removethe lid and scatter the butter pieces over thedry ingredients. Pulse the machine 5 or 6times to cut in the butter. Remove the lid and fluff the mixture with a fork, lifting it up from the bottom of the bowl. Scatter the shortening piecesover the flour and pulse the machine 6 or 7times. Remove the lid and fluff the mixture again. Drizzle half of the water over the flour mixture and pulse the machine 5 or 6 times. Removethe lid, fluff the pastry, and sprinkle on the rest of the water. Pulse themachine 5 or 6times more, until the pastry starts to form clumps. Overall, it will look like coarse crumbs. Dump the contents of the processor bowl into a large mixing bowl. Test the pastry by squeezing some of it between your fingertips. If it seems a little dry and not quite packable, drizzle a teaspoon or so of cold water over the pastry and work it in with your fingertips. Using your hands, pack the pastry into two balls, as you would pack a snowball. Make oneball slightly larger than the other; this will be your bottom crust.
— From "Apple Pl e" by KenHaednoh, TheHarvard CommonPress
a green tomato pie that she
said comes from a collection of old recipe dippings that
tem p erature 1 C all-purpose flour '/2 C cake flour
belonged to her mother.
Green Tomato Pie Makes 8 servings.
2 TBS confectioners' sugar
6 to 8 med green tomatoes (4 C), sliced 4 TBS lemon juice
2 tsp lemon zest 1 tspsalt /2 tsp cinnamon 1~/2 C sugar 4 TBS cornstarch 4 TBS butter
Pastry for a 9-inch, double-crust pie (store-bought or basic butter pie crust) Begin by washing, peeling and thinly slicing thetomatoes. In a medium- to large-sized saucepan,combine tomatoes, lemon juice, lemon zest, salt and ci nnamon. Cook these ingredients over medium heat for about15 minutes, stirring often to evenly cookthetomatoes. Combine the sugar and the cornstarch in a small bowl. Add this to the tomatoesandcontinue to cook until themixture thickens,
— From: "Apple Ple"by KenHaedrioh, TheHarvard CommonPress
My Pecan Pie Makes1 9-inch pie; serves 8to10. This is a very grown-up pecan pie with intense flavors. Unlike many versions, its sweetness isanything but one-dimensional. This recipe eschews corn syrup for a heady combination of maple syrup, Seville orange marmalade, dark rum, coconut, date and vanilla to achieve its flavor. Serve it with whipped cream tocut through the sweetness. — Rachel Saunders
about 5 to 8 minutes. It is import-
ant to stir the mixture constantly while cooking to keep it from
1 C pecan halves
/3 C Grade B pure maple syrup
sticking to the bottom of the pan.
5 TBS and 1 tsp unsalted butter,
/s C packed dark brownsugar
Remove the tomatoes from the stovetop, stir in the butter
preferably European-style, melted, plus more unmelted butter for buttering ~/2 batch pie pastry (see recipe
in Apple-Pumpkin Pie recipe,
~/2 tsp kosher salt 2 TBS dark rum
until it melts, and allow the mix-
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
ture to cool slightly. Line a 9-inch pie plate with pastry; pour in tomato mixture. Cover with top pastry, seal the edges, crimp and cut several small slits in the crust to allow steam to escape. Bake in a425-degree ovenfor 35 to 45 minutes, or until nicely browned. Servewarm or cooled.
'/3 C thick-cut Seville orange
marmalade ~/s C unsweetened shredded
Page D2), chilled but not rolled out
coconut
Unbleached all-purpose flour, for dusting
/3 C chopped dates ~/2 C heavy cream, whipped into soft mounds
3 Ig eggs, at roomtemperature First, lightly toast thepecans:Position arack in the middle of theovenand preheat the oven to350 degrees. Placethe pecans in onelayer on a baking sheet andtoast themuntil very palegolden brown, about 7minutes. Transfer them to aplate to cool completely, andthen chopthem coarsely. Increasethe oventemperatureto 425. Very lightly buttera9-inch pieplate. Place thechilled dough onalightly floured board. Beatthe doughbriefly with a rolling pin to soften if needed.Roll it out into aneven12-inch circle, turning it often and flouring your board and rolling pin lightly as needed.Carefully fit the dough into the prepared pie plate. Using sharp clean scissors, trim the overhang sothe dough extends'/4-inch beyondthe edgeof the pieplate. Turn the overhangunder andcrimp the edgeall around. Prick the bottom of the pie shell all over with a fork and freezethe shell until firm, just a few minutes (5 to 10). Line the shell with a 12-inch square of parchment andfill the shell to the brim with pie weights. Bakefor10 to12 minutes. Removethe parchment and pie weights andcontinue baking until the shell is palegolden brown atthe edges anddry to the touch, 3 to 5 minutes more. If thebottom oftheshell puffs up, prick the bubble in afew places with the tip of asharp knife andgently press down on it with anovenmitt to flatten. Transfer thepie shell to arackto cool. Decreasethe oventemperature
Andrews McMeelPublishing/Submittedphoto
Good dough is the start of any pie. From "Blue Chair Cooks with Jam & Marmalade" by Rachel Saunders.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
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to 375.
To makethe filling, whisk together the creamand eggs in amedium bowl. Add the maplesyrup, brown sugar, melted butter, salt, rum andvanilla and mix well. Stir in themarmaladeandthen the pecans, coconut anddates. Pour the filling into thecooled crust andplacethe pie in the middle of the oven. Bake until the top is goldenandthe perimeter is cracking slightly but the middle is still slightly jiggly, about 45minutes. Placethe pie ona rack to cool to room temperature before serving. Serve with a dollop of the whipped cream onthe side. — From"BlueChairCooks with Jam & Marmalade"byRachelSaundeis, Andrews McNleelPublishing '•
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0
Knead each ball once or twice, and then flatten the balls into3/4-inch-thick
disks on a floured work surface. Wrapthe disks in plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 1 hour before rolling. About 10 minutes before rolling, transfer the pastry to the freezer to make it even firmer. To mix by hand: Combine the flour, sugar and salt in a large mixing bowl. Toss well, by hand, to mix. Scatter the butter over the dry ingredients; toss. Using a pastry blender or two knives, cut the butter into the flour until it is broken into pieces the size ofsplit peas. Add theshortening and continue to cut until all of the fat is cut into small pieces. Sprinkle half of the water over the dry mixture; toss well with a fork to dampenthe mixture. Add the remaining water, onetablespoon at a time, and continue to toss and mix, pulling the mixture up from the bottom of the bowl on the upstroke and gently pressing down on the downstroke. Pastry made by hand often needs a bit more water, so add it one to two teaspoons at a time — if it seems necessary — until the pastry can be packed. Form the pastry into balls, as instructed above, then shape and refrigerate as directed.
Judith Nees of Waco, Texas,emailed me a recipe for
Put the butter and cream cheese in the bowl of a large stand-up mixer fitted with the flat beater attachment. Blendfor30to45secondsonmedium-low speed. Sift the flours and confectioners' sugar into a medium-size mixing bowl. With the mixer on low, add the dry mixture to the creamed mixture about/3 cup at a time, blending reasonably well after each addition. You don't have to wait until the previous addition hasbeenentirely incorporated before adding the next, but do give it some time. When all of the dry ingredients have been added andthe dough starts to ball up around the beater, stop the machine. Removethe bowl and scrape the dough onto a lightly floured work surface. Kneadthe dough gently 3 or 4 times, then shape it into a ball. Placethe ball on alightly floured sheet of plastic wrap and flatten it into a disc about3/4inch thick (unless the recipe instructs you to shape the dough into 2 balls for a double-crust pie). Wrap the disk in plastic and refrigerate for at least1~/2hours, until firm enough to roll. To mix by hand:Using awooden spoon, creamthe butter and creamcheese together in a medium-size mixing bowl. Sift the dry ingredients together, as instructed above, then addthem to the creamed mixture about /3 cup at a time, stirring well after eachaddition. Whenthe dough coheres, proceed asdirected above.
3 TBS heavy cream
All-American Double Crust
withher.
Makes enough for one9-inch deep-dish pie shell or one 9-inch thin-crusted double-crust pie. I love this fine, tender pastry. Onething you should know about this crust is that a creamcheese dough, onceyou start to roll it, gets soft quicker than an all-butter pastry — don't delay when you're working with this crust. If the dough starts to get soft and sticks to your rolling pin, simply slide the pastry — waxedpaper andall — onto a baking sheet and put it in the fridge for 5 minutes. Then take it out and continue to roll. This recipe is written for a large stand-up mixer fitted with a flat beater. If you don't haveone, usethe hand method. — Ken Haedrich ~/2 C (1 stick) unsalted butter, at room temperature
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LIVING SMART
Editor's note:Martha Stewart's column will return. Questions of general interest can beemailed to mslletters@marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.
Indoor garden
be." But then, who among us hasn't thought about their own
Continued from 01 You don't have to be a plant whisperer to enjoy success in this endeavor. Although, occasionally, you do have to be the bee. In a quest for bug-free indoor pollination, Millard stimulated the tomato's reproductive
dirtnap and harboredthesame self-doubt?
Millard had dragged a full bag of vermiculite as big as a pillowcase up the three flights of stairs. This, of course, was a bit of a sight gag: the white filler looks like Styrofoam and weighs no more. The idea was to mix it with a bagged organic
parts with her electric tooth-
brush. (Talk about forbidden fruit.) But what she discovered, and what the book illustrates, is
mo. But any indoor potting mix with a little fertilizer would do. "You want something that
the odd root crop with almost
drains really well," Millard said. "Dirt from your garden
no special equipment. The VWmicrogreens didnot
ment requires that most types
ANGIE
HICKS
a book to be written about how
to breed common garden bugs
s aid.
(What vinaigrette goes with
in the house, but let's leave that
road salt?) Instead, it became a proof of concept. "The lesson is:
to the newspaper's entomology expert.
den."If the conditions are right,
inch black plastic planting flats almost everywhere she goes,
Don't worry about it so much," Millard said of her indoor gar-
Millard totes a stack of 20-
itwillhappen." In many ways, the garden-
the same way a r eal estate
agent seems to bleed a trail of lawn signs. Get the ones with
ing conditions in the northland
are best suited to ornamental
the bottom watering slits and the translucent lids. They are a
4a
alcoholism. Theprofessionaleschatologists (known elsewhere crystal Ann uepa/The New York Times as meteorologists) were predict- A kitchen plant in St. Paul, Minnesota, in October. One can cultiing scattered frosts for the night vate a kitchen garden with almost no special equipment to harvest after Millard paid me a house year-round in cold climates. call. It was early September.
The parsley and sage in my "It's surprisingly spacious," backyardcould hang on until Thanksgiving. But if I didn't she said. "It's like a New York bring the basil inside now, I apartment." wouldn't see it again until May Except, presumably, in New or June. York it would have cost $2.65 While Iwas outside, I noticed million in an all-cash transaca volunteer tomato seedling tion and another $1 million for and a stray mint. What would aparking spot. be the harm in digging them Millardhas good news for up and converting them into the y a r dless m e tropolitan. house pets? (Millard recom- Much of the equipment you mends convertingthe garage need for indoor kitchen gardenor a three-season porch into a ing is already in the kitchen. kind of halfway house where Sprouts should grow in a Mathe plants can get acdimated.) son jar with a screen lid for air I asked Millard about what and drainage. Soak the seeds may still be growing at her (Millardlikes the flavor ofbrochouse across town. But she had coli). Then, after a day or two, moved out soon after finish-
ing a draft of the book. While she and Pankow shopped for farmland of their own, they
were dwelling in a downscale version of that VW Microgreen: a 25-year-old Coachman fifthwheelcampertheyboughtfrom friends for $2,000. The quarters were homey; a previous owner had gone through the effort of painting the wallpaper.
turn the jar upside down and wait. Are the white filaments ed-
ible food or some type of brassica thrush? Millard was noncommittal. "I will sprout things
if people ask me to," she said. "But I have not been a huge fan." Farther down in th e cup-
boards, pie plates or baking sheets m a k e
sa t i sfactory
From previous page whelmed with cooking the whole Thanksgiving meal, may choose to go with a store-bought pie. Costco, for example, reports that in 2013, during the week leading up to Thanksgiving, its bakeries sold more than 1.5 million pies
Good Basic Pie Dough —single crust, refrigerated (see below) FILLING: 5~/2 C peeled, cored and thinly
more than I million pumpkin pies.
Delicious are all good)
"I get that people are too
busy or too overwhelmed at the holidays. If you've done everything else on your own, something's got to give, so maybe you fall back on the $5.99 Costco pie. "To me, making pie is the same as writing a handwritten
note. Not enough people write handwritten notes today, and not enoughpeople make pie. When you do it you're saying, 'You mean something to me, you're special, and I'm doing this for you because I love you.' And it's a very different experience than serving Cost-
co pie," he said.
2 TBS apple cider or water 3/4 C plus 2 TBS sugar 2 TBS ell-purpose flour ~/4 tsp salt
1 Ig egg plus 1egg yolk sliced baking apples (Grenny 1 C regular sour cream Smith, Northern Spy, Golden
Haedrich thinks it's worth
DIY
~/3 C half-and-half or milk 2 tsp vanilla extract
C ost: A bout
$ 15 , o r
much less if you have paint leftovers
Directions: The toilet seat is attached to the toilet bowl with
screws on top and nuts under-
Supplies: Cotton make-
neath. Locate the screws at the
up pads (about $3 for 80), a pint of paint (about $6) or a quart of paint (about $13) Directions: Dab paint onto touch-up spots with a
back of the seat. They may be under a cap that will have to be popped off with a flat-head screwdriver. Tighten each screw with a screwdriver or
cotton pad. Done!
coin as you hold the nut under-
neath with pliers. The nut may need a little clockwise turn with your fingers or pliers. Big holiday meals mean (Remember, "tighty righty, more people than usual lefty loosey")
Chairs that scrape the floor
around the t able. Chair
legs can scrape the floor, leaving marks, as people come and go. Felt pads fall off, so buy glides with felt or carpet pads built in, and save your hardwood, linoleum or ceramic tile floor from scratches. (The glides
CRUNCHY PECAN TOPPING: 1 C all-purpose flour '/2 C sugar /s C packed light brown sugar ~/2 tsp cinnamon '/4 tsp salt 3/4 C coarsely chopped pecans 6 TBS unsalted butter, melted
On a sheetoflightly floured waxpaper, roll the pastry into a13-inch circle with afloured rolling pin. Invert the pastry over a9~/~-inch deep-dish piepan, center, and peeloff the paper. Tuckthe pastry into the pan, without stretching it, and sculpt the edgeinto an upstanding rim. Place inthe freezer until needed. Preheattheovento 400 degrees. Put the apples in alarge nonstick skillet and addthe 2tablespoons cider or water. Turntheheat to medium-high, cover, andcookthe apples for 4 to 5minutes, stirring once or twice. Youwantthem to steamandsoften slightly, but not get all limp. Using aslotted spoon, transfer the apples to abowl. Put the skillet back onthe heat andreduce any liquid in the pan toabout 2 tablespoons. Stir into the apples. Cool. Using a separate largebowl, combineall of the sugar, theflour and salt. Whisk to mix. Add the eggandyolk, sour cream, half-and-half or milk andvanilla. Whisk well, to combine. Stir in the apples. Carefully pour theapplesand custard into your chilled pie shell. Takea moment to distribute the apples evenly in the shell. Place the pie onthe center oven rackand bakefor 15 minutes. Reducethe heat to 350 andbake another 15 minutes. Meanwhile, start making thetopping. Combine the flour, sugars, cinnamon, salt and pecans in a large mixing bowl. Add the melted butter. Stir it in, first with a largefork, then switch to your handsand rubeverything together well with your fingers. Refrigerate until needed. After the pie has baked for 30 minutes — 15 minutes at 400 and 15 minutes at 350 — remove it from the oven, place it on aheatproof surface, and spreadall of the topping evenly over the pie. It will seem like alot, and that's fine. Put the pie back in the ovenand bakeanother 20 to 22 minutes, just until the top turns golden — a shade or two darker than it was. Transfer the pie to arack to cool. Refrigerate while it is still slightly warm. I like this best served cold, but room temperature is fine, also. Somemayeven prefer to serve it warm. Your choice.
you own the basic tools below) Supplies: screwdriver, pliers or a coin
Continued from 01
Makes 8 to 10servings.
in the United States, including
the effort to bake a pie at home.
masterfulpiece of industrial design, they cost about $1.50 each, and theylook just like garbage. A Pyrex casserole dish makes a smarter display. "It may help with the drainage to put a low layer of gravel in the planters to grow microgreens bottom," Millard said, prepping or shoots. At the start, plastic the planter. A few handfuls of wrap can keep the seeds hu- soil mix flew into the trays. She mid. Youmay even have the was no more delicate with the shoot seeds in the bulk bin: pea seeds and the popcorn kersay, dried peas, raw sunflower nels, scattering a single layer seeds or untreatedpopcorn. over the surface. Being houseGermination isn't a sign bound, they wouldn't need a of spoilage; it's the goal here. coat of dirt on top. You'll want to sow at the Millardrecommends soaking the seeds for a day or two be- kind of density you would see forehand, changing the water in front of the stage at Bonnanow and again. "If you leave roo. Once the sprouts come up, them longer than that, they'll Millard said, "You could have give off a really vile smell," she someone crowd surf without said, "like burning moldy feet." falling in." At this point, you're not raising My summer corn crop in the food but developing abiological yard had been a mixed success. weapons program. By that I mean it was a success The easiest indoor garden- for the squirrels that stripped ing projects look a lot like the stalks clean and a total failseed-starting. You don't need ure for me, who waited 80 days much dirt: an inch and a half and got nothing. "Depending on your condifor sprouts, and maybe half an inch for microgreens (a regular tions in here, after about two lettuce mix, harvested early). weeks you should be able to "You can do that on a paper harvest them," Millard said. towel," she said. "They're not "Cut them like you're giving going to grow into their fullest them the worst haircut in the expression of what they could world."
Pennsylvania Dutch Sour Cream Apple Pie
Some home cooks, over-
some models can achieve as much as 97percent AFUE.
T
cide farmer, she welcomed the chance for a clean start. There's
salad. "I can't imagine the carpet of your car is a food-safe
of furnaces reach a minimum 80 percent AFUE, though
Natural gas is considered his time of year, your the most economical way to home heating system heat ahome when temperamay be going through turesarebelow freezing. the occasional warm-up lap Oil or propane can be a or it could be in full-blown good option where gas lines aren't available. However, oil workout mode already. Maybe your system is fit for or propane ~ s re q uire winter duty. But if you have more storage room, run "dirtdoubts,here's advice from ier" than natural gas and can top-rated HVAC pros: be moreexpensiveto operate. To assess your current sysElectricity can be an extem, ask your HVAC contrac- pensive way to fuel a furnace. tor to provide a written effi- Often, a heat pump is a more ciency analysis and summary economical option for an of any recommended repairs. all-electric house. Your contractor can do this The cost of a new heating during an annual tuneup. system can vary widely,deHeating systems are not pending on equipment type, one-size-fits-all. Be wary of a your home's layout, desired contractor who offers a quote features, local labor costs and without examining your any necessary changes to exhome. Ideally, a technician isting system components. should perform what's called Ageneralpricerangewould a "Manual J calculation," be $4,000 to $8,500 for a heatwhich indudes square foot- ing and air conditioning sysage, window efficiency and tem with basic installation and other factors to determine the features. Additional features right size heating system. An will add to the cost and might incorrectly sized system will include air purifying systems, costyou money and comfort. new insulated ductwork, huBuy the most efficient fur- midifiers, programmablethernace you can afford. Efficien- mostats and more. cy — a measure of how much — Angie Hicksis the founder energy put into the furnace is of Angie's List, which offers converted into heating pow- consumerreviews on everything er — is described in terms of from home repair to health care.
is too dense." As a no-pesti-
become the stuff of a piquant
berries, red-barked shrubs and
AFUE. The federal govern-
compost she likes, called Cows-
that it's possible and even easy to cultivate shoots, greens and
environment," Mi llard
A primerbeforeyou buy a newfurnace
— Reporter: ahighberger@mac.com — Source: "What's a Homeowner to do? 442 ThingsYou Should Know," by Stephen Fanuka and Edward Lewine, Artisan Books,a division of Workman Publishing Company, Inc.,2011, www.thisoldhouse.com, www.familyhandyman.com.
are in the felt-pad section of
the hardware store.) Time: 30 to 60 minutes
Cost: About $30 for eight chairs, assuming you own a hammer
Supplies: Nail-on glides with "carpet base" ($3.29 for four), hammer Directions: Drill a small
guide hole into the bottom of the wooden chair leg, and
Free pipeinstallation estimates
then hammer in the glide.
Loosetoiletseat A toilet seat that moves around isn't cool. Tighten
it up, and nobody will talk about your wobbly loo behind your back. Time: 5 minutes
Cost: Free (assuming
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— From www.thepieacademycom
"Tome, making pie is the same as writing a handwritten note.
Not enoughpeople write handwritten
notes today, and not enough peop/e make pie. When you doit
GARDENING.Get good at it.
Good Basic Pie Dough Makes a single crust for a 9- to 9~/2-inch standard or deep-dish pie. This is a simple, reliable pie crust you'll find yourself making often. Tip: Make this twice, while all your ingredients are out, so you have anextra pastry on hand. Wrap as indicated, and freeze for up to one month. — Ken Haedrich 1~/2 C all-purpose flour 1 tsp confectioners' sugar or
granulated sugar ~/2 tsp salt
5 TBS cold, unsalted butter, cut into ~/4-inch pieces 4 TBS cold vegetable shortening, in tablespoon-
size pieces /3C ice-cold water
you're saying, 'You mean something to me, you're special, and I'm doing this for you because I love you.' And it's a very different experience
Combine the flour, sugar and salt in a large mixing bowl. Add the butter and toss gently with your hands, to coat with flour. Using your pastry blender, cut the butter into the flour to break it up partially. Large, random-size pieces of butter will remain. Add the cold shortening, toss lightly, and thencontinue to cut both fats into the flour until the flour has ameallike consistency. All of the flour should look as if it has been "touched" by the fat, and small pea-size pieces of fat should remain. Drizzle '/4 cup of thecold water hereand there overthe mixture. Using a pastry fork or other large fork, quickly stir the mixture with a few strokes, "lifting" the mixture up from the bottom of the bowl as you stir. Sprinkle on the remaining cold water andcontinue mixing, with as few strokes as possible, just until the dough pulls together. Gently pack the dough into a ball. than SerVing COStCO Place the dough on a long sheet of plastic wrap and dust it lightly with flour. Flatten the dough into a disc pie." slightly less than '/4-inch thick. Wrap in the plastic, place this inside a plastic bag, and refrigerate for at least1 to — Ken Haedrich, 2 hours before rolling. author of two pie cookbooks
Are you ~ssionate about gardening in Central 0& ~ Willing to share your time R e w l e oca l ly? Consider becoming O SU st" Ge r d ener™.
— From www.thepieacademycom
C ses o Q5 Cascades HI > end from January 17th - April 4th, 2015, Sam - 4pm Cost is $275, and application deadline is January 9th, 2015. (scholarships available) ~gnsioy •s D
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2014 •
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
Call for package rates
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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
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
. Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
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: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad Th
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B u I I e t i n :
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208
Items for Free
Pets & Supplies
A v e . 210
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9 7 7 0 2
O r e g o n 210
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212
Furniture 8 Appliances Furniture & Appliances Furniture & Appliances
Antiques & Collectibles
6' metal patio table w/4 English Bulldog, AKC, The Bulletin chairs, FREE, y ou C hampion sired 4 recommends extra ' haul! 541-771-8762 mos old male availI caution when purITEMS FORSALE 264- Snow Removal Equipment able to pet h ome. Bookcase 70"h x 48"w; 2 $1800. 541-728-8249 chasing products or I 201 - NewToday 265 - BuildingMaterials drawer met. file cab, you www.tannersbulldogs.com services from out of I 202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves haul. Free! 541-410-0750 I the area. Sending I Beautiful Oval Table 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood aQ German Shepherds ' cash, checks, o r ' Solid walnut, hand208 204- Santa's Gift Basket www.sherman-ranch.us 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers CA King Henredon I credit i n formation Great-Grandma's crafted by an Amish 541-281-6829 205- Free Items Sleigh Bedwith Or- m ay b e subjected to Trunk! Pets & Supplies 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment artisan for Schanz About 150 yrs old, 208- Pets and Supplies ganic Mattress and I FRAVD. For more 270- Lost and Found Norwich Terriers AKC, Furniture Co. Excellent Bedding. It's mag210 -Furniture & Appliances c information about an c this piece came from House raised, good condition w/lovely patina The Bulletin recom- rare! GARAGESALES Prussia and is in nificient. $4500 I adv e r tiser, you may I 211- Children's Items family dogs. Females, 27" H, top 30" L and 20" mends extra caution 275 - Auction Sales very good condition! Cash only. I call t h e Ore g onI 212 -Antiques & Collectibles $2500; males, $2000. wide. Graceful curved when purc h asAlso comes with 541-390-7109 280 - Estate Sales 541-487-4511 or email legs with 2-1/2" ' State Atto r ney ' 215- Coins & Stamps ing products or ser- sharonm@peak.org some written history hand-turned center I General's O f f i ce 281 Fundraiser Sales 240- Crafts and Hobbies vices from out of the from that era. support. Orig. $649; Consumer Protec282- Sales NorlhwestBend 241 -Bicycles and Accessories area. Sending cash, $350 cash. sell $275. Queen-sizesleigh bed I tion h o tline a tI 284Sales Southwest Bend 242 - Exercise Equipment checks, or credit in541-385-4790 cherry (head & foot c 1-877-877-9392. 541-383-9308 286- Sales Norlheast Bend f ormation may be 243 - Ski Equipment boards), nearly new. I subjected to fraud. 288- Sales Southeast Bend 244 - Snowboards $275. 541-351-5133 I The Bulletin I Mahogany GlassChina For more informasertingcentral oregonsince rggg Bid Now! 245 - Golf Equipment 290- Sales RedmondArea Closet, 68"H x 39"W x www.BulletinBidncuy.com tion about an adver16"D, 3 dra w ers, 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 292 - Sales Other Areas Poodle AKC mini male, tiser, you may call SOFA dark brown glass front d o ors, 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. blue, $600 cash. 212 FARM MARKET the O r egon State l eather, Hit a c hi good shape. $425. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 541-912-4414 Attorney General's 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery Antiques & brand, l i k e n e w, 541-382-6773 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs Office C o n sumer mysticalmerlepoodles.com 316- Irrigation Equipment $300; and matching Collectibles 251 - Hot TubsandSpas Protection hotline at POODLE or POMAPOO 325- Hay, Grain and Feed chair and ottoman 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 1-877-877-9392. puppies, toy. Adorable! like n ew , $ 2 0 0. Antiques wanted: tools, 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies Bay ivew...say Local 255 - Computers 541-475-3889 541-280-0892 furniture, pre-'80s John 341 Horses and Equi p ment You Can Bid On: The Bulletin 256 - Photography serving central owgon sincerggg Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W Pug female, 6 w eeks ol d, $2,000 Gift 345Li v es t o ck and E qui pment 257 - Musical Instruments hotography, advertising, available now, $600. Call Certificate 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 258 - Travel/Tickets eer cans. 541-389-1578 Motorola Radio, table Retail Value $2,000 Adopt a rescued cat or 541-550-8807 350 Horseshoeing/Farriers 259 - Memberships top mdl. Great ext. kitten! Altered, vacci- QueenslandHeelers M. JacobsFine 358Farmer's Column cond. but needs ex260- Misc. Items nated, ID chip, tested, Standard 8 Mini, $150 Furniture 375 Meat and Animal Processing Anti uetable Top pertise to work. $100, 261 - Medical Equipment more! CRAFT, 65480 (Bidding closes 8 up. 541-280-1537 541-419-6408 383- Produce andFood 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, www.rightwayranch.wor Tues., Nov. 11, 1-5. 54 1 -389-8420 at 8:00 p.m.) 263- Tools dpress.com www.craftcats.org South Korean 203 203 i( Scotty AKC pups, ready Apothecary chest s4 qlggO now! Mom/Dad on site, Dining room set with 6 Holiday Bazaar Holiday Bazaar typical of what was 35ye" diameter, has chairs and 1 large 1st shots. 541-771-0717 used decades ago to g & Craft Shows & Craft Shows image of sailing ship leaf. $250.00. Aussie pups mini/toy, sell herbs and mediciYorkie M, 8 wks, docked, on the 541-382-3949 all colors, 1st shots, 1st shots, dewormed, nals. This piece is be3 Sisters Lions Club HUGE INDOOR SALE top. Base $340 cash. ¹11948 built in 1870 lieved to have been $550. 541-416-1615 is oak HOLIDAY FAIR Sat. Nov. 15, 9 to 3. 541-678-7599 G ENERATE SOM E produced in 1940s or by New England capstan. 103 Hood Ave., Sisters, Crystal Peaks Youth Organ Co. pups AKC, 2 girls, EXCITEMENT in your later. 35"W x 9.5" G reat selection o f Very Ranch West, 19275 Boston Terrier, older fe- Yorkie IT O'ORKS! neighborhood! Plan a 2 boys, baby dolls! Shots, deep x 42" high handmade items from Innes Market Rd. unique male, needs new home, Beautiful carved training, health guar. garage sale and don't Asking$2500 cash local vendors, 11/28 Many local vendors on $100. Boston 3-yr old potty piece, could sell cabinet. In 1878i it $700 & up. 541-777-7743 forget to advertise in 231460-5105 (Bend) -12/21, M o n-Thurs, male, great family dog, separately. $400 site, selling items intook 2nd place in 202 classified! 541-419-6408. 10-5. Fri-Sun, 10-6. cluding ant i ques,also needs new home, Sydney, Australia. 541-385-5809. What are you Want to Buy or Rent Vendor info call Helen handmade cr a f ts,$150. 541-227-1502 Was presented to a 541-595-6967. furn., home decor, ga- Chihuahua pup, long hair, looking for? minister after his serGrandfather clock, Aeon Wanted: $Cash paid for rage sale treasures, arents on site, purebred vice in the Civil War. 31 day, great cond. vintage costume jew- ... A BIG Deal ... You'll find it in $350. 541-385-4790 tack and much 250/trade 541-420-9474 $200. 541-382-3479 eliy. Top dollar paid for • VENDORS WANTED» tools, more! Questions? Call The Bulletin Classifieds Gold/Silver.l buy by the for Craft Fair The Bulletin reserves Estate, Honest Artist Dec. 6, 9-5; Dec. 7, 10-3 Kelsie 541-330-0123 Donate deposit bottles/ Gray leather couch, good cans to local all vol., the right to publish all condition, $300 or best Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Booths: Crafts, $30; non-profit rescue, for 541-385-5809 offer. 541-389-1339 South Korean ads from The Bulletin Commercial, $50. Central Oregon feral cat spay/neuter. Dahlia Dairy wood milk newspaper onto The Blanket Chest Accepting Donations Where can you find a SaturdayMarket T railer a t Jak e 's 210 typical of storing bottle crate + 20 glass Bulletin Internet webfor Rummage Sale thru 2014 Holiday Event D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Furniture & Appliances helping hand? King Bed and matbottles. $195 obo site. blankets for frigid Dec. 5th (recelpts avail.) Sat. 11/15, 10-4 Petco (near Wal-Mart) tress set, Sleep 541-419-6408 nights. Dimensions From contractors to TACK & EQUIPMENT Sun. 11/1 6, 11-5 in Redmond; or doComfort massager, The Bulletin are 31" long x 14.5' 15% Consignment. • Bend High School • serving central oregonsince rggg yard care, it's all here nate M-F a t S m ith A1 Washers&Dryers includes linens, wide x 22" high. Let us sell your tack! (portion of proceeds benSign, 1515 NE 2nd Full warranty. TURN THE PAGE in The Bulletin's and electric blanket, Asking$800 cash. Check out the For more information: efits BSHS MusicDept) Bend; or CRAFT in FREE delivery(Also $800 obo 1-231-360-5105 "Call A Service 541-548-6088or For More Ads classifieds online New VendorsWelcome! Tumalo. Can pick up Wanted: used W/D's. 541-516-8578 (Bend) k i be I . wlhsg Call 541-420-9015 ~ wwur.bendbulletin.com large amts, 389-8420. The Bulletin Professional" Directory 541-280-7355 ~oe o state.edu www.craftcats.org Updated daily
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Includes up Item Priced af: to 40 words • Under $500 ----. of text, 2" in length, • $SOO Io $e9e ....
with border, full color photo, • $1000 to $2499 bold headline and price. • $2500 and over
The Bulletin 541- 5 - 5
Your Total Ad Cost onl:
-------------- $29 ............................$39 ........................... $49
........................... $59
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• The Bulletin, • Ce ntr'al Oregon Marketplace • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads ® bendbulletin.com 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Some restrictions apply.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOV 11, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Thesday, November 11,2014
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sbprtz
Failure to communicate By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
I found Cy the Cynic, a chauvinist, and Wendy, my club's feminist, in the
opens one diamond. The next player bids one spade. What do you say? lounge — arguing, as usual. ANSWER: In today's deal, South "You tw o w o ul d c o mmunicate reached adecent contract by bidding better if you were whales," I sighed. 3 NT. Still, that would not be t h e "Communication?" Wendy sniffed. choice of most experts because it "To a woman, it's the honest sharing consumes space, leaving no room to of feelings and ideas. To a man, it's look for other contracts. Many experts scratching out a note before leaving would make a negative double, for a weekend with the boys." showing — by agreement — hearts Wendy and Cy had communication b ut a hand unsuitable to bid t w o trouble as East-West. Against 3NT, hearts. They would bid more later. the Cynic led a low spade: low from North dealer dummy, jack from Wendy ... and Both sides vulnerable South played low.
NORTH 4Q3 QA63 0 J 98 7 5 4AQ10
MAKING THREE South won the next spade with the queen and let the nine of diamonds ride. Cy won and led a club; he had no more spades. South won, forced out the ace of diamonds and claimed, making three. "Who was non-communicative then?" Cy sneered. South's spades should be A-10-9, so Wendy must play low on the first s pade, forcing South to w i n a n d keeping communication. If S o uth g oes t o d u m m y t o fi n e sse i n diamonds, Cy wins and leads his last spade, and South goes down. DAILY QUESTION
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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.prg. BIZARRO
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: E L E C T
M A G S Y S I NO L O C N I D O G E OM I N G I N R E V I E A T W O R A S P W I R Y S T A Y I N G K A R A T S A E S T O T I R W H Y G O A T G O I N G F T H I R D R O B A R E D E R A L L O Y E M xwordeditoroaol.com 6
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EVAIL
"It's nothing personal, Harold, but you make me sick, and I never want to see you again."
15 Sound of pain 16 Scientology creator Hubbard 17Big Bang, toa physicist 20 Snarky state 21 What comes before beauty? 22 -weensy 23 Show stopper 27 Greeter and seater 30 Frozen drink brand 31 Started the pot 32 Commercial suffix with Motor 33 Pop's favorite root beer? 37 Old man'splace,
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By Pam Amick Klawitter (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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11/11/14
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
)
s
I
fe
s
632
771
865
880
881
882
Apt JMultiplex General
Lots
ATVs
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
greiggginer\gg4 Custom Motorhome
Keystone Laredo 31'
MONTANA 3585 2008,
CHECKYOUR AD •
•
•
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
•
•
•
682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
•
BOATS &RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 -Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882- FifthWheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
Bid Now!
www.BulletinBidnBuy.com
•
AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Epuipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Lj 4'
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to
Buy Negg...Buy Local
You Can Bid On: Lot 29 at Yarrow Community, Madras Retail Value $24,000 SunForest Construction (Bidding closes Tues., Nov. 11, at 8:00 p.m.)
your ad, please con-
tact us ASAP so that
corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily Month-to-month lease, check it out! Call 855-435-1264
775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
870
Boats & Accessories 14' Deep V Lake Tracker with trailer and 9.9 hp Johnson outboard. $3300. 541-382-6482 16' Valco aluminum Drift Boat & trailer, $3200. Call 541-480-1633
17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, like new, 135hp I/O, low time, Bimini top, many extras, Karavan trailer with swing neck current registrations. $7000. 541-350-2336
New Dream Special 3 bdrm, 2 bath $50,900 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
Need to get an ad in ASAP? Fax it to 541-322-7253 :
g .
The Bulletin Classifieds
o 0 0
634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 850 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Snowmobiles W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAiN GLEN, 541 -383-931 3 4-place enclosed InterProfessionally managed by Norris & state snowmobile trailer w/ Rocky Mountainpkg, Stevens, Inc. $6500. 541-379-3530 648
Houses for Rent General
Polaris Ranger 4x4, 500 EFI, winch, l i ghts, metal roof, extras, low hrs, like new, $6500. 541-516-8695
860
II!otorcycles & Accessories
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, 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
2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat
Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6
speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, slide-out. Sleeps 6, Arctic insulation, all queen walk-around options - reduced by bed w/storage under$3500 to $31,500. neath. Tub 8 shower. 541-420-3250 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. RV CONSIGNMENTS Microwave. Awning. WANTED Outside sho w er. Slide-through storWe Do the Work, a ge. E a s y Li f t . You Keep the Cash! On-site credit $29,000 new; Askapproval team, ing $13,600 541-447-4805 web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! RV 2006 w i th 1 2 '
RV HOLIDAY RAMBLER CONSIGNMENTS VACATIONER 2003 WANTED 6.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, We Do The Work ... workhorse, Allison 1000 You Keep The Cash! 5 speed trans., 39K, On-site credit NEW TIRES, 2 slides, approval team, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS web site presence. brakes, steel cage cock- We Take Trade-Ins! pit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, BIG COUNTRY RV ree standing dinette, Bend: 541-330-2495 was $121,060 new; now, Redmond: $35,900. 541-536-1008 541-548-5254
I'
Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Re-
2275 GL, 150hp sults! Call 385-5809 Honda VTEC, less 1985 Harley Davidson than 110 hours, or place your ad PUBLISHER'S RV 1200C with S portster original owner, lots on-line at NOTICE frame and '05 Harley CONSIGNMENTS of extras; Tennesbendbulletin.com All real estate adver- crate motor. Rat Rod WANTED see tandem axle tising in this newspa- look, Screaming Eagle We Do The Work ... trailer. Excellent 882 per is subject to the tips, leather saddlebags, condition, $23,500 You Keep The Cash! Fifth Wheels F air Housing A c t e xtras. S a crifice a t On-site credit 503-646-1804 which makes it illegal $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, approval team, 476 476 476 to a d vertise "any 458-206-8446 (in Bend). web site presence. preference, limitation Employment Employment Employment 2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like We Take Trade-Ins! or disc r imination Call The Bulletin At new, ActiV hull, safe Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities 541-385-5809 based on race, color, lock canister, 15HP BIG COUNTRY RV religion, sex, handi- Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Yamaha w/ t r olling Bend: 541-330-2495 cap, familial status, At: www.bendbulletin.com plate, 6 gal Transom Redmond: CDL Truck Driver PoliceCaptain Looking for your next marital status or na541-548-5254 Needed. The City of Prinevemployee? tank, less 30 hrs, 2 Alpenlite 28 ft. tional origin, or an inOur wood chip and ille is s eeking a Place a Bulletin help chest seats, full Bimini 1987, New stove, tention to make any lumber drivers averdynamic, r e silient, wanted ad today and top, Transom wheels, fridge. Good fursuch pre f erence, age 54K annually. experienced i n d ireach over 60,000 cover, RV's special. nace, AC. Stereo, limitation or discrimiOff weekends,paid vidual with excellent readers each week. $5500. 541-923-6427 DVD player. Queen nation." Familial stavacation, health inm anagement a n d Your classified ad bed WITH bedding. tus includes children Ads published in the surance. Fo r 35 interpersonal skill to will also appear on 20 ft. awning. "Boats" classification under the age of 18 2001 Honda Goldwing y ears w e hav e act as our Police bendbulletin.com Good shape. $4500 1800cc w/2005 Caliinclude: Speed, fishliving with parents or serviced E a s tern Captain. F u ll-time which currently 541-977-5587 Winnebago 22' fornia side car trike ing, drift, canoe, legal cus t odians, Oregon, C e n tral position and salary receives over 1.5 2002 - $28,500 conversion, 40K acpregnant women, and house and sail boats. Chevy Oregon, S o uthern will DOE and DOQ. million page views 454, heavy CHECK YOURAD tual miles, every opFor all other types of people securing cusO regon an d t h e Full benefits packevery month at tion imaginable! CD, watercraft, please go duty chassis, new tody of children under B oise Valley a n d age included. To no extra cost. batteries 8 tires, cab to Class875. 18. This newspaper AM/FM, cruise, has 5' you can live in any view complete ad, Bulletin Classifieds 8 roof A/C, tow hitch 541-385-5809 will not knowingly ac- ttrake, side rails, some of these locations. Get Results! job description and w /brake, 21k m i . , riding gear. Well sercept any advertising We run late model apply, go to Call 385-5809 more! 541-280-3251 viced. located in Mt. for real estate which is P etes an d K e n - www.cityofprinevile.c or place Senring Central Oregon since 1903 Vernon, OR. Trailer on the first day it runs in violation of the law. worths all 550 cats om. App l ication your ad on-line at optional. $22,500. O ur r eaders a r e to make sure it is corwith 13 speeds, our deadline is 11-21-14 bendbulletin.com Bayliner 185 2006 541-350-5050 Tick, Tock rect. "Spellcheck" and hereby informed that trailers are C ur!in 5pm. The City of open bow. 2nd owner all dwellings adverhuman errors do ocPrineville is an equal — low engine hrs. vans (no tarps to 486 Tick, Tock... cur. If this happens to tised in this newspadeal with) 4 0'-23' opportunity em— fuel injected V6 Independent Positions per are available on your ad, please condoubles year around — Radio & Tower. ployer. ...don't let time get tact us ASAP so that an equal opportunity work. We our lookGreat family boat away. Hire a Sales Help Wanted: basis. To complain of corrections and any ing for long term Priced to sell. Have an item to E nergetic kios k d iscrimination ca l l adjustments can be drivers, our average $11,590. professional out HUD t o l l-free at made to your ad. employee has sales person needed 541-548-0345. sell quick? of The Bulletin's 1-600-677-0246. The 541 -385-5809 w orked for us f o r immediately for the Harley Davidson If it's under toll free t e lephone 2001 FXSTD, twin "Call A Service The Bulletin Classified over 8 years. So if Bend-Redmond 875 you are looking for a '500 you can place it in area. Secured loca- number for the hear- cam 88, fuel injected, Watercraft Professional" i m p aired is Vance 8 Hines short home, give us a call tions, high commis- ing The Bulletin Directory today! 1-600-927-9275. 541.523.9202 shot exhaust, Stage I sions paid weekly! Ads published in "Wa www.radfordtrucking. Classifieds for: with Vance & Hines tercraft" include: Kay For more informa658 fuel management com aks, rafts and motor t ion, p lease c a l l Houses for Rent system, custom parts, '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Ized personal Howard at extra seat. Freightliner custom Redmond watercrafts. Fo '16 - 3 lines, 14 days 541-279-0982. You $10,500 OBO. "boats" please se 5th wheel puller, Garage Sales (Private Party ads only) c an a l s o em a i l Call Today sleeper cab, rebuilt Terrebonne area loft for Class 870. tcoles©yourneigh541-5'I 6-8664 Garage Sales RESTAURANT rent. Studio, new kitchen, 541-385-5809 Ready to make memories! engine with 20k miles, borhoodpublications. full bath, c ommercial Top-selling Winnebago 6.5 generator, 120 cu. com for more infor- zone, Garage Sales $680/mo first & last 31J, original owners, non- ft. storage boxes - one mation. Serving Central Oregon since 1903 + deposit. No pets, no 8' long. Gets 10.9 smokers, garaged, only Find them smoking; references re18,800 miles, auto-levelmpg, many more 880 quired. 541-480-4645 or ing jacks, (2) slides, upfeatures. All in good in 541-410-6365 Raezce) Motorhomes graded queen bed, bunk shape. See to appreThe Bulletin beds, micro, (3) TVs, ciate (in Terrebonne ® l3mtlzcm 675 Harley Fat Boy 2002 sleeps 10! Lots of storarea).$24,000. Classifieds Pastfnf Pastarfa 14k orig. miles.. Exage, maintained, very RV Parking 503-949-4229 in the Old Mill Districtis cellent cond. Vance& clean! Only $67,995! Ex541-385-5809 seeking professional, Hines exhaust, 5 tended warranty and/or fiFull hookup RV s ite friendly, service-focused spoke HD rims, wind nancing avail to qualified avail. through April Cleaning service, Mon. leaders to take on the vest, 12" rise handle buyers! 541-388-7179 30th, $425 + e l ec. bars, detachable lug- Fri., off by 5 p m . roles ofAssistant GenCentral Oregon KOA weekends & holidays, eral Manager and a gage rack w/back 881 2007 Winnebago 528 541-546-3046 free. N o n -smoking.Kitchen Manager.Comrest, hwy pegs& many Outlook Class"C" Travel Trailers 541-815-0015 chrome accents. Must Keystone Everest 5th etitive salary, excellent Loans & Mortgages 31', solar panel, enefits. Apply online at see to appreciate! Wheel, 2004 catalytic heater, WARNING www. astini.com/careers $10,500. In CRR area Model 323P - 3 slides, Hhn0 excellent condition, Finance The Bulletin recomcall 530-957-1865 rear island-kitchen, more extras. City of Prineville is Vce ©nlh mends you use caufireplace, 2 TV's, Asking $55K. seeking an experiRoofers Wanted tion when you proCD/DVR/VCR/Tuner enced, highly motiCall River Roofing, Ph. 541-447-9268 vide personal w/surround sound, A/C, HDFatBo 1996 541-383-3569 vated, professional information to compa2007 Jayco Jay Flight custom bed, ceiling fan, a pplicant for t h e or applyin person at nies offering loans or 29 FBS with slide out & W/D ready, many extras. 697 SE Glenwood position of Finance New awning & tires. credit, especially awning - Turn-key ready Drive, in Bend. Assistant II. Full-time Excellent condition. those asking for adto use, less than 50 toposition and salary $18,900.More pics vance loan fees or 745 tal days used by current will DOE and DOQ. companies from out of owner. Never smoked in, available.541-923-6408 Homes for Sale Full benefit package state. If you have no indoor pets, excellent Completely included. To v iew Allegro 32' 2007, like cond., very clean. Lots of concerns or quesRebuilt/Customized job description, go to NOTICE new, only 12,600 miles. bonus features; many chasing products or 9 tions, we suggest you All real 2012/2013 Award www.cityofprineville. estate adverChev 8.1L with Allison 60 have never been used. consult your attorney services from out of • Winner com. Y o u may transmission, dual ex- A sking $18,000. C a l l tised here in is subor call CONSUMER f the area. Sending Condition haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- Lisa, 541-420-0794 for apply online. The ject to the Federal Showroom HOTLINE, c ash, checks, o r Many Extras City of Prineville is eling system, 5kw gen, more info / more photos. Keystone Raptor, 2007 F air Housing A c t , 1-877-877-9392. Low Miles. an equal opportu- f credit i n f ormation power mirrors w/defrost, which makes it illegal 37 toy hauler, 2 slides, • may be subjected to 2 slide-outs with awnity employer. BANK TURNED YOU to advertise any pref$75,000 generator,A/C, 2 TVs, I FRAUD. nings, rear c a mera, Dutchman Denali DOWN? Private party erence, limitation or 541-548-4807 satellite system w/auto 32' 2011 travel For more informatrailer hitch, driyer door will loan on real esbased seek, in/out sound sysHousekeeper part time- tion about an adver- ~ tate equity. Credit, no discrimination w/power window, cruise, trailer. 2 slides Evon race, color, relitem,sleeps 6,m any exand some part time / tiser, you may call erything goes, all exhaust brake, central problem, good equity ion, sex, handicap, yard work needed . ware, linens tras.$29,999. In Madras, the Oregon State is all you need. Call amilial status or na- HD Softtail Deuce 2002, vac, satellite sys. Asking kitchen call 541-771-9607 or 541-382-4464 etc. Hitch, sway I Attorney General's Oregon Land Mort- tional $67,500. 503-781-8812 origin, or inten541-475-6265 broken back forces bars, water & sewer s Office C o n s umer s gage 541-388-4200. tion to make any such sale, only 200 mi. on People Lookfor Information S Protection hotline at S hoses. List price preferences, l i mita- new motor from HarUSE THE CLASSIFIEDS! About Products and $34,500 - asking I 1-877-877-9392. LOCAL MONEY:Webuy tions or discrimination. ley, new trans case secured trustdeeds & We will $26,800 Loaded. Services Every Daythrough not knowingly and p arts, s p o ke Door-to-door selling with Must see to apprecinote,some hard money accept any The Bulletia Classifferfs advertis- wheels, new brakes, loans. Call Pat Kellev fast results! It's the easiest ate. Redmond, OR. ing for real estate 541-362-3099 ext.13. early all o f bi k e 541-604-5993 way in the world to sell. which is in violation of n General brand new. Has proof this law. All persons Beaver Marquis, The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturall work done. ReThe Bulletin Classified are hereby informed of 1993 day night shift and other shifts as needed. We movable windshield, 541-385-5809 Four Winds 2008 that all dwellings adBsjjainlh 40-ft, Brunswick currently have openings all nights of the week. T-bags, black and all vertised are available 18' travel trailer floor plan. Many Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts out with a on an equal opportu- chromed used very little start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and skeleton theme extras, well mainnity basis. The Bulle- willy end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoon all caps and covtained, fire sup$8500. tin Classified sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. ers. Lots o f w o r k, pression behind 541-719-1217 Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a heart and love went refrig, Stow Master 750 minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts into all aspects. All 5000 tow bar, Redmond Homes Kit Companion 26', '94 are short (1 1:30 - 1:30). The work consists of done at professional $22,995. Find exactlY what loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackshops, call for info. 1 slide, new stove/fridge, 541-383-3503 you are looking for in the Gd for hunting/camping! ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup Must sell quickly due Rooms for Rent Looking for your next $2500 541-389-5788 and other tasks. For qualifying employees we to m e d ical bi l l s, CLABBf pfBDB emp/oyee? The Bulletin offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, Furn. room quiet home, Place a Bulletin help $8250. Call Jack at short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid 541-279-9538. To Subscribe call Laredo 30' 2009 no drugs, alcohol or ad today and vacation and sick time. Drug test is required smoking. $450/mo. 1st 8 wanted 541-385-5800 or go to reach over 60,000 prior to employment. last . 541-408-0846 KAWASAKI www.bendbulletin.com readers each week. KLX125, 2003, Your classified ad Please submit a completed application atten- BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS will also appear on good condition. tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Search the area's most $1100. bendbulletin.com at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanHeartland P r owler comprehensive listing of 541-593-8746 which currently redler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be 2012, 29PRKS, 33', overall length is 35' classified advertising... ceives over obtained upon request by contacting Kevin real like new, 2 slides-livestate to automotive, 1.5 million page has 2 slides, Arctic Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). Yamaha V-Star, 250cc i ng area & la r ge package, A/C,table merchandise to sporting views every month No phone calls please. Only completed appli- goods. 2011 motorcycle, new Fleetwood D i scovery closet, 15' power awBulletin Classifieds at no extra cost. & chairs, satellite, cations will be considered for this position. No custom seat for rider, 40' 2003, diesel, w/all ning, power hitch 8 appear every day in the Arctic pkg., power Bulletin Classifieds resumes will be accepted. Drug test is revinyl coating on tank, options 3 slide outs, stabilizers, full size awning, in excellent print or on line. Get Results! quired prior to employment. EOE. 2 helmets included. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, queen bed, l a r ge condition! More pix Call 385-5809 or Call 541-385-5809 Gets 60mpg, and has etc., 32,000 miles. shower, porcelain sink at bendbulletin.com www.bendbulletin.com place your ad on-line Wintered in h e ated 8 toilet. The Bulletin 3,278 miles. at $22,500 urviwgcentral oregon since fget Asking $4700, firm. shop. $82,000 O.B.O. $25,000or make offer. bendbugetin.com 541-419-3301 The Bulletin Serving CentralOregonsince tgtg Call Dan 541-550-0171 541-447-8664 541-999-2571
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Snowbird Special! Open Road 36' 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 8 scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $25,995 541-419-0566 885
Canopies & Campers A RE 8' c a nopy f o r standard size pickup,
$400. 541-771-8791 Skamper 1990 8-ft popup cabover camper im maculate many extras 3-burner stove, heater w/thermostat, hot water heater, oversized pressure water s y stem„ Fantastic Fan, lots of storage, sleeps 4, $3750. 541-617-0211 g
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908
Aircraft, Parts
& Service
The Bulletin
ever
1/3interest in
Columbia 400, Financing available.
$150,000
(located @ Bend) 541-288-3333
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www. N4972M.com
The Bulletin
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1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance 8 affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007
1974 Beffanca 1730A 2160 TT, 440 SMO, 160 mph, excellent condition, always
hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K. In Madras, call 541-475-6302
HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546
I
. 0 0
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 196 8 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184. 916
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h oses, camlocks, $ 25,000. 541-820-3724
SEMI-DRY VAN
53' long x102" wide, good tires, no dings,
$8500.
541-719-'I 217
E6 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
925
932
933
933
935
935
975
975
975
Utility Trailers
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Cadillac Escalade
JEEP WRANGLER
Ford Focus2010
MAZDA 3S 2011
Aluma 54" x 10' utility trailer, spare tire, removable racks, $1750. 541-516-8695
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories Jeepster Commando 1968 6-cyl Buick, 4WD, com(4) 185/55/R-15 Dunlop pletely restored. $12,000 Winter Maxx tires, off obo. 808-430-5133 or 541-382-6300 Fiat 500. Bought Nov. 2013, less than 500 m iles, $ 35 0 o b o . 707-206-7770,Bend 4 studded Les Schwab Nokia tires 225/55-17 on pretty alloy wheels, off S ubaru. $ 250. Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, 541-382-6409 soft & hard top, excellent condition, aiways gaNeed to get an raged. 155 K m i les, ad in ASAP? $11,500. 541-549-6407 You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
541-447-7272
Shop automotive 6hp 60-gallon special vertical air compressor tank, $600 541-385-9350 Winter radial studded 225/70R-16 set of 4 tires, $100 each obo 541-447-3376 932
Antique & Classic Autos
Chevelle Mallbu 1966 Complete
it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399
1965 Mustang
gythrp@gmail.com
Honda Ri d geline RTL 2006. 2nd owner 2011 Has every112,000 mi.. Records thing, seriously!! since owning car for 5 Vin¹301832 years. Truck crew cab $49,977 w ith 3.5 V 6 , a u t o trans, very clean with ROBBERSON most options, 17n alnI n e nLn ~ maM R loy wheels with Toyo Tires at 80%. Custom 541-312-3986 t onneau cover f o r Dlr ¹0205. pricing bed, and tow hitch. good thru 11/30/14 Price to sell$14,997. dagreene75ohotmail. com or 610-909-1701
Vin¹A10401
21.977
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2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826
The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting yourneeds. Call on one of the professionals today!
Limited Edition. PRAYING FOR SNOW! Vin¹149708
ROBBERSON i 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 11/30/14
Pickups
i
Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
541-480-5634
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933
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CHEVELLE MALIBU 1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $12,000. 541-788-0427
Chevy Si l verado 1500 2 0 1 4, L T , 4 WD, crew c a b , short box, 5.3L, new Feb. 28, 2014. Not driven since June 2014. Gar a ged. Loaded, brown tan cloth interior, 4900 m i., $34,9 9 0 .
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 Professional" Directory Toyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. Automatic, 6-cylinder, CrewMax, 2011 - Only tilt wheel, power win29,700 miles & loaded! dows, power brakes, 381hp, TRD off road pkg, air conditioning, keyBilstein shocks,18n alloys, less entry, 69K miles. Nlercedes sunroof, rear s l i ding Excellent condition; 450SL, 1975 window, backup camera, tires have 90% tread. 97K Miles 12-spkr JBL sys, running $8999. $11,995. Chevy Silverado brds, hitch/trailer sway 541-504-8399 2012 4x4 Crew Cab kg, 10-way adj leather Call 541-598-5111 39K miles, td seats, dual climate Mercedes-Benz 450 SE White Diamond paint, control, sonar, 6-disc CD, Find It in 1973 Gasoline. Best Tonneau cover, leather Bluetooth, more!$36,500. The Bulletin Classifieds! offer. 541-576-2380. heated seats, running 541-390-6616 541-385-5809 boards, tow-ready, new tires (only 200 Just too many miles on them), like Jeep Cherokee 1995 new inside and out! collectibles? green with tan leather $31,500 interior. Good shape, 541-350%775 no damage history. Sell them in or best offer. VW CONV. 1 9 78 The Bulletin Classifieds $2200 541-410-1135. $8999 -1600cc, fuel Ford F-150 1991 injected, classic 1978 541-385-5809 Volkswaqen ConvertJee Libe 2 01 2 ible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible 935 top, cream colored interior & black dash. Sport Utility Vehicles This little beauty runs Good runner 4x4 and looks great and Only $4,998 turns heads wherever
restoration, $32,900.
(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)
g mends extra caution g • when p u r chasing •
I products or servicesI
931
541-385-5809 '65-'66 Mustang original bucket seats, completely rebuilt, better than new. Price lowered, must sell.
I The Bulletin recoml
Say ngoodbuy"
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
BMW X3 35i 2010 Exlnt cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, nayigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-915-9170
ROBBERSON vs II e e vII ~
GMC Sonoma 1991 4x4 Ext. Cab, 6-cyl, AT, runs great, new radiator, AC, power, tow pkg, bedliner, 155K, n o da m age. $4500. 541-385-4790
AWD,6-cylinder fully loaded, excellent condition, beige/gold, moonroof, 74K miles, always garaged $16,500. 541-536-5067
2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt & cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.
$22,500.
541-419-5980
Need help fixing stuff?
Call A ServiceProfessional find the help you need.
FIND IT1
SUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds
only 7k miles a lot of vehicle for$16,977 Vin¹619102
ROBBERSON slllensn ~
Great MPGs make this a great commuter. Vin¹154827 $11,977 ROBBERSON
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14
Certified preowned with warranty. ¹401047 Onl $16.947 ROBBERSON cllleevn ~
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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205. pricing good thru 11/30/14
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 price good thru 11/30/14
Buick LeSabres, 2002 132k $3999; 2005 179k $4999. 541-419-5060
Mercedes300E
www.bendbulletin.com Ford Fusion SE
Mercedes MBZ ML500, 2003, Silver, fully equipped,
102K miles, original owner, factory rims with snow tires included. All records, excellent condition. $11,500. 541-322-6281
1993 sharp, well maint. Vin¹857877 Bargain Corral Price $3,977 ROBBERSON
2012. Low miles-
high miles per gallon $15,977 Vin¹302474
Subaru Forester
ROBBERSON sI ne ns n~
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 11/30/14 940 Vans
Chevy Van 1983, 6-cyl, AT, w/truck-mounted carpet cleaning unit (needs wrk) $600. 541-548-3064
Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & out, one owner, nonsmoker, loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m. 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 Dodge T&C Ltd 2000, loaded, 48K orig. mi., $9995. 541-416-0382
Honda Accord SE 2006, 4-cyl, great mpg, nonsmoker, well maint'd, 95K mi., clean. 1 owner. Reduced $8250 firm. 480-266-7396 (Bend)
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-
ways garaged, all
maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218 WHEN YOU SEE THIS
MOreP iXatBendbljletin,CO m Infiniti l30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles.
$5,900 obo.
541-420-3277
Tiee
Nearly perfect! Must see! vin¹ 142671
$11,977 ROBBERSON I I n e n IIs ~
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 11/30/1 4
On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
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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 bendbullefin.com Check out the classifieds online www.bendbullefin.com Updated daily
In Print Cind Online WithThe Bulletin'S CICISSifiedS. A dd color photos for pets, real estate, auto 8 m o r e ! I
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GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck
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*SpBcial private party rates apply to merchandise and automotive categories.
The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com To place your photo ad, visit us online at ww w . b e n c i bu l l e t i n . c o m or c a ll with questions,
5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
I tion about an adver-I tiser, you may call
I the Oregon StateI e Attorney General's e e Office C o nsumer I I Protection hotline atI 1-877-877-9392.
The Bulletina Sern'ng Central Oregon sincetgt
Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway. This advertising tip brought toyou by
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregonsince 1SOS
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Vin ¹715926
Bargain Corral price $3,977 ROBBERSON y I M RRR
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205.Price good thru 11/30/1 4
Jee Patriot2014
BMW X5 2006
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5 41-385-580 9 Ford F250 1984 4x4 King Cab, 6.9 C6 auto, shift kit, 90% tires, good wood truck! $2000 or best offer. 541-279-8023
from out of the area
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000 1000
Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE Wall St. S t orage, L LC at 1315 NW Wall St., Bend, OR 97701 will be accepting sealed bids on November 22, from 10am-2pm for the following units: Robert Li g h tner: B11; Alyssa Walton: M19. PUBLIC NOTICE CALL FOR BIDS PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that Job Growers Incorporated has published a Request for Proposals (RFP) on November 5, 2014, for the services of a qualified and experienced third party evaluator to evaluate their recent federal Department of Labor-awarded project "Rethinking Job Search." The evaluation is wholly funded by the federal Department of Labor Employment and Training Administration for $450,000. The RFP is available at w w w.jobgrowers.com. Proposals are due at noon on November 26, 2014.